http://www.truth-out.org/bush-obama-wiki-and-cia67188
Bush, Obama, Wiki and the CIA
Friday 28 January 2011
by: William Fisher, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis
At his first prime-time press conference in February 2009, President Barack Obama was asked for his view on a proposal by Sen. Patrick Leahy for a "truth and reconciliation" commission to investigate whether the predecessor Bush administration had committed crimes in its handling of suspected terrorist detainees.
Obama ducked the heart of the question by saying he didn't know enough about the proposal to answer. But he then repeated a meme that he would subsequently deliver repeatedly in a variety of forms to a variety of audiences. It was to become almost as much a political cliché as "yes, we can" or "change we can believe in."
He said
Nowhere was the seriousness of Obama's intent more obvious than in his ongoing efforts to shield the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), its operatives and its activities from public scrutiny or accountability.
This was, however, 180 degrees from the approach he took while on the campaign trail. As a candidate, Obama promised to end the use of torture, close
"From both a moral standpoint and a practical standpoint, torture is wrong," he wrote in Foreign Affairs.
And, indeed, on January 22, 2009, the president created a task force to study and evaluate the transfer of prisoners to other nations for detention and/or interrogation.
Its eventual conclusion created considerable disappointment among Obama's human rights constituency
And on January 22, 2009, President Obama signed a detailed executive order "operationalizing" the task force recommendations.
The order said that prisoners "shall in all circumstances be treated humanely and shall not be subjected to violence to life and person (including murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture), nor to outrages upon personal dignity (including humiliating and degrading treatment)." It also specifically nullified interpretations of federal law on interrogations "issued by the Department of Justice (DOJ) between September 11, 2001 and January 20, 2009."
These Bush-era DOJ documents were the so-called "torture memos" prepared by John Yoo and Jay Bybee, some of which Obama ultimately released to the public.
But legal experts and human rights advocates were quick to point out that "diplomatic assurances" were precisely the same mechanism used by the Bush administration. The record shows that such assurances were usually less than worthless; countries with records of prison torture could not be trusted to change their ways.
And we will probably never know whether that outcome may actually have pleased any of the senior officials in the Bush administration.
Rendition - which began during the administration of Bill Clinton - was of particular concern to two of
While rendition and torture were not the focal points of Obama's presidential campaign, the subjects were prominent enough for the corporate media to have addressed the story with some frequency. And most observers believe that the public understood that rendition and torture were inseparable.
Given this background, it is perhaps understandable that the Obama administration's reaction to the anti-Bush actions of some of
Moreover, such actions were and are being taken to protect Bush-era policies and personalities, which were sometimes rumored in the American press and in the blogosphere, but only widely confirmed by the diplomatic cables recently released by WikiLeaks. So, it is reasonable to assert that the
Earlier, the Bush administration had faced - unsuccessfully - a similar situation in
Later, as Scott Horton disclosed in Harper's Magazine, the US attempted to obstruct investigations by the Spanish government into the murder of a Spanish journalist in Iraq by US forces, the use of Spanish airfields for the CIA's rendition program and the torture of Spanish detainees at Guantánamo.
A major worry was a torture case brought by a Spanish nongovernmental organization against six senior Bush administration officials, including the former Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales.
The German situation has been impeccably reported by Matthias Gebauer and John Goetz of Der Spiegel online.
They write that the American diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks "provide new details about the case of Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen abducted by the CIA in 2003. The reports confirm just how much pressure the
The external details of the el-Masri case are well known by now.
Over the Christmas-New Year's holiday in 2003, Khaled el-Masri, a greengrocer from a small town in South Germany, traveled by bus to
According to The Guardian newspaper in Britain, despite el-Masri's protests that he was not al-Masri, he was beaten, stripped naked, shot full of drugs, given an enema and a diaper and flown first to Baghdad and then to the notorious "salt pit," the CIA's secret interrogation facility in Afghanistan.
"At the salt pit, he was repeatedly beaten, drugged and subjected to a strange food regime that he supposed was part of an experiment that his captors were performing on him.
"Throughout this time, El-Masri insisted that he had been falsely imprisoned and the CIA slowly established that he was who he claimed to be. Over many further weeks of bickering over what to do, a number of CIA figures apparently argued that, though innocent, the best course was to continue to hold him incommunicado because he 'knew too much'."
Then Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice sharply disagreed and ordered el-Masri's immediate release - which did take place, albeit not until Secretary Rice learned of a delay and issued her order again.
Scott Horton, an international lawyer who is a contributing editor at Harper's Magazine, reported that Dana Priest of The
Throughout this process, el-Masri's account of what transpired, part of which he wrote as an op-ed in The
Steven Watt, senior staff attorney with the ACLU Human Rights Program, told this reporter at the time, "Our government kidnapped an innocent man; tortured him and then, adding insult to injury, denied him his day in court through bogus claims of harm to national security."
He added, "To date, the
And Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy of the Federation of American Scientists, reminded us, "There are innocent individuals who have been swept up in US government counterterrorism operations, wrongly detained, 'rendered' surreptitiously to foreign countries, subjected to extreme physical and mental stress, or otherwise wronged."
"In some cases, like those of persons such as Maher Arar and Khaled el-Masri, efforts to seek legal remedies have been blocked by the government's invocation of the state secrets privilege," he added.
"As a result, the alleged abuses committed in such cases remain unresolved and there is no way for the affected individuals
to be made whole," he said.
But the WikiLeaks documents reveal that, in 2007, American officials, including the
In one of the cables, the Ambassador, William R. Timken Jr., reports on a meeting to caution German officials against trying to enforce the arrest warrants. In another, a senior American diplomat tells a German official "that our intention was not to threaten
German officials, according to the WikiLeaks document, conceded that they understood the possible diplomatic consequences, but also warned that, given the outcry from the German media, their options were limited.
Despite the warnings, the German government did issue Interpol arrest warrants for CIA officials involved in the kidnapping. However, they dropped the charges a few months later.
The Wiki cable shows a discussion between the
The DCM noted that the reports in the German media of the discussion of the issue between the secretary and Foreign Minister Steinmeier in
The cable went on to say
Politically speaking, Nikel reportedly said, "
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Nikel also cited intense pressure from the Bundestag and the German media. The German federal government must consider the "entire political context," he said. He assured the DCM that the chancellor's office is well aware of the bilateral political implications of the case, but added that this case "will not be easy."
In the end, most press accounts note that the indictments of the CIA officers appear to be dormant. And they depict German Prime Minister Angela Merkel as having "caved" to the
The
The case was brought by the family of José Couso, a young cameraman with the Spanish TV network Telecinco. He was filming from the balcony of the Palestine Hotel in
Following Couso's death, there were protests at American diplomatic posts in
In 2005, Spanish authorities opened a preliminary investigation with an international arrest warrant against three of the involved
The international arrest warrant against the three military personnel was reactivated, accusing the soldiers of murder and of a crime against the international community. They were subsequently indicted and, in July 2010, Judge Santiago Pedraz launched a search and arrest warrant against the three
"I am outraged," said Javier Couso, the brother of José Couso. "I can't believe my government conspired with a foreign government ... It seems we are citizens, or at least a small province, of the empire of the
The leaked
A cable dated May 14, 2007, from the
But there were also other, equally serious, issues with
that the CIA flight that took el-Masri to
To de-escalate that situation, the
The case file is now in the jurisdiction of a Spanish magistrate. He has taken no further action on the indictments while he awaits an answer to the question he asked the Obama administration - whether it intends to open an investigation of its own.
Among their biggest worries were investigations originated by the magistrate Baltasar Garzón, the storied jurist who had the Europe-wide arrest warrant issued for former Chilean strongman Augusto Pinochet.
Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) - which has played a major role in mobilizing lawyers to defend Guantanamo detainees, told this reporter, "The importance of this investigation cannot be understated. Contrary to statements by some, the Spanish investigations are not 'symbolic.' Just ask Augusto Pinochet, who was stranded under house arrest in
But the diplomatic cables reveal that Garzon was seen by US officials as having "an anti-American streak." However, many observers doubt this assertion. Garzon has been a frequent visitor to the
"We are certainly under no illusions about the individual with whom we are dealing," US officials said after Garzon opened an investigation into torture at
"Judge Garzon has been a storied and controversial figure in recent Spanish history, whose ambition and pursuit of the spotlight may be without rival," the
Garzón was deemed to put self-promotion first. "We suspect Garzón will wring all the publicity he can from the case unless and until he is forced to give it up," said the officials.
"It is hard for us to see why the publicity-loving Garzón would shut off his headline-generating machine unless forced to do so," they reported.
"We also fear Garzón - far from being deterred by threats of disciplinary action - may welcome the chance for martyrdom, knowing the case will attract worldwide attention."
When another Spanish magistrate began investigating the alleged use of a Spanish airport for secret CIA flights carrying terror suspects, officials noted that
They were especially alarmed when magistrates and prosecutors in both
coordination among independent investigators will complicate our efforts to manage this case at a discreet government-to-government level," they warned.
"Baring [sic] a categorical statement from the US government that no detainees passed through Spain - and we understand that might be undesirable from a policy standpoint even if factually correct - nothing but time is going to make this go away," they said.
"Top (Spanish) ministers moved quickly to let us know that the government is working to resolve this situation," the officials reported, naming the deputy prime minister, the foreign minister and the justice minister.
"The [Spanish] government must act carefully as it tries to influence
It is worth noting that while
Presumably under the mantra of looking forward, not backward, the White House and the State Department believe they have an obligation to do whatever they can diplomatically to protect US personnel, US interests and
This is considered essential, albeit most observers contend that it does not come anywhere near meeting the transparency and accountability pledges made by the president during the campaign and beyond.
Some observers suggest it may also be useful to consider the extent to which the diplomatic efforts of the Obama administration have been motivated by the desire to continue the tradition of "the imperial presidency" - the effort to maintain a strong executive branch, typified by George W. Bush.
But even if Obama's diplomats are successful in suppressing anything that might embarrass the CIA, the military, or any other agency of government, its troubles would appear to be far from over.
Last week, in
CCR and ECCHR filed a 12-page dossier detailing the key role of Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, who ran the island prison camp from November 2002 until April 2004, in the torture and other serious abuse of detainees held there.
In the dossier, the rights groups detail acts of torture and other war crimes committed against detainees, including the torture of CCR client Mohammed al Qahtani. Much of the documentation discussed in the dossier is drawn from US government reports.
Based on his record in Guantánamo, Miller was sent to
"There is ample evidence - primarily from US government sources - that Geoffrey Miller played a central role in the torture of detainees at Guantánamo and later in
William Fisher has managed economic development programs in the Middle East and in many other parts of the world for the US State Department and USAID for the past thirty years. He began his work life as a journalist for newspapers and for the Associated Press in Florida . Fisher also served in the international affairs area during the Kennedy administration. Go to The World According to Bill Fisher for more.
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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