http://harpers.org/archive/2012/09/hbc-90008846

CIA Waterboarding, Qaddafi Collaboration Revealed

*By Scott Horton <http://harpers.org/subjects/ScottHorton>*

Just days after Attorney General Holder announced a formal decision of
impunity <http://harpers.org/archive/2012/08/hbc-90008825> resulting from a
probe into 101 documented cases in which CIA agents engaged in acts of
torture and abuse in apparent violation of CIA guidelines—including those
approving torture—further explosive allegations have emerged that lay bare
the scope of CIA cooperation with abusive regimes in the era before the
Arab Spring. Drawing on interviews with Libyan prisoners previously held by
the CIA in black-site facilities, as well as a large cache of secret
documents that turned up when rebels seized Qaddafi’s state security
offices last year, Human Rights Watch has issued a 156-page
report<http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/libya0912webwcover_1.pdf>(PDF)
that meticulously documents a George W. Bush–era CIA program of
torture, including waterboarding, in careful collaboration with former
Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi. Among the report’s key findings:

   - Five Libyans described their captivity in U.S.-run prisons in
   Afghanistan for between eight months and two years before they were
   rendered back to Libya. They described having been chained to walls
   naked—sometimes diapered—in pitch-dark, windowless cells for weeks or
   months at a time; being restrained in painful stress positions for long
   periods, being forced into cramped spaces; being beaten and slammed into
   walls; being kept inside for nearly five months without the right to bathe;
   being denied food; and being denied sleep by continuous, deafeningly loud
   Western music.

   - One former prisoner described having been waterboarded on repeated
   occasions during U.S. interrogations in Afghanistan. The report notes that
   the prisoner never used the phrase “waterboarding,” but described the
   procedure in detail: his captors put a hood over his head, strapped him
   onto a wooden board, “then they start with the water pouring. . . . They
   start to pour water to the point where you feel like you are suffocating.”
   He added: “[T]hey wouldn’t stop until they got some kind of answer from
   me.” He said a doctor was present during the waterboarding and that it
   happened so many times he could not keep count.

   - Another prisoner in Afghanistan described being subjected to a
   water-suffocation practice similar to waterboarding, and said that he was
   threatened with use of the board. A doctor was present during this abuse as
   well.

   - All fourteen former prisoners who were interviewed described being
   turned over by the CIA to the Qaddafi regime with the full expectation that
   they would be tortured and abused after transfer to Libya.

   - The report offers further detail on the fate of Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi,
   the man whose torture-induced fraudulent claims about the plans of Iraqi
   strongman Saddam Hussein were cited by the Bush Administration to justify
   the invasion of Iraq. The CIA turned al-Libi over to the Qaddafi regime,
   and he died in prison under mysterious circumstances shortly thereafter.
   The report notes the discovery of photographs of al-Libi from the morning
   after his death in which evidence of torture is plainly visible on his body.

Former CIA director and current Romney national-security adviser Michael
Hayden <http://www.intelligence.senate.gov/pdfs/110824.pdf> and former
President Bush have both asserted that only three individuals held in
detention by the CIA were ever waterboarded. The report would establish
these claims as untruthful.

The report, coupled with recent developments in Libya, also highlights the
CIA’s chronic inability to distinguish between violent anti-American
Islamist groups such as Al Qaeda and those who simply opposed their own
oppressive regime and sought to overturn it. The Bush Administration
promoted cordial relations with Qaddafi, while the Bush-era CIA worked
intensively to develop a close rapport with Qaddafi’s security forces, much
as it did in Egypt, Yemen and a number of other repressive Arab states. In
2011, the Obama Administration reversed course, siding with the rebels
opposing Qaddafi and deploying military and intelligence resources to
topple his regime. Many of the Libyan groups persecuted and abused by the
CIA belonged to the alliance that toppled Qaddafi, and a number of their
leaders are now in positions of importance in the new regime. Thus the
CIA’s miscalculations could not have been more sweeping or more harmful to
long-term U.S. interests.

In an important speech last year at Harvard
University,<http://opiniojuris.org/2011/09/16/john-brennan-speech-on-obama-administration-antiterrorism-policies-and-practices/>CIA
veteran and Obama counterterrorism adviser John O. Brennan stressed
that the administration’s Middle East policies emphasize the rule of law
and respect for human rights. If that’s true, then the cache of evidence
disclosed by the Libyan revolution and the comparable evidence that has
emerged in Egypt <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1038/eg31.htm> point to
the CIA as a rogue institution operating at dangerous cross-purposes with
official U.S. policy. The agency aligned itself closely with the most
abusive institutions in the countries where it was operating, and enabled
the wanton torture of political opponents. Those tight relationships appear
to have seriously warped its intelligence posture, leaving it dangerously
blind to the developments that swept the Arab world early last year.
Moreover, much of the conduct highlighted in the HRW report violated
criminal statutes, including the Anti-Torture Act and the prohibition on
renditions of persons to countries where they were likely to face torture.

The Justice Department’s systematic whitewashing of these crimes can best
be explained by the fact that it was a key actor in the crimes. It cannot
be expected to prosecute its own senior staffers, nor can it be expected to
take actions that would further stain its already badly soiled reputation.
But this very whitewashing raises fundamental doubt about the Obama
Administration’s commitment to ending torture by American intelligence
operatives. To the contrary, the Obama Administration’s handling of the
matter appears to retain torture as a viable option for American foreign
policy—one that Mitt Romney, with Michael Hayden at his side, would happily
resume.

At its outset, the report quotes Abdul Hakim
Belhadj<http://www.reprieve.org.uk/tvandradio/Belhadj_European_Parliament>,
a man who was imprisoned and abused by the CIA, but who went on to lead the
Libyan insurrection, with American backing: “All we seek is justice. . . .
We hope the new Libya, freed from its dictator, will have positive
relationships with the West. But this relationship must be built on respect
and justice. Only by admitting and apologizing for past mistakes . . . can
we move forward together as friends.” A hand of friendship has been
outstretched, but with it a request that the United States reject its
misguided practices of the past. It would be foolish and contrary to our
national-security interests to ignore this offer.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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