April 30, 2007
"Make Sure This Happens!!"
How Rumsfeld Micromanaged Torture

By ANDREW COCKBURN

When Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld boasted, as he did
frequently, of his unrelenting focus on the war on terror, his
audience would have been startled, maybe even shocked, to discover the
activities that Rumsfeld found it necessary to supervise in minute
detail. Close command and control of far away events from the Pentagon
were not limited to the targeting of bombs and missiles. Thanks to
breakthroughs in communications, the interrogation and torture of
prisoners could be monitored on a real time basis also.

The first prisoner to experience such attention from Rumsfeld's
office, or the first that we know about, was an American citizen, John
Walker Lindh, a young man from California whose fascination with Islam
had led him to enlist in the Taliban. Shortly thereafter, he and
several hundred others surrendered to the Northern Alliance warlord
Abdu Rashid Dostum in return for a promise of safe passage. Dostum
broke the deal, herding the prisoners into a ruined fortress near
Mazar-e-Sharif. Lindh managed to survive, though wounded, and
eventually fell into the hands of the CIA and Special Forces, who
proceeded to interrogate him.

According to documents later unearthed by Richard Serrano of the Los
Angeles Times, a Special Forces intelligence officer was informed by a
Navy Admiral monitoring events in Mazar-e-Sharif that "the Secretary
of Defense's Counsel (lawyer William Haynes) has authorized him to
'take the gloves off' and ask whatever he wanted." In the course of
the questioning Lindh, who had a bullet in his leg, was stripped
naked, blindfolded, handcuffed, and bound to a stretcher with duct
tape. In a practice that would become more familiar at Abu Ghraib
prison in Iraq 18 months later, smiling soldiers posed for pictures
next to the naked prisoner. A navy medic later testified that he had
been told by the lead military interrogator that "sleep deprivation,
cold and hunger might be employed" during Lindh's interrogations.
Meanwhile, his responses to the questioning, which ultimately went on
for days, were relayed back to Washington, according to the documents
disclosed to Serrano, every hour, hour after hour. Someone very
important clearly wanted to know all the details.

Lindh was ultimately tried and sentenced in a U.S. court, but Rumsfeld
was in no mood to extend any kind of legal protection to other
captives. As the first load of prisoners arrived at the new military
prison camp at Guantanamo, Cuba, on January 11, 2002, he declared them
"unlawful combatants" who "do not have any rights under the Geneva
Convention." In fact, the Geneva Conventions provide explicit
protection to anyone taken prisoner in an international armed
conflict, even when they are not entitled to actual prisoner of war
status, but no one at that time was in a mood to contradict the
all-powerful secretary of defense.

<etc.>
--
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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