How to Make Terrorists Talk
By BOBBY GHOSH / WASHINGTON Bobby Ghosh / Washington – Fri May 29, 4:00 am ET
 


The most successful interrogation of an Al-Qaeda operative by U.S. officials 
required no sleep deprivation, no slapping or "walling" and no waterboarding. 
All it took to soften up Abu Jandal, who had been closer to Osama bin Laden 
than any other terrorist ever captured, was a handful of sugar-free cookies.

Abu Jandal had been in a Yemeni prison for nearly a year when Ali Soufan of the 
FBI and Robert McFadden of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service arrived to 
interrogate him in the week after 9/11. Although there was already evidence 
that al-Qaeda was behind the attacks, American authorities needed conclusive 
proof, not least to satisfy skeptics like Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, 
whose support was essential for any action against the terrorist organization. 
U.S. intelligence agencies also needed a better understanding of al-Qaeda's 
structure and leadership. Abu Jandal was the perfect source: the Yemeni who 
grew up in Saudi Arabia had been bin Laden's chief bodyguard, trusted not only 
to protect him but also to put a bullet in his head rather than let him be 
captured. (See pictures of do-it-yourself waterboarding attempts.)

Abu Jandal's guards were so intimidated by him, they wore masks to hide their 
identities and begged visitors not to refer to them by name in his presence. He 
had no intention of cooperating with the Americans; at their first meetings, he 
refused even to look at them and ranted about the evils of the West. Far from 
confirming al-Qaeda's involvement in 9/11, he insisted the attacks had been 
orchestrated by Israel's Mossad. While Abu Jandal was venting his spleen, 
Soufan noticed that he didn't touch any of the cookies that had been served 
with tea: "He was a diabetic and couldn't eat anything with sugar in it." At 
their next meeting, the Americans brought him some sugar-free cookies, a 
gesture that took the edge off Abu Jandal's angry demeanor. "We had showed him 
respect, and we had done this nice thing for him," Soufan recalls. "So he 
started talking to us instead of giving us lectures."

It took more questioning, and some interrogators' sleight of hand, before the 
Yemeni gave up a wealth of information about al-Qaeda - including the 
identities of seven of the 9/11 bombers - but the cookies were the turning 
point. "After that, he could no longer think of us as evil Americans," Soufan 
says. "Now he was thinking of us as human beings."

Soufan, now an international-security consultant, has emerged as a powerful 
critic of the George W. Bush - era interrogation techniques; he has testified 
against them in congressional hearings and is an expert witness in cases 
brought by detainees. He has described the techniques as "borderline torture" 
and "un-American." His larger argument is that methods like waterboarding are 
wholly unnecessary - traditional interrogation methods, a combination of guile 
and graft, are the best way to break down even the most stubborn subjects. He 
told a recent hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee that it was these 
methods, not the harsh techniques, that prompted al-Qaeda operative Abu 
Zubaydah to give up the identities of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the 
self-confessed mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, and "dirty bomber" Jose Padilla. 
Bush Administration officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney, had 
previously claimed that Abu Zubaydah supplied that information
 only after he was waterboarded. But Soufan says once the rough treatment began 
- administered by CIA-hired private contractors with no interrogation 
experience - Abu Zubaydah actually stopped cooperating. (Read "Dick Cheney: Why 
So Chatty All of a Sudden?")

The debate over the CIA's interrogation techniques and their effectiveness has 
intensified since President Barack Obama's decision to release Bush 
Administration memos authorizing the use of waterboarding and other harsh 
methods. Defenders of the Bush program, most notably Cheney, say the use of 
waterboarding produced actionable intelligence that helped the U.S. disrupt 
terrorist plots. But the experiences of officials like Soufan suggest that the 
utility of torture is limited at best and counterproductive at worst. Put 
simply, there's no definitive evidence that torture works.

The crucial question going forward is, What does? How does an interrogator 
break down a hardened terrorist without using violence? TIME spoke with several 
interrogators who have worked for the U.S. military as well as others who have 
recently retired from the intelligence services (the CIA and FBI turned down 
requests for interviews with current staffers). All agreed with Soufan: the 
best way to get intelligence from even the most recalcitrant subject is to 
apply the subtle arts of interrogation rather than the blunt instruments of 
torture. "There is nothing intelligent about torture," says Eric Maddox, an 
Army staff sergeant whose book Mission: Black List #1 chronicles his 
interrogations in Iraq that ultimately led to the capture of Saddam Hussein. 
"If you have to inflict pain, then you've lost control of the situation, the 
subject and yourself."

Read about a top interrogator who is against torture.

See pictures of the aftershocks from the Abu Ghraib scandal. 

The Rules of the Game
There is no definitive textbook on interrogation. The U.S. Army field manual, 
updated in 2006, lists 19 interrogation techniques, ranging from offering "real 
or emotional reward" for truthful answers to repeating questions again and 
again "until the source becomes so thoroughly bored with the procedure, he 
answers questions fully and candidly." (Obama has ordered the CIA to follow the 
Army manual until a review of its interrogation policies has been completed.)

Some of the most interesting techniques are classified as "emotional 
approaches." Interrogators may flatter a detainee's ego by praising some 
particular skill. Alternatively, the interrogators may attack the detainee's 
ego by accusing him of incompetence, goading him to defend himself and possibly 
give up information in the process. If interrogators choose to go on the 
attack, however, they may not "cross the line into humiliating and degrading 
treatment of the detainee." (See pictures of the battle against the Taliban.)

But experienced interrogators don't limit themselves to the 19 prescribed 
techniques. Matthew Alexander, a military interrogator whose efforts in Iraq 
led to the location and killing of al-Qaeda leader Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, says 
old-fashioned criminal-investigation techniques work better than the Army 
manual. "Often I'll use tricks that are not part of the Army system but that 
every cop knows," says Alexander. "Like when you bring in two suspects, you 
take them to separate rooms and offer a deal to the first one who confesses." 
(Alexander, one of the authors of How to Break a Terrorist: The U.S. 
Interrogators Who Used Brains, Not Brutality, to Take Down the Deadliest Man in 
Iraq, uses a pseudonym for security purposes.)

Others apply methods familiar to psychologists and those who deprogram cult 
members. James Fitzsimmons, a retired FBI interviewer who dealt extensively 
with al-Qaeda members, says terrorism suspects often use their membership in a 
group as a psychological barrier. The interrogator's job, he says, "is to bring 
them out from the collective identity to the personal identity." To draw them 
out, Fitzsimmons invites his subjects to talk about their personal histories, 
all the way back to childhood. This makes them think of themselves as 
individuals rather than as part of a group.

Ultimately, every interrogation is a cat-and-mouse game, and seasoned 
interrogators have more than one way to coax, cajole or trick their captives 
into yielding information. Lying and dissimulation are commonplace. When a 
high-ranking insurgent spoke of his spendthrift wife, Alexander said he 
sympathized because he too had a wife who loved to shop. The two men bonded 
over this common "problem"; the insurgent never knew that Alexander is single. 
The Army manual even includes a "false flag" technique: interrogators may 
pretend to be of other nationalities if they feel a captive will not cooperate 
with Americans. (Read "Beyond Waterboarding: What Interrogators Can Still Do.")

Other countries that have experienced insurgencies and terrorism have evolved 
rules too. From Britain, with its Irish separatists, to Israel, with its 
Palestinian militants, most such countries have tended to move away from harsh 
techniques. But institutional relapses can occur: human-rights lawyers and 
Palestinians with experience in Israeli prisons say some violent interrogation 
techniques have returned in recent years.

The Tricks of the Trade
Each interrogator has his own idea of how to run an interrogation. Soufan likes 
to research his captive as thoroughly as possible before entering the 
interrogation room. "If you can get them to think you know almost everything to 
know about them - their families, their friends, their movements - then you've 
got an advantage," he says. "Because then they're thinking, 'Well, this guy 
already knows so much, there's no point in resisting ... I might as well tell 
him everything.'" When Abu Zubaydah tried to conceal his identity after his 
capture, Soufan stunned him by using the nickname given to him by his mother. 
"Once I called him 'Hani,' he knew the game was up," Soufan says.

To get Abu Jandal's cooperation, Soufan and McFadden laid a trap. After 
palliating his rage with the sugar-free cookies, they got him to identify a 
number of al-Qaeda members from an album of photographs, including Mohamed Atta 
and six other 9/11 hijackers. Next they showed him a local newspaper headline 
that claimed (erroneously) that more than 200 Yemenis had been killed in the 
World Trade Center. Abu Jandal agreed that this was a terrible crime and said 
no Muslim could be behind the attacks. Then Soufan dropped the bombshell: some 
of the men Abu Jandal had identified in the album had been among the hijackers. 
Without realizing it, the Yemeni prisoner had admitted that al-Qaeda had been 
responsible for 9/11: For all his resistance, he had given the Americans what 
they wanted. "He was broken, completely shattered," Soufan says. From that 
moment on, Abu Jandal was completely cooperative, giving Soufan and McFadden 
reams of information - names and
 descriptions of scores of al-Qaeda operatives, details of training and tactics.

See pictures of a jihadist's journey.
See pictures from inside Guantanamo Bay's detention facilities.
Alexander, who conducted more than 300 interrogations and supervised more than 
1,000 others in Iraq, says the key to a successful interrogation lies in 
understanding the subject's motivation. In the spring of 2006, he was 
interrogating a Sunni imam connected with al-Qaeda in Iraq, which was then run 
by al-Zarqawi; the imam "blessed" suicide bombers before their final mission. 
His first words to Alexander were, "If I had a knife right now, I'd slit your 
throat." Asked why, the imam said the U.S. invasion had empowered Shi'ite thugs 
who had evicted his family from their home. Humiliated, he had turned to the 
insurgency. Alexander's response was to offer a personal apology: "I said, 
'Look, I'm an American, and I want to say how sorry I am that we made so many 
mistakes in your country.'"
The imam, Alexander says, broke down in tears. The apology undercut his 
motivation for hating Americans and allowed him to open up to his interrogator. 
Alexander then nudged the conversation in a new direction, pointing out that 
Iraq and the U.S. had a common enemy: Iran. The two countries needed to 
cooperate in order to prevent Iraq from becoming supplicant to the Shi'ite 
mullahs in Tehran - a fear commonly expressed by Sunnis. Eventually the imam 
gave up the location of a safe house for suicide bombers; a raid on the house 
led to the capture of an al-Qaeda operative who in turn led U.S. troops to 
al-Zarqawi. (See pictures of U.S. troops' 6 years in Iraq.)
The Ticking Time Bomb
Proponents of waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques say the 
noncoercive methods are useless in emergencies, when interrogators have just 
minutes, not days, to extract vital, lifesaving information. The worst-case 
scenario is often depicted in movies and TV series like 24: a captured 
terrorist knows where and when a bomb will go off (in a mall, in a school, on 
Capitol Hill), and his interrogators must make him talk at once or else risk 
thousands of innocent lives. It's not just fervid screenwriters who believe 
that such a scenario calls for the use of brute force. In 2002, Richard Posner, 
a Court of Appeals judge in Chicago and one of the most respected legal 
authorities in the U.S., wrote in the New Republic that "if torture is the only 
means of obtaining the information necessary to prevent the detonation of a 
nuclear bomb in Times Square, torture should be used ... No one who doubts that 
this is the case should be in a position of
 responsibility."
The CIA's controversial methods, argue their defenders, were spawned by 
precisely that sense of urgency: in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, amid 
swirling rumors of further attacks to come - including the possibility of a 
"dirty" nuclear bomb - the Bush Administration had no choice but to authorize 
the use of whatever means necessary to extract information from suspected 
terrorists. "We had a lot of blind spots after the attacks on our country," 
former Vice President Cheney explained in a May 21 speech in Washington. "We 
didn't know about al-Qaeda's plans, but Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and a few others 
did know. And with many thousands of innocent lives potentially in the balance, 
we didn't think it made sense to let the terrorists answer questions in their 
own good time, if they answered them at all."
But professional interrogators say the ticking-time-bomb scenario is no more 
than a thought experiment; it rarely, if ever, occurs in real life. It's true 
that U.S. intelligence managed to extract information about some "aspirational" 
al-Qaeda plots through interrogation of prisoners captured after 9/11. But none 
of those plots have been revealed - at least to the public - to have been 
imminent attacks. And there is still no conclusive proof that any usable 
intelligence the U.S. did glean through harsh interrogations could not have 
been extracted using other methods.
In fact, a smart interrogator may be able to turn the ticking-bomb scenario on 
its head and use a sense of urgency against a captive. During combat raids in 
Iraq, Maddox grew used to interrogating insurgents on the fly, often at the 
point of capture. His objective: to quickly extract information on the location 
of other insurgents hiding out nearby. "I'd say to them, 'As soon as your 
friends know you've been captured, they'll assume that you're going to give 
them up, and they'll run for it. So if you want to help yourself, to get a 
lighter sentence, you've got to tell me everything right now, because in a 
couple of hours you'll have nothing of value to trade.'"
That trick led to Maddox's finest hour in Iraq. At 6 a.m. on December 13, 2003, 
the final day of his tour of duty, two hours before his flight out of Baghdad, 
he began interrogating Mohammed Ibrahim, a midranking Baath Party leader known 
to be close to Saddam Hussein. More than 40 of Ibrahim's friends and family 
members associated with the insurgency were already in custody. For an hour and 
a half, Maddox tried to persuade him that giving up Saddam could lead to the 
release of his friends and family. Then Maddox played his final card: "I told 
him he had to talk quickly because Saddam might move," he says. "I also said 
that once I got on the plane, I would no longer be able to help him. My 
colleagues would just toss him in prison. Instead of saving 40 of his friends 
and family, he'd become No. 41." It worked. That evening, Ibrahim's directions 
led U.S. forces to Saddam's spider hole.

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