The Sheikh and the Torture Senator
By Ann Wright
t r u t h o u t | Guest Contributor
Thursday 22 March 2007
Last week, senior al-Qaeda operative Khalid Sheikh Mohammed reportedly confessed
during his Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT) at the US prison in the US
Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He is said to have admitted planning
virtually every al-Qaeda attack on the United States. But during the military
tribunal proceedings, he also said he was tortured during his four-year confinement
in CIA secret prisons. Senators Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC)
viewed the Guantanamo proceedings over a special video link into the US Senate.
Afterwards, Levin said that Sheikh Mohammed's allegations of torture by US officials
must be investigated.
Senator Levin, you don't have to go far to find someone who knows about Sheikh
Mohammed's torture.
I was in the audience February 12, 2007, during the Washington, DC, screening
of the new HBO documentary, "The Ghosts of Abu Ghraib." After watching
the documentary, panelists Senators Lindsey Graham and Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.)
discussed prisoner abuse and torture at Abu Ghraib.
To the amazement of the audience, Graham said with a twinkle in his eye that
"Americans don't mind torture; they really don't." Then he smiled
broadly, almost gleefully, and said that the US had used certain interrogation
techniques on "Sheikh Mohammed, one of the 'high-value' targets" -
techniques that "you really don't want to know about, but they got really
good results."
I firmly believe that Graham's statement acknowledged that US officials have
tortured prisoners, and he, as a senator, knew what was done and agrees with
the torture because "it got results."
Except you don't know what the results are. In the case of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
it appears that with torture you can get someone to confess to masterminding
the entire al-Qaeda attack on the United States. Senior FBI officials are questioning
some of Sheikh Mohammed's assertions of guilt. It reminds us of the FBI's concern
about torture techniques used by both the CIA and the US military on prisoners
in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo - techniques that can elicit confessions
just to get the torturers to stop.
In January 2007, I was in the city of Guantanamo with human rights activists,
calling for the closure of the US military prison on the fifth anniversary of
the first prisoners being sent there. With us was former prisoner Asif Iqbal,
a 23-year-PS: HBO old who told us that he had been beaten by US interrogators until
he confessed to helping plan the 9/11 attacks. In reality, he was a completely
innocent young man who happened to be in Afghanistan when the US attack began
and he was swept up with hundreds of other local people. He told us how prisoners
in Afghanistan and in Guantanamo confessed to anything the interrogators wanted,
to prevent further torture.
I am horrified that US senators have been complicit in knowing of criminal
acts of our intelligence agencies and doing nothing to stop them. Graham told
400 of us in the audience on February 22 that he knew of the torture of Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed. Graham is a military lawyer and a civilian lawyer. He knew
that the torture of Sheikh Mohammed was a criminal act and did nothing to stop
it.
Senator Levin, if you want to know about torture committed by US government
officials, please put under oath your colleague, Senator Lindsey Graham, and
ask him "what he knew and when he knew it."
P.S. HBO filmed the senator's remarks. Please watch the HBO video and see his
comments for yourself.
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Ann Wright is a 29-year retired US Army Reserve colonel and also a
16-year US diplomat who served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan,
Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. She was on the team that reopened the
US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, in December 2001. She resigned from the US
diplomatic corps in March 2003 in opposition to the war in Iraq.
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