Pentagon Records Detail Prisoner Abuse by US Military
Military interrogators assaulted Afghan detainees in 2003, using investigation methods they learned during self-defense training, Pentagon documents released Wednesday show.
Detainees at the Gardez Detention Facility in southeastern Afghanistan reported being made to kneel outside in wet clothing and being kicked and punched in the kidneys, nose and knees if they moved, according to the documents.
A 2006 Army review concluded that the detainees were not abused but that the incident revealed "misconduct that warrants further action."
The documents, which were turned over Wednesday evening to the American Civil Liberties Union, focus on the 2003 death of Afghan detainee Jamal Nasser, who died in U.S. custody at the Gardez facility.
The documents detail interrogation techniques used on eight detainees, including Nasser, who were suspected of weapons trafficking.
The Army review found that abuse did not cause Nasser's death. But the documents include interviews with some interrogators who acknowledged slapping the detainees _ a technique they learned during survival training at the Army's SERE school. SERE stands for Survive, Evade, Resist and Escape.
"You say you gave permission for (redacted) to hit detainees during interrogations; did you have a memorandum or order from your higher headquarters authorizing that?" a military criminal investigator asked one of the interrogators, according to a November 2004 transcript among the more than 300 pages of documents.
"No, I did not have a memorandum and had not seen one," the interrogator answered, according to the transcript. "I used tactics that were used in SERE."
The investigator continued: "Did you see (redacted) hit detainees during the interviews?"
"Yes, open or closed slaps, not punches," the interrogator answered.
In another interview that day, according to the documents, the Army investigator asks whether "you ever heard of a tactic of pouring cold water or a water and snow mix on persons captured?"
"They do spray cold water on prisoners," the interrogator answered, referring to SERE lessons. That interrogator was unaware, however, of men in his unit pouring cold water over the detainees, as the Afghans later complained.
ACLU attorney Amrit Singh said such interrogation techniques are taught at SERE schools only to show soldiers how to withstand them from enemy captors. She called the methods, when used together, a form of torture.
"They were intended to be defensive methods, not offensive methods," Singh said. "This raises serious questions about the interrogation methods that were being applied in Afghanistan."
SERE methods were also used on detainees by military interrogators in Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Singh said.
The Pentagon and the Army did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday evening.
The 2004 criminal inquiry of Nasser's death was among a string of probes into alleged abuse of prisoners in U.S. jails in Afghanistan.
Trying to deflect the kind of scandal that followed the abuse of prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan ordered a review of their secretive network of about 20 jails at bases across Afghanistan.
Nasser was among eight detainees who were held at Gardez for between 18 and 20 days. The Army concluded he died of a stomach ailment.
Associated Press writer Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.
© 2008 Associated Press
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18 Comments so far
Show AllTorture is not an "interrogation technique." Torture is torture.
Water boarding is not "simulated drowning," it is drowning and it is torture since the days of the Spanish inquisition.
"Militants" is currently misued in the US media to cover everything from the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people to reisist the abusive Israeli military occupation of their land with islaamic extremist fanatics of the 9/11 variety. As a militarily occupied people the Palestinians do have the right to resist. Both sides in this conflict are comitting illegal violence against civilians, with far more Palestinian child and adult victims!
"Nasser was among eight detainees who were held at Gardez for between 18 and 20 days. The Army concluded he died of a stomach ailment."
yup..water torture will do that to you...
During 1958 I was assigned as an Instructor at the Department of Combat Intelligence, US Army Intelligence School, Ft. Holabird, MD, on Methods used for Interrogation of Prisoners of War, and at NO time was the use of torture or brutality ever instructed or even condoned. Techniques regarding Suvival Training have NOTHING to do with Methods of Interrogation. Granted, in the heat of battle things do get out of control, but is still no excuse for mistreating prisoners. One can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.
Hey AP, stop calling them "interrogation techniques".
You know it has nothing to do with interrogation. To pretend that it does is to cooperate quite arrogantly with the torture, battery, rape and murder.
The military is like the bully who grabs your hand and pushes it into your face.
The AP is like the bully's sycophantic protege, mocking: "Stop hitting yourself. Why do you keep hitting yourself?"
Let us rejoice that finally a US Prez has admitted what most knew all along: that torture has always been used at given times at given places, given human nature and the lack of oversight in war zones and prisons...Only difference is that now our Chief Exec embraces it......to a limited extent these guys have "come clean " like never before...."gloves are off" now. This is all emblematic of big change down the road, not so far as we would wish.
But perhaps we should keep positive. My experience (17 years) under (the not untypical right wing fascist) Augusto Pinochet in Chile prompts me to predict that to see any REAL CHANGE in this land we will need the following:
First, a collapse of our economy at least as bad as the "Great Dep", then the vicious deaths of thousands of innocent citizens, a reign of terror for a few years, press and speech curtailment, special prisons, etc., etc. After about a decade or so of this realpolitik the need for the much-mentioned "checks and balances" starts becoming apparent and the people begin to CARE again. Then on to the constitutional convention and we TRY AGAIN.
Our system can and will be salvaged. The positive elements in our technological reality are something to be proud of. And human kind IS working to put the baddie genies back into the bottle. But in the meantime most of us are deathly afraid of.....death and the disappearance of our little selves. So we have hypnotized ourselves with the TUBE and this SCREEN, largely unconcerned about the responsibilites of what citizenship now means in the age of violence and greed and nation states which are unconcerned about how to stop the juggernaut from eating itself.
Stiv Whitman and Terryb: I've got to back Curmudgeon 99 on this one. We Americans have gone along with the program for too long. Like they say, "what goes around, comes around." In warfare, innocent people get hurt or killed because of a few bad apples at the top. Yes-No?
Remember one thing, folks. When you wear a military uniform, you represent collective nationalism in your country for good or evil. We all are stigmatized by the actions of those who "are only following orders," of the most criminal regime in US history.
Curmudgeon99 is correct. We haven't paid the piper yet, for our crimes against humanity.
And like the SS; these boys Volunteered to Murder and Torture people in foreign lands.
Volunteering to Torture? That's a Psycopath.
Khiam.
Ditto to the above comments re mental retardation. Bush/Cheney et al are psychopaths, deceitful, lacking remorse, conning others for personal gain (clinical descriptors of psychopathic personality).
PS. The other reason not to confuse these a-holes of the universe with people of below-average intelligence is that a lower IQ has nothing to do with being evil. One of my daughters was profoundly "retarded" because meningitis destroyed nearly all her brain. But she remained loving and funny till the day she died. Retarded people are seldom evil. And vice versa.
In defense of curmudgeon, "we the people" are also culpable here, not merely the media and Congress. Why? If we demanded more of media and Congress, they would not dare ho-hum their way through this vile mess.
To Darius: Please don't call Bush (or Cheney, Rice, et al.) a "retard". To do so is to confuse being IQ-challenged with being evil. After all, individuals with below-average IQs were born that way; it is not their fault. These scum have plenty enough intelligence to think up their life-destroying schemes and bully Congress into implementing them and cow the media into toeing the line.
No, they are not stupid or lacking in intelligence, unfortunately. They are evil to the marrow of their bones. That's why they are so terrifying.
I'm just so sick of what this little retard has done to our country,I think you all know what i'd like to see done to him and all his dumb ass followers.
It's bloody disgusting that there's even a "torture debate" going on in the US. What the hell is wrong with you people?!?!
curmudgeon, It's the goddamn congress, and the senate, as well as the media. It's not the American people.
To curmudgeon99:
It's NOT the public giving torture the "ho-hum" but the corporate media. No need to confuse the two!
If it's in SERE then it's done to soldiers, therefore it must be legal, can't be torture and can be used upon enemies.
Does this twisted logic provide legal cover for abusers?
The architects of America's torture program will stand trial for their offenses. Me and others like me will not rest until they do. There is no easy "out" for these people. They're goin' down! No 2 ways about it!
And the fact that all torture was planned IN the White House with full knowledge of Bush gets a ho-hum from the US public.
Payback time will NOT be pretty.
Condi to CIA:
"This is your baby. Go to it."