American Civil Liberties Union
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JULY 10, 2006
1:41 PM
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CONTACT: American Civil Liberties Union
media@aclu.org
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Senior Defense Department Officials' Failure to Provide Clear Interrogation Policy Resulted in Abuses, Documents Show
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NEW YORK - July 10 - Documents obtained by the
American Civil Liberties Union under the
Freedom of Information Act
show that military commanders in Afghanistan
requested in January 2003
that the Defense Department clarify which
interrogation methods could
be used against prisoners held by U.S. forces, but
that senior Defense
Department officials ignored the request. The ACLU
released some
of the government documents last week and, after review, released
the
remainder today.
"It is the
Defense Desaid Jameel
Jaffer, an ACLU
attorney. "But as these documents show, the Defense Department allowed abusive interrogation practices to flopartment's responsibility to ensure that prisoners are
treated
humanely, as the Geneva Conventions require," urish."
The documents, which
include the report of Vice
Admiral Albert T. Church, who was tapped to conduct a
comprehensive
review of Defense Department interrogation operations, reveal new
details in how several systemic failures in the chain of command
manifested
themselves, including: Improvised
Interrogation and "Silence as
Consent" According
to the Church report, military commanders in
Afghanistan sought
clarification from United States Central Command (Centcom)
and the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, describing interrogation techniques then being
employed and recommending that the techniques be approved as official
policy in
Afghanistan. Some of the techniques in
the request had been
approved by the Secretary of Defense exclusively
for use at Guantánamo; some had
since been rescinded altogether.
When senior officials failed to respond
as to whether those techniques
were appropriate, the ground command in
Afghanistan subsequently
adopted their own techniques as policy on the theory
that "silence is
consent." Unclear Guidelines As to What
Constitutes "Sleep Deprivation" According to a
report by Brigadier
General Richard Formica, as late as May 2004
Coalition Joint Task Force-7 was
operating under a set of rules that
had been approved by Gen. Sanchez in
September of 2003, but rescinded a
month later. The September order
included approval of the use of
military dogs, stress positions, sleep
adjustment and environmental
manipulation. All of these techniques were
rescinded in an
October memo. The new documents reveal that
an
officer on the ground tried to confirm the policy in February 2004, asking of
the September Sanchez memo "Can you verify that this is a valid, signed
policy?
If not, can you send me (or steer me toward) the current
policy?" The officer
received a reply that consisted of a copy of the
signed September memo and no
mention of the October memo. It
wasn't until May 21, 2004 that, after some
media attention, "anyone in
[the unit] became aware that the 14 Sep 03 policy
had been superceded."
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld later approved "sleep
adjustment" but not
"sleep deprivation," which was defined as "keeping detainee
awake for
more than 16 hours or allowing a detainee to rest briefly and then
repeatedly awakening him, not to exceed four days in
succession."
- One commander at Guantánamo came up with his own
definition of
sleep deprivation - "I define 'sleep deprivation' as keeping
a
detainee awake continuously for five or six day's [sic] straight."
-
Based on the advice of military lawyers and an United States Army Ranger
course
in which soldiers were subjected to days that lasted for 20
hours, a unit devised
its own policy on how long detainees could be
interrogated. "If it was okay to
subject our soldiers to twenty-hour
days, then in our mind's [sic] it was okay
to subject the terrorists to
twenty-hour interrogations."
-
In at least one instance, a
detainee was interrogated for 20 hours
every day for almost two months.
Lack of Guidelines and Enforcement Evidence in
the
Church Report also suggests that in developing techniques,
interrogators
interpreted the rules extremely broadly. In
particular, Alpha Company,
519th MI Battalion developed a variety of
techniques that went well beyond those
authorized. Some of these
techniques, including stress positions, were
similar to those
authorized by the Secretary of Defense in December 2002 for use
at
Guantánamo. Loopholes in the language and lack of oversight allowed
these practices to continue.
- In an investigation in which Marines
were ordered by a superior
officer to strip detainees and take their money, an
investigator stated
that, "the alleged conduct is a pattern of abuse of
detainees in direct
contravention to the Marine policy of 'No Better Friend, no
worse
enemy,' as well as the law of war. A Senior Naval Officer's conduct of
publicly humiliating these Iraqis clearly jeopardized the Battalion's
mission
and the Battalion's standing with the public....these acts
could have been a
"tipping point" resulting in hostility against
coalition forces."
-
A detainee
named Awayed Wanas Jabar died in U.S. custody in Iraq
after having his legs tied
to the bars of a window and a strap of
engineer tape tied tightly around his
midsection. A preliminary inquiry
stated that, "His position resembled that of a
person who had been
crucified." According to one Marine, the detainee seemed
"exhausted,
with his entire bodyweight appearing to be supported by the strap
around his midsection." Jabar remained in that position for at
least an
hour and a half and died approximately 15 minutes after the
tape was cut.
Because no autopsy was conducted, an investigation
was unable to conclude if the
cause of death was
asphyxia.
The Church Report also identified several cases in which medical personnel
failed to act after witnessing behavior that should have led them to
suspect
detainee abuse. The report found two cases where military
physicians in Bagram
reported no evidence of trauma when subsequent
autopsies found severe soft
tissue injuries. In one instance in
Iraq, military physicians documented
concerns about possible detainee
abuse in a memorandum dated six months after
the detainee's
death. "These documents further confirm that
systemic
command failures led to the widespread abuse of detainees held in U.S.
custody abroad," said ACLU staff attorney Amrit Singh. "Only an
independent investigation into detainee abuse can be trusted to hold
relevant
officials accountable for such failures." The
full Church Report,
along with other documents released to the ACLU, is
available online at: http://action.aclu.org/torturefoia/released/071006
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