Torture Porn for Gardenweasel

Mahoney

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Inside the CIA's notorious "black sites"

A Yemeni man never charged by the U.S. details 19 months of brutality and psychological torture -- the first in-depth, first-person account from inside the secret U.S. prisons. A Salon exclusive.

By Mark Benjamin

Dec. 14, 2007 | WASHINGTON -- The CIA held Mohamed Farag Ahmad Bashmilah in several different cells when he was incarcerated in its network of secret prisons known as "black sites." But the small cells were all pretty similar, maybe 7 feet wide and 10 feet long. He was sometimes naked, and sometimes handcuffed for weeks at a time. In one cell his ankle was chained to a bolt in the floor. There was a small toilet. In another cell there was just a bucket. Video cameras recorded his every move. The lights always stayed on -- there was no day or night. A speaker blasted him with continuous white noise, or rap music, 24 hours a day.

The guards wore black masks and black clothes. They would not utter a word as they extracted Bashmilah from his cell for interrogation -- one of his few interactions with other human beings during his entire 19 months of imprisonment. Nobody told him where he was, or if he would ever be freed.

It was enough to drive anyone crazy. Bashmilah finally tried to slash his wrists with a small piece of metal, smearing the words "I am innocent" in blood on the walls of his cell. But the CIA patched him up.

So Bashmilah stopped eating. But after his weight dropped to 90 pounds, he was dragged into an interrogation room, where they rammed a tube down his nose and into his stomach. Liquid was pumped in. The CIA would not let him die.

On several occasions, when Bashmilah's state of mind deteriorated dangerously, the CIA also did something else: They placed him in the care of mental health professionals. Bashmilah believes these were trained psychologists or psychiatrists. "What they were trying to do was to give me a sort of uplifting and to assure me," Bashmilah said in a telephone interview, through an interpreter, speaking from his home country of Yemen. "One of the things they told me to do was to allow myself to cry, and to breathe."

Last June, Salon reported on the CIA's use of psychologists to aid with the interrogation of terrorist suspects. But the role of mental health professionals working at CIA black sites is a previously unknown twist in the chilling, Kafkaesque story of the agency's secret overseas prisons.

Little about the conditions of Bashmilah's incarceration has been made public until now. His detailed descriptions in an interview with Salon, and in newly filed court documents, provide the first in-depth, first-person account of captivity inside a CIA black site. Human rights advocates and lawyers have painstakingly pieced together his case, using Bashmilah's descriptions of his cells and his captors, and documents from the governments of Jordan and Yemen and the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to verify his testimony. Flight records detailing the movement of CIA aircraft also confirm Bashmilah's account, tracing his path from the Middle East to Afghanistan and back again while in U.S. custody.

Bashmilah's story also appears to show in clear terms that he was an innocent man. After 19 months of imprisonment and torment at the hands of the CIA, the agency released him with no explanation, just as he had been imprisoned in the first place. He faced no terrorism charges. He was given no lawyer. He saw no judge. He was simply released, his life shattered.

"This really shows the human impact of this program and that lives are ruined by the CIA rendition program," said Margaret Satterthwaite, an attorney for Bashmilah and a professor at the New York University School of Law. "It is about psychological torture and the experience of being disappeared."

Bashmilah, who at age 39 is now physically a free man, still suffers the mental consequences of prolonged detention and abuse. He is undergoing treatment for the damage done to him at the hands of the U.S. government. On Friday, Bashmilah laid out his story in a declaration to a U.S. district court as part of a civil suit brought by the ACLU against Jeppesen Dataplan Inc., a subsidiary of Boeing accused of facilitating secret CIA rendition flights.

Bashmilah said in the phone interview that the psychological anguish inside a CIA black site is exacerbated by the unfathomable unknowns for the prisoners. While he figured out that he was being held by Americans, Bashmilah did not know for sure why, where he was, or whether he would ever see his family again. He said, "Every time I realize that there may be others who are still there where I suffered, I feel the same thing for those innocent people who just fell in a crack."

It may seem bizarre for the agency to provide counseling to a prisoner while simultaneously cracking him mentally -- as if revealing a humanitarian aspect to a program otherwise calibrated to exploit systematic psychological abuse. But it could also be that mental healthcare professionals were enlisted to help bring back from the edge prisoners who seemed precariously damaged, whose frayed minds were no longer as pliable for interrogation. "My understanding is that the purpose of having psychiatrists there is that if the prisoner feels better, then he would be able to talk more to the interrogators," said Bashmilah.

Realistically, psychiatrists in such a setting could do little about the prisoners' deeper suffering at the hands of the CIA. "They really had no authority to address these issues," Bashmilah said about his mental anguish. He said the doctors told him to "hope that one day you will prove your innocence or that you will one day return to your family." The psychiatrists also gave him some pills, likely tranquilizers. They analyzed his dreams. But there wasn't much else they could do. "They also gave me a Rubik's Cube so I could pass the time, and some jigsaw puzzles," Bashmilah recalled.

The nightmare started for him back in fall 2003. Bashmilah had traveled to Jordan from Indonesia, where he was living with his wife and working in the clothing business. He and his wife went to Jordan to meet Bashmilah's mother, who had also traveled there. The family hoped to arrange for heart surgery for Bashmilah's mother at a hospital in Amman. But before leaving Indonesia, Bashmilah had lost his passport and had received a replacement. Upon arrival in Jordan, Jordanian officials questioned his lack of stamps in the new one, and they grew suspicious when Bashmilah admitted he had visited Afghanistan in 2000. Bashmilah was taken into custody by Jordanian authorities on Oct. 21, 2003. He would not reappear again until he stepped out of a CIA plane in Yemen on May 5, 2005.

Bashmilah's apparent innocence was clearly lost on officials with Jordan's General Intelligence Department. After his arrest, the Jordanians brutally beat him, peppering him with questions about al-Qaida. He was forced to jog around in a yard until he collapsed. Officers hung him upside down with a leather strap and his hands tied. They beat the soles of his feet and his sides. They threatened to electrocute him with wires. They told him they would rape his wife and mother.

It was too much. Bashmilah signed a confession multiple pages long, but he was disoriented and afraid even to read it. "I felt sure it included things I did not say," he wrote in his declaration to the court delivered Friday. "I was willing to sign a hundred sheets so long as they would end the interrogation."

[conclusion through link]
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/12/14/bashmilah/
 
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gardenweasel

el guapo
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Jan 10, 2002
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"the bunker"
Just makes you wanna jump up and sing Lee Greewood, don't it?

salon.com?.....a bit gullible aren`t we?...

btw,how`d he escape?....they just released him,you say?....

you aren`t the tallest tree in the forest,mahoney....but,you might be the thickest...
 

Mahoney

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Is that any way to thank me for your own personal MOJO thread??

Remember, garden, before you sleep tonight...

Jump up in the air three times, click your heels, and shout, "Yahoo!"

Then check under your bed for terrorists.
 

Jabberwocky

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Here is an account published by Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/27/AR2007022702214.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/01/AR2005110101644.html

Here is an account published by Amnesty International
http://www.amnesty.org/en/report/info/AMR51/177/2005

The New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/08/13/070813fa_fact_mayer

BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6733353.stm

I could continue to post, but whats the point? The government has ackowledged the existence of these prisons, and has openly argued that those detained in the these prisons have no rights to due process whatsoever, that they can and should be tortured, etc...

And your position GW is that there has never been a false arrest and there has never been an innocent person that was detained and tortured for years on end.

:scared

I am sorry, who is the gullible one?
 

Mahoney

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Dec 10, 2007
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The point is that the weasel would be crying for mama after ten minutes of the treatment this poor sap got in OUR name paid for by OUR dollars.
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
Forum Member
Jan 10, 2002
40,555
214
63
"the bunker"
Here is an account published by Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/27/AR2007022702214.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/01/AR2005110101644.html

Here is an account published by Amnesty International
http://www.amnesty.org/en/report/info/AMR51/177/2005

The New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/08/13/070813fa_fact_mayer

BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6733353.stm

I could continue to post, but whats the point? The government has ackowledged the existence of these prisons, and has openly argued that those detained in the these prisons have no rights to due process whatsoever, that they can and should be tortured, etc...

And your position GW is that there has never been a false arrest and there has never been an innocent person that was detained and tortured for years on end.

:scared

I am sorry, who is the gullible one?

guess what...when you murder 3,000 innocents on american soil....when you don`t wear uniforms and hide among the population....when you have as many as 13 aliases.....the system can`t be perfect....it wasn`t in ww2,either...

how many people were held during ww2?...and for how long?....

probably till the end of hostilities.....without due process...and these guys get due process...from a military court.....how else did that whining jihadi live to tell his b.s. story?.....

how many of our boys have been released?

and btw....how many of these "innocents" have been released and recaptured on the battlefield?.....more than a few....

they get honey glazed chicken etc........prayer mats,korans and halal food...

as of now,our servicemen get their heads hacked off....

when they start giving us geneva convention protections...when they start wearing uni`s to discern themselves from their own innocent peeps(who they don`t give a rat`s ass about)....when they start giving us due process....then we can talk....

if we face an enemy that wants to play by the rules,i`m all for it...


until then,i`ll let you guys ring your hands over these monsters.....personally,i want them to stay at guantanamo.....i don`t want them in my country with access to shyster lawyers like that sickening woman that was passing intel from her client back to al qaeda......

you want to wallpaper your houses in tin foil?...fine.....thankfully,you fringers are in the minority....

btw...who do you guys think started the practice of rendition?...it was your boy bill clinton.....
 
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