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New York Times
May 20, 2005

In U.S. Report, Brutal Details of 2 Afghan Inmates' Deaths
By TIM GOLDEN

Even as the young Afghan man was dying before them, his American jailers
continued to torment him.

The prisoner, a slight, 22-year-old taxi driver known only as Dilawar, was
hauled from his cell at the detention center in Bagram, Afghanistan, at
around 2 a.m. to answer questions about a rocket attack on an American
base. When he arrived in the interrogation room, an interpreter who was
present said, his legs were bouncing uncontrollably in the plastic chair
and his hands were numb. He had been chained by the wrists to the top of
his cell for much of the previous four days.

Mr. Dilawar asked for a drink of water, and one of the two interrogators,
Specialist Joshua R. Claus, 21, picked up a large plastic bottle. But
first he punched a hole in the bottom, the interpreter said, so as the
prisoner fumbled weakly with the cap, the water poured out over his orange
prison scrubs. The soldier then grabbed the bottle back and began
squirting the water forcefully into Mr. Dilawar's face.

"Come on, drink!" the interpreter said Specialist Claus had shouted, as
the prisoner gagged on the spray. "Drink!"

At the interrogators' behest, a guard tried to force the young man to his
knees. But his legs, which had been pummeled by guards for several days,
could no longer bend. An interrogator told Mr. Dilawar that he could see a
doctor after they finished with him. When he was finally sent back to his
cell, though, the guards were instructed only to chain the prisoner back
to the ceiling.

"Leave him up," one of the guards quoted Specialist Claus as saying.

Several hours passed before an emergency room doctor finally saw Mr.
Dilawar. By then he was dead, his body beginning to stiffen. It would be
many months before Army investigators learned a final horrific detail:
Most of the interrogators had believed Mr. Dilawar was an innocent man who
simply drove his taxi past the American base at the wrong time.

The story of Mr. Dilawar's brutal death at the Bagram Collection Point -
and that of another detainee, Habibullah, who died there six days earlier
in December 2002 - emerge from a nearly 2,000-page confidential file of
the Army's criminal investigation into the case, a copy of which was
obtained by The New York Times.

Like a narrative counterpart to the digital images from Abu Ghraib, the
Bagram file depicts young, poorly trained soldiers in repeated incidents
of abuse. The harsh treatment, which has resulted in criminal charges
against seven soldiers, went well beyond the two deaths.

In some instances, testimony shows, it was directed or carried out by
interrogators to extract information. In others, it was punishment meted
out by military police guards. Sometimes, the torment seems to have been
driven by little more than boredom or cruelty, or both.

In sworn statements to Army investigators, soldiers describe one female
interrogator with a taste for humiliation stepping on the neck of one
prostrate detainee and kicking another in the genitals. They tell of a
shackled prisoner being forced to roll back and forth on the floor of a
cell, kissing the boots of his two interrogators as he went. Yet another
prisoner is made to pick plastic bottle caps out of a drum mixed with
excrement and water as part of a strategy to soften him up for
questioning.

The Times obtained a copy of the file from a person involved in the
investigation who was critical of the methods used at Bagram and the
military's response to the deaths.

Although incidents of prisoner abuse at Bagram in 2002, including some
details of the two men's deaths, have been previously reported, American
officials have characterized them as isolated problems that were
thoroughly investigated. And many of the officers and soldiers interviewed
in the Dilawar investigation said the large majority of detainees at
Bagram were compliant and reasonably well treated.

"What we have learned through the course of all these investigations is
that there were people who clearly violated anyone's standard for humane
treatment," said the Pentagon's chief spokesman, Larry Di Rita. "We're
finding some cases that were not close calls."

Yet the Bagram file includes ample testimony that harsh treatment by some
interrogators was routine and that guards could strike shackled detainees
with virtual impunity. Prisoners considered important or troublesome were
also handcuffed and chained to the ceilings and doors of their cells,
sometimes for long periods, an action Army prosecutors recently classified
as criminal assault.

Some of the mistreatment was quite obvious, the file suggests. Senior
officers frequently toured the detention center, and several of them
acknowledged seeing prisoners chained up for punishment or to deprive them
of sleep. Shortly before the two deaths, observers from the International
Committee of the Red Cross specifically complained to the military
authorities at Bagram about the shackling of prisoners in "fixed
positions," documents show.

Even though military investigators learned soon after Mr. Dilawar's death
that he had been abused by at least two interrogators, the Army's criminal
inquiry moved slowly. Meanwhile, many of the Bagram interrogators, led by
the same operations officer, Capt. Carolyn A. Wood, were redeployed to
Iraq and in July 2003 took charge of interrogations at the Abu Ghraib
prison. According to a high-level Army inquiry last year, Captain Wood
applied techniques there that were "remarkably similar" to those used at
Bagram.

Last October, the Army's Criminal Investigation Command concluded that
there was probable cause to charge 27 officers and enlisted personnel with
criminal offenses in the Dilawar case ranging from dereliction of duty to
maiming and involuntary manslaughter. Fifteen of the same soldiers were
also cited for probable criminal responsibility in the Habibullah case.

So far, only the seven soldiers have been charged, including four last
week. No one has been convicted in either death. Two Army interrogators
were also reprimanded, a military spokesman said. Most of those who could
still face legal action have denied wrongdoing, either in statements to
investigators or in comments to a reporter.

"The whole situation is unfair," Sgt. Selena M. Salcedo, a former Bagram
interrogator who was charged with assaulting Mr. Dilawar, dereliction of
duty and lying to investigators, said in a telephone interview. "It's all
going to come out when everything is said and done."

With most of the legal action pending, the story of abuses at Bagram
remains incomplete. But documents and interviews reveal a striking
disparity between the findings of Army investigators and what military
officials said in the aftermath of the deaths.

Military spokesmen maintained that both men had died of natural causes,
even after military coroners had ruled the deaths homicides. Two months
after those autopsies, the American commander in Afghanistan, then-Lt.
Gen. Daniel K. McNeill, said he had no indication that abuse by soldiers
had contributed to the two deaths. The methods used at Bagram, he said,
were "in accordance with what is generally accepted as interrogation
techniques."


The Interrogators

In the summer of 2002, the military detention center at Bagram, about 40
miles north of Kabul, stood as a hulking reminder of the Americans'
improvised hold over Afghanistan.

Built by the Soviets as an aircraft machine shop for the operations base
they established after their intervention in the country in 1979, the
building had survived the ensuing wars as a battered relic - a long,
squat, concrete block with rusted metal sheets where the windows had once
been.

Retrofitted with five large wire pens and a half dozen plywood isolation
cells, the building became the Bagram Collection Point, a clearinghouse
for prisoners captured in Afghanistan and elsewhere. The B.C.P., as
soldiers called it, typically held between 40 and 80 detainees while they
were interrogated and screened for possible shipment to the Pentagon's
longer-term detention center at Guant�namo Bay, Cuba.

The new interrogation unit that arrived in July 2002 had been improvised
as well. Captain Wood, then a 32-year-old lieutenant, came with 13
soldiers from the 525th Military Intelligence Brigade at Fort Bragg, N.C.;
six Arabic-speaking reservists were added from the Utah National Guard.

Part of the new group, which was consolidated under Company A of the 519th
Military Intelligence Battalion, was made up of counterintelligence
specialists with no background in interrogation. Only two of the soldiers
had ever questioned actual prisoners.

What specialized training the unit received came on the job, in sessions
with two interrogators who had worked in the prison for a few months.
"There was nothing that prepared us for running an interrogation
operation" like the one at Bagram, the noncommissioned officer in charge
of the interrogators, Staff Sgt. Steven W. Loring, later told
investigators.

Nor were the rules of engagement very clear. The platoon had the standard
interrogations guide, Army Field Manual 34-52, and an order from the
secretary of defense, Donald H. Rumsfeld, to treat prisoners "humanely,"
and when possible, in accordance with the Geneva Conventions. But with
President Bush's final determination in February 2002 that the Conventions
did not apply to the conflict with Al Qaeda and that Taliban fighters
would not be accorded the rights of prisoners of war, the interrogators
believed they "could deviate slightly from the rules," said one of the
Utah reservists, Sgt. James A. Leahy.

"There was the Geneva Conventions for enemy prisoners of war, but nothing
for terrorists," Sergeant Leahy told Army investigators. And the
detainees, senior intelligence officers said, were to be considered
terrorists until proved otherwise.

The deviations included the use of "safety positions" or "stress
positions" that would make the detainees uncomfortable but not necessarily
hurt them - kneeling on the ground, for instance, or sitting in a "chair"
position against the wall. The new platoon was also trained in sleep
deprivation, which the previous unit had generally limited to 24 hours or
less, insisting that the interrogator remain awake with the prisoner to
avoid pushing the limits of humane treatment.

But as the 519th interrogators settled into their jobs, they set their own
procedures for sleep deprivation. They decided on 32 to 36 hours as the
optimal time to keep prisoners awake and eliminated the practice of
staying up themselves, one former interrogator, Eric LaHammer, said in an
interview.

The interrogators worked from a menu of basic tactics to gain a prisoner's
cooperation, from the "friendly" approach, to good cop-bad cop routines,
to the threat of long-term imprisonment. But some less-experienced
interrogators came to rely on the method known in the military as "Fear Up
Harsh," or what one soldier referred to as "the screaming technique."

Sergeant Loring, then 27, tried with limited success to wean those
interrogators off that approach, which typically involved yelling and
throwing chairs. Mr. Leahy said the sergeant "put the brakes on when
certain approaches got out of hand." But he could also be dismissive of
tactics he considered too soft, several soldiers told investigators, and
gave some of the most aggressive interrogators wide latitude. (Efforts to
locate Mr. Loring, who has left the military, were unsuccessful.)

"We sometimes developed a rapport with detainees, and Sergeant Loring
would sit us down and remind us that these were evil people and talk about
9/11 and they weren't our friends and could not be trusted," Mr. Leahy
said.

Specialist Damien M. Corsetti, a tall, bearded interrogator sometimes
called "Monster" -he had the nickname tattooed in Italian across his
stomach, other soldiers said - was often chosen to intimidate new
detainees. Specialist Corsetti, they said, would glower and yell at the
arrivals as they stood chained to an overhead pole or lay face down on the
floor of a holding room. (A military police K-9 unit often brought
growling dogs to walk among the new prisoners for similar effect,
documents show.)

"The other interrogators would use his reputation," said one interrogator,
Specialist Eric H. Barclais. "They would tell the detainee, 'If you don't
cooperate, we'll have to get Monster, and he won't be as nice.' " Another
soldier told investigators that Sergeant Loring lightheartedly referred to
Specialist Corsetti, then 23, as "the King of Torture."

A Saudi detainee who was interviewed by Army investigators last June at
Guant�namo said Specialist Corsetti had pulled out his penis during an
interrogation at Bagram, held it against the prisoner's face and
threatened to rape him, excerpts from the man's statement show.

Last fall, the investigators cited probable cause to charge Specialist
Corsetti with assault, maltreatment of a prisoner and indecent acts in the
incident; he has not been charged. At Abu Ghraib, he was also one of three
members of the 519th who were fined and demoted for forcing an Iraqi woman
to strip during questioning, another interrogator said. A spokesman at
Fort Bragg said Specialist Corsetti would not comment.

In late August of 2002, the Bagram interrogators were joined by a new
military police unit that was assigned to guard the detainees. The
soldiers, mostly reservists from the 377th Military Police Company based
in Cincinnati and Bloomington, Ind., were similarly unprepared for their
mission, members of the unit said.

The company received basic lessons in handling prisoners at Fort Dix,
N.J., and some police and corrections officers in its ranks provided
further training. That instruction included an overview of "pressure-point
control tactics" and notably the "common peroneal strike" - a potentially
disabling blow to the side of the leg, just above the knee.

The M.P.'s said they were never told that peroneal strikes were not part
of Army doctrine. Nor did most of them hear one of the former police
officers tell a fellow soldier during the training that he would never use
such strikes because they would "tear up" a prisoner's legs.

But once in Afghanistan, members of the 377th found that the usual rules
did not seem to apply. The peroneal strike quickly became a basic weapon
of the M.P. arsenal. "That was kind of like an accepted thing; you could
knee somebody in the leg," former Sgt. Thomas V. Curtis told the
investigators.

A few weeks into the company's tour, Specialist Jeremy M. Callaway
overheard another guard boasting about having beaten a detainee who had
spit on him. Specialist Callaway also told investigators that other
soldiers had congratulated the guard "for not taking any" from a detainee.

One captain nicknamed members of the Third Platoon "the Testosterone
Gang." Several were devout bodybuilders. Upon arriving in Afghanistan, a
group of the soldiers decorated their tent with a Confederate flag, one
soldier said.

Some of the same M.P.'s took a particular interest in an emotionally
disturbed Afghan detainee who was known to eat his feces and mutilate
himself with concertina wire. The soldiers kneed the man repeatedly in the
legs and, at one point, chained him with his arms straight up in the air,
Specialist Callaway told investigators. They also nicknamed him "Timmy,"
after a disabled child in the animated television series "South Park." One
of the guards who beat the prisoner also taught him to screech like the
cartoon character, Specialist Callaway said.

Eventually, the man was sent home.


The Defiant Detainee

The detainee known as Person Under Control No. 412 was a portly,
well-groomed Afghan named Habibullah. Some American officials identified
him as "Mullah" Habibullah, a brother of a former Taliban commander from
the southern Afghan province of Oruzgan.

He stood out from the scraggly guerrillas and villagers whom the Bagram
interrogators typically saw. "He had a piercing gaze and was very
confident," the provost marshal in charge of the M.P.'s, Maj. Bobby R.
Atwell, recalled.

Documents from the investigation suggest that Mr. Habibullah was captured
by an Afghan warlord on Nov. 28, 2002, and delivered to Bagram by C.I.A.
operatives two days later. His well-being at that point is a matter of
dispute. The doctor who examined him on arrival at Bagram reported him in
good health. But the intelligence operations chief, Lt. Col. John W.
Loffert Jr., later told Army investigators, "He was already in bad
condition when he arrived."

What is clear is that Mr. Habibullah was identified at Bagram as an
important prisoner and an unusually sharp-tongued and insubordinate one.

One of the 377th's Third Platoon sergeants, Alan J. Driver Jr., told
investigators that Mr. Habibullah rose up after a rectal examination and
kneed him in the groin. The guard said he grabbed the prisoner by the head
and yelled in his face. Mr. Habibullah then "became combative," Sergeant
Driver said, and had to be subdued by three guards and led away in an
armlock.

He was then confined in one of the 9-foot by 7-foot isolation cells, which
the M.P. commander, Capt. Christopher M. Beiring, later described as a
standard procedure. "There was a policy that detainees were hooded,
shackled and isolated for at least the first 24 hours, sometimes 72 hours
of captivity," he told investigators.

While the guards kept some prisoners awake by yelling or poking at them or
banging on their cell doors, Mr. Habibullah was shackled by the wrists to
the wire ceiling over his cell, soldiers said.

On his second day, Dec. 1, the prisoner was "uncooperative" again, this
time with Specialist Willie V. Brand. The guard, who has since been
charged with assault and other crimes, told investigators he had delivered
three peroneal strikes in response. The next day, Specialist Brand said,
he had to knee the prisoner again. Other blows followed.

A lawyer for Specialist Brand, John P. Galligan, said there was no
criminal intent by his client to hurt any detainee. "At the time, my
client was acting consistently with the standard operating procedure that
was in place at the Bagram facility."

The communication between Mr. Habibullah and his jailers appears to have
been almost exclusively physical. Despite repeated requests, the M.P.'s
were assigned no interpreters of their own. Instead, they borrowed from
the interrogators when they could and relied on prisoners who spoke even a
little English to translate for them.

When the detainees were beaten or kicked for "noncompliance," one of the
interpreters, Ali M. Baryalai said, it was often "because they have no
idea what the M.P. is saying."

By the morning of Dec. 2, witnesses told the investigators, Mr. Habibullah
was coughing and complaining of chest pains. He limped into the
interrogation room in shackles, his right leg stiff and his right foot
swollen. The lead interrogator, Sergeant Leahy, let him sit on the floor
because he could not bend his knees and sit in a chair.

The interpreter who was on hand, Ebrahim Baerde, said the interrogators
had kept their distance that day "because he was spitting up a lot of
phlegm."

"They were laughing and making fun of him, saying it was 'gross' or
'nasty,' " Mr. Baerde said.

Though battered, Mr. Habibullah was unbowed.

"Once they asked him if he wanted to spend the rest of his life in
handcuffs," Mr. Baerde said. "His response was, 'Yes, don't they look good
on me?' "

By Dec. 3, Mr. Habibullah's reputation for defiance seemed to make him an
open target. One M.P. said he had given him five peroneal strikes for
being "noncompliant and combative." Another gave him three or four more
for being "combative and noncompliant." Some guards later asserted that he
had been hurt trying to escape.

When Sgt. James P. Boland saw Mr. Habibullah on Dec. 3, he was in one of
the isolation cells, tethered to the ceiling by two sets of handcuffs and
a chain around his waist. His body was slumped forward, held up by the
chains.

Sergeant Boland told the investigators he had entered the cell with two
other guards, Specialists Anthony M. Morden and Brian E. Cammack. (All
three have been charged with assault and other crimes.) One of them pulled
off the prisoner's black hood. His head was slumped to one side, his
tongue sticking out. Specialist Cammack said he had put some bread on Mr.
Habibullah's tongue. Another soldier put an apple in the prisoner's hand;
it fell to the floor.

When Specialist Cammack turned back toward the prisoner, he said in one
statement, Mr. Habibullah's spit hit his chest. Later, Specialist Cammack
acknowledged, "I'm not sure if he spit at me." But at the time, he
exploded, yelling, "Don't ever spit on me again!" and kneeing the prisoner
sharply in the thigh, "maybe a couple" of times. Mr. Habibullah's limp
body swayed back and forth in the chains.

When Sergeant Boland returned to the cell some 20 minutes later, he said,
Mr. Habibullah was not moving and had no pulse. Finally, the prisoner was
unchained and laid out on the floor of his cell.

The guard who Specialist Cammack said had counseled him back in New Jersey
about the dangers of peroneal strikes found him in the room where Mr.
Habibullah lay, his body already cold.

"Specialist Cammack appeared very distraught," Specialist William Bohl
told an investigator. The soldier "was running about the room
hysterically."

An M.P. was sent to wake one of the medics.

"What are you getting me for?" the medic, Specialist Robert S. Melone,
responded, telling him to call an ambulance instead.

When another medic finally arrived, he found Mr. Habibullah on the floor,
his arms outstretched, his eyes and mouth open.

"It looked like he had been dead for a while, and it looked like nobody
cared," the medic, Staff Sgt. Rodney D. Glass, recalled.

Not all of the guards were indifferent, their statements show. But if Mr.
Habibullah's death shocked some of them, it did not lead to major changes
in the detention center's operation.

Military police guards were assigned to be present during interrogations
to help prevent mistreatment. The provost marshal, Major Atwell, told
investigators he had already instructed the commander of the M.P. company,
Captain Beiring, to stop chaining prisoners to the ceiling. Others said
they never received such an order.

Senior officers later told investigators that they had been unaware of any
serious abuses at the B.C.P. But the first sergeant of the 377th, Betty J.
Jones, told investigators that the use of standing restraints, sleep
deprivation and peroneal strikes was readily apparent.

"Everyone that is anyone went through the facility at one time or
another," she said.

Major Atwell said the death "did not cause an enormous amount of concern
'cause it appeared natural."

In fact, Mr. Habibullah's autopsy, completed on Dec. 8, showed bruises or
abrasions on his chest, arms and head. There were deep contusions on his
calves, knees and thighs. His left calf was marked by what appeared to
have been the sole of a boot.

His death was attributed to a blood clot, probably caused by the severe
injuries to his legs, which traveled to his heart and blocked the blood
flow to his lungs.


The Shy Detainee

On Dec. 5, one day after Mr. Habibullah died, Mr. Dilawar arrived at Bagram.

Four days before, on the eve of the Muslim holiday of Id al-Fitr, Mr.
Dilawar set out from his tiny village of Yakubi in a prized new
possession, a used Toyota sedan that his family bought for him a few weeks
earlier to drive as a taxi.

Mr. Dilawar was not an adventurous man. He rarely went far from the stone
farmhouse he shared with his wife, young daughter and extended family. He
never attended school, relatives said, and had only one friend, Bacha
Khel, with whom he would sit in the wheat fields surrounding the village
and talk.

"He was a shy man, a very simple man," his eldest brother, Shahpoor, said
in an interview.

On the day he disappeared, Mr. Dilawar's mother had asked him to gather
his three sisters from their nearby villages and bring them home for the
holiday. But he needed gas money and decided instead to drive to the
provincial capital, Khost, about 45 minutes away, to look for fares.

At a taxi stand there, he found three men headed back toward Yakubi. On
the way, they passed a base used by American troops, Camp Salerno, which
had been the target of a rocket attack that morning.

Militiamen loyal to the guerrilla commander guarding the base, Jan Baz
Khan, stopped the Toyota at a checkpoint. They confiscated a broken
walkie-talkie from one of Mr. Dilawar's passengers. In the trunk, they
found an electric stabilizer used to regulate current from a generator.
(Mr. Dilawar's family said the stabilizer was not theirs; at the time,
they said, they had no electricity at all.)

The four men were detained and turned over to American soldiers at the
base as suspects in the attack. Mr. Dilawar and his passengers spent their
first night there handcuffed to a fence, so they would be unable to sleep.
When a doctor examined them the next morning, he said later, he found Mr.
Dilawar tired and suffering from headaches but otherwise fine.

Mr. Dilawar's three passengers were eventually flown to Guant�namo and
held for more than a year before being sent home without charge. In
interviews after their release, the men described their treatment at
Bagram as far worse than at Guant�namo. While all of them said they had
been beaten, they complained most bitterly of being stripped naked in
front of female soldiers for showers and medical examinations, which they
said included the first of several painful and humiliating rectal exams.

"They did lots and lots of bad things to me," said Abdur Rahim, a
26-year-old baker from Khost. "I was shouting and crying, and no one was
listening. When I was shouting, the soldiers were slamming my head against
the desk."

For Mr. Dilawar, his fellow prisoners said, the most difficult thing
seemed to be the black cloth hood that was pulled over his head. "He could
not breathe," said a man called Parkhudin, who had been one of Mr.
Dilawar's passengers.

Mr. Dilawar was a frail man, standing only 5 feet 9 inches and weighing
122 pounds. But at Bagram, he was quickly labeled one of the
"noncompliant" ones.

When one of the First Platoon M.P.'s, Specialist Corey E. Jones, was sent
to Mr. Dilawar's cell to give him some water, he said the prisoner spit in
his face and started kicking him. Specialist Jones responded, he said,
with a couple of knee strikes to the leg of the shackled man.

"He screamed out, 'Allah! Allah! Allah!' and my first reaction was that he
was crying out to his god," Specialist Jones said to investigators.
"Everybody heard him cry out and thought it was funny."

Other Third Platoon M.P.'s later came by the detention center and stopped
at the isolation cells to see for themselves, Specialist Jones said.

It became a kind of running joke, and people kept showing up to give this
detainee a common peroneal strike just to hear him scream out 'Allah,' "
he said. "It went on over a 24-hour period, and I would think that it was
over 100 strikes."

In a subsequent statement, Specialist Jones was vague about which M.P.'s
had delivered the blows. His estimate was never confirmed, but other
guards eventually admitted striking Mr. Dilawar repeatedly.

Many M.P.'s would eventually deny that they had any idea of Mr. Dilawar's
injuries, explaining that they never saw his legs beneath his jumpsuit.
But Specialist Jones recalled that the drawstring pants of Mr. Dilawar's
orange prison suit fell down again and again while he was shackled.

"I saw the bruise because his pants kept falling down while he was in
standing restraints," the soldier told investigators. "Over a certain time
period, I noticed it was the size of a fist."

As Mr. Dilawar grew desperate, he began crying out more loudly to be
released. But even the interpreters had trouble understanding his Pashto
dialect; the annoyed guards heard only noise.

"He had constantly been screaming, 'Release me; I don't want to be here,'
and things like that," said the one linguist who could decipher his
distress, Abdul Ahad Wardak.


The Interrogation

On Dec. 8, Mr. Dilawar was taken for his fourth interrogation. It quickly
turned hostile.

The 21-year-old lead interrogator, Specialist Glendale C. Walls II, later
contended that Mr. Dilawar was evasive. "Some holes came up, and we wanted
him to answer us truthfully," he said. The other interrogator, Sergeant
Salcedo, complained that the prisoner was smiling, not answering
questions, and refusing to stay kneeling on the ground or sitting against
the wall.

The interpreter who was present, Ahmad Ahmadzai, recalled the encounter
differently to investigators.

The interrogators, Mr. Ahmadzai said, accused Mr. Dilawar of launching the
rockets that had hit the American base. He denied that. While kneeling on
the ground, he was unable to hold his cuffed hands above his head as
instructed, prompting Sergeant Salcedo to slap them back up whenever they
began to drop.

"Selena berated him for being weak and questioned him about being a man,
which was very insulting because of his heritage," Mr. Ahmadzai said.

When Mr. Dilawar was unable to sit in the chair position against the wall
because of his battered legs, the two interrogators grabbed him by the
shirt and repeatedly shoved him back against the wall.

"This went on for 10 or 15 minutes," the interpreter said. "He was so
tired he couldn't get up."

"They stood him up, and at one point Selena stepped on his bare foot with
her boot and grabbed him by his beard and pulled him towards her," he went
on. "Once Selena kicked Dilawar in the groin, private areas, with her
right foot. She was standing some distance from him, and she stepped back
and kicked him.

"About the first 10 minutes, I think, they were actually questioning him,
after that it was pushing, shoving, kicking and shouting at him," Mr.
Ahmadzai said. "There was no interrogation going on."

The session ended, he said, with Sergeant Salcedo instructing the M.P.'s
to keep Mr. Dilawar chained to the ceiling until the next shift came on.

The next morning, Mr. Dilawar began yelling again. At around noon, the
M.P.'s called over another of the interpreters, Mr. Baerde, to try to
quiet Mr. Dilawar down.

"I told him, 'Look, please, if you want to be able to sit down and be
released from shackles, you just need to be quiet for one more hour."

"He told me that if he was in shackles another hour, he would die," Mr.
Baerde said.

Half an hour later, Mr. Baerde returned to the cell. Mr. Dilawar's hands
hung limply from the cuffs, and his head, covered by the black hood,
slumped forward.

"He wanted me to get a doctor, and said that he needed 'a shot,' " Mr.
Baerde recalled. "He said that he didn't feel good. He said that his legs
were hurting."

Mr. Baerde translated Mr. Dilawar's plea to one of the guards. The soldier
took the prisoner's hand and pressed down on his fingernails to check his
circulation.

"He's O.K.," Mr. Baerde quoted the M.P. as saying. "He's just trying to
get out of his restraints."

By the time Mr. Dilawar was brought in for his final interrogation in the
first hours of the next day, Dec. 10, he appeared exhausted and was
babbling that his wife had died. He also told the interrogators that he
had been beaten by the guards.

"But we didn't pursue that," said Mr. Baryalai, the interpreter.

Specialist Walls was again the lead interrogator. But his more aggressive
partner, Specialist Claus, quickly took over, Mr. Baryalai said.

"Josh had a rule that the detainee had to look at him, not me," the
interpreter told investigators. "He gave him three chances, and then he
grabbed him by the shirt and pulled him towards him, across the table,
slamming his chest into the table front."

When Mr. Dilawar was unable to kneel, the interpreter said, the
interrogators pulled him to his feet and pushed him against the wall. Told
to assume a stress position, the prisoner leaned his head against the wall
and began to fall asleep.

"It looked to me like Dilawar was trying to cooperate, but he couldn't
physically perform the tasks," Mr. Baryalai said.

Finally, Specialist Walls grabbed the prisoner and "shook him harshly,"
the interpreter said, telling him that if he failed to cooperate, he would
be shipped to a prison in the United States, where he would be "treated
like a woman, by the other men" and face the wrath of criminals who "would
be very angry with anyone involved in the 9/11 attacks." (Specialist Walls
was charged last week with assault, maltreatment and failure to obey a
lawful order; Specialist Claus was charged with assault, maltreatment and
lying to investigators. Each man declined to comment.)

A third military intelligence specialist who spoke some Pashto, Staff Sgt.
W. Christopher Yonushonis, had questioned Mr. Dilawar earlier and had
arranged with Specialist Claus to take over when he was done. Instead, the
sergeant arrived at the interrogation room to find a large puddle of water
on the floor, a wet spot on Mr. Dilawar's shirt and Specialist Claus
standing behind the detainee, twisting up the back of the hood that
covered the prisoner's head.

"I had the impression that Josh was actually holding the detainee upright
by pulling on the hood," he said. "I was furious at this point because I
had seen Josh tighten the hood of another detainee the week before. This
behavior seemed completely gratuitous and unrelated to intelligence
collection."

"What the hell happened with that water?" Sergeant Yonushonis said he had
demanded.

"We had to make sure he stayed hydrated," he said Specialist Claus had
responded.

The next morning, Sergeant Yonushonis went to the noncommissioned officer
in charge of the interrogators, Sergeant Loring, to report the incident.
Mr. Dilawar, however, was already dead.


The Post-Mortem

The findings of Mr. Dilawar's autopsy were succinct. He had had some
coronary artery disease, the medical examiner reported, but what caused
his heart to fail was "blunt force injuries to the lower extremities."
Similar injuries contributed to Mr. Habibullah's death.

One of the coroners later translated the assessment at a pre-trial hearing
for Specialist Brand, saying the tissue in the young man's legs "had
basically been pulpified."

"I've seen similar injuries in an individual run over by a bus," added Lt.
Col. Elizabeth Rouse, the coroner, and a major at that time.

After the second death, several of the 519th Battalion's interrogators
were temporarily removed from their posts. A medic was assigned to the
detention center to work night shifts. On orders from the Bagram
intelligence chief, interrogators were prohibited from any physical
contact with the detainees. Chaining prisoners to any fixed object was
also banned, and the use of stress positions was curtailed.

In February, an American military official disclosed that the Afghan
guerrilla commander whose men had arrested Mr. Dilawar and his passengers
had himself been detained. The commander, Jan Baz Khan, was suspected of
attacking Camp Salerno himself and then turning over innocent "suspects"
to the Americans in a ploy to win their trust, the military official said.

The three passengers in Mr. Dilawar's taxi were sent home from Guant�namo
in March 2004, 15 months after their capture, with letters saying they
posed "no threat" to American forces.

They were later visited by Mr. Dilawar's parents, who begged them to
explain what had happened to their son. But the men said they could not
bring themselves to recount the details.

"I told them he had a bed," said Mr. Parkhudin. "I said the Americans were
very nice because he had a heart problem."

In late August of last year, shortly before the Army completed its inquiry
into the deaths, Sergeant Yonushonis, who was stationed in Germany, went
at his own initiative to see an agent of the Criminal Investigation
Command. Until then, he had never been interviewed.

"I expected to be contacted at some point by investigators in this case,"
he said. "I was living a few doors down from the interrogation room, and I
had been one of the last to see this detainee alive."

Sergeant Yonushonis described what he had witnessed of the detainee's last
interrogation. "I remember being so mad that I had trouble speaking," he
said.

He also added a detail that had been overlooked in the investigative file.
By the time Mr. Dilawar was taken into his final interrogations, he said,
"most of us were convinced that the detainee was innocent."


Ruhallah Khapalwak, Carlotta Gall and David Rohde contributed reporting
for this article, and Alain Delaqueriere assisted with research.

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