This video says about itself:
The Dark Prison: The Legacy of the CIA Torture Programme – Fault Lines
24 March 2016
“In the immediate aftermath of 9/11 we did some things that were wrong. We did a whole lot of things that were right, but we tortured some folks.”
It’s been more than a year since US President Barack Obama admitted that the CIA tortured prisoners at its interrogation centres.
While the CIA has long admitted the use of waterboarding, which simulates drowning by pouring water into a person’s nose and mouth, a truncated and heavily redacted report by the Senate Intelligence Committee in December 2015 detailed other abuses that went beyond previous disclosures.
Reading like a script from a horror film, some of the techniques involved prisoners being slapped and punched while being dragged naked up and down corridors, being kept in isolation in total darkness, subject to constant deafening music, rectal rehydration and being locked in coffin-shaped boxes.
Critical to the development of the CIA’s brutal interrogation programme was a legal memo that said the proposed methods of interrogation were not torture if they did not cause “organ failure, death or permanent damage”.
Despite failing to produce any useful information about imminent terrorist attacks, the CIA meted out these and other brutal treatments for years after the September 11, 2001 attacks.
And with dozens of people having since been released without charge, and at least a quarter of them officially declared to have been “wrongfully detained”, the effects of torture live on with the victims, burned into their minds.
In this episode of Fault Lines, we explore the plight of these men struggling to overcome their harrowing experiences of torture since leaving CIA-run black sites.
By Cristian Farias, Legal Affairs Reporter, The Huffington Post in the USA:
American Public Is Not Entitled To See Full Senate Torture Report, Court Rules
As a “congressional record,” the document is not subject to freedom-of-information laws.
05/13/2016 07:19 pm ET
An appeals court ruled on Friday that more than 6,000 pages of the so-called Senate torture report cannot be made public because they consist of congressional records that are not subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, which only covers federal agencies.
The unanimous ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in Washington made clear that records that Congress shares with federal agencies can’t be disclosed if there’s a “clear intent” by lawmakers “to control the document.”
The decision dealt a major blow to the American Civil Liberties Union, which sued the CIA and other federal agencies that saw the full report ahead of the Senate’s release of a much shorter executive summary in 2014.
The ACLU had argued that the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, then headed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), had “relinquished control” of the full report when it allowed President Barack Obama and other agencies to inspect it before the much briefer executive summary was released to the public.
But the appeals court rejected that argument, relying on a “critical” June 2009 letter Feinstein sent to the CIA that made “plain” that the Senate committee “intended to control any and all of its work product” — including the 6,963-page report that resulted from its investigation into widespread detainee abuse by the agency during the Bush administration.
The court said that the “mere transmission” of the full report to the executive branch didn’t mean the document was now discoverable under federal public-disclosure laws.
“The Committee effectively stamped its control over the Full Report when it wrote the terms of the Letter,” wrote U.S. Senior Circuit Judge Harry Edwards Friday, concluding that those terms governed the report’s lengthy process of revisions and approval by the two government branches in the years that followed.
Hina Shamsi, the ACLU lawyer who in March argued in favor of the disclosures, expressed disappointment about Friday’s ruling on Twitter and said her organization is weighing whether to appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court.
Feinstein, through spokesman Tom Mentzer, sidestepped a question from The Huffington Post about whether she believes the full report remains in the Senate’s control and thus outside the public’s reach.
Instead, the senator suggested that only certain officials should be granted access to its contents.
“Now that this case is resolved, I again call on the administration to allow appropriate, cleared individuals to have full access to the study and for the National Archives to fulfill its obligation to preserve this document,” Feinstein said in a statement.
But in a December 2014 letter to the president — after the torture report’s executive summary was made public — Feinstein seemed to defer to the executive on what do to with the full report, counseling that it should allow “for use as broadly as appropriate” so that the abuse “is never repeated.”
“I hope you will encourage use of the full report in the future development of CIA training programs, as well as future guidelines and procedures for all Executive Branch employees, as you see fit,” Feinstein wrote at the time.
NEW REPORTS DETAIL CIA TORTURE The declassified transcripts contain testimony from prisoners. [NYT]
New CIA torture documents confirm chilling details of Khaled El-Masri’s ‘Kafka-esque’ ordeal: here.
Right after he took office, Barack Obama promised to do away with torture. But documents obtained by BuzzFeed News show for the first time how a harsh interrogation tactic thrived on his watch in Afghanistan. Human rights advocates said it could be inhumane and illegal: here.
The CIA Didn’t Just Torture, It Experimented on Human Beings: here.
Pingback: CIA destroys torture evidence | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Anohni’s new anti-war music album | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Orlando G4S murderer ‘an alcoholic closet gay’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Trump abuses Istanbul atrocity for promoting torture | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Blairite Jack Straw, MI6’s Sir Mark Allen ‘too big to jail’ for Libyan torture | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: CIA-funded Syrian ‘moderate rebels’ behead 12-year-old sick child | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Hillary Clinton chooses Senator Tim Kaine as Vice Presidential candidate | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Hillary Clinton, Democratic convention, war and TPP | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: War Porn, American anti-war novel | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Ukrainian secret police torture jails | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: United States wars, more decades yet? | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Nederlandse inlichtingendiensten hebben een veel actievere rol gespeeld tijdens de Koude Oorlog dan tot nu toe werd aangenomen. De Buitenlandse Inlichtingendienst (BID), was in de jaren vijftig betrokken bij meerdere geheime operaties in de toenmalige Sovjet-Unie, in landen als Roemenië, Bulgarije, Albanië en Tsjecho-Slowakije. De dienst werkte daarbij nauw samen met de Amerikaanse CIA. Dat blijkt uit het boek Samen met de CIA. Operaties achter het IJzeren Gordijn van spionagedeskundige Cees Wiebes, dat vrijdag verschijnt.
Door: Huib Modderkolk 1 september 2016, 16:46
http://www.volkskrant.nl/4368634/?utm_source=VK+avond+20160902
LikeLike
Pingback: German warmongers whitewash al-Qaeda | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: CIA torture report, background | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Anti-Trump movement continues | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: US Americans suspected of torture in Afghanistan | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Donald Trump’s far-right nominees | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Will Trump destroy CIA torture evidence? | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: CIA torture, new information | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Pentagon: ‘We didn’t kill Yemeni civilians … whoops … we did’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: CIA against British pro-peace women | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Secret Saudi-UAE-USA torture prisons in occupied Yemen | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Hillary Clinton made Trump president, book review | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: CIA-United States corporate media revolving door | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Trump replaces ex-Exxon boss with CIA boss at State Department | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Trump’s torturing CIA boss Haspel, new documents | Dear Kitty. Some blog