A Deadly Interrogation: Can The CIA Legally Kill a Prisoner?
Friday, November 11th,
2005
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/11/11/157256
We
speak with journalist Jane Mayer of The New Yorker as the Senate rejects demands
for an independent commission on torture and the US military. We look at whether
CIA agents are being allowed to kill detainees in their custody. [includes rush
transcript]
The Republican-led Senate
has rejected a Democratic effort this week to establish an independent
commission to investigate the U.S. military for its interrogation practices. The
55 to 43 vote was split largely along party lines.
The Democrats were trying to set up a panel along
the lines of the 9/11 Commission to investigate how the U.S. has been treating
detainees in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo. The vote came a week after the
Washington Post revealed new details about a network of secret overseas prisons
run by the CIA. And it came two weeks after Vice President Dick Cheney met with
Senator John McCain to urge him to exempt the CIA from a proposed law to bar
cruel and degrading treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody. The editors of The
Washington Post responded to Cheney’s request by describing him as
“Vice President for
Torture.”On Thursday, Senator
John McCain, who survived torture as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War,
spoke out against torture and said the Abu Ghraib scandal has enormously harmed
the country.Senator John
McCain:
“Torture does not work.
The Israeli Supreme Court in 1999 said that the Israelis could not torture or
practice cruel and inhumane processes on the people they take prisoners. The
Israeli defense officials who I have discussed this with say that it
doesn’t work and they use psychological techniques and so on, it
doesn’t work. And two, it’s so damaging to us in an image fashion.
And three, the next conflict we’re in this government will use that same
rationale to inflict serious injuries to Americans who may become
captive.”Last week former
President Jimmy Carter criticized the administration’s detainee
policies.Jimmy
Carter:
“The insistence by our
government that the CIA or others have a right to torture prisoners in
Guantanamo Bay and around the world is just one indication of what this
administration has done that is a departure from past
policies.”Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist said on Thursday that he has no concerns about how detainees are
being treated in secret overseas prisons. He said, "I am not concerned about
what goes on and I’m not going to comment about the nature of
that."However, Frist questioned how
classified information about the CIA’s secret prisons appeared in the
pages of the Washington Post. He said, "My concern is with leaks of information
that jeopardize your safety and security -- period. That is a legitimate
concern."We look at whether CIA agents
are being allowed to kill detainees in their custody. In the new issue of The
New Yorker, investigative reporter Jane Mayer examines the death of Manadel
al-Jamadi. He suffocated two years ago during a CIA interrogation at the Abu
Ghraib prison. His head had been covered with a plastic bag and he was shackled
in a crucifixion-like pose that inhibited his ability to breathe. The U.S.
government classified Jamadi’s death as a homicide. But the CIA officer
who interrogated Jamadi has never been charged with a crime and continues to
work with the agency. • Jane
Mayer, investigative journalist, staff writer for the New Yorker Magazine. He
recent article is A Deadly
Interrogation: Can The CIA Legally Kill a
Prisoner?.RUSH
TRANSCRIPTThis transcript is available free
of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and
hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate - $25,
$50, $100,
more...AMY GOODMAN: On Thursday,
Senator John McCain spoke out against the torture and said the Abu Ghraib
scandal has enormously harmed the
country. • SEN. JOHN McCAIN: Torture
does not work. The Israeli Supreme Court in 1999 said that the Israelis could
not torture or practice cruel or inhumane people on the people they take
prisoner. The Israeli defense officials who I have discussed this with say that
it doesn't work and they use psychological techniques, and so, (1) it doesn't
work, (2) it's so damaging to us in an image fashion, and (3) the next conflict
we're in this government will use that same rationale to inflict serious injury
to Americans who may become captive.AMY
GOODMAN: That was Senator John McCain, who survived torture as a prisoner during
the Vietnam War. Last week former President Jimmy Carter criticized the
administration’s detainee
policies. • JIMMY CARTER: The
insistence by our government that the C.I.A. or others have the right to torture
prisoners in Guantanamo and around the world is just one indication of what this
administration has done that’s a radical departure from past
policies.AMY GOODMAN: Former President Jimmy
Carter on the Today Show. Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist said
Thursday he has no concerns about how detainees are being treated in secret
overseas prisons. He said, quote, "I am not concerned about what goes on, and
I'm not going to comment about the nature of that." However, Dr. Frist
questioned how classified information about the C.I.A.'s secret prisons appeared
in the pages of the Washington Post. He said, quote, "My concern is with leaks
of information that jeopardize your safety and security, period. That is a
legitimate concern," Frist said.Well, today
we're going look at whether C.I.A. agents are being allowed to kill detainees in
their custody. In the issue of The New Yorker magazine, investigative reporter
Jane Mayer examines the death of Manadel al-Jamadi. He suffocated two years ago
during a C.I.A. interrogation at the Abu Ghraib prison. His head had been
covered with a plastic bag. He was shackled in a crucifixion-like pose that
inhibited his ability to breathe. The U.S. government classified Jamadi's death
as a homicide, but the C.I.A. officer who interrogated Jamadi has never been
charged with a crime and continues to work with the agency. Jane Mayer joins us
now from our studio in Washington D.C. She is a staff writer for The New Yorker
magazine. Welcome to Democracy Now!,
Jane.JANE MAYER: Thanks a lot. Great to be
here.AMY GOODMAN: It's good to have you with
us. Can you lay out the story of what happened to this
man?JANE MAYER: He was captured by Navy
Seals in his house in Baghdad. He was a suspect in blowing up a number of
things, including the Red Cross headquarters, so we're not talking about a boy
scout here, but he was captured in a fight and turned over to the C.I.A. And
when he walked into Abu Ghraib prison on November 4, 2003, he was walking and
talking, and 45 minutes later he was dead. And so, what I was trying to do was
pull back the curtain. None of us really know exactly what's happening behind
those doors, where people are being interrogated in secret locations by unnamed
people. So what I was able to do was put together a paper trail, looking at
documents that had come out in a related trial and see what it is they were
doing in this case, and what they were doing was lethal in this case. So,
anyway, it was just a way to try to shed some light on what's really been a
secret practice.As you know, many people on
the Hill have been unable to get their hands on the instructions for what kinds
of interrogation techniques we do use, and the White House keeps saying,
“We don't torture,” but obviously they're fighting very hard to keep
some kind of loophole open there to be able to do something that they describe
as ‘just short of torture,’ which is cruel, inhumane and degrading
things. And what happened in this case was a man was – he was stripped and
then had his hands shackled behind his back and then attached to a window up
above his head, and eventually, because of the bag on his head and because he
had several broken ribs, he was unable to breathe. He eventually just died of
asphyxiation.JUAN GONZALEZ: Your article
identifies the only C.I.A. agent who was in the room at the time, Mark Swanner,
and also a translator –JANE MAYER:
Right.JUAN GONZALEZ: – that was also
in the room. And it also mentions that an Inspector General's report raised
issues of possible criminality in this case, but that nothing has
happened.JANE MAYER: Isn't that interesting?
Yes. The Inspector General at the C.I.A. is actually said to be a very
independent and quite, you know, conscientious investigator of some of the
problems inside the agency. And he had – did a very thorough report, sent
it on to the Justice Department saying that there was the possibility of
criminal behavior in this case. That was more than a year ago that that report
reached the Justice Department, and there it has, according to one of the
lawyers I talked to, lain fallow, as they say, and nothing has gone forward. And
I think the reason is, and I was interviewing a lot of people who know about the
law and the C.I.A. were saying that to open – to prosecute this case would
open a complete can of worms. It would mean that they would have to examine in
court, in an open courtroom probably, what it is that the C.I.A. really is
allowed to do to people when they interrogate them. What are these rules? What
do they mean when they say it's not torture, but it is cruel, inhumane and
degrading? And this would just be, you know, shining a klieg light on
that.AMY GOODMAN: Jane Mayer, the picture
we've seen repeatedly, one of them from Abu Ghraib, this is Jamadi, the man who
was wrapped in plastic, dead?JANE MAYER:
Yes, and they put him on ice so that his body wouldn't decompose, so he is sort
of known – among at least the reporters, as ‘the iceman.’
Yeah. It was a picture that came out along with the other disclosures when all
of the revelations broke about Abu Ghraib, and it was a picture that, you know,
I think contributed mightily to the black eye that the country got, because, you
know, it was clear that somebody had died in U.S. custody. And it's still clear,
and it's still clear that nobody has been charged in connection with this death,
at least not inside the C.I.A. Actually, a bunch of Navy Seals were put on trial
in connection with charges of abusing Jamadi, and they were exonerated. So the
question then was raised: If the Seals didn't kill him, who did? And the
Seals’ defense lawyers are pointing the finger at the
C.I.A.JUAN GONZALEZ: Now, Senator John
McCain obviously has been leading an effort in Congress and the Senate to
basically ban even the C.I.A.'s involvement in this kind of abusive behavior,
but at the same time the senator also voted in the Senate vote yesterday that
would basically prevent detainees at a place like Guantanamo from being able to
appeal in the federal courts their cases. It's a bit of a contradiction, it
seems, in the senator’s stance in some of these
issues.JANE MAYER: Yeah, I agree. I do think
that there – and it looked like a backdoor way for the administration
really to get around the McCain legislation. They’ve just found another
way to skin the cat. I mean, there's a lot of confusion about what the C.I.A.
does, and what it ought to be allowed to do, but I can tell you this, I mean, I
think that the administration has tried to make it sound like this is something
that has always been true in times of war, that we've been able to use powers
like this, and it's not so. The C.I.A. has never been in the business of holding
prisoners or interrogating prisoners like this, and certainly not in using
lethal force or, you know, forms of torture. This is – it really is a
brave new world, because basically after 9/11 when Dick Cheney said, you know,
“We need to be working on the dark side,” he was – the
administration believed that there needed to be a new paradigm that would
require them to use kinds of techniques and act in ways that had never been used
before. The C.I.A. is bound by U.S. law, and so what they came up with was the
notion that somehow if they did these things to foreign prisoners in non-U.S.
territory, they could go through a loophole in the law that nobody else ever
thought existed, and that's what they're fighting
about.AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Jane
Mayer, who writes for The New Yorker magazine. Her latest piece is “A
Deadly Interrogation: Can the C.I.A. Legally Kill a Prisoner?” Michael
Ratner, President of the Center for Constitutional Rights, commented on the
Lindsey Graham, that’s the Republican Senator’s measure that would
override the Supreme Court decision that grants detainees the right to appeal.
The Times reporting nearly two hundred of the roughly five hundred detainees
currently held at Guantanamo have appeals pending. The approved amendment would
nullify all of them. This is Michael
Ratner. • MICHAEL RATNER: This is
saying that people who are fighting for their rights in Guantanamo, who have
been kept there for four years, who have been detained, who have been tortured
and who have so far had the rights to attorneys and who won the right to have
attorneys in the Supreme Court, Congress is now saying, ‘Courts can no
longer hear any case out of Guantanamo. The people are going to be kept, the
detainees, simply at the behest of the President. He can do what he wants with
them. If he’s going to torture them, he can do that. No lawyers will have
access. No courts will be able to review those detentions.’ It's something
that really has not happened since the Civil War in the United
States.AMY GOODMAN: Michael Ratner,
President of the Center for Constitutional Rights. Our guest, Jane Mayer,
writing for The New Yorker. Jane?JANE MAYER:
I was just going to say, I think under-girding this is, while the administration
hasn't said it outright, they do believe that torture works. I spoke last night
with John Yoo, who used to be a lawyer in the Office of Legal Counsel in the
Justice Department, who wrote many of the guidelines on what can and can't be
done. And he was speaking here in Washington and I talked to him for a little
bit, and he said, “You know, torture works.” He said that we have a
lot of information that we've gotten from terrorists by using these kinds of
techniques. You know, what's interesting is almost every other expert that I've
ever interviewed, people from the C.I.A., people from the F.B.I., they say you
get unreliable information out of torture, and it doesn't work. In addition to
the moral questions, it's not practical. But that's not what John Yoo thinks,
and John Yoo was a very important member of the administration on this, so I
think that is really what is beneath all of
this.JUAN GONZALEZ: And he’s often a
commentator on the Lehrer NewsHour and isn't quite as explicit when he’s
talking on the Lehrer NewsHour as he was when he was talking to
you.JANE MAYER: No, it was kind of amazing
to have him say it outright. He's a law professor now, so maybe he can speak
more freely, but, you know, I have to believe that Vice President Cheney thinks
torture works and that these methods work somehow, and they also think –
and the other thing that is under-girding this fight is the White House at this
point believes that the President needs to have completely unfettered executive
power to wage the war in any way he sees fit, and that none of the international
laws or any of the constraints that might have been imposed by Congress are
constitutional, as far as they're concerned. So this is really a lot about a
theory of executive power that is, you know, imperial power
practically.JUAN GONZALEZ: Any sense in your
investigation of the impact on the career military officers or others within the
government, their response to these extreme new measures that have been adopted
by the Bush administration in recent
years?JANE MAYER: Well, I mean, we had, you
know, the case of Ian Fishbeck, who was a – I can’t remember his
rank -- lieutenant or captain, who came out and said, “You know, the
problem with all of this is it's creating confusion on the ground.” People
don't know, the people who are stuck actually having to interrogate these
prisoners don't know what the rules are, and they don't know where the limits
are, and, of course, if they step over them they are in jeopardy of being
prosecuted themselves. All the Lynndie Englands, all the lower level people are
the ones who get in trouble. The people who have created this confusion have, so
far, been indemnified, and very purposefully so. I mean, they’ve written
sort of guidelines that make it almost impossible for them to get in
trouble.AMY GOODMAN: How high up does this
go? I mean, we know about Alberto Gonzales, as White House Chief Counsel,
writing the memo that says the Geneva Conventions don't apply, and it turns out
actually David Addington, who has now replaced Scooter Libby as Chief of Staff
of Dick Cheney, was involved in the writing of that memo. He has since been
elevated. Your reports talking about the autopsy being performed by military
pathologists, according to Jeffrey Smith, the former General Counsel of the
C.I.A., now private practice lawyer, “A decision to prosecute Swanner
would probably go all the way to the Attorney
General.”JANE MAYER: Well, I mean, the
issue is that at the top of the Justice Department, Alberto Gonzales is the
person who played a major part in creating these interrogation rules, so it
would be very hard for him to actually bring prosecutions against people for
following rules that he helped create. Now, in the case of Swanner, it's unclear
whether he was following rules or if this was an unauthorized interrogation, but
in any case, to raise all those issues is to shine light on top of, you know,
Gonzales and others in the Justice Department. So it's very hard for them to
bring prosecutions in a case like this without a lot of political damage being
done.AMY GOODMAN: And that issue, you said
of, well, ‘torture works.’ Torture also doesn't work, aside from the
moral reasons, just in the last few days the New York Times reporting the Bush
administration was warned in February 2002 that intelligence reports alleging
ties between Iraq and al-Qaeda were likely fabricated by a member of al-Qaeda in
U.S. detention. However, the Bush administration ignored the Defense
Intelligence Agency warning that the detainee Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi was lying.
His faulty claims were repeatedly used to justify the invasion of Iraq, and it
turns out al-Libi may have been speaking to interrogators after he was tortured.
He was captured in November 2001 in
Afghanistan.JANE MAYER: He was –
actually, he's an interesting case. He was somebody who was rendered by –
he was taken – there was a fight over him between the F.B.I. and the
C.I.A. And the F.B.I. wanted to treat him like a criminal, read him his rights
and interrogate him in the sort of usual fashion we do in this country. The
C.I.A. got a hold of him and took him away, and they took him to unknown other
countries where he was interrogated in ways that were considerably rough,
apparently. There were rumors that he had kind of lost his grip on sanity at
some point along the way, and he then came up with this information that worked
its way into Colin Powell’s U.N. address, which, as we know, later became
– was not true. It was one of the great regrets of Powell's life was that
he gave that speech, apparently, without checking the information more. So there
can be really damage done by false intelligence, and that means damage done by
methods that create false intelligence, like using force in a way that makes the
information unreliable. I mean, in the case of Jamadi, just take a look in this
story that I was writing this week. Jamadi died before he told them anything.
So, I mean, it was completely self-defeating what happened in this
case.AMY GOODMAN: Jane Mayer, we want to
thank you for being with us, writes for The New Yorker Magazine. Her latest
piece is called "A Deadly Interrogation: On Torture and the C.I.A.: Can the
C.I.A. Legally Kill a
Prisoner?"www.democracynow.org
Posted: Fri - November 11, 2005 at 09:43 PM
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Published On: Nov 14, 2005 09:04 PM
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