Deeper Into Darkness:
Slavery and Betrayal in Bush's Gulag
by Chris Floyd
Rich Kastelein has unearthed more background on the literally atrocious case of recently released Gitmo captive Bisher al-Rawi, whose story was highlighted here yesterday. Meanwhile "Smintheus," a frequent commenter here and author of the blog "Inconvenient News" offers further clarification, and a damning examination of a much-overlooked aspect of Bush's gulag: it is a literal system of slavery, where human beings are bought and sold, traded and transported like meat: " America's Slaves."
While yesterday's post focused on the ludicrous charges used by Gambian authorities to detain al-Rawi and his friend, Jamil el-Banna -- that a battery charger in their luggage was a "suspicious device" -- the Independent story provided by Kastelein and Smintheus' work focuses on the real reason the two men were detained, at the specific request of British intelligence: to press-gang them into work as spies for the Anglo-American "war on terror."
Ironically, al-Rawi, who was finally released from the American
concentration camp in Guantanamo Bay last week, had previously done
some work for British intelligence, acting as a go-between between MI5
and a controversial Muslim cleric the Brits were investigating, Abu
Qatada. MI5 approached al-Rawi, who agreed to help, without payment. It
was not a spy mission; al-Rawi was working openly as an intermediary
between the cleric and the agency, with the agreement of both sides. As
the Independent notes, even while the British government claimed they
couldn't find the "dangerous" cleric, they were trying to establish a
relationship with him through al-Rawi. Jamil el-Banna later played a
very minor role, driving Abu Qatada's wife and children on two
occasions, the second at the request of British intelligence.
Eventually,
Abu Qatada was arrested by British authorities, and al-Rawi, his role
as an intermediary now ended, sought to return to private life, working
with his brother's peanut oil plant in Gambia. But it seems that Bush's
Terror Warriors had other plans. They wanted to plant spies in the
Muslim community, and wanted to do it right away -- no long, slow
infiltration of trained agents. What better way than to grab a few
likely prospects -- guys who'd been cooperative before -- and threaten
to deep-six them into the American gulag if they didn't play ball?
And
that's what happened. The tale unfolded by the men's attorney --
American lawyer George Mickum -- in the Independent last month, before
al-Rawi's release, is a sickening story indeed. The horror lies not
only in the specific atrocities meted out to al-Rawi and el-Banna (who
remains in the Gitmo camp), but in the fact that there is nothing
unusual in their story. It has been repeated countless times --
literally countless, for we have no way of knowing how many people have
been sent through the meat grinder of Bush's gulag. It is also
revelatory of the true nature of the "tribunals" and "status reviews"
that Bush has established for his penal colony -- lawless farces from
the word go, as we noted yesterday.
In case you missed the
Independent story when it first came out (as I did, although Rich
didn't), it is worth reading in full, and quoting at length. Because
this is what the United States of America stands for in the world
today: torture, extortion, cruelty and injustice. And if you support
the Bush Administration in any way, by active bootlicking or passive
acceptance, then this is what you stand for too.
From the Independent:
...Gambian
authorities detained Mr al-Rawi, Mr el-Banna and their friends
immediately after the group landed in Africa. Indeed, shortly after the
arrest, Gambian authorities told the arrested group that the British
had told them to make the arrests. There is no question that British
officials rendered Mr al-Rawi and Mr el-Banna into the hands of CIA
officials in Africa in November of 2002. During one of Mr el-Banna's
more than 100 interrogation sessions, his interrogator told him his
adopted country had betrayed him...
Mr al-Rawi states that "from
the very beginning in the Gambia the CIA said, 'The British told us
that one of you was helping MI5.' By the second day in the Gambia, they
[the CIA] were asking me to work for the US in Britain. I said I would
not."
Although Mr al-Rawi's brother Wahab and another friend
were released after a month and returned to England, Mr al-Rawi and Mr
el-Banna were rendered at the end of 2002 in a CIA Gulfstream jet, one
of a fleet of jets used by the CIA in its "extraordinary rendition"
programme, in which the US transports victims to foreign countries for
the express purpose of torture....
Mr al-Rawi and Mr el-Banna
were taken to the notorious "dark prison" in Kabul, Afghanistan. There,
both men were imprisoned underground in isolation and darkness and
tortured over two weeks. They were held in leg shackles 24 hours a day.
They were starved, beaten, dragged along floors while shackled, and
kicked. Round-the-clock screams from fellow prisoners made sleep
impossible.
Subsequently, they were transferred to the US Air
Force base at Bagram, Afghanistan. Although they were chained hand and
foot and hooded, while waiting to be transported, their captors beat
them. Mr el-Banna, in particular, was beaten repeatedly.
In
Bagram, they were imprisoned and tortured for another two months. They
were beaten, starved, and sleep deprived. What is particularly
noteworthy is the fact that the only information the interrogators were
interested in was information about Abu Qatada. Over the years, CIA and
military interrogators have repeatedly attempted to suborn testimony
from both men, linking Abu Qatada to al-Qa'ida. Mr el-Banna has
repeatedly refused offers of freedom, money, and passports in exchange
for false testimony.
Ultimately, both men were transported to
Guantanamo, a trip so harrowing that a government informer, who was
posing as a prisoner and had to be transported and treated the same as
other prisoners, stated in a television interview that, at the time, he
wished someone would shoot him. Forced to wear darkened goggles,
face-masks and earphones, chained at the ankles, handcuffed behind
their backs with thin plastic that caused incredible pain, and, in some
cases, lasting damage, starving and sick prisoners who had been
deprived of sleep were forced to maintain a sitting position, legs
forward and chained without moving for nearly 24 hours.
If
they moved they were beaten, kicked, hit with blunt objects. The
government informer lasted barely one month in the intolerable
conditions in Guantanamo before demanding freedom. During the first
month at Guantanamo in which both were kept in strict solitary
confinement, the pair were interrogated six hours per day and kept in
the interrogation room for 14 hours per day, sometimes in freezing
temperatures to induce hypothermia, one of the many techniques approved
for use by the Bush administration. In some cases they were
short-shackled, hands behind heels, for the entire time.
Bear
in mind: neither of these men were captured "on the battlefield,"
neither of them had been involved in any terrorist activities, and both
of them had in fact been cooperative with Western intelligence. And
this is what happened to them. Imagine the treatment inflicted upon
those who have been rendered into Bush's gulag on some measure of
suspicion -- however spurious or well-founded.
...The
military has taken great pains to prevent any exculpatory information
from creeping into the official records to ensure prisoners have no
chance to exonerate themselves. In Guantanamo, Mr al-Rawi has met
perhaps 10 different CIA agents. One agent who went by the name
"Elizabeth" told him: "Don't think that leaving here will come without
a price." Mr al-Rawi said: "She asked me whether I would work with
them, and I said no. [She] suggested, 'How about working with MI5?'"
...I
advised the men more than one month before I travelled to Guantanamo in
September 2004, advising them not to appear before the CSRT (Combatant
Status Review Tribunal) or participate in the process. My letters were
not delivered until after each had participated in his tribunal. I
advised them against participating, among other reasons because the
tribunals were permitted to rely on information obtained under torture.
Both men were not even permitted to review all the evidence against
them, and thus had no chance to defend themselves...
At the
conclusion, Mr el-Banna's personal representative, a soldier and
non-lawyer who could be compelled under the CSRT rules to testify
against him courageously dissented from the tribunal's conclusion,
including a formal statement in the CSRT record: "The personal
representative states that the record is insufficient to prove that the
detainee is an enemy combatant."
...My security clearance
allows me to review all of the classified evidence in the cases,
including all the evidence the tribunal relied upon to conclude that Mr
al-Rawi and Mr el-Banna were enemy combatants. There is no evidence in
the record, classified or unclassified, which supports the military's
determination that these are enemy combatants. None.
Again,
this is what can happen to Muslims who actually cooperate in an
aboveboard fashion with the intelligence services of the Anglo-American
Terror Warriors. If they refuse to give their lives over to black ops
and betrayal, they can simply be "disappeared" into the hideous system
of brutality and slavery that Bush has created.
source:
http://www.chris-floyd.com/index.php?option=com _content&task=view&id=1094&Itemid=135
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