Torture in Cuba ... but it's
not the Cubans who torture!

Arthur
Shaw©:
VHeadline.com guest
commentarist Arthur Shaw writes: Yes, torture takes place in Cuba, but
it's not the Cubans who torture ... it's the Americans.
The Americans in Cuba
should take their iniquities to the United States where
they and their iniquities belong ... and those who
condemn the friendship between Venezuela and Cuba would
do well to examine the ethics of their own friends.
The American Civil
Liberties Union got certain evidence from the US
government using the US Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
that documents the widely-reported allegations of torture
which US commits against POWs in violation of US law,
specifically the US Anti-Torture Act and the Geneva
Convention, ratified by the United States in 1958.
On Monday, July 12, 2004, an FBI
agent (whose name is censored) working in the
Boston office of the Bureau, replies to an earlier
request "Could you provide a short summary of what
you observed?"
Here is the short
summary of his observations which the unnamed agent
provided:
"I
am responding to your request for feedback on aggressive
treatment and improper interview techniques used on
detainees at GTMO. I did observe treatment that was not
only aggressive, but personally very upsetting, although
I can't say that this treatment was perpetrated by
Bureau. It seemed that these techniques were being
employed by the military, government contract employees
and CENSORED."
- "GTMO" is the US Naval Base at
Guantanamo in Cuba which the United States
illegally and imperialistically occupies.
- "Aggressive
treatment" seems to be torture that the US
perpetrates when the POW is not being
interviewed. "Improper interview
techniques" seems to be torture that occurs
during interrogation.
It's surprising that the
FBI agent from Boston found the torture which he observed
"very unsetting." Perhaps the POWs, the victims
of the torture, felt the same way as the visiting and
observing agent.
The predictable
dishonesty of the agent shines through when he says
"I can't say that this treatment was perpetrated
by Bureau."
Why
can't he say?
Did he observe torture
by FBI agents or not?
He
refuses to say that he didn't observe it, only that he
can't say he did.
Perhaps the agent wants
to keep his summary short as requested. But the FBI agent
can say who, outside of the Bureau,
tortures POWs, he lists "military, government
contract employees and CENSORED."
- The
"government contract employees" are US
mercenaries.
- The
"CENSORED" are most likely US
intelligence agents, especially CIA officers.
On Monday, August 2, 2004, a
second epistle, by an unnamed FBI agent, about torture at
Guantanamo was to the higher-ups (also unnamed) at
the Bureau. This epistle says however that Valene E.
Caproni ,"(OGC) (FBI)", presumably someone in
the FBI's office of general counsel, was crossed
referenced with a copy of the document.
The unnamed FBI agent
reports:
"On
a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to
find a detainee chained hand and foot in a fetal
position to the floor, with no chair, food, or water.
Most times they had urinated and defecated on
themselves, and had been left there from 18, 24 hours
or more. On one occasion, the air conditioning was
turned down so far and the temperature was so cold in
the room, that the barefooted detainee was shaking
with cold. When I asked the MPs what was going on, I
was told that interrogators from the day prior had
ordered this treatment, and the detainee was not to
be moved. On another occasion, the A/C had been
turned off, making the temperature in the
unventilated room probably well over 100 degrees. The
detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a
pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been
literally pulling his own hair out throughout the
night. On another occasion, not only was the
temperature unbearably hot, but extremely loud rap
music was being played in the room, and had been
since the day before, with the detainee chained hand
and foot in the fetal position on the floor."
The FBI agent adopts
the fashionable term "detainee" rather than
"POW" to refer to victims of torture by US
authorities.
The FBI and the military
police appear impotent to enforce US law against torture
or against anything else, even in a place where the US
government claims, however wrongfully, it has
jurisdiction. Clearly, the oath they took to uphold and
defend the US constitution doesn't mean anything to them.
Evidently, when
someone ... detainee, POW, or whoever ... falls into
US custody, there's no such thing as human rights.
In this US concentration
camp, the "interrogators" (here
unidentified) are either the law or individuals above
the rule of law. From the July 12 document discussed
earlier, we know that the "interrogators" may
be either FBI agents, military personnel, US mercenaries,
and intelligence officers or some combination thereof.
On the three occasions
or visits the FBI agent mentions, he observed, as forms
of torture, starvation, extreme temperatures, compulsory
incontinence, and loud, continuous rap music. According
to the agent, the effects of the torture were devastating
on the POWs.
The US also seems to
like to chain the POWs it tortures in the "fetal
position" for hours or days.
Perhaps the US wants
the POWs to feel as helpless as a fetus in the womb.
The FBI agent doesn't
say whether he observed a POW interrogation. If the
foregoing forms of torture are used during the periods
between interrogations, who knows what happens during an
interrogation?
According a document dated May 5,
2002, an unnamed FBI agent actually interviewed
"detainee 1722."
The agent reported:
"CENSORED
stated he had been beaten unconscious approximately
three or four weeks ago when he was still at Camp X -
Ray. According to CENSORED an unknown number of
guards entered his cell, unprovoked, and started
spitting and cursing at him. The guards called him a
"son of a bitch," and a
"bastard," then told him he was crazy.
CENSORED
rolled onto his stomach to protect himself, CENSORED
stated a soldier named CENSORED jumped on his back
abd started beating him in the face. CENSORED
thenchoked him until he passed out CENSORED stated
that CENSORED was beating him because CENSORED is a
Muslim and CENSORED is a Christian. CENSORED
indicated there was a female guard named CENSORED who
was also beating him and grabbed his head and beat it
into the cell floor.
CENSORED
stated that all the soldiers were aware of his
CENSORED and he was taken to the hospital following
the beating; where he received an IV and treatment
for his facial wounds. CENSORED claimed CENSORED who
is a tall African-American male visited him at the
hospital and told the doctors to immediately returm
him to the camp. CENSORED reported the aforementioned
incident to two Red Cross representatives at Camp
Delta, who he identified as CENSORED and CENSORED.
CENSORED stated he did not do anything to cause the
guards to enter his cell, and did everything they
instructed him to do...."
Other recently (published
December 20, 2004, by the ACLU) released FBI evidence
documents equally horrendous incidents and forms of
torture that the United States perpetrates on Cuban soil.
Now, are these
things ... forms of torture ... US policy or
transgressions of US policy by a "few bad
apples" at the bottom of the chain of command?
Fortunately, an
FBI document dated May 22, 2004, clearly answers this
question.
The document is from an
unnamed FBI agent to three other unnamed FBI agents and
to four named FBI agents: M. C. Briese, Gary M. Bald, T.
G. Harrington, and Frankie Battle, all of (Div 13) (FBI),
whatever that is.
Without beating
around the Bush, the document reads:
"Although
we have no reason to believe any of our personnel
disobeyed our instructions and participated in
interrogations that utilized techniques beyond the
bounds of FBI practice but within the parameters of
the Executive Order (e g sleep deprivation, stress
positions, loud music, etc.), some of our personnel
were in the general vicinity of interrogations in
which such tactics were being used, and because of
their proximity to the sites of these interrogations,
heard and saw things which would be indicative of
interrogations utilizing the techniques authorized by
the Executive Order."
If that ain't clear
enough, how about this passage from the same document:
"The
things our personnel witnessed [but did not
participate in] were authorized by the President
under his Executive Order."
This too for clarity:
"I wish
to make clear our personnel have been present at
various facilities when interrogation techniques made
lawful by the Executive Order, but outside the
standard of FBI practice, were utilized. While our
personnel did not participate in these
interrogations, they heard/saw indications that such
interrogations were underway."
If the author of the
memo wanted to make something "clear" he
overachieved his aim.
Bush
is indeed authorizing command, but he isn't carrying out
the US chain of command.
This so-called Executive
Order that Bush signed authorizes FBI agents, US military
personnel, mercenaries hired by the US, and US
intelligence agent to violate US law, specifically the US
Anti-Torture Act and the Geneva Convention, the latter is
a treaty ratified by the United States.
Under Article VI,
paragraph 2 of the US Constitution, both the law and
the treaty are part of the "supreme law of the
land" and no Executive Order signed by an
election thief like Bush can override them.
As for the patently
pusillanimous and utterly lamed contention of the FBI
that its agents did not "participate" in the
torture they witnessed, the FBI sounds like someone who
argues "Oh yeah, I was there when this person got
raped and otherwise abused, but I didn't partake in
it."
Arthur Shaw
belial4444@aol.com
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