Court Documents Reveal Existence of New Torture Tapes

by: t r u t h o u t | Report

Court Documents Reveal Existence of New Torture Tapes
On Monday, a federal court ordered the government to turn over a videotape of the brutal interrogation of a Guantanamo detainee to the prisoner's lawyers. (Photo Illustration: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t, Adapted From: daliborlev / flickr, remuz / flickr)

    A federal court judge on Monday revealed that the brutal interrogation of an alleged "war on terror" detainee imprisoned at Guantanamo for more than seven years was videotaped and she ordered the government to turn over the materials to the prisoner's lawyers.

    Mohammed al-Qahtani was someone Bush administration officials had referred to as the "20th hijacker" of the 9/11 attacks. The government claimed the Saudi man intended to take part in 9/11, but he was denied entry into the United States by an immigration official a month before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

    As reported previously, specific interrogation methods used against al-Qahtani were approved by former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in a December 2002 action memorandum.

    The treatment of al-Qahtani was cataloged in an 84-page "torture log" that was leaked in 2006. The "torture log" shows that beginning in November 2002 and continuing well into January 2003, al-Qahtani was subjected to sleep deprivation, interrogated in 20-hour stretches, poked with IVs and left to urinate on himself.

    In an interview with The Washington Post last January, Susan Crawford, the retired judge who heads military commissions at Guantanamo, became the highest ranking US official who said the interrogation of al-Qahtani met the legal definition of torture and, as a result, she would not allow a war crimes tribunal against him to proceed because the evidence against him was tainted.

    "We tortured [al] Qahtani," Crawford told veteran Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward. Though the war crimes charges were dropped, al-Qahtani remains detained indefinitely at Guantanamo, where he has been imprisoned since February 2002.

    Al-Qahtani filed a habeas corpus petition in October 2006 challenging his imprisonment, and his attorneys argued that any admissions he made about his alleged involvement in terrorist activities were extracted through torture and threats of torture, assertions that Bush administration officials had vehemently denied.

    The human rights group, Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which has represented al-Qahtani since 2005, disclosed the court documents containing details of the existence of video and audiotapes of al-Qahtani's interrogations. The group filed court papers in March seeking any video tapes of al-Qahtani's interrogation and other records.

    "After the intense scrutiny of the government's torture and interrogation of Mr. al Qahtani, it is shocking that the government has hidden the existence of these tapes from the public for so many years," said CCR attorney Gitanjali S. Gutierrez. "The government's interrogation of him has been the topic of multiple military, Justice Department and congressional investigations. These tapes should have been acknowledged long ago."

    In a six-page order, US District Court Judge Rosemary Collyer wrote: "in order to clear these tapes for release, multiple agencies including the Department of Defense ('DOD'), the FBI, and the Central Intelligence Agency would have to review the tapes frame-by frame" and that would be "excessively burdensome."

    "However, the tapes created at the end of the period from August 13, 2002 to November 22, 2003 likely have some value to [the defense]," Collyer added. "To justify [al-Qahtani's] detention, the Government relies on [his] statements made from April 2003 through March 2004. [Al-Qahtani] challenges the veracity and reliability of the statements.

    "He contends that his statements were so tainted by the cumulative effects of abusive treatment that took place previously that the statements cannot be credited or relied upon ... To provide relevant information to [al-Qahtani] and yet to ease the burden on the Government, the Court will order the Government to produce only those audio/video recordings of Petitioner created between November 15, 2002 and November 22, 2002."

    On November 23, 2002, Rumsfeld verbally authorized interrogators to use harsh methods during the interrogation of al-Qahtani, according to previous investigations into the Bush administration's torture program.

    According to an FBI inspector general's report released last year, agents employed by the bureau raised concerns in October 2002 with Marion Bowman, the Justice Department's deputy general counsel in charge of national security, about the methods used during interrogations at Guantanamo Bay.

    An FBI agent stationed at Guantanamo then sent the agency an analysis on November 27, 2002, calling into question the legality of the interrogation techniques, stating that the methods used appeared to violate the US torture statute. Bowman then alerted William "Jim" Haynes, then the Department of Defense general counsel.

    The same day Bowman raised concerns with Haynes, Haynes advised Rumsfeld to approve of the "enhanced interrogation" methods, according to comments Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California) made during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last year that focused on the contents of the FBI report.

    "According to Mr. Bowman, Haynes claimed he didn't know anything about the coercive interrogation techniques that were occurring at Guantanamo, despite the fact that he recommended on November 27, 2002, that Secretary Rumsfeld formally approve the very techniques that were being used at Guantanamo" and during al-Qahtani's interrogation, Feinstein said.

    Rumsfeld, FBI Inspector General Glenn Fine told the committee, ignored FBI agents' warnings and on December 2, 2002, signed an action memorandum approving the use of "enhanced techniques" against prisoners at Guantanamo, concluding that the tactics stopped short of torture.

    On December 11, 2002, interrogators began to apply what they called the "pride and ego down approach," subjecting al-Qahtani to religious and sexual humiliation, making him bark like a dog and calling him "a pig" as he was made to pick up piles of trash with his hands cuffed. According to a December 13, 2002, entry contained in the al-Qahtani's "torture log," the interrogators sought to "escalate the detainee's emotions."

    "A mask was made from an MRE [meals ready to eat] box with a smiley face on it and placed on the detainee's head for a few moments. A latex glove was inflated and labeled the 'sissy slap' glove. This glove was touched to the detainee's face periodically after explaining the terminology to him.

    "The mask was placed back on the detainee's head. While wearing the mask, the team began dance instruction with the detainee. The detainee became agitated and began shouting. The mask was removed and detainee was allowed to sit. Detainee shouted and addressed lead [interrogator] as 'the oldest Christian here' and wanted to know why lead allowed the detainee to be treated this way."

    The log contains numerous entries describing al-Qahtani's reaction to the interrogations, as he cried, shook, moaned, yelled, prayed, cried out for Allah, trembled uncontrollably and asserted his innocence.

    According to a report by CCR attorneys, "on one occasion described in the interrogation log, Mr. al-Qahtani was rushed to a military base hospital when his heart rate fell dangerously low during a period of extreme sleep deprivation, physical stress and psychological trauma.

    "The military flew in a radiologist from the US Naval Station in Puerto Rico to evaluate the computed tomography ('CT' or 'CAT') scan. After being permitted to sleep a full night, medical personnel cleared Mr. al-Qahtani for further interrogation the next day. During his transportation from the hospital, Mr. al-Qahtani was interrogated in the ambulance."

    Rumsfeld's December 2, 2002, action memo was criticized by Alberto Mora, the former general counsel of the Navy.

    "The interrogation techniques approved by the Secretary [of Defense] should not have been authorized because some (but not all) of them, whether applied singly or in combination, could produce effects reaching the level of torture, a degree of mistreatment not otherwise proscribed by the memo because it did not articulate any bright-line standard for prohibited detainee treatment, a necessary element in any such document," Mora wrote in a 14-page letter to the Navy's inspector general.

    A December 20, 2005, Army inspector general report relating to the capture and interrogation of al-Qahtani included a sworn statement by Lt. Gen. Randall M. Schmidt, who said Secretary Rumsfeld was "personally involved" in the interrogation of al-Qahtani and spoke "weekly" with Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, the commander at Guantanamo, about the status of the interrogations between late 2002 and early 2003.

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This entire spectacle of

This entire spectacle of torture is a smokescreen to prevent a proper and thorough (re)investigation of 9/11. The subject of torture has become a great and endless theatrical display and consume of media attention with a very specific purpose. To do what this country has done, without check or oversight - round up a vast number of innocent Arabs with Arab sounding names and torture them along with video-taping those very torture sessions, then have endless court hearings and discussions on the media about what tapes and photos get to be released - describe (part of) the greatest cover-up of a US-based crime on its own soil in U.S. history. 9/11 was an insiders' job. All this torture stuff is a secondary smokescreen to drive us deeper and deeper into the original 9/11 narrative, which is an easily proven lie.


When will Geoffrey Miller be

When will Geoffrey Miller be prosecuted for war crimes?


Corrections for 1639: "The

Corrections for 1639: "The subject of torture has become a great and endless theatrical display that will consume the media'a attention with a very specific purpose. (Sorry for these typos.)


What is outrageous is that

What is outrageous is that after we worked so hard to give our Democrats TOTAL POWER, they can't seem to remember their Oath and their duty to protect our Constitution and Enforce Our Federal Anti-Torture Laws. Put yourself out for the Truth. Get out in the streets in front of your Congressional Representative's office and raise hell. Start your own "prosecution" protest group. KEEP ASKING ALL POLITICIANS AT ALL PUBLIC EVENTS "WHY DO YOU SUPPORT TORTURE?" If they aren't actively calling for enforcement of our Federal Torture Laws, They DO Support Torture and a dual standard of Justice. SIGN THE PETITIONS Demanding prosecution for all those leaders in Bush's Administration that Conspired to Torture at ANGRYVOTERS.ORG http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG Only Prosecution Stops Torture, Abuse of Power, our Constitution, & Rule Of Law


Current talks in Australia's

Current talks in Australia's media are of the excuses that Bush & buddies used to justify the war in Afghanistan, which include the pursuit of Binladen & other excuses to the lead up of the Iraq war. The unjustified torture of prisoners is on everyone's lips but the conduct of the western countries actions are a sealed position being called & played as a status of national security. Justice must be asserted for the rectification of the corruption which has been done, or the threats of terror will be an ongoing problem in my opinion.


Prisons, correction,

Prisons, correction, reform--all for the emerging function of 'normalization' for production, power, and social discipline--emerged two centuries ago to replace excessive cruelty and torture as the punishment meted out by power, Cf. Foucault. Does this torture (which sounds like real depravity), along with LRADs against Pitt students, and the increasingly irrational and arbitrary heavy hand of the sovereign mean ... our judge-social worker-psychiatrists can no longer pretend to have a grip? Is normal over? Is that what it means?


I recently had an

I recently had an experience, which personally demonstrated to me the dangers of not fully investigating and prosecuting the Bush war crimes. I had a letter to the editor printed, in which I stated that Obama and his administration are making themselves culpable by continuing to cover up Bush atrocities, among other things. One of the responses to my letter was from a right-wing "Bush defender," who claimed there were no war crimes committed because the democratic congressional investigations of "07 and '08 didn't come up with anything. As you may recall, those toothless investigations accomplished nothing more than photo ops for democrats up for election. Additionally, the "Bush excuse maker" sited the fact that Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder did not find any criminal wrongdoing because he is only going after those who exceeded Bush's interrogation methods. This has been proven illegal from the get-go. Of course, right-wingers never let facts get in the way of their feelings and continuously try to rewrite history to fit their delusions. This brings me to my point, by Holder just going for the low hanging fruit instead of investigating and prosecuting everyone that was involved. It sets a precedent to continue atrocities and war crimes for the Obama and future administrations.


Why stop at Nov 22 when on

Why stop at Nov 22 when on Nov 23 Rumsfeld ordered harsh methods?


Because of the idiotic

Because of the idiotic actions of the Bush administration, we will never convict people who should be convicted. This is a shameful chapter in our history.


Before 9/11 this kind of

Before 9/11 this kind of behaviour would have been viewed as horrific and totally unacceptable behaviour. However, the world we live in now views this as just another days work. Abu Graib was just the tip of the iceberg and yet most people are prepared to accept that it was “a few bad apples”! and the total illegality of Guantanamo is viewed as a necessary requirement of our times. These times are what the US has created for itself, or some people in power have created for the US. If you really want to change the barbaric mindset of those in power then you need to go right down to the root of it. Does America have the guts to look at itself and investigate the real perpetrators! Lice-Christ has a very valid point and yet the people are still shepherded by a subservient media and refuse to even consider the obvious.


I have always been proud to

I have always been proud to be an American; that is until I read about what was done to prisoners under our control. No human being should have to go through what these prisoners did. I am ashamed, not only for those who perpetrated the acts, but for those in command who authorized the torture. The whole of it is despicable. It is a very sad time in our history. Those responsible should be brought to justice for their acts. We must show the world this is not how Americans think or act. What was done was atrocious.


And the American people, for

And the American people, for the most part, remain either ignorant or silent. Shame on us/US!


And the American people

And the American people remain silent or ignorant. Shame on US!


It is time for President

It is time for President Obama to do what he was elected to do. The majority of Americans who believe in the Constitution of the United States elected him to return us to the values that made America great. Torture is not part of America. After WWII we executed the Japanese Generals that allowed our prisoners to be subjected to water-boarding. It is time to air out our dirty laundry and take all necessary action to prosecute those who abdicated, approved and participated in the torture of any prisoners in our custody or the custody of our agents. There will be no sense of justice ever in this country until we do what is right. President Obama, please do what we elected you to do - quit covering for the Bush administration and it's crimes, it is time to clear the air , expose and prosecute the criminals and let the citizens who elected you and the rest of the world see that America is on the road to a real recovery. The recovery of true American values - justice, truth and honor.


Correction: I meant

Correction: I meant advocate - not abdicate in my message 30 minutes ago. Thanks.


How can anyone still think

How can anyone still think that Bin Laden and his cave dwellers actually had anything to do with the Cordite dynamiting of the World Trade Buildings. Would the Zionists have given an avowed enemy of theirs such a lethal weapon. Not in their worst nightmares. It was cordite that was used to Implode those 3 buildings within Seconds. Nothing else could have accomplished that destruction...certainly not the planes that were said to have crashed into them. By pilots that could not possibly have accomplished such a feat, flying jumbo jets...when they could barely pilot a Cessna, if that ? It is time to quit sounding even more stupid by continuing to voice such inanities...at least in an open forum. Bush knows he is dead, but he will never admit it..as he is much more valuable as a propaganda tool alive. Notice how quick another Video surfaced when the Patriot Act was up for Renewal ? Anything to project fear. Obama better wake up or he will have the same bad reputation of his predecessor.


So, prisons, reformatories

So, prisons, reformatories and correction, all 'normalized' discipline--facilitating power's more penetrating and pervasive social control for production, etc.--two hundred years ago (Cf., Foucault).

Does this torture (which seems as much lurid sexual depravity as governmental policy), along with LRADs used on goofy Pitt students, TAS, and the increasingly arbitrary and irrational heavy hand of the sovereign ... Does it mean that our former overseers, the judge-criminologist-social worker-psychiatrists have totally lost their grip?

So 'normal' is just over with? Along with what we assumed was civilization? And there's never, ever any going back!



Lice-Christ, sorry but

Lice-Christ, sorry but you're with the birthers on 9/11. What needs investigating is how Bush et al. kept using intel that was known to be false as its basis for ginning up an invasion of a country that was too weak to be a threat, let alone an existential threat and how it kept conflating 9/11 with Iraq and its alleged WMD. Sen. Rockefeller wasn't really allowed to delve as deeply into that cesspool as he should have been because the GOP senators still had enough influence to stop it. Now that they're only 40 of 100 we can really look into the high crimes and misdemeanors of both GWBush and the GOP that slavishly followed his every crackpot notion for eight long years.


When I was 21 years old, I

When I was 21 years old, I voted for Johnson for President, because Goldwater wanted to drag our country into a war on the Asia mainland. Johnson won and we got a war on the asia mainland! For the next 40 years I worked for the Democrats, and worked to change the Democrat Party and push it back to the Left. Election after election I was disappointed by the Democrats. We are not going to change or reform this party. Both parties are heads of a two headed snake, and the snake's name is Fascism.


Here's another call for

Here's another call for justice. I don't understand why our President doesn't make things right by prosecuting every person, from the President on down, who broke our laws. We gave him the mandate. Obama has a chance, right now, to be a hero to this country, or to be a toothless failure. I hope he seizes the opportunity to do the right thing.


Let's demand that our

Let's demand that our leaders do what we elected them to do. Let's demand an end to GITMO, an end to the war on Iraq, and an end to the war in Afghanistan. Let's also demand that George and the big DICK be hauled into court and prosecuted for the high crimes and misdemeanors they committed. If President Clinton's lies about falling for a scheming little whore (after which NOBODY died and relatively few dollars were expended) could be prosecuted, the lies and perjuries that dooped US and our "global allies" into eight years and more of death and destruction to Americans, Iraqis and many of our global allies should most certainly be brought to justice.