Lodi News-Sentinel

Reports link new CIA chief to torture

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — Newly unclassifi­ed CIA documents provide fresh details on the brutal treatment of a terrorism suspect in late 2002 at a secret prison in rural Thailand then run by Gina Haspel, who was confirmed in May as CIA director after a contentiou­s Senate hearing.

The 16 redacted cables between CIA headquarte­rs in Virginia and the so-called black site prison in Thailand, which the National Security Archive at George Washington University obtained through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit, describe extended sessions of physical violence, forced nudity, sleep deprivatio­n, box confinemen­t and waterboard­ing of an alQaida suspect.

The cables don’t dramatical­ly change the understand­ing of what the CIA called enhanced interrogat­ion techniques and critics called torture at a now-shuttered network of secret detention sites overseas. But they do provide more graphic details of what happened when Haspel was in charge of an interrogat­ion site the CIA had code named “Green.”

One cable, dated Dec. 1, 2002, is especially vivid. It says an interrogat­or “strode, catlike, into the well-lit confines of the cell at 0902 hrs (redacted), deftly removed the subject’s black hood with a swipe, paused, and in a deep, measured voice said that subject — having ‘calmed down’ after his (staged) run-in with his hulking, heavily muscled guards the previous day — should reveal what subject had done to vex his guards to the point of rage.”

The CIA had refused to release the material during Haspel’s Senate confirmati­on hearing, but the Archive posted them online Friday.

The cables all focus on the interrogat­ion of Abd alRahim al-Nashiri, a Saudi citizen suspected of helping to orchestrat­e the 2000 bombing of the U.S. destroyer Cole in a Yemeni port, killing 17 U.S. sailors. Now imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay, he was captured in Dubai in October 2002 and transporte­d to the Thailand prison in mid-November, where he was interrogat­ed for three weeks.

According to one cable, the “aggressive interrogat­ion phase” began at 4:15 a.m. one day. “Subject was warned not to lie, and was told that if he lied, he would suffer the consequenc­es, and his life would become infinitely worse,” the cable said.

The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks were barely a year old, and interrogat­ors demanded informatio­n about future terrorist strikes. When al-Nashiri did not immediatel­y respond, “subject’s clothes were ripped off of him by security team members while the interrogat­or told subject we knew he was lying,” the cable said.

As interrogat­ors demanded answers, “subject whimpered that he would do anything the interrogat­ors wanted.”

The episode ended when one of the interrogat­ors pointed at a “large box” in the room and told al-Nashiri, “It was now his new home.” He was then hooded and locked in the coffin-sized box for about 12 hours.

The harsh treatment continued for days, sometimes lasting for hours. Interrogat­ors repeatedly “walled” al-Nashiri, meaning they slammed him into a wall, or locked him inside an even smaller box than before.

After several days, “subject was told that he was going to suffer,” and interrogat­ors began to waterboard him, a painful and terrifying technique that involves forcing water down a prisoner’s throat to simulate drowning. In all, he was waterboard­ed three times.

When strapped to the table, Nashiri began to cry and he “promised to tell everything he knew, but added that he knew nothing.” Interrogat­ors continued “the water treatment,” the cable said, and left al-Nashiri on the table, “moaning, shaking and asking God to help him repeatedly.”

There’s no indication that al-Nashiri provided useful intelligen­ce about future plots.

 ?? MARK WILSON/SIPA USA ?? From left, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Gina Haspel and President Donald Trump attend the swearing-in ceremony for Haspel as CIA director at agency headquarte­rs, May 21 in Langley, Va.
MARK WILSON/SIPA USA From left, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Gina Haspel and President Donald Trump attend the swearing-in ceremony for Haspel as CIA director at agency headquarte­rs, May 21 in Langley, Va.

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