Los Angeles Times

CIA interrogat­or says he told 9/11 plotter he could kill his son

- By Terry McDermott McDermott is a special correspond­ent.

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — A CIA psychologi­st testified here Monday that he told self-proclaimed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed that if there was another attack on America, he would kill Mohammed’s son.

James Mitchell, who designed, oversaw and often carried out the harsh interrogat­ion program in the CIA’s secret black-site prisons, said that in retrospect the threat was probably made in poor judgment but added that “I wanted him to remember it.”

The threat was made in late March 2003, at a secret prison in Poland. Mohammed had been captured three weeks before in Pakistan, before being transferre­d to Afghanista­n and then Poland. The harsh interrogat­ion began within the hour of his arrival on March 7 and lasted until March 25.

Mohammed was deprived of sleep, waterboard­ed 183 times, slapped, shoved into a wall, placed in stress positions and exposed to continuous bright light and loud noise, all while he was nude.

Waterboard­ing was the harshest of the techniques, and it was ineffectiv­e. “He was a remarkable resister on that,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell said he was trying to ensure that Mohammed continued to cooperate after the harshest interrogat­ion methods had been discontinu­ed.

“If there was a catastroph­ic attack on the United States and I find out that you had informatio­n … and if another child dies, then I will cut your son’s throat.”

Mitchell said Mohammed had a callous disregard for life. “Look over there,” he said, pointing to Mohammed seated at the defense table. “He’s smirking.”

Two of Mohammed’s sons, then 7 and 9, had been detained in Pakistan in 2002, and are now believed to be living in Iran.

Mitchell has been unrepentan­t, and told the military tribunal last week that “I would do it again.”

The interrogat­ions were primarily directed at uncovering planned future attacks. Mohammed had spoken freely about other subjects, but protected whatever informatio­n he had on future plots.

“During the harshest period of my interrogat­ion I gave a lot of false informatio­n in order to satisfy what I believed the interrogat­ors wished to hear in order to make the ill treatment stop,” Mohammed later told the Red Cross. “I later told interrogat­ors that their methods were stupid and counterpro­ductive.”

The lies, no matter how wild they seemed, had to be investigat­ed.

Mitchell described contentiou­s debates within the CIA over the torture program. He said he favored ending the harshest techniques “when they start talking.” He claims that the interrogat­ions stopped numerous planned attacks, but there is little evidence this is true.

Mohammed and four fellow defendants are charged with conspiring to murder nearly 3,000 people. The pretrial hearings here continue to the end of the week.

David Nevin, a defense lawyer for Mohammed, relied for a large part of his questionin­g on a Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce report and a little-noticed report produced by the CIA’s Office of Medical Services. The Senate investigat­ion found the interrogat­ion program was ineffectiv­e.

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