The U.S. Army general widely considered the architect
of abusive prisoner interrogation techniques at Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib,
and detention centers in Afghanistan used "creative" and "aggressive"
tactics, but did not practice torture or violate law or Pentagon policy, the
head of the U.S. Southern Command has determined.
Despite the recommendations of military investigators, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey C.
Miller will not be reprimanded thus bringing to a close what could be the
last of 12 separate investigations into detainee abuse.
Members of the team that conducted the three-month investigation told the Senate
Armed Services Committee Wednesday that Gen. Bantz J. Craddock, commander of
U.S. Southern Command, had overruled their recommendation of a reprimand, and
will instead refer the matter to the Army's inspector general.
They said Gen. Craddock had concluded that Miller's techniques did not rise
to the level of torture and did not violate any U.S. laws or policies. Their
probe was looking into allegations by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), who said they witnessed abusive interrogation techniques at Guantanamo.
The FBI allegations were contained in documents obtained by the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) through the Freedom of Information Act.
Barring future allegations of prisoner abuse, the Miller probe ends all outstanding
inquiries into an issue that has inflamed critics of the George W. Bush administration
for several years. In the dozen previous investigations all carried out by
military or Pentagon-appointed panels only one high-level officer has faced
disciplinary action.
Army Reserve General Janice Karpinsky received an administrative reprimand
for failing to properly supervise detainee treatment at Abu Ghraib prison in
Iraq. A number of lower-level officers and enlisted personnel have been reprimanded
or court-martialed, and other low level cases are still pending.
There have been only two congressional hearings into prisoner abuse, one in
the Senate and the other in the House of Representatives. Growing calls for
an investigation by an independent 9/11-type commission have been resisted by
most Republicans, who control both bodies.
The conclusions of the Miller inquiry appear to strongly support the contention
that Gen. Miller was the constant in the prisoner treatment equation, first
at the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and later at military prisons
in Iraq and Afghanistan, where similar interrogation techniques were employed.
Miller was deeply involved in the handling of detainees, first at Guantánamo
in 2002 and 2003, where he earned credit for improving interrogation techniques
and for the treatment of prisoners, and later in Iraq, where he was sent in
August 2003 to suggest ways to improve interrogations immediately before the
worst abuses at Abu Ghraib prison.
In 2004, he was appointed to oversee all detainee operations in Iraq. Multiple
investigations have cleared him of wrongdoing.
Anthony D. Romero, the ACLU's executive director, said, "It is irrefutable
that the government violated the Geneva Conventions and the Army Field Manual.
As before, low-ranking men and women will take the full blame while the higher
ups get off scot-free. Once again, we have abuse without high-level accountability."
The chief investigator into Guantanamo practices, Air Force Lt. Gen. Randall
M. Schmidt, told the Senate panel of the interrogation techniques used on Mohammed
al-Qahtani, a Saudi who was captured in December 2001 along the Afghanistan-Pakistan
border. Al-Qahtani was thought to be involved in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Schmidt said interrogators told him his mother and sisters were whores, forced
him to wear a bra and wear a thong on his head, told him he was a homosexual
and said that other prisoners knew it.
They also forced him to dance with a male interrogator and subjected him to
strip searches with no security value, threatened him with dogs, forced him
to stand naked in front of women, and to wear a leash and act like a dog.
These techniques were approved by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld for
use on al-Qahtani the alleged "20th hijacker" in the 9/11 terrorist
attacks at Guantanamo in late 2002 as part of a special interrogation
plan aimed at breaking him down.
Investigators also described other interrogation practices used at Guantanamo,
including:
- A female interrogator smeared what she described as menstrual blood
it was fake on a prisoner. The woman was disciplined, investigators
said, but they recommended no further action on the allegation because it
happened some time ago.
- A Navy officer threatened one high-value prisoner by saying he would go
after his family. This was in violation of U.S. military law, the investigation
found.
- A prisoner was bound on the head with duct tape, his mouth covered, because
he was chanting verses from the Koran.
- Interrogators used cold, heat, loud music and sleep deprivation on prisoners
to break their will to resist interrogation. These techniques were approved
at certain times at Guantanamo.
- Detainees were chained to the floor in fetal positions. The investigation
said this was not authorized, but could not confirm an FBI agent's allegation
that detainees were left in this position for long periods.
There have also been repeated accusations that U.S. personnel at Guantanamo
have mishandled the Koran, the Muslim holy book. A separate Pentagon investigation
found five such instances
The Guantanamo investigators described the techniques they found as degrading
and abusive, Gen. Schmidt said, but did not constitute torture.
"It is clear from the report that detainee mistreatment was not simply
the product of a few rogue military police in a night shift," said Carl
Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the committee.
And Sen. Edward Kennedy, the powerful Democrat committee member from Massachusetts,
said, "I am deeply concerned about the failure indeed, outright refusal
of our military and civilian leaders to hold higher ups accountable for the
repeated and reports of abuse and torture of the prisoners at Guantanamo."
Bush administration officials have said the excesses at Abu Ghraib prison in
Iraq were the work of "a few bad apples." The Republican chairman
of the Armed Services Committee, Sen. John Warner of Virginia, said investigators
had found only three instances, out of thousands of interrogations, where military
personnel violated Army policy.
Investigators also determined that interrogators violated the Geneva Conventions
and Army regulations three times.
Edward S. Herman, professor emeritus of the University of Pennsylvania, told
IPS, "Internal investigations by an institution whose lies would fill an
encyclopedia are hardly credible and would be laughed out of court by an honest
media."
"They are even more laughable when we consider that the top leadership
has indicated that international law is not applicable to us, that the concept
of torture is infinitely flexible, and that the folks we are holding in Guantanamo
are being treated like Caribbean vacationers," he said.
The report said the military should review how it determines the legal status
of prisoners at Guantanamo, and decide what forms of treatment and interrogation
techniques will be allowed.
Guantanamo holds 520 prisoners, while more than 230 others have been released
or transferred to the custody of their home governments. Most were captured
during the U.S. war in Afghanistan after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks; only a
few have been charged with any crime.
The report also recommended discipline for several low-level interrogators.
It is unclear whether Gen. Miller could face disciplinary proceedings as a
result of the inspector general inquiry recommended by Gen. Craddock.
(Inter Press Service)