Red Cross Seeks Access to CIA Prison

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) called on Thursday for access to all foreign terrorism suspects held by the United States after a report of a covert CIA prison system for al Qaeda captives.

The Washington Post said on Wednesday the CIA had been hiding and interrogating inmates at a secret facility in Eastern Europe, among so-called “black sites” in eight countries under a global network set up after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“We are concerned at the fate of an unknown number of people captured as part of the so-called global war on terror and held at undisclosed places of detention,” Antonella Notari, chief ICRC spokeswoman, told Reuters in response to a question.

“Access to detainees is an important humanitarian priority for the ICRC and a logical continuation of our current work in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay,” she added.

Also in Geneva, the United Nations’ Human Rights Committee said it had received two letters and a report from the United States which it hoped would address the issue of detainees being held outside the country.

“It was in our request to the United States. We are going to see how they answer,” committee chairwoman Christine Chanet for France told journalists, saying the committee had yet to study the documents.

The European Commission said on Thursday it would look into media reports naming two east European countries as allowing the CIA (U.S. Central Intelligence Agency) to hold al Qaeda suspects outside of any national or international legal jurisdiction.

EU CHECKING

Friso Roscam Abbing, spokesman for European Justice and Security Commissioner Franco Frattini, said the EU executive would check the reports with Poland, a new member state, and Romania, which is due to join the European Union in 2007.

The U.S.-based campaign organization Human Rights Watch said earlier it had indications the two were hosting CIA prisons.

Both denied the allegations on Thursday and the Commission’s Abbing said it had no knowledge of any such prisons at present.

“What I think we will do is to at a technical level… check what the truth is in these stories. We will check the accuracy of those reports,” he told a daily briefing.

He said the treatment of prisoners was not a matter of EU competence but any secret prisons would not appear compatible with the EU’s non-binding Charter of Fundamental Rights or the so-called Copenhagen political criteria for EU membership, which include upholding the rule of law and respect for human rights.

He said the Commission’s decision to check the reports did not signal any formal investigation, nor would it be appropriate for Frattini to personally question government leaders in the countries concerned.

Carroll Bogert, associate director of the New York-based Human Rights Watch, outlined earlier what had led the group to believe Poland and Romania were hosting the alleged CIA prisons.

She said the group based its assumption on flight logs, such as a Boeing 737 having made trips to eastern Europe from Afghanistan and countries in the Middle East.

One flight log showed that a plane went from Kabul to northeastern Poland on September 22, 2003. That was the same month that “we know several CIA prisoners who were held in Afghanistan were transferred out of Afghanistan and the next day the same plane landed at a military airport in Romania,” Bogert said.

The Romanian airfield had been closed to the public and the media for some time, she added.

The Washington Post said it had not published the names of the European countries at the request of senior U.S. officials who said disclosure could disrupt counterterrorism efforts or make the host countries targets for retaliation.

U.S. officials declined direct comment on the report, which was likely to stir up fresh criticism of the Bush administration’s treatment of terrorism suspects.

Russia’s FSB security service and Bulgaria’s foreign ministry both denied such facilities existed on their territory as did Thailand, which was named in the Washington Post report.

The U.N.’s Human Rights Committee monitors a 1976 treaty on basic freedoms. The regular report on compliance filed by the United States last Friday was some seven years overdue.

The committee, which will examine the report next July at a public session, said last year it had specifically asked that the issue of detention centers be included.

The ICRC, a neutral humanitarian organization, monitors whether prison conditions and treatment of detainees comply with the 1949 Geneva Conventions, which lay down rules for treating those captured in international armed conflicts.

(Additional reporting by Evelyn Leopold in New York, Adam Jasser in Warsaw, Martin Dokoupil in Bucharest, Richard Waddington in Geneva)

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The Torture Test

The next several days will show whether our Congress has slipped its moral moorings.  Seldom have moral lines been so clearly drawn.  The issue is whether American armed forces and intelligence personnel should be permitted or forbidden to torture detainees. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are expected to decide whether to ban torture against all prisoners held by the United States, to merely ban torture for some of those prisoners, or to reject outright any attempt to legislate a new ban on torture. The White House and the CIA are lobbying to exempt detainees held by the CIA from an amendment— sponsored by John McCain and endorsed by nearly all senators—that would ban “cruel, inhuman and degrading” treatment for all detainees held by the United States.

The context for the White House position is key. After the publication of the Abu Ghraib photos in 2004, the administration released a raft of documents claiming these documents showed that there was no policy allowing the abuse of prisoners.  It was surreal; the documents showed just the opposite.  It was as though the White House thought we couldn’t read.

Most striking was a memorandum of February 7, 2002, signed by President George W. Bush, on the treatment of Al Qaeda and Taliban detainees.  That memorandum records the president’s unilateral determination that the Geneva Convention on prisoners of war “does not apply to either al Qaeda or Taliban detainees.”  This decision is of dubious validity because there is no provision in the Geneva conventions that would countenance a unilateral decision to exempt prisoners from Geneva protections.

I will spare you most of the torturous language offered by the president’s lawyers.  Suffice it to say that paragraph 3 of his February 7 memorandum contains a gaping loophole that, in effect, authorizes torture:

As a matter of policy, the United States Armed Forces shall continue to treat detainees humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity , in a manner consistent with the principles of Geneva. (emphasis added)

How Did We Stoop So Low?

President Bush and Vice President Cheney set the tone.  According to counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke, it began on the evening of 9/11. Immediately after the president’s 8:30 p.m. TV address to the nation, he met with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Clarke in a bunker under the East Wing of the White House.  In his book, Against All Enemies , Clarke describes the president as “confident, determined, and forceful”:

I want you all to understand that we are at war…any barriers in your way, they’re gone.  Any money you need, you have it…I don’t care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass.

At a joint hearing of the House and Senate intelligence committees on September 26, 2002, Cofer Black, then-head of the Counterterrorism Center at CIA, emphasized the need for “operational flexibility,” adding that intelligence operatives cannot be held to the “old” standards.  Addressing torture, Black said:

This is a highly classified area, but I have to say that all you need to know: There was a before-9/11 and an after-9/11.  After 9/11 the gloves came off.

Yesterday, The Washington Post delivered fresh evidence that, within days of 9/11, Bush and Cheney told then-CIA director George Tenet to set CIA interrogators free from the customary restrictions.  In her article yesterday on the mini-gulag system of secret CIA-operated prisons overseas, Post reporter Dana Priest reported that on September 17, 2001, Bush signed a secret “finding” giving the CIA broad authorization to disrupt terrorist activity, including permission to kill, capture and detain Al Qaeda members anywhere in the world.

Authorization for “rendering” detainees to other countries for interrogation, as well as the establishment of secret prisons abroad, were probably subsumed under such a broad presidential “finding.”  Still, one can assume that Tenet and, indeed, the president himself would seek reassurance that they would be legally protected from prosecution in the future.  And this would account for the flurry of lawyerly activity in early 2002.

Why were then-White House counsel Alberto Gonzalez and David Addington, then counsel to Vice President Cheney (and recently appointed to replace I. Lewis Libby as chief of staff) and their counterpart attorneys at Justice and Defense at such pains to square the circle to make torture “legal?”  Addington reportedly took the lead in drafting the famous memorandum sent by Gonzales to the president on January 25, 2002, which described as “quaint” and “obsolete” some of the Geneva provisions, and reassured the president that there was “a reasonable basis in law” that—if he exempted Taliban and Al Qaeda detainees from Geneva protections—he could still avoid possible future prosecution for war crimes.  And so, Bush signed the February 7 memorandum, and Tenet’s hired thugs could feel more at ease employing so-called “Enhanced Interrogation Techniques”—including “water-boarding,” during which a detainee is repeatedly brought to the point of drowning.

In her report, Priest made it clear that only the chair and ranking members of the House and Senate intelligence committees were briefed on the secret prisons, and this is probably what happened with respect to other quasi-legal activities as well.  But there is a problem.  Members of Congress, however much they may enjoy being privy to real secrets and as prone as many are to give intelligence activities a wink and a nod, they cannot make illegal activities legal.  And that’s the rub.

Enter The Straight Man

Earlier this month, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who knows torture up close and personal, was joined by 89 other senators in voting for legislation that makes unlawful “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment of persons under custody or control of the United States government.”  The McCain initiative took the form of an amendment to this year’s $440-billion defense authorization bill, which includes about $50 billion needed for operations in Iraq. 

It will come as no surprise that Cheney is leading the fight against the amendment.  It is an unseemly spectacle.  Here we have a parvenu regarding things military—with multiple draft deferments to escape the war in Vietnam—importuning the highly decorated officer and torture survivor McCain to allow torture to continue in Iraq and elsewhere. No matter. Cheney descended on McCain and other senators last July and tried to twist their arms to put the amendment aside. Cheney was rebuffed, as he apparently was once again last week, when he and CIA chief Porter Goss made another attempt to dissuade McCain.

A few CIA professionals were angry enough to protest, but were assured by Goss’ Office of Congressional Affairs that Goss is on record as forbidding the use of torture by CIA officers.  This disingenuous reply came even as Goss joined Cheney in lobbying on the Hill to modify the McCain amendment so there would be no legal problems for CIA personnel engaging in torture—or for the CIA director who condoned it.

Yesterday, the president’s own United Methodist Church’s Board of Church and Society, in an almost unanimous vote, protested against the “unjust war in Iraq” and appealed for return of our troops.  The Board also issued a strong statement against torture, urging Congress to create an independent, bipartisan commission to investigate detention and interrogation practices at Guantanamo, Iraq and Afghanistan.  The Methodist bishops may issue a similarly strong statement next week.

Until now, the lukewarm mainstream churches have not been able to find their voice—a throwback to the unconscionably passive stance adopted by the Catholic and Lutheran churches that were co-opted by Hitler in the 1930s. Let us hope that other churches start paying attention to what is going on and follow the good example of the Methodists.

Otherwise, our government’s view will prevail.  As described by one former CIA lawyer that is “the law of the jungle.  And right now we happen to be the strongest animal.”

House and Senate conferees are to meet this week to reconcile the two versions of the defense bill.  The fate of the McCain amendment, which is included only in the Senate bill, hangs in the balance.  Three of the nine Republican senators who voted against the amendment are on the Senate/House conference committee.  What emerges will be a moral barometer.  It will be interesting to see if the barometer keeps falling.

Ray McGovern is co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.  He now works for Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, D.C.

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VCS Weekly Update: Veterans Day Press Conference


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November 4, 2005

Dear VCS Members and Supporters:

The New York Times this week ran a critical article, “Detainee Policy Sharply Divides Bush Officials”, detailing the internal debate within the Pentagon and the Bush administration over whether or not policies governing detainees and prisoners in the “War on Terror” should prohibit cruel, humiliating and degrading treatment.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?page=Article&ID=5305

As more and more information surfaces in the prisoner abuse scandal, it has become increasingly clear that the debate sets long term standards of the U.S. military against the civilian leadership of the White House and Pentagon. Recently the Senate approved, 90-9, language which would prohibit cruel treatment and torture, yet that provision faces stiff opposition from the leadership in the House of Representatives and a threatened veto from the White House.

Veterans for Common Sense believes that the use of torture and cruel treatment betrays core American values. Further, it damages the effort to stabliize Iraq and does irreparable harm to the U.S. image in the world.

After all, even President Dwight Eisenhower once commented that had the U.S. not promised humane treatment to its prisoners, the Germans would have resisted harder and prolonged the war.

Unfortunately, the U.S. administration — filled as it is with armchair generals who never saw combat in Vietnam or elsewhere — just doesn’t understand that they are destroyed decades of U.S. military tradition.

You can help ensure that the McCain Amendment, which passed 90-9 in the Senate two weeks ago, survives the Conference process and makes it into law.  Please take 5 minutes today to make a phone call to help ensure American values. Find out more here:

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/?page=Campaign&CampaignID=25

On Monday, Veterans for Common Sense will premier a full page ad in Congressional Quarterly, thanks to your help, calling on Congress to establish an independent commission to investigate torture. You can see the ad here:

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/files/vcs/VetsAdfullpagev2.pdf

The ad will run in CQ Weekly next week, as well as CQ Today on one or more days.

We’ll follow that with a press conference on November 11, Veterans Day, at the National Press Club. As soon as we have more information on the press conference, we’ll get it to you.

Please remember — conducting a press conference and running ads costs us many thousands of dollars. Your support for this work is critical. You can help — make a donation, on line or in the mail. Click here to make your donation or to get the address for sending a check.

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On-Line Events Calendar

If you have an upcoming Veterans Day event, memorial service, or other event that may be of interest to other VCS members, please let us know. To post your event online today, visit:

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/calendar.htm

As always, thanks for your support of Veterans for Common Sense.
With highest regards,

Charles Sheehan-Miles
Executive Director

NEWS

House Refuses to Consider Democratic Measure Condemning Republicans for Lax Oversight of Iraq War
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5326
Liz Sidoti Associated Press November 04, 2005
Democrats tried unsuccessfully Thursday to force the GOP-controlled House to take up a measure condemning Republicans for “their refusal to conduct oversight” of the Bush administration’s Iraq war policy and order investigations into it. The House voted 220-191 to set aside a resolution offered by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. “I think it brings shame to the House for this Congress to be engaged in a cover up when it comes to revealing what’s happening in Iraq,” Pelosi said.

THE WAR IN IRAQ

The war in Iraq: Was it worth it?
GEORGE PACKER North Jersey November 04, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5323
Before the invasion, there was the possibility of a world without Saddam Hussein and of an Iraq that no longer threatened endless violence in its volatile region – which was attractive. There was also the certainty of death and destruction in a new war, and the many reasons to doubt that this administration was up to the job – which was frightening.

COMMENTARY: U.S. cannot follow Vietnam example in Iraq
MICHAEL MURPHY Patriot Ledger South Boston November 04, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5320
History, like life, only moves forward. As some scribe said long ago, sometimes we learn from the past, and sometimes we repeat it.

The New Sunni Jihad: ‘A Time for Politics’
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad Almendhar November 04, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5318
NORTH OF BAGHDAD : For weeks before Iraq’s constitutional referendum this month, Iraqi guerrilla Abu Theeb traveled the countryside just north of Baghdad, stopping at as many Sunni Arab houses and villages as he could. Each time, his message to the farmers and tradesmen he met was the same: Members of the disgruntled Sunni minority should register to vote — and vote against the constitution.

U.S. Army adapts to ‘war of the flea’ in Iraq
Staff AlertNet /Reuters November 04, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5311
WASHINGTON, Nov 3 (Reuters) – In small steps and without fanfare, the U.S. Army is adapting its training to “the war of the flea,” the type of hit-and-run insurgency that is gripping Iraq, where more than 2,000 American military personnel have been killed.

Local military families divided on Iraq war
TOM RAGAN Santa Cruz Sentinel November 02, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5282
PAJARO — Rita Silva looked down at the photo album containing the pictures of Victor Gonzalez, her grandson, who was killed in Iraq last fall. She murmured in Spanish that he was “an American hero who died for his country.”

A Weekly Battle Over War in Iraq Outside Walter Reed on Friday Nights, Two Camps Stand Their Ground
Allan Lengel Washington Post November 03, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5296
Every Friday night, Gael Murphy and Kristinn Taylor meet in Northwest Washington, separated by a bustling four-lane road — and a whole lot more.

PRISONER ABUSE SCANDAL

U.S. Detainee Policies Under Growing Fire
Martin Sieff UPI November 03, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5306
The secret prison system set up by the United States to hold suspects in the war on terror was under critical new scrutiny on every side Wednesday. And the controversy appeared linked to widespread and growing speculation that U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney’s unprecedented power might be crumbling, in the wake of the indictment of his top aide.

Anti-torture measure protects U.S. troops
Miami Herald Editorial Board Miami Herald November 02, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5293
Here is a stong message to Vice President Richard Cheney, who supports the use of torture that endangers U.S. service members: The Miami Herald says “No.”

Detainee Policy Sharply Divides Bush Officials
TIM GOLDEN and ERIC SCHMITT New York Times November 03, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5305
The Bush administration is embroiled in a sharp internal debate over whether a new set of Defense Department standards for handling terror suspects should adopt language from the Geneva Conventions prohibiting “cruel,” “humiliating” and “degrading” treatment, administration officials say.

Bush Admin.: Treaty Outlawing Torture Doesn’t Apply Beyond U.S. Soil
Niko Kyriakou OneWorld US November 02, 2005
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=5290
Echoing recent comments by White House officials, a U.S. government report submitted to the United Nations last Friday bears a message that the brutal treatment of people held in U.S. military custody abroad is and should be legal. The report, which was submitted to the UN’s Human Rights Committee and is designed to document U.S. compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), fails to mention a number of U.S violations of the treaty that took place off of U.S. soil in places like Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, human rights groups say. “This is not a sufficient report,” said Ann Fagan Ginger, Executive Director of the Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute based in Berkeley, California. “The government continues its arrogant and illegal refusal to report major violations…in Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and elsewhere in Iraq and Afghanistan,” she told OneWorld Friday.

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Bush Retreats Inside His Bunker — Support in Polls Drops to 35{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d}

Bush Retreats Inside His Bunker — His administration has become its own republic of fear, and Bush is a prisoner to the right

Sidney Blumenthal, Guardian, Thursday November 3, 2005

One year after his re-election President Bush governs from a bunker. “We go forward with complete confidence,” he proclaimed in his second inaugural address. He urged “our youngest citizens” to see the future “in the determined faces of our soldiers”, to choose between “evil” and “courage”. But as he listened that day, Vice-President Dick Cheney knew the election had been secured by a cover-up.
“I would have wished nothing better,” declared Patrick Fitzgerald in his press conference of October 28 announcing the indictment of I Lewis “Scooter” Libby, the vice-president’s chief of staff, “that, when the subpoenas were issued in August 2004, witnesses testified then, and we would have been here in October 2004 instead of October 2005. No one would have went to jail.”

The indictment documents that Cheney confirmed the identity of Valerie Plame to him. The indictment also describes a figure called “Official A”, subsequently disclosed to be Karl Rove, the president’s chief political adviser, who informed Libby that he had told the conservative columnist Robert Novak of Plame’s status. The next day Libby conferred with Cheney on how to handle the matter; that very day, Libby revealed Plame’s identity to two reporters. Then Libby falsely testified that he had learned Plame’s name from reporters.

On September 30 2003 President Bush emphatically stated that he wanted anyone in his administration with information about the Plame leak to “come forward”. On June 10 2004 he pledged that anyone on his staff who leaked Plame’s name would be fired.

When the Libby indictment was announced, Bush and Cheney praised him as a fine public servant. Still under investigation, Rove remains in the West Wing. But Cheney knew during the presidential campaign that he had discussed with Libby how to deal with Plame. Now Bush knows that Rove had enabled Robert Novak to publish her identity. But the president’s promise to fire officials is suddenly inoperative.

Libby’s alleged cover-up was undertaken in the spirit of neoconservative Leninism. Any tactic is rationalised by the vanguard, which sets all policy and uses the party as its instrument. If he had testified truthfully in October 2004 the result would have consumed the final days of the campaign. His Leninist logic permitted him to protect the Republican cause, but he has tainted Bush’s victory in history.

Bush took his 2004 win as a resounding mandate for a rightwing agenda. With each right turn, however, his popularity declined. Iraq acted as an accelerator of his fall. His nomination of Harriet Miers for the supreme court was an acknowledgement of his sharply narrowed political space. While the Republican masses supported him, the Leninist right staged a revolt. In Bush’s cronyism and opportunism they saw his deviation. With the prosecutor’s indictment imminent, Bush withdrew Miers. Broadly unpopular, he could not suffer a split right. His new nominee, federal judge Samuel Alito, a reliable sectarian, is a tribute to his bunker strategy.

Hostage to his failed fortune, Bush is a prisoner of the right. His administration has become its own republic of fear. Libby’s trial will reveal the administration’s political methods. Cheney, along with a host of others, will be called to testify. Whatever other calamities may befall Bush, their spectre harries him to the right. “Disunity, dissolution and vacillation” are hallmarks of “the path of conciliation”, as Lenin wrote in What is to be Done. The vanguard on “the path of struggle” criticised for being “an exclusive group,” must oppose any retreat proposed by the “opportunist rearguard”. “We are surrounded on all sides by enemies, and we have to advance almost constantly under their fire.”

sidney_blumenthal@yahoo.com

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Bush’s Iraq War Policy Is Now in Play

Bush War Policy Is Now in Play

Democrats renew their criticism as public opposition solidifies, the body count grows and prewar intelligence is under a new assault.

Janet Hook and Ronald Brownstein, Los Angeles Times, November 3, 2005

WASHINGTON — For months, the politics of the Iraq war have been frozen in place, with stalwart Republicans defending President Bush’s policy and most Democrats shunning a direct challenge.

Now the ice has begun to crack.

In the face of solidifying public opposition to the war, a mounting U.S. body count and a renewed focus on the faulty intelligence used to justify the war, Democratic lawmakers and candidates have sharpened their critique of the administration’s policy and, in some cases, urged a withdrawal of U.S. troops.

“The mood has really shifted,” said Sen. Russell D. Feingold (D-Wis.), who in August became the chamber’s first member to call for a troop withdrawal. “We are in a whole different period.”

Meanwhile, some Republicans who were strong backers of Bush’s policy increasingly are distancing themselves from his optimism that the U.S. mission will be successful — even after the recent approval of an Iraqi constitution.

“I hope that is a turning point,” Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said of the constitution’s passage. “But there is increasing skepticism. We’ve had a lot of events that appeared to be turning points, but the violence continues.”

The changing political dynamic was dramatized this week when Democrats launched an unusually bold challenge: They essentially shutdown the Senate to force the release of a languishing report on whether the administration had distorted or mishandled intelligence in making the case for invading Iraq. Republicans, although angered, quickly agreed to investigate the status of the report.

Even before the Senate showdown, challenges to administration policy had been multiplying. Sen. John F. Kerry of Massachusetts, the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee, recently called for new ways to accelerate troop withdrawals. Several Democratic congressional candidates began to urge Bush to set a timeline for ending U.S. involvement in the war.

The new focus on Iraq — especially after the U.S. casualty count passed 2,000 last week and after the indictment of a top White House aide who allegedly sought to discredit a high-profile war critic — underscores the issue’s likely prominence in next year’s election.

When other hot issues fade, “the first thing that pops back up is concern about Iraq,” said Bill McInturff, a Republican pollster. “Iraq is fundamental to the political debate in 2006. People are going to focus on and want to know: Where are we going and what’s the plan?”

The debate next fall could look very different from the arguments today. In both parties, many believe the administration could reshape the political landscape by beginning to withdraw troops. And many Republicans believe that increased Democratic criticism of Bush’s policies will drive more Americans to rally behind the president.

Democrats remain deeply divided on what alternative to offer — and whether they should offer one at all.

Yet persistent public discontent with the war has clearly strengthened the position of Democrats who urge more confrontation.

Most Americans now consider the decision to invade a mistake, according to recent polls.

And in a survey released in mid-October by the Pew Research Center, a narrow majority said the U.S. should set a timetable for withdrawing its forces.

Among rank-and-file Democrats, disillusionment with the war has become overwhelming, the polls show. After months of nearly complete disconnect, more Democratic elected officials and candidates are echoing those sentiments.

In a speech last week, Kerry argued that the U.S. should link troop reductions to “specific, responsible benchmarks” of progress in Iraq — for instance, by bringing home 20,000 soldiers after Iraqi elections in December.

In an e-mail to supporters Wednesday, Kerry said if Bush didn’t meet that goal, “we will demand that Congress acts to take the decision out of his hands.”

Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri, the traditionally hawkish ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, wrote to Bush last week, saying the U.S. should withdraw one combat brigade each time three Iraqi brigades are fully trained.

Democrats Bryan Lentz and Patrick Murphy, two Iraq war veterans challenging Republicans in potentially competitive House races in Pennsylvania, are promoting benchmark-linked timelines for withdrawing U.S. troops.

“As long as we are doing the job, the Iraqis are going to say, ‘The Americans are here,’ ” said Murphy, who served eight months in Iraq as an Army captain. “You need to give them the incentive to do it.”

In Ohio, Paul Hackett, another Iraq war veteran, generally opposed a timetable for withdrawal during his unsuccessful high-profile summer campaign for a House seat.

But Hackett, as he faces off in a Democratic Senate primary against Rep. Sherrod Brown, has embraced a time limit set in cooperation with the military.

Brown has endorsed legislation that would require Bush to draft a withdrawal plan by year’s end.

Democratic Senate contenders Matt Brown in Rhode Island and Patty Wetterling in Minnesota are backing a complete U.S. withdrawal by the end of next year.

Liberal activists welcome those positions. Tom Matzzie, Washington director of the group MoveOn.org, said the party would benefit from disillusionment over the war in next year’s elections only if it presented voters “a vision for how America will get out of Iraq.”

But most of the big names in the Democratic foreign policy establishment — such as Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware and retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark — fear that a push for a fixed timetable for withdrawal will hurt the Iraq war effort and the Democratic cause in 2006.

“I think the only thing that can rescue Bush from the consequences of his inept handling of Iraq is overkill by zealous Democrats,” said Will Marshall, president of the Progressive Policy Institute, a centrist Democratic think tank.

The divisions among Republicans are more subtle, but they are growing.

The vast majority of Republicans support the war and argue that there is no viable alternative to staying the course. But it is increasingly difficult for them to keep the bad news in Iraq from eclipsing what they see as good news.

“We try to keep an ear to the ground, and the ground is rumbling,” said Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.). “I offer my constituents the assurance that this is a path on which we must be successful. But it’s being reacted to with unease and uncertainty.”

Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), facing a tough reelection fight in 2006, has been accused by his opponent, Democrat Bob Casey Jr., of uncritically backing the administration’s policy in Iraq. Aides to Santorum — the Senate’s No. 3 Republican leader — responded by combing his record to find criticisms he voiced about aspects of the war.

Rep. Anne M. Northup (R-Ky.), who represents a Democratic-leaning district, distanced herself from Bush on Iraq in a recent interview with National Public Radio.

“I don’t say, as the president does, that I am sure that we are going to be successful in Iraq,” she said. “I don’t say that because I am not sure.”

Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio), who is up for reelection next year, also is far more cautious than Bush in his comments about the war’s course. DeWine said that when he was asked about the issue by worried constituents, “I tell them the jury is still out.

“People are very concerned.”

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U.S. Detainee Policies Under Growing Fire

The secret prison system set up by the United States to hold suspects in the war on terror was under critical new scrutiny on every side Wednesday. And the controversy appeared linked to widespread and growing speculation that U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney’s unprecedented power might be crumbling, in the wake of the indictment of his top aide.

However, administration sources said President George W. Bush and his top officials remained determined to continue waging the war on terror in the way they have over the past four years.

The president and his top team believe that the success of the U.S. military and intelligence and domestic security services in preventing any follow-up catastrophic attack on the U.S. mainland comparable to, or worse than, the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks that killed 2,800 people had justified the wisdom of their tactics and strategy, the sources said.

Administration insiders said Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld were the driving forces in the tough policy of holding hundreds, possibly thousands, of suspect Islamist detainees in a network of former Soviet prisons in Eastern European nations eager to stay on good terms with the United States.

But late week, Cheney lost his trusted right-hand man of the past five years when I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, his chief of staff, was forced to resign after being indicted for perjury by Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald in the investigation of the exposure of CIA agent Valerie Plame.

And The New York Times reported that Cheney had been the individual who had disclosed Plame’s identity to Libby, a story that put Cheney in the cross hairs of the continuing investigation.

On Wednesday, The New York Times reported aides to Cheney and some senior Pentagon officials had opposed tightening up the legal definitions on handling terror suspects. Some Defense Department and State Department officials had urged tightening up the language and using terms from the Geneva Convention that prevent “cruel,” “humiliating” and “degrading” treatment, the paper said.

The New York Times said that Pentagon officials were revising four major documents, including two high-level directives on detention operations and interrogations and the U.S. Army’s interrogations manual as part of their response to the 12 major investigations and policy reviews that had followed the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal.

Administration sources said that Libby’s departure would not mean any softening in the vice president’s stance on detainee policy. They noted that Libby’s successor as Cheney’s national security adviser, John Hannah, had served since the start of the Bush administration as Libby’s own right-hand man and had shared with him responsibility in formulating key policy positions.

Also, The New York Times reported Wednesday that David Addington, Libby’s successor in his other position as Cheney’s chief of staff, also fiercely opposed imposing tougher standards governing the handling terror suspects. The paper said Addington had even “verbally assailed” a Pentagon aide who was briefing him and Libby on the proposed new draft.

However, Cheney’s opponents in the administration have also been emboldened by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.’s, tough stand on the issue. As UPI has reported, McCain is increasingly seen as a potential vice presidential successor to Cheney should the latter have to step down either for reasons of ill-health or if he is implicated in the future in Fitzgerald’s on-going Plame investigation.

The debate within the administration followed increasing pressure from the Senate, spearheaded by McCain, for the Bush administration to crack down on any possibility that torture might be used in any systematic or widespread way against detainees.

Following McCain’s leadership, the Senate has overwhelmingly approved, by 90 votes to nine, an amendment to the $445 billion defense appropriations bill that would crack down heavily to prevent the use of torture. President Bush has threatened to veto the measure.

Cheney unsuccessfully tried to persuade McCain to soften his measure. But McCain, who was tortured during his years as a captive of the North Vietnamese during the Vietnam War, is morally committed on the issue and refuses to back down.

Also Wednesday, the Washington Post reported that some of the most important al-Qaida suspects to have been captured in the now four-year-old war on terror were being held at a Soviet-era compound in an unidentified country in Eastern Europe.

It said the facility was part of a “covert prison system” that has included sites in eight countries including Afghanistan and several democracies in Eastern Europe. The paper cited “U.S. and foreign officials familiar with the arrangement” as its sources for the report.

The sites were described as “black sites” in classified White House, CIA, Defense Department and congressional documents, the paper said.

The U.S. government appears especially anxious to maintain large secure facilities outside the Muslim world because of the increased danger that suspects can escape in friendly Muslim countries. Omar al-Farouq, one of Osama bin Laden’s top lieutenants in al-Qaida, managed to escape with three accomplices from a U.S. facility in Afghanistan in July.

The Indonesian government, which is fighting al-Qaida’s allied Islamist organization Jemaah Islamiyah, was furious that an embarrassed Bush administration did not promptly inform them of the escape after it occurred.

The Indonesian security authorities had captured al-Farouq and handed him over to the United States. The fiasco of al-Farouq’s escape is believed to have made President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono much more reluctant to hand over such important figures to the U.S. authorities in the future.

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First Casualty of War

First Casualty of War

By Eric Alterman, Los Angeles Times, November 3, 2005

Eric Alterman is a senior fellow of the Center for American Progress. His “When Presidents Lie: A History of Official Deception and its Consequences” is just out in paperback from Penguin.

It is just a coincidence, but fortuitous nevertheless, that the Democrats forced the Senate into a special secret session to discuss how we got into the war in Iraq during the same week that we finally learned the nation was deliberately misled about the famous “Tonkin intercepts” that helped lead us into Vietnam more than 40 years ago.

What worried the Democrats about Iraq turns out to be exactly what happened in Vietnam. We know now, thanks to one brave and dogged historian at the National Security Agency, that after the famed Gulf of Tonkin “incident” on Aug. 4, 1964 — in which North Vietnam allegedly attacked two American destroyers — National Security Council officials doctored the evidence to support President Johnson’s false charge in a speech to the nation that night of “open aggression on the high seas against the United States of America.”

In fact, no real evidence for those attacks has ever been found. The entire case rested on the alleged visual sightings of an inexperienced 23-year-old sonar operator. Nevertheless, Johnson took the opportunity to order the bombing of North Vietnam that night and set the nation inexorably on a path toward the “wider war” he promised he did not seek. And administration bigwigs never admitted publicly that they might have acted in haste and without giving contradictory signals their proper weight.

On the contrary, military and national security officials scrambled wildly to support the story. The media cooperated, with lurid reports of the phony battle inspired by fictional updates like the one Johnson gave to congressional leaders: “Some of our boys are floating around in the water.”

The new study apparently solves a mystery that has long bedeviled historians of the war: What was in those famous (but classified) North Vietnamese “intercepts” that Defense Secretary Robert McNamara was always touting to Congress, which allegedly proved the attack took place? Until recently, most assumed that McNamara and others had simply misread the date on the communications and attributed conversations between the North Vietnamese about an earlier Tonkin incident on Aug. 2, 1964, (when the destroyer Maddox was briefly and superficially under fire) to Aug. 4, the day of the phony attack. But, according to the New York Times, NSA historian Robert J. Hanyok has concluded that the evidence was deliberately falsified: there were translation mistakes that were not corrected, intelligence that was selectively cited and intercept times that were altered.

In revealing the story Monday, the Times reported that Hanyok’s efforts to have his classified findings made public had been rejected by higher-level agency policymakers who, beginning in 2003, “were fearful that it might prompt uncomfortable comparisons with the flawed intelligence used to justify the war in Iraq.”

And rightly so. The parallels between the Tonkin episode and the war in Iraq are far too powerful for political comfort. In both cases, top U.S. national security officials frequently asserted a degree of certainty about the alleged actions and capabilities of an adversary that could not possibly be supported by the available evidence. In both cases, it’s possible that the president might have been honestly misguided rather than deliberately deceptive — at least at first. But in neither case would anyone admit the possibility of an honest mistake.

Johnson does not appear to have known that he was retaliating for an imaginary attack when he ordered U.S. planes to take off on the evening of Aug. 4. But, according to Alexander Haig, who was at work at the Pentagon that night, “Everyone on duty wanted to make it possible for the president to do what he wanted to do.” The director of the U.S. Information Agency, Carl Rowan, wondered: “Do we know for a fact that the North Vietnamese provocation took place? Can we nail down exactly what happened? We must be prepared to be accused of fabricating the incident.” McNamara said they would know for sure the next morning. But the speech couldn’t hold.

The phony Tonkin incident alone did not cause the Vietnam War. But the fact that the war was initially inspired by an attack that was, in fact, fabricated after the fact made the experience far more bitter for its victims. Doubts about the incident arose almost immediately. A 1966 article in the magazine Ramparts on Tonkin and the war caught the flavor of the times with its title, “The Whole Damn Thing Was a Lie.”

The Bush administration’s desire to keep secret the story of a 40-year-old deception — a set of official lies, phony documents and trumped-up data that led the country into a debilitating, counterproductive and deceptive war — simply to protect its own misdeeds is despicable, however typical. But thanks to Hanyok’s willingness to go public against the administration’s wishes, we know who was lying vis-à-vis Vietnam.

One day we may learn the truth about Iraq. Let’s hope for the sake of a future president who finds himself similarly tempted to mislead the nation into conflict that the warnings of history will be viewed with humility rather than hubris, and that the nation will be spared yet another war based on official lies.

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Partisan Quarrel Forces Senators to Bar the Doors

Partisan Quarrel Forces Senators to Bar the Doors

By CARL HULSE and DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, New York Times, November 2, 2005

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 – Democrats forced the Republican-controlled Senate into an unusual closed session on Tuesday over the Bush administration’s use of intelligence to justify the Iraq war and the Senate’s willingness to examine it.

The move provoked a sharp public confrontation between the two parties as the Republicans lost control of the chamber for two hours and were left to complain bitterly about what they called an unnecessary “stunt.” The confrontation demonstrated an escalation of partisan tensions in the wake of last week’s indictment of the White House aide I. Lewis Libby Jr. in the C.I.A. leak case.

Senator Bill Frist, the majority leader, and other senior Republicans said Senator Harry Reid, the Democratic leader, had blindsided them by invoking a seldom-used rule and that the maneuver had seriously damaged relations in the Senate, where partisan tension was already high.

“This is an affront to me personally,” an angry Mr. Frist said.

He said would find it difficult to trust Mr. Reid any longer.

“It’s an affront to our leadership,” Mr. Frist said. “It’s an affront to the United States of America. And it is wrong.”

But Democrats said last week’s indictment of Mr. Libby, the chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, highlighted anew the need for the Senate to examine the administration’s handling of intelligence. They said the unusual demand for a closed session was made out of frustration with the refusal of the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, Senator Pat Roberts, Republican of Kansas, to make good on his February 2004 pledge to pursue such an investigation.

“We see the lengths they’ve gone to,” said Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat, referring to the disclosure of a C.I.A. officer’s identity. “And now the question is, Will this Senate meet its responsibility under the Constitution to hold this administration, as every administration should be held, accountable?”

After Mr. Reid invoked Senate Rule 21 allowing senators to request a closed session, the galleries were cleared, C-Span coverage was terminated and the chamber’s doors were closed for about two hours. In the end, lawmakers agreed to name three members from each party to assess the state of the Intelligence Committee’s inquiry into prewar intelligence and report back by Nov. 14.

Mr. Roberts denied having done anything to slow the inquiry. In fact, he said, Intelligence Committee staff members were aggressively working on what is known as the Phase 2 intelligence inquiry, so named because the panel completed its initial work on the quality of the intelligence in July 2004.

“We have agreed to do what we already agreed to do,” Mr. Roberts said on the Senate floor, “and that is to complete as best we can phase two of the Intelligence Committee’s review of prewar intelligence in reference to Iraq.”

But Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, the senior Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, questioned Mr. Roberts’s commitment to the inquiry. He said that whenever the panel closed in on the sensitive question of administration handling of intelligence, “then all of a sudden an iron curtain comes down.”

“I have to say in all honesty that I am troubled by what I see as a concerted effort by this administration to use its influence to limit, delay, to frustrate, to deny the Intelligence Committee’s oversight work into the intelligence reporting and activities leading up to the invasion of Iraq,” Mr. Rockefeller said.

Democrats have sought to use the indictment to press for Congressional hearings in both the House and Senate. And Mr. Reid and others have called publicly for President Bush to apologize for the activities that led to the indictment as well as urging the ouster of Karl Rove, the deputy White House chief of staff who also figured in the investigation. Democrats say the administration has so far exhibited only a “bunker mentality.”

“We have seen over and over again that this administration does not want to hear information they don’t like,” said Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York. “Instead of, like Ronald Reagan’s administration did, meeting the arguments, they simply choose to belittle the arguer.”

A closed session is infrequent but not unheard of in the Senate and is usually conducted to discuss matters of national security.

Democrats said there had been 54 “secret” sessions since 1929, with 6 of the most recent held during the impeachment of President Bill Clinton.

But the Senate in its early days met only in closed session, prohibiting the public and even members of the House of Representatives from watching. Rule 21 allowing a senator to request a closed session was adopted after the Senate in 1795 opened its doors.

Mr. Frist and other leading Republicans said they were particularly angry that Mr. Reid had provided them no warning of his intention, which they considered a breach of Senate etiquette.

“I’m astounded by this,” said Senator Trent Lott, Republican of Mississippi and a former majority leader. “I don’t really know what the tenor of this is, or what is the justification for it, and why this extreme, you know, approach was used.”

Mr. Reid said he had no alternative because Senate Republicans had repeatedly ignored Democratic calls to finish up the inquiry.

“If Senator Frist is upset about my following Senate procedures, then I’m sorry he’s disappointed with my following Senate procedures,” Mr. Reid said.

He added that he had “zero” regrets about his maneuver. “The American people had a victory today,” Mr. Reid said.

 

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CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons

CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons – Debate Is Growing Within Agency About Legality and Morality of Overseas System Set Up After 9/11

By Dana Priest
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 2, 2005; A01

The CIA has been hiding and interrogating some of its most important al Qaeda captives at a Soviet-era compound in Eastern Europe, according to U.S. and foreign officials familiar with the arrangement.

The secret facility is part of a covert prison system set up by the CIA nearly four years ago that at various times has included sites in eight countries, including Thailand, Afghanistan and several democracies in Eastern Europe, as well as a small center at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, according to current and former intelligence officials and diplomats from three continents.

The hidden global internment network is a central element in the CIA’s unconventional war on terrorism. It depends on the cooperation of foreign intelligence services, and on keeping even basic information about the system secret from the public, foreign officials and nearly all members of Congress charged with overseeing the CIA’s covert actions.

The existence and locations of the facilities — referred to as “black sites” in classified White House, CIA, Justice Department and congressional documents — are known to only a handful of officials in the United States and, usually, only to the president and a few top intelligence officers in each host country.

The CIA and the White House, citing national security concerns and the value of the program, have dissuaded Congress from demanding that the agency answer questions in open testimony about the conditions under which captives are held. Virtually nothing is known about who is kept in the facilities, what interrogation methods are employed with them, or how decisions are made about whether they should be detained or for how long.

While the Defense Department has produced volumes of public reports and testimony about its detention practices and rules after the abuse scandals at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison and at Guantanamo Bay, the CIA has not even acknowledged the existence of its black sites. To do so, say officials familiar with the program, could open the U.S. government to legal challenges, particularly in foreign courts, and increase the risk of political condemnation at home and abroad.

But the revelations of widespread prisoner abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq by the U.S. military — which operates under published rules and transparent oversight of Congress — have increased concern among lawmakers, foreign governments and human rights groups about the opaque CIA system. Those concerns escalated last month, when Vice President Cheney and CIA Director Porter J. Goss asked Congress to exempt CIA employees from legislation already endorsed by 90 senators that would bar cruel and degrading treatment of any prisoner in U.S. custody.

Although the CIA will not acknowledge details of its system, intelligence officials defend the agency’s approach, arguing that the successful defense of the country requires that the agency be empowered to hold and interrogate suspected terrorists for as long as necessary and without restrictions imposed by the U.S. legal system or even by the military tribunals established for prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.

The Washington Post is not publishing the names of the Eastern European countries involved in the covert program, at the request of senior U.S. officials. They argued that the disclosure might disrupt counterterrorism efforts in those countries and elsewhere and could make them targets of possible terrorist retaliation.

The secret detention system was conceived in the chaotic and anxious first months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when the working assumption was that a second strike was imminent.

Since then, the arrangement has been increasingly debated within the CIA, where considerable concern lingers about the legality, morality and practicality of holding even unrepentant terrorists in such isolation and secrecy, perhaps for the duration of their lives. Mid-level and senior CIA officers began arguing two years ago that the system was unsustainable and diverted the agency from its unique espionage mission.

“We never sat down, as far as I know, and came up with a grand strategy,” said one former senior intelligence officer who is familiar with the program but not the location of the prisons. “Everything was very reactive. That’s how you get to a situation where you pick people up, send them into a netherworld and don’t say, ‘What are we going to do with them afterwards?’ “

It is illegal for the government to hold prisoners in such isolation in secret prisons in the United States, which is why the CIA placed them overseas, according to several former and current intelligence officials and other U.S. government officials. Legal experts and intelligence officials said that the CIA’s internment practices also would be considered illegal under the laws of several host countries, where detainees have rights to have a lawyer or to mount a defense against allegations of wrongdoing.

Host countries have signed the U.N. Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, as has the United States. Yet CIA interrogators in the overseas sites are permitted to use the CIA’s approved “Enhanced Interrogation Techniques,” some of which are prohibited by the U.N. convention and by U.S. military law. They include tactics such as “waterboarding,” in which a prisoner is made to believe he or she is drowning.

Some detainees apprehended by the CIA and transferred to foreign intelligence agencies have alleged after their release that they were tortured, although it is unclear whether CIA personnel played a role in the alleged abuse. Given the secrecy surrounding CIA detentions, such accusations have heightened concerns among foreign governments and human rights groups about CIA detention and interrogation practices.

The contours of the CIA’s detention program have emerged in bits and pieces over the past two years. Parliaments in Canada, Italy, France, Sweden and the Netherlands have opened inquiries into alleged CIA operations that secretly captured their citizens or legal residents and transferred them to the agency’s prisons.

More than 100 suspected terrorists have been sent by the CIA into the covert system, according to current and former U.S. intelligence officials and foreign sources. This figure, a rough estimate based on information from sources who said their knowledge of the numbers was incomplete, does not include prisoners picked up in Iraq.

The detainees break down roughly into two classes, the sources said.

About 30 are considered major terrorism suspects and have been held under the highest level of secrecy at black sites financed by the CIA and managed by agency personnel, including those in Eastern Europe and elsewhere, according to current and former intelligence officers and two other U.S. government officials. Two locations in this category — in Thailand and on the grounds of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay — were closed in 2003 and 2004, respectively.

A second tier — which these sources believe includes more than 70 detainees — is a group considered less important, with less direct involvement in terrorism and having limited intelligence value. These prisoners, some of whom were originally taken to black sites, are delivered to intelligence services in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Afghanistan and other countries, a process sometimes known as “rendition.” While the first-tier black sites are run by CIA officers, the jails in these countries are operated by the host nations, with CIA financial assistance and, sometimes, direction.

Morocco, Egypt and Jordan have said that they do not torture detainees, although years of State Department human rights reports accuse all three of chronic prisoner abuse.

The top 30 al Qaeda prisoners exist in complete isolation from the outside world. Kept in dark, sometimes underground cells, they have no recognized legal rights, and no one outside the CIA is allowed to talk with or even see them, or to otherwise verify their well-being, said current and former and U.S. and foreign government and intelligence officials.

Most of the facilities were built and are maintained with congressionally appropriated funds, but the White House has refused to allow the CIA to brief anyone except the House and Senate intelligence committees’ chairmen and vice chairmen on the program’s generalities.

The Eastern European countries that the CIA has persuaded to hide al Qaeda captives are democracies that have embraced the rule of law and individual rights after decades of Soviet domination. Each has been trying to cleanse its intelligence services of operatives who have worked on behalf of others — mainly Russia and organized crime.

Origins of the Black Sites

The idea of holding terrorists outside the U.S. legal system was not under consideration before Sept. 11, 2001, not even for Osama bin Laden, according to former government officials. The plan was to bring bin Laden and his top associates into the U.S. justice system for trial or to send them to foreign countries where they would be tried.

“The issue of detaining and interrogating people was never, ever discussed,” said a former senior intelligence officer who worked in the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center, or CTC, during that period. “It was against the culture and they believed information was best gleaned by other means.”

On the day of the attacks, the CIA already had a list of what it called High-Value Targets from the al Qaeda structure, and as the World Trade Center and Pentagon attack plots were unraveled, more names were added to the list. The question of what to do with these people surfaced quickly.

The CTC’s chief of operations argued for creating hit teams of case officers and CIA paramilitaries that would covertly infiltrate countries in the Middle East, Africa and even Europe to assassinate people on the list, one by one.

But many CIA officers believed that the al Qaeda leaders would be worth keeping alive to interrogate about their network and other plots. Some officers worried that the CIA would not be very adept at assassination.

“We’d probably shoot ourselves,” another former senior CIA official said.

The agency set up prisons under its covert action authority. Under U.S. law, only the president can authorize a covert action, by signing a document called a presidential finding. Findings must not break U.S. law and are reviewed and approved by CIA, Justice Department and White House legal advisers.

Six days after the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush signed a sweeping finding that gave the CIA broad authorization to disrupt terrorist activity, including permission to kill, capture and detain members of al Qaeda anywhere in the world.

It could not be determined whether Bush approved a separate finding for the black-sites program, but the consensus among current and former intelligence and other government officials interviewed for this article is that he did not have to.

Rather, they believe that the CIA general counsel’s office acted within the parameters of the Sept. 17 finding. The black-site program was approved by a small circle of White House and Justice Department lawyers and officials, according to several former and current U.S. government and intelligence officials.

Deals With 2 Countries

Among the first steps was to figure out where the CIA could secretly hold the captives. One early idea was to keep them on ships in international waters, but that was discarded for security and logistics reasons.

CIA officers also searched for a setting like Alcatraz Island. They considered the virtually unvisited islands in Lake Kariba in Zambia, which were edged with craggy cliffs and covered in woods. But poor sanitary conditions could easily lead to fatal diseases, they decided, and besides, they wondered, could the Zambians be trusted with such a secret?

Still without a long-term solution, the CIA began sending suspects it captured in the first month or so after Sept. 11 to its longtime partners, the intelligence services of Egypt and Jordan.

A month later, the CIA found itself with hundreds of prisoners who were captured on battlefields in Afghanistan. A short-term solution was improvised. The agency shoved its highest-value prisoners into metal shipping containers set up on a corner of the Bagram Air Base, which was surrounded with a triple perimeter of concertina-wire fencing. Most prisoners were left in the hands of the Northern Alliance, U.S.-supported opposition forces who were fighting the Taliban.

“I remember asking: What are we going to do with these people?” said a senior CIA officer. “I kept saying, where’s the help? We’ve got to bring in some help. We can’t be jailers — our job is to find Osama.”

Then came grisly reports, in the winter of 2001, that prisoners kept by allied Afghan generals in cargo containers had died of asphyxiation. The CIA asked Congress for, and was quickly granted, tens of millions of dollars to establish a larger, long-term system in Afghanistan, parts of which would be used for CIA prisoners.

The largest CIA prison in Afghanistan was code-named the Salt Pit. It was also the CIA’s substation and was first housed in an old brick factory outside Kabul. In November 2002, an inexperienced CIA case officer allegedly ordered guards to strip naked an uncooperative young detainee, chain him to the concrete floor and leave him there overnight without blankets. He froze to death, according to four U.S. government officials. The CIA officer has not been charged in the death.

The Salt Pit was protected by surveillance cameras and tough Afghan guards, but the road leading to it was not safe to travel and the jail was eventually moved inside Bagram Air Base. It has since been relocated off the base.

By mid-2002, the CIA had worked out secret black-site deals with two countries, including Thailand and one Eastern European nation, current and former officials said. An estimated $100 million was tucked inside the classified annex of the first supplemental Afghanistan appropriation.

Then the CIA captured its first big detainee, in March 28, 2002. Pakistani forces took Abu Zubaida, al Qaeda’s operations chief, into custody and the CIA whisked him to the new black site in Thailand, which included underground interrogation cells, said several former and current intelligence officials. Six months later, Sept. 11 planner Ramzi Binalshibh was also captured in Pakistan and flown to Thailand.

But after published reports revealed the existence of the site in June 2003, Thai officials insisted the CIA shut it down, and the two terrorists were moved elsewhere, according to former government officials involved in the matter. Work between the two countries on counterterrorism has been lukewarm ever since.

In late 2002 or early 2003, the CIA brokered deals with other countries to establish black-site prisons. One of these sites — which sources said they believed to be the CIA’s biggest facility now — became particularly important when the agency realized it would have a growing number of prisoners and a shrinking number of prisons.

Thailand was closed, and sometime in 2004 the CIA decided it had to give up its small site at Guantanamo Bay. The CIA had planned to convert that into a state-of-the-art facility, operated independently of the military. The CIA pulled out when U.S. courts began to exercise greater control over the military detainees, and agency officials feared judges would soon extend the same type of supervision over their detainees.

In hindsight, say some former and current intelligence officials, the CIA’s problems were exacerbated by another decision made within the Counterterrorist Center at Langley.

The CIA program’s original scope was to hide and interrogate the two dozen or so al Qaeda leaders believed to be directly responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks, or who posed an imminent threat, or had knowledge of the larger al Qaeda network. But as the volume of leads pouring into the CTC from abroad increased, and the capacity of its paramilitary group to seize suspects grew, the CIA began apprehending more people whose intelligence value and links to terrorism were less certain, according to four current and former officials.

The original standard for consigning suspects to the invisible universe was lowered or ignored, they said. “They’ve got many, many more who don’t reach any threshold,” one intelligence official said.

Several former and current intelligence officials, as well as several other U.S. government officials with knowledge of the program, express frustration that the White House and the leaders of the intelligence community have not made it a priority to decide whether the secret internment program should continue in its current form, or be replaced by some other approach.

Meanwhile, the debate over the wisdom of the program continues among CIA officers, some of whom also argue that the secrecy surrounding the program is not sustainable.

“It’s just a horrible burden,” said the intelligence official.

Researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

 

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Remember That Mushroom Cloud?

November 2, 2005, New York Times Editorial Board

Remember That Mushroom Cloud?

The indictment of Lewis Libby on charges of lying to a grand jury about the outing of Valerie Wilson has focused attention on the lengths to which the Bush administration went in 2003 to try to distract the public from this central fact: American soldiers found a lot of things in Iraq, including a well-armed insurgency their bosses never anticipated, but they did not find weapons of mass destruction.

It’s clear from the indictment that Vice President Dick Cheney and his staff formed the command bunker for this misdirection campaign. But there is a much larger issue than the question of what administration officials said about Iraq after the invasion – it’s what they said about Iraq before the invasion. Senator Harry Reid, the minority leader, may have been grandstanding yesterday when he forced the Senate to hold a closed session on the Iraqi intelligence, but at least he gave the issue a much-needed push.

President Bush, Vice President Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell and George Tenet, to name a few leading figures, built support for the war by telling the world that Saddam Hussein was stockpiling chemical weapons, feverishly developing germ warfare devices and racing to build a nuclear bomb. Some of them, notably Mr. Cheney, the administration’s doomsayer in chief, said Iraq had conspired with Al Qaeda and implied that Saddam Hussein was connected to 9/11.

Last year, the Senate Intelligence Committee did a good bipartisan job of explaining that the intelligence in general was dubious, old and even faked by foreign sources. The panel said the analysts had suffered from groupthink. At the time, the highest-ranking officials in Washington were demanding evidence against Iraq.

But that left this question: If the intelligence was so bad and so moldy, why was it presented to the world as what Mr. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, famously called “a slam-dunk” case?

Were officials fooled by bad intelligence, or knowingly hyping it? Certainly, the administration erased caveats, dissents and doubts from the intelligence reports before showing them to the public. And there was never credible intelligence about a working relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda.

Under a political deal that Democrats should not have approved, the Intelligence Committee promised to address these questions after the 2004 election. But a year later, there is no sign that this promise is being kept, other than unconvincing assurances from Senator Pat Roberts, the Republican who is chairman of the intelligence panel, that people are working on it.

So far, however, there has been only one uncirculated draft report by one committee staff member on the narrow question of why the analysts didn’t predict the ferocity of the insurgency. The Republicans have not even agreed to do a final report on the conflict between the intelligence and the administration’s public statements.

Mr. Reid wrested a commitment from the Senate to have a bipartisan committee report by Nov. 14 on when the investigation will be done. We hope Mr. Roberts now gives this half of the investigation the same urgency he gave the first half and meets his commitment to examine all aspects of this mess, including how the information was used by the administration. Americans are long overdue for an answer to why they were told there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

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