by Chris Floyd
This is when you know a regime is in on
the ropes: when its security apparatchiks start the panicked, wholesale
destruction of the evidence of their crimes.
"I KNEW it was truly over when I came home
to find a neighbour in a panic. He had smelled a fire nearby. We traced
its source soon enough, after climbing to the roof of my building.
Smoke drifted from the garden of the villa next door, where workers had
recently been digging a peculiarly deep hole, as if for a swimming pool.
In a far corner of the garden stood rows of cardboard boxes spilling
over with freshly shredded paper, and next to them a smouldering fire.
"More
intriguingly, a group of ordinary looking young men sat on the lawn,
next to the hole."
Below is a piece that never got posted in all the hackfoonery
that was going with the site recently. It was written in the first heat
of Egypt's uprising, but in some ways, it is even more pertinent today,
as the Obama Administration rallies around the suave and vicious
torturer they have installed in Cairo, in a desperate attempt to produce
the kind of "continuity" of militarist-elitist corruption in Egypt that
Barack Obama has achieved so magnificently at home in his takeover from
the Bush Regime.
"More boxes surrounded them, and from these the men
extracted, one by one, what looked like cassette tapes and compact
discs. After carefully smashing each of these with hammers, they tossed
them into the pit. Down at its bottom another man shovelled wet cement
onto the broken bits of plastic. More boxes kept appearing, and their
labours continued all afternoon.
"The villa, surrounded by high
walls, is always silent. Cars, mostly unobtrusive Fiats and Ladas, slip
in and out of its automatic security gates at odd hours, and fluorescent
light peeps through shuttered windows late in the night. This happens
to be an unmarked branch office of one of the Mubarak regime's top
security agencies. It seems that someone had given the order to destroy
their records. Whatever secrets were on those tapes and in those papers
are now gone forever."
There were of course no such scenes in the leafy suburbs surrounding
Washington in the days after Barack Obama's election. Naturally, during
the Bush years there had been the judicious destruction of particular
pieces of evidence -- tapes of torture sessions, for instance -- that
might have proved briefly embarrassing. (And embarrassment was really
all that the Bushists had to worry about when they were still in power;
they had seen that even the horrors of Abu Ghraib had scarcely troubled
the public waters for more than a couple of news cycles.)
But there were no worries at all about the coming of Obama. No need for those involved in the torture of thousands and the custodial killing of dozens of captives
to start digging deep holes and sealing their tapes and papers beneath
concrete. They knew well how Obama would treat them: like heroes.
Indeed, one of his earliest acts was to appear at CIA headquarters and
assure the assembled covert operators that they would never be held accountable under the law for their atrocities.
Meanwhile, the Guardian alerts us to a piece in Dissident Voice detailing "The Torture Career of Egypt’s New Vice President: Omar Suleiman and the Rendition to Torture Program."
Suleiman was of course Cairo's longtime chief of intelligence -- and as
such a willing proxy torturer for the bipartisan ruling elite in
Washington. Bear in mind that the administration of the Nobel Peace
Laureate worked closely with Suleiman in his intelligence role until his
(doubtless temporary) elevation by Mubarak at the weekend. Stephen
Soldz reports:
"When Suleiman was first announced,
Al-jazeera commentators were describing him as a “distinguished” and
“respected ” man. It turns out, however, that he is distinguished for,
among other things, his central role in Egyptian torture and in the US
rendition-to-torture program. Further, he is “respected” by US officials
for his cooperation with their torture plans, among other
initiatives....Jane Mayer, in The Dark Side, pointed to Suleiman’s role
in the rendition program:
Each rendition was authorized at the very
top levels of both governments….The long-serving chief of the Egyptian
central intelligence agency, Omar Suleiman, negotiated directly with top
Agency officials. [Former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt] Walker described
the Egyptian counterpart, Suleiman, as “very bright, very realistic,”
adding that he was cognizant that there was a downside to “some of the
negative things that the Egyptians engaged in, of torture and so on. But
he was not squeamish, by the way” (pp. 113).
"Suleiman wasn’t just the go-to bureaucrat
for when the Americans wanted to arrange a little torture. This “urbane
and sophisticated man” apparently enjoyed a little rough stuff himself.
Shortly after 9/11, Australian citizen, Mamdouh Habib, was captured by
Pakistani security forces and, under US pressure, tortured by
Pakistanis. He was then rendered (with an Australian diplomats watching)
by CIA operatives to Egypt, a not uncommon practice. In Egypt, Habib
merited Suleiman’s personal attention. As related by Richard Neville,
based on Habib’s memoir:
Habib was interrogated by the country’s
Intelligence Director, General Omar Suleiman…. Suleiman took a personal
interest in anyone suspected of links with Al Qaeda. As Habib had
visited Afghanistan shortly before 9/11, he was under suspicion. Habib
was repeatedly zapped with high-voltage electricity, immersed in water
up to his nostrils, beaten, his fingers were broken and he was hung from
metal hooks.
That treatment wasn’t enough for Suleiman, so:
To loosen Habib’s tongue, Suleiman
ordered a guard to murder a gruesomely shackled Turkistan prisoner in
front of Habib – and he did, with a vicious karate kick.
"After Suleiman’s men extracted Habib’s
confession, he was transferred back to US custody, where he eventually
was imprisoned at Guantanamo. His “confession” was then used as evidence
in his Guantanamo trial."
As I noted early in the Obama administration, the Peace Laureate has been fully on board with this program from the beginning. From June 2009:
"But we must give credit where it's due.
Obama has wrought some changes in the imperial torture policies, making
good on his campaign pledges to restore the American values that were
lost or diminished under his odious predecessor. As Alfred McCoy -- the
premier historian of the American elite's long, long love affair with
torture -- points out, Obama has revived the venerable bipartisan
practice of relying on client states to do the bulk of the dirty work
for the U.S. security apparat. McCoy writes (at TomDispatch):"
If, like me, you've been following
America's torture policies not just for the last few years, but for
decades, you can't help but experience that eerie feeling of déjà vu
these days. With the departure of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney from
Washington and the arrival of Barack Obama, it may just be back to the
future when it comes to torture policy, a turn away from a dark,
do-it-yourself ethos and a return to the outsourcing of torture that
went on, with the support of both Democrats and Republicans, in the Cold
War years....
Then, on April 16th, President Obama ... released
the four Bush-era memos detailing CIA torture, insisting: "Nothing will
be gained by spending our time and energy laying blame for the past."
During a visit to CIA headquarters four days later, Obama promised that
there would be no prosecutions of Agency employees. "We've made some
mistakes," he admitted, but urged Americans simply to "acknowledge them
and then move forward." The president's statements were in such blatant
defiance of international law that the U.N.'s chief official on torture,
Manfred Nowak, reminded him that Washington was actually obliged to
investigate possible violations of the Convention Against Torture.
That piece, by the way, was prompted by a story about a then-recent
"suicide" at the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp, where the Peace
Laureate was force-feeding captives being held in indefinite detention:
"The recent, mysterious death of yet
another captive in the Guantanamo concentration camp opens yet another
door into the blood-caked labyrinth of the American gulag, where despite
all the soaring rhetoric about "restoring the rule of law," torture is
still very much the order of the day.
"Scott Horton at Harper's
provides this telling quote from an AP story on the death of Mohammad
Ahmed Abdullah Saleh Al Hanashi, which gulag officials have classified
as an "apparent suicide":
A Guantanamo Bay detainee who left his
cell to meet with military commanders as prisoner representative never
returned, and was instead sent to a psychiatric ward where he died five
months later, a former detainee recalled…The U.S. military has refused
to say how Saleh allegedly killed himself in the closely watched ward.
But the former detainee, Binyam Mohamed, said it wasn’t like him to
commit suicide. “He was patient and encouraged others to be the same,”
Mohamed said. “He never viewed suicide as a means to end his despair.”
Even if it was suicide, Mohamed still classifies the death as “murder,
or unlawful killing, whichever way you look at it,” saying that the U.S.
had caused Saleh to lose hope by locking him up indefinitely without
charges.
"They took him away, held him under the
close supervision in a psychiatric ward -- and yet he still managed to
magically kill himself by some as-yet undisclosed method. No doubt the
"ongoing investigation" -- by the NCIS guys! just like on TV! -- will
eventually manage to concoct an explanation plausible enough to satisfy
our ever-incurious political and media elites."
But as Horton
notes, Saleh was also a victim of an particularly sadistic form of
torture that is still being practiced -- openly, unapologetically -- by
the Obama Administration's agents in the Guantanamo concentration camp:
force-feeding. Horton writes:
"The techniques do not comply with the
international standards for actual force-feeding, established in the
World Medical Association’s Malta Declaration of 1991. Instead they have
a darker and more distressing progeny. From the use of restraint chairs
down to the specific brand of commercial diet supplement used by the
doctors, the force-feeding techniques now in use at Guantanamo replicate
the methods used by the CIA at black sites under Bush. At the black
sites, those methods were not part of any medical regime. Instead, they
were a part of a carefully designed torture regime, the very same regime
that Obama claims to have abolished in his first executive order."
2.
Meanwhile, as Egyptians rise up for
freedom, the United States is forcing its puppet satrapy in Afghanistan
to violate its own laws -- in order to keep the Peace Laureate's
Bactrian gulag going. Clive Stafford Smith has the incredible story in the Guardian. (Yes, the British newspaper. What, you thought it would be leading the CBS Evening News?)
"[As] the US looks to hand over
responsibility for the prisoners in Parwan prison to the Karzai
government ... hey have come face-to-face with an intractable problem:
they are holding 1,400 prisoners without trial. Every week, the number
grows; it is predicted to rise to 3,200. Some have been there for many
years.Dare we allow them to face Afghan justice?
"According to the
US, few if any of these prisoners would be convicted at a fair trial.
They have been detained as a result of intelligence tips – and hearsay
is not admissible in court; and there is no forensic evidence that
proves them guilty of any crime."Right now," one unnamed, but clearly
unnerved, senior American official said this week, "if we turned them
over to the Afghans tomorrow, they'd be in a position, under their laws
and their constitution, that they may be released."
"In other
words, the Afghan legal system would respect their legal rights and, if
they were not charged with a crime, they would have to be set free. Ten
years ago, this would have been seen as a sign of great progress. Had
the Taliban recognised the ancient writ of habeas corpus, and insisted
on freedom or a fair trial, we would have been both surprised and
delighted.Ten years on, we have taught the world a better way. Among the
Afghan rules that concern the Americans is the requirement that a
suspect be charged within 72 hours of arrest. He must also be granted a
speedy trial – generally, within two months. The US also worries that a
detainee must be tried in the province where he committed his crime.
"Compare
these "problems" with the rights ascribed to citizens under the US bill
of rights, the paradigm that we once hoped to export to the lawless
countries of the third world. The US constitution requires that the
suspect be charged within 48 hours, and be allowed a speedy trial. The
sixth amendment provides that he has a right to be tried "in the state
and district" where the crime occurred."
He then tells of the case of yet another child prisoner of the American gulag:
"...Hamidullah, a Pakistani kid who is in
Parwan. He was just 14 years old when the Americans detained him, and he
appears to be wholly innocent of any crime. After several years in
which to gather evidence, his American captors recently conceded that
they do not even know how old he is. Yet, they have successfully argued
that he should be allowed no legal rights.
"US officials will not
speculate when a handover will occur, but say that a "detentions decree"
from Karzai is a critical prerequisite. In other words, before he will
be allowed to assume custody of Hamidullah and hundreds of other
prisoners, Karzai must commit to dismantling the Afghan rule of law.
"Thus is our civilisation exported to the world."
Do remember these stories the next time you are called upon by some
earnest progressive to come to the aid of Barack Obama in his hour of
political need. This is what they are asking you to support. And this is exactly what you will enable if you give that support.