The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lasting image of 2002

Photo from Guantánamo Bay prison still fuels debate, 20 years later.

- Carol Rosenberg

Four months to the day after the Sept. 11 attacks, a photograph­er hoisted a camera above shiny new razor wire and took a picture of 20 prisoners on their knees in orange uniforms, manacled, masked and heads bowed. The image ignited a debate over what the United States was doing at its offshore prison, which continues operating to this day. It also became one of the most enduring, damning photos of U.S. detention policy in the 21st century.

But lost in time and collective memory to many is that the picture was not some leaked image of torture that the public was not meant to see. It was taken by a U.S. Navy photograph­er, intentiona­lly released by the Defense Department.

“I was doing exactly what I was assigned to do,” said the photograph­er, Shane T. Mccoy. “It was my job to document it. I absolutely had to photograph it. And I had to send it up.”

The date was Jan. 11, 2002. In Afghanista­n and Pakistan, local allies had scooped up hundreds of suspected foreign fighters and al-qaida members and delivered them to U.S. forces. The CIA had yet to establish its secret prison network. The detainee abuse scandal at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq was years away.

And an Air Force cargo plane had delivered the first prisoners to the base in southeast Cuba — the “least worst place” for the mission, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said. Mccoy, a petty officer at the time, drew the assignment of photograph­ing opening day at Camp X-ray for the elite Combat Camera unit.

In time, the U.S. would hold about 780 prisoners at the remote outpost. In a matter of months, after the first 300 prisoners were brought there, the Pentagon had put up crude rows of cells welded from shipping containers. Later, the military built air-conditione­d prisons, where the last 39 detainees are held today.

Image won’t go away

To the chagrin of a succession of military commanders, the image of those first 20 men on their knees would not go away.

Newspapers and magazines routinely republish it in articles about the prison, the base and the U.S. war on terrorism. Protesters don orange and reenact it. Islamic State fighters usurped it and put hostages in bright orange clothing, then executed them.

It has become so pervasive, so emblematic of U.S. detention policy that some do not realize that it was taken at Guantánamo Bay, the prison that the George W. Bush administra­tion made its showcase detention operation.

In a recent episode of “60 Minutes” about a former National Security Agency contractor who leaked a government document, the Guantánamo photo that was released by the U.S. military filled the screen to illustrate the idea that the government has used classifica­tion “to conceal wrongdoing — torture in the war on terror, for example.”

How you see that photo depends on “your politics, your awareness of Guantánamo and what went on there — on your capacity for empathy, whether or not anybody in your family has ever been in prison,” said Anne Wilkes Tucker, the former curator of photograph­y at Houston’s Museum of Fine Arts.

“That picture will be interprete­d and reinterpre­ted for probably ever,” she said. “It’s so rich, and can solicit 180-degree interpreta­tions. From ‘We got them’ to ‘More than half are probably innocent.’”

Hours before the first 20 men arrived, the Marine responsibl­e for setting up Camp X-ray, Brig. Gen. Michael Lehnert, described them as “the worst of the worst” of the detainees held in Afghanista­n. It would eventually be clear that was not true.

Just two are held today. Of those first 20, eight were released by the time Bush left office. None were ever charged in the Sept. 11 attacks.

In Senate testimony last month, Lehnert, who retired as a major general, called the enterprise he had set up misguided, at odds with U.S. values. He urged that it be closed.

Mccoy, 47, now a photograph­er for the U.S. Marshals Service, recalled that day as a long one. He had split the duties with another Navy photograph­er, and with a coin toss ended up documentin­g the men awaiting registrati­on in a makeshift, open-air holding compound.

He chose about 100 images, wrote captions and sent them to Washington.

At the Pentagon a week later, news organizati­ons were clamoring for transparen­cy at the nascent detention operation in Cuba. Grainy, night-vision news footage had been broadcast from Afghanista­n showing U.S. soldiers leading prisoners in rags, with bags on their head.

“The challenge was that the Geneva Convention­s specifical­ly prohibit holding detainees up to public ridicule or humiliatio­n,” Victoria Clarke, Rumsfeld’s spokeswoma­n, wrote in her 2006 memoir, “Lipstick on a Pig.” To “allay some of our critics,” she obtained permission and released five photos.

People in the Pentagon saw a portrayal of safely held, anonymous prisoners that met Geneva Convention­s obligation­s to protect prisoners against “public curiosity.” Out in the world, the imagery struck some people as cruel. They saw degradatio­n, sensory deprivatio­n and subjugatio­n.

“Did I ever misread what was in those photos,” Clarke wrote. “Instead of showing the care and concern with which we treated the detainees, the photos served as high-octane fuel for our critics and doubters.”

Some in Europe were particular­ly offended. The dragnet in Afghanista­n and Pakistan had rounded up English-speaking Muslims, some of them from Western Europe, and they were being sent to Guantánamo Bay.

“Shaved and Confused,” said a headline accompanyi­ng the photo in Glasgow’s Sunday Herald. “Even Our Enemies Have Human Rights,” declared London’s Sunday Independen­t. “Guantánamo Scandal,” said the title of a blurb on the front page of Le Monde. The Mirror tabloid questioned the alliance between Prime Minister Tony Blair and Bush. “What are you doing in our name, Mr. Blair?” said a tabloid cover.

Not understand­ing visual literacy

“I think it’s a lack of visual literacy on the part of, in this case, the military,” said Fred Ritchin, a former professor of photograph­y and imaging at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts and dean emeritus of the Internatio­nal Center of Photograph­y.

“The attempt here, from what I understand, seems to have been to try to show good guys rounding up those who might have been considered the bad guys, while thinking that they were doing it in a humane way,” he said. “Other people don’t see it that way.”

Mccoy and Clarke said the Pentagon failed by not providing fuller explanatio­ns of what was happening in the photo.

“It was this tiny little slice of what happened down there, without seeing the whole pie,” Mccoy said, like “taking a few words out of context” and creating an alternativ­e narrative.

The photo showed a moment when the prisoners were crosslegge­d while on their knees “so they can’t get up quickly and run away,” said Mccoy, who has seen law enforcemen­t officers put prisoners on the ground the same way.

Hats and mittens were to protect against the cold in the cavernous cargo plane that brought them from wintry Afghanista­n. Blackout goggles and ear coverings were to prevent the presumed enemy from communicat­ing and perhaps plotting attacks. Turquoise masks were to shield against the possible spread of tuberculos­is.

Photo not in context

Without adequate explanatio­n, Mccoy said, “you just see the photo that outraged people.”

“I’m always of the opinion that people should be able to see most of what the government is doing,” he said. “The fact that I have a little slice of history, I don’t mind that. I don’t mind that I was the one inside the camp documentin­g it. If things got changed for the better, then that’s wonderful. I never witnessed any mistreatme­nt.”

Rumsfeld explained that the detainees were in transit and not kept that way. “I think that a lot of people saw that and said, ‘My goodness, they’re being forced to kneel,’ which is not true,” he said.

He declared it “probably unfortunat­e” that the images were released. The Pentagon stopped giving them out. By then, major news agencies had distribute­d them.

Mccoy learned of the reaction to his photos and called his mother. “I told her that I caused an internatio­nal incident. She said, ‘I’m so proud of you.’ She knew I was just doing my job.”

 ?? U.S. NAVY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shane T. Mccoy’s photo of Jan. 11, 2002, shows the first 20 prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, soon after their arrival. How you view the photo depends on “your politics, your awareness of Guantánamo and what went on there,” says Anne Wilkes Tucker, a former curator of photograph­y at a Houston museum.
U.S. NAVY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Shane T. Mccoy’s photo of Jan. 11, 2002, shows the first 20 prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, soon after their arrival. How you view the photo depends on “your politics, your awareness of Guantánamo and what went on there,” says Anne Wilkes Tucker, a former curator of photograph­y at a Houston museum.
 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A sentry tower at Camp X-ray, the original prison facility for detainees at Guantanamo Bay. In time, the United States would hold about 780 prisoners at the remote outpost, most of them on suspicion of terrorism. Only 39 remain incarcerat­ed today.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES A sentry tower at Camp X-ray, the original prison facility for detainees at Guantanamo Bay. In time, the United States would hold about 780 prisoners at the remote outpost, most of them on suspicion of terrorism. Only 39 remain incarcerat­ed today.

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