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Wikileaks: US Pressured Spain over CIA Rendition and Guantánamo Torture
US officials tried to influence Spanish prosecutors and government officials to head off court investigations into Guantánamo Bay torture allegations, secret CIA "extraordinary rendition" flights and the killing of a Spanish journalist by US troops in Iraq, according to secret US diplomatic cables.
WikiLeaks cables reveal that investigations by Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón were of greatest concern to the US. (Photograph: Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty Images) Among their biggest worries were investigations pursued by the magistrate Baltasar Garzón, who US officials described as having "an anti-American streak".
"We are certainly under no illusions about the individual with whom we are dealing," they said after he opened an investigation into torture at Guantánamo Bay prison camp. "Judge Garzon has been a storied and controversial figure in recent Spanish history, whose ambition and pursuit of the spotlight may be without rival."
The revelations contained in the leaked documents will be embarrassing to Spanish prosecutors who shared information on cases they were involved in, and whose identities the Americans wanted protected.
They included the attorney general, Candido Conde-Pumpido, national court chief prosecutor, Javier Zaragoza, and fellow prosecutor Vicente González Mota, responsible for the CIA flights affair.
Zaragoza is revealed as a valuable source who accuses Garzón of opening some human rights cases in order to "drum up more speaking fees". He proved to be an ally as the US tried to stem a flood of investigations at Spain's national court – one of the world's most vigorous courts in exercising international jurisdiction over human rights crimes.
A major worry was a torture case brought by a Spanish non-governmental organisation against six senior Bush administration officials, including the former attorney general Alberto Gonzales.
Senator Mel Martinez, a former Republican party chairman, and the US embassy's charge d'affaires visited the Spanish foreign ministry to warn the investigation would have consequences. "Martinez and the charge underscored that the prosecutions would ... have an enormous impact on the bilateral relationship," the officials reported.
Officials in Madrid discussed with Zaragoza ways in which a US investigation into the same allegations might be opened in order to force the Spanish court to close its own case. "Zaragoza has also told us that if a proceeding regarding this matter were underway in the US, that would effectively bar proceedings in Spain. We intend to further explore this option with him informally," they said.
Garzón, who opened a separate torture investigation, was deemed to put self-promotion first. "We suspect Garzón will wring all the publicity he can from the case unless and until he is forced to give it up," said the officials.
"Zaragoza said he had challenged Garzón directly and personally on this latest case, asking if he was trying to drum up more speaking fees," they reported.
They noted that Garzón was already in hot water over his investigation into human rights crimes committed under Spain's former dictator General Francisco Franco. As a result Garzón now looks set to be removed from his job by supreme court judges next year.
"Zaragoza doubts Garzón will risk a second such complaint," they said.
But US officials worried he would go down fighting. "It is hard for us to see why the publicity-loving Garzón would shut off his headline-generating machine unless forced to do so," they reported. "We also fear Garzón – far from being deterred by threats of disciplinary action – may welcome the chance for martyrdom, knowing the case will attract worldwide attention."
When another Spanish magistrate began investigating the alleged use of a Spanish airport for secret CIA flights carrying terror suspects, officials noted that US policy was to deal with these cases in closed-door conversations with governments.
They were especially alarmed when magistrates and prosecutors in both Spain and Germany began comparing notes. "This co-ordination among independent investigators will complicate our efforts to manage this case at a discreet government-to-government level," they warned.
Officials noted, however, that their own government had not explicitly denied the allegations. "Our ability to beat down this story is constrained by the fact that we do not ourselves know, factually, what might have transpired five or six years ago as the battles in Afghanistan and Iraq began yielding large numbers of potentially dangerous terrorist detainees and unlawful combatants," they observed.
"Baring (sic) a categorical statement from the US government that no detainees passed through Spain – and we understand that might be undesirable from a policy standpoint even if factually correct – nothing but time is going to make this go away," they said.
González Mota, who was handling the CIA flights, was a valuable source. "The prosecutors do not intend to request information on this case from the embassy or from the US government in general," US officials said after a conversation with him.
When another Spanish magistrate issued arrest warrants for three US soldiers involved in the death of Spanish television cameraman José Couso in Baghdad, senior ministers in Spain's socialist government moved to stop the investigation. Couso was killed in April 2003 alongside Reuters cameraman Taras Protsyuk when a tank opened fire on a hotel known to accommodate journalists.
"Top ministers moved quickly to let us know that the government is working to resolve this situation," the officials reported, naming the deputy prime minister, María Teresa Fernández de la Vega, foreign minister, Miguel Angel Moratinos, and justice minister, Juan Fernando López Aguilar.
"The [Spanish] government must act carefully as it tries to influence Spain's fiercely independent judiciary," they noted. " In order to avoid aggravating the situation, Spanish government leaders must publicly show their respect for the independent workings of the courts."
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18 Comments so far
Show AllAnother example of the US undermining Democracy and its institutions.
Wikileaks and Julian Assange have provided a valuable service to those of us interested in the truth.
At this point in time, it appears that any and all who work for the State Department are complicit in the rendition and torture and other war crimes.
Take your Wiki-asskicking Bush, Cheney, Obama and Congress. Like it. We need to limit how much this country's political campaigns spend so we get better politicians.
yes yes yes. you are so right gene. this the biggest reason i support the green party. screw the asshole dims and rethug parties. they are both equally responsible for everything that has been going on. i heard this on democracy now and it is really something. the US was undermining the judicial system of spain and threatening germany if they held cia personnel accountable for kidnapping the wrong person from their country. i would bet that many in europe will not trust the US again.
way to go asshole dims and rethugs!! and naturally they were doing all they could to cover their shitty asses.
wiki leaks is going to be really vital to getting alot of the information we in the US have not been getting about the BS our country has been up to.
matt
galveston tx
"Magistrate Baltasar Garzón, who US officials described as having "an anti-American streak".
"We are certainly under no illusions about the individual with whom we are dealing," they said after he opened an investigation into torture at Guantánamo Bay prison camp. "Judge Garzon has been a storied and controversial figure in recent Spanish history, whose ambition and pursuit of the spotlight may be without rival."
Boy, does anyone see any similarity of how the U.S. global EMPIRE (and its 'Vichy' political whores, and 'Vichy' corporatist media) are slurring and discrediting this guy Garzon overseas, and how the exact same friggin EMPIRE dealt with the dangerous Ralph Nader right here in the 'homeland' of the ruling-elites' global corporate/financial/militarist 'Vichy' EMPIRE (only posing as the former nation-state previously known as America)?
Anyone remember the NYT, Post, ABC, NBC, even "The Nation" using these descriptions to sideline the dangerous Nader --- "whose ambition and pursuit of the spotlight may be without rival", or 'egomaniac', 'spoiler'??
That's how an EMPIRE deals with anyone who endangers the EMPIRE "abroad" or "at home" --- or rather that's how an EMPIRE deals with anyone not already in power, nor with the power to immediately hurt the EMPIRE. [EMPIRE deals with those in power and intent on exposing it, like JFK, somewhat more directly].
As Hannah Arendt presciently warned, based on her painful experience with the Nazi EMPIRE, "EMPIRE abroad entails tyranny at home".
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
cable by cable, the criminals and the global financial terrorists are being exposed.
of course the criminals themselves are doing the only thing they know: intimidate and kill, for maximum chilling effect, to minimize the inevitable avalanche of leaks from all around the world.
the enemy of the global financial terrorists and their local henchmen are the informed and empowered people in solidarity.
"A major concern behind Obama’s effort to cover up state crimes committed by his predecessor, including illegal domestic spying as well as torture, renditions and indefinite detention, is a desire to uphold the vast expansion of unilateral executive power of the Bush years, which was at the heart of the dictatorial conceptions laid out in the secret memos. Obama, his advisers and the military-intelligence apparatus before which they are bowing wish to retain the repressive structures and laws enacted under Bush in the face of explosive tensions building up within American society. All the more under conditions of economic crisis, democratic forms become untenable in a society dominated by staggering levels of social inequality, and where a monopoly of political power is exercised by a financial aristocracy through two corrupt and servile parties."
...
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/apr2009/pers-a25.shtml
“I’m a strong believer that it’s important to look forward and not backward.”
- Barack Obama, war criminal and chief errand boy for Big Business.
Excellent post, mcoyote!
Thanks for the link, I had not read the WSWS article you reference --- which is spot-on, as all WSWS articles are.
Here's a return of the favor from yesterdays that struck me as similarly appropriate:
"This perverse attempt to equate state secrecy with freedom and democracy—and exposure of secrets to the public as antidemocratic and totalitarian—speaks volumes about the fraudulent character of “democracy” in the US and the rest of the capitalist world as well as the rabidly reactionary character of the attacks on WikiLeaks."
full article:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/nov2010/pers-n30.shtml
I was particularly struck by Bill's concluding analogy to the effective insurrection that led to the overthrow of Imperial Russia, and to the outing of similar EMPIRE secrets.
Best,
Alan
I'm proud that CD continues to be one of the only true progressive sites on the web which allows references to WSWS --- although Fluffington News may allow such candor as soon as hell freezes over.
No prosecution for US crimes, but now prosecution threatened against Wikileaks for exposing US crimes.
Obama, like Bush, detests the rule of law.
AmeriKKKa the greatest pruveyor of violence in the world....
What kind of unethical, immoral and legally perverse country is the US? Why would it want to keep the truth from being told, why would it not want evil doers to be investigated and penalized, why would it attempt to blackmail Spain? Unlike the US, the Spanish Judiciary really is fair and independant. It is not politicized as in America. When trials are held in Spain they are fair and unbiased. When trials are held in the US, the defendants must worry about political interference and obstruction of justice. It goees with the territory unfortunately.
..
President Obama, Atty.Gen. Holder, and Secty.of State Clinton should all resign from office ,,,IMMEDIATELY and UNCONDITIONALLY,,,,,,,,,,,,,
If these individuals fail to resign; then the new Congress should hold hearings to remove them.
//
the rest of the world are waiting, patiently for now, for americans to correct our wrongs.
they are not gonna wait forever.
We need to pass a law that makes it compulsory to prosecute any government official for any crime or violation. So long as prosecutors can choose to prosecute or not, corruption will continue to rule and ruin our lives.
You can let Amazon know what you think about them shutting down Wikileaks by simply taking them off your list of stores for your Christmas holiday shopping.
Wow, U.S. diplomats worked to deflect the prosecution of murderous crimes committed as a consequence of Bush administration policies. Torture and waging preventive wars are international crimes. So is shooting journalists with tank shells or machine gun fire. Now you've got obstruction of justice added to the mix.
And the Obama administration acts like that's all OK. It covers it up and even adopts those same Bush policies as its own.
It seems, from this leak, that it really is possible for the Bush/Bama bastards to get prosecuted. Maybe that might happen abroad, but it is sorely needed.
-TIA
Did we need Wikileaks to know this ?