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December 12, 2014

Untrained CIA Agents Were Just Making Up Torture Methods As They Went Along

On Tuesday morning, the Senate intelligence committee released an executive summary of its five-year investigation into the CIA's interrogation and detention program.  
Among the report's most striking revelations is that CIA interrogators were often untrained and in some instances made up torturous techniques as they went along. 
The CIA was "unprepared" to begin the enhanced interrogation program, the Senate report concluded. The agency sent untrained, inexperienced people into the field to interrogate Abu Zubaydah, the first important Al Qaeda suspect the US captured.
Within weeks of Zubaydah's arrival, while he was still in the hospital recovering from a gunshot wound, CIA headquarters was planning to throw him in all-white room with no natural lighting, blast rock music 24/7, strip him of his clothes, and keep him awake all day. They did. Extreme interrogations like these, identified as "enhanced interrogation techniques," went on for more than three months before CIA officers received any sort of training in the new techniques from anyone.

Page 10 of the executive summary of the Senate intelligence committee report
As the overall detention and interrogation program proceeded, many untrained CIA personnel continued to do whatever they wanted, without authorization or supervision. At one facility in 2002, code-named COBALT, "untrained CIA officers…conducted frequent, unauthorized, and unsupervised interrogations of detainees using harsh physical interrogation techniques that were not—and never became—part of the CIA's formal 'enhanced' interrogation program," the report found. COBALT is reportedly a prison in Afghanistan the agency nicknamed "the Salt Pit." In one example identified by the report, an interrogator left a COBALT detainee chained naked to the concrete floor. The detainee later died of suspected hypothermia.
The CIA also put a junior official with absolutely no relevant experience in charge of this entire facility. Later, when the CIA's inspector general investigated COBALT, the CIA said it knew little about what happened there. Several interrogators at the site became uncomfortable with their coworkers' methods, not sure that they were safe or effective. According to John Helgeron, the CIA inspector general who conducted a formal review of the agency's detention and interrogation program, CIA interrogators at COBALT had zero training guidelines before December 2002. The report claims, quoting Helgeron: "Interrogators, some with little or no training, were 'left to their own devices in working with detainees.'"
In 2004, the CIA chief at another detention site, code-named BLACK, penned a long email about his disillusionment with the program, especially deficiencies in training:

Page 144 of the executive summary of the Senate intelligence committee's report
And in one particularly heinous example, the CIA headquarters sent an untrained interrogator to question Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, a man the CIA claimed was an Al Qaeda "terrorist operations planner" involved in several bombings. One senior CIA official had reservations about sending the untrained interrogator, noting that he heard the man was "too confident, had a temper, and had some security issues." But the man got sent anyway.
While there, the interrogator allegedly forced Nashiri to stand with his hands over his head for two and a half days, blindfolded him, pushed a pistol up against his head, and revved up a cordless drill close to his body. When this produced no new information, the interrogator slapped the detainee repeatedly on the back of the head, told him he'd sexually assault his mother in front of him, blew cigar smoke in his face, and made him sit in such stressful positions that a medical officer was concerned the detainee's shoulders would be dislocated.
The CIA base chief let this happen because he thought this interrogator was sent to "fix" the problem of an uncooperative detainee and had permission from headquarters to take such extreme steps. Both men were later reprimanded, according to the report.

2 comments:

  1. This piece is a lie. It's a dodge. The techniques used in torture are tried and true and date back centuries, to the crusades, the Ismaili hashish assassins and honed scientifically by the NaZis in the death camps, and by those working in the US intelligence apparatus after many of those same NaZis were brought to America via Operation Paperclip.

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  2. I would add Zio-Nazis! You didn't know that Hitler himself and many in his cabinett and his generality were Jews? That 120.000 Jews fought with the German army and 360.000 Hungarians and over 100.000 so called POW's from France.


    Why were the most 'successful' concentration camp located in Poland? Right - Polish and Ukraine thugs served along the SS in those camps.


    USA is controlled by Judea and its bank system Wall Street/City of London and so are the so called US allies.

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