In November 2002, a newly minted CIA
case officer in charge of a secret prison just north of Kabul allegedly
ordered guards to strip naked an uncooperative young Afghan detainee,
chain him to the concrete floor and leave him there overnight without
blankets, according to four U.S. government officials aware of the
case. The Afghan guards -- paid by the CIA and working under CIA
supervision in an abandoned warehouse code-named the Salt Pit --
dragged their captive around on the concrete floor, bruising and
scraping his skin, before putting him in his cell, two of the officials
said. As night fell, so, predictably, did the temperature. By morning,
the Afghan man had frozen to death. After a quick autopsy by a CIA
medic -- "hypothermia" was listed as the cause of death -- the guards
buried the Afghan, who was in his twenties, in an unmarked,
unacknowledged cemetery used by Afghan forces, officials said. The
captive's family has never been notified; his remains have never been
returned for burial. He is on no one's registry of captives, not even
as a "ghost detainee," the term for CIA captives held in military
prisons but not registered on the books, they said. The fact that the
Salt Pit case has remained secret for more than two years reflects how
little is known about the CIA's treatment of detainees and its handling
of allegations of abuse. The public airing of abuse at Abu Ghraib
prompted the Pentagon to undertake and release scathing reports about
conduct by military personnel, to revise rules for handling prisoners,
and to prosecute soldiers accused of wrongdoing. There has been no
comparable public scrutiny of the CIA, whose operations and briefings
to Congress are kept classified by the administration. [more]
Republican Chairman Opposes C.I.A. Abuse Inquiry The
Republican chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee is opposing a
request by the panel's top Democrat to investigate possible misconduct
by the C.I.A. in the treatment of terrorism suspects, Congressional
officials said Tuesday. The chairman, Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, is
insisting that any review be conducted only as part of the committee's
standard oversight role, not a broader inquiry, an aide to Mr. Roberts
said. [more]
Bush Lackey Gonzales Defends Transfer of Detainees for Torture. Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales
yesterday defended the practice of "extraordinary rendition," the
process under which the United States sometimes transfers detainees in
the war on terrorism to other nations where they may undergo harsh
interrogation, trial or imprisonment. Gonzales, speaking to reporters at the Justice
Department yesterday, said that U.S. policy is not to send detainees
"to countries where we believe or we know that they're going to be
tortured." That represents a slight modification of his congressional
testimony in January that renditions would not be made to countries
where it is "more likely than not" they will be tortured. Gonzales
added yesterday that if a country has a history of torture, Washington
seeks additional assurances that it will not be used against the
transferred detainee. At the same time, he said, the administration
"can't fully control" what other nations do, according to accounts of
his remarks by wire services. He added that he does not know whether
countries have always complied with their promises. [more]
U.S. soldiers investigated for shooting Afghan villagers [more]
American Jails in Iraq Are Bursting With Detainees [more]