“Globalizing Torture”
More Than 50 Countries Helped the CIA Outsource Torture
By Spencer Ackerman
February 06, 2013 "Wired" - - In the years after 9/11, the CIA ran a worldwide program to hold and interrogate suspected members of al-Qaida, sometimes brutally. It wasn’t alone: The agency had literally dozens of partners that helped in ways large and small. Only it’s never been clear just how many nations enabled CIA capture and torture; cooperated with it; or carried it out on behalf of the U.S. — until now.
By Spencer Ackerman
February 06, 2013 "Wired" - - In the years after 9/11, the CIA ran a worldwide program to hold and interrogate suspected members of al-Qaida, sometimes brutally. It wasn’t alone: The agency had literally dozens of partners that helped in ways large and small. Only it’s never been clear just how many nations enabled CIA capture and torture; cooperated with it; or carried it out on behalf of the U.S. — until now.
A new
report from the Open
Society Foundation
details the CIA’s effort to outsource torture since 9/11 in
excruciating detail. Known as “extraordinary rendition,” the
practice concerns taking detainees to and from U.S. custody
without a legal process — think of it like an off-the-books
extradition — and often entailed handing detainees over to
countries that practiced torture. The Open Society
Foundation found that 136 people went through the post-9/11
extraordinary rendition, and 54 countries were complicit in
it.
Some
were official U.S. adversaries, like Iran and Syria, brought
together with the CIA by the shared interest of combating
terrorism. “By engaging in torture and other abuses
associated with secret detention and extraordinary
rendition,” writes chief Open Society Foundation
investigator Amrit Singh in a report
released
early Tuesday, “the U.S. government violated domestic and
international law, thereby diminishing its moral standing
and eroding support for its counterterrorism efforts
worldwide as these abuses came to light.”
Iran
didn’t do any torturing on behalf of the CIA. Instead, it
quietly transferred at least 15 of its own detainees to
Afghan custody in March 2002. Six of those found their way
into the CIA’s secret prisons. “Because the hand-over
happened soon after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan,” Singh
writes, “Iran was aware that the United States would have
effective control over any detainees handed over to Afghan
authorities.” At least one of those detainees, Tawfik al-Bihani,
ended up at Guantanamo Bay, where
his official file makes no mention of his time with the
CIA.
Iran’s
proxy Syria did torture on behalf of the United
States. The
most famous case involves Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen
snatched in 2002 by the U.S. at John F. Kennedy
International Airport before the CIA sent him to Syria under
the mistaken impression he was a terrorist. In Syrian
custody, Arar was “imprisoned for more than ten months in a
tiny grave-like cell, beaten with cables, and threatened
with electric shocks by the Syrian government,” Singh
writes.
But it
wasn’t just Arar. At least seven others were rendered to
Syria. Among their destinations: a prison in west Damascus
called the Palestine Branch, which features an area called
“the Grave,” comprised of “individual cells that were
roughly the size of coffins.” Syrian intelligence reportedly
uses something called a “German Chair” to “stretch the
spine.” These days the Obama administration prefers to call
for Syrian dictator Bashar Assad, the
murderer of over 60,000 Syrians, to
step down.
Many,
many other countries were complicit in the renditions. For a
month, Zimbabwe hosted five CIA detainees seized from Malawi
in June 2003 before they were released in Sudan. Turkey, a
NATO ally, allowed a plane operated by Richmor Aviation,
which has been linked to CIA renditions, to refuel in Adana
in 2002 and gave an Iraqi terrorist suspect to the CIA in
2006. Lots of countries played host to CIA rendition
flights, including Sri Lanka, Thailand, Afghanistan, Belgium
and Azerbaijan. Italy let the plane carrying Arar refuel.
Under Muammar Gadhafi,
Libya was an eager participant in the CIA’s rendition
scheme — and the Open Society Foundation sifted through
documents found after Gadhafi fell to discover that Hong
Kong helped shuttle a detainee named Abu Munthir to the
Libyan regime.
The
full 54 countries that aided in post-9/11 renditions:
Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Australia, Austria,
Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Canada, Croatia,
Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Djibouti, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Finland, Gambia, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hong
Kong, Iceland, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Jordan,
Kenya, Libya, Lithuania, Macedonia, Malawi, Malaysia,
Mauritania, Morocco, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Romania,
Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka,
Sweden, Syria, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Emirates,
United Kingdom, Uzbekistan, Yemen, and Zimbabwe. The Open
Society Foundation doesn’t rule out additional ones being
involved that it has yet to discover.
Singh
and the Open Society Foundation don’t presume that the CIA
is out of the extraordinary renditions game under Obama.
Danger Room pal Jeremy Scahill recently
toured a prison in Somalia that the CIA uses. While
Obama issued an executive order in 2009 to get the CIA out
of the detentions business, the order “did not apply to
facilities used for short term, transitory detention.” The
Obama administration says it won’t transfer detainees to
countries without a pledge from a host government not to
torture them — but Syria’s Assad made exactly that pledge to
the U.S. before torturing Maher Arar.
Much
of this is likely to be contained in the Senate intelligence
committee’s recent report into CIA torture. It’s unclear
when, if ever, that
report will be declassified. But the Open Society
Foundation’s study into renditions comes right as Obama aide
John Brennan — already
under pressure to clarify his role, if any, in post-9/11
torture — is about to testify to the panel ahead of
becoming CIA director. It remains to be seen if the Senate
committee will ask Brennan to clarify if the CIA still
practices extraordinary rendition, along with its old
friends.
Wired.com ©
2013 Condé Nast.
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