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How Bush's Torture Helped Al-Qaeda
Captured al-Qaeda operatives, facing the threat or reality of torture, appear to have fed the Bush administration's obsession about Iraq, buying Osama bin Laden and other terrorist leaders time to rebuild their organization inside nuclear-armed Pakistan.
Even now, as al-Qaeda and its Taliban allies expand their power ever closer to Pakistan's capital of Islamabad, ex-Bush administration officials continue to insist they protected U.S. security by repeatedly waterboarding the likes of 9/11 plotter Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and terrifying others, such as Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, with "extraordinary renditions" to foreign countries known to torture.
However, the emerging evidence, including recently released Justice Department memos, suggests that the "high-value detainees" may have helped divert U.S. focus away from their al-Qaeda colleagues by providing tantalizing misinformation about Saddam Hussein's Iraq and dropping tidbits about Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who operated inside Iraq.
The May 30, 2005, memo by Steven Bradbury, then acting head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, also appears to have exaggerated the value of intelligence extracted from detainee Abu Zubaydah through harsh interrogations - references that Bush administration defenders have cited as justification for abusive tactics, including the near-drowning of waterboarding.
The May 30 memo states: "Interrogations of Zubaydah - again, once enhanced techniques were employed - furnished detailed information regarding al Qaeda's ‘organizational structure, key operatives, and modus operandi' and identified KSM [Khalid Sheikh Mohammed] as the mastermind of the September 11 attacks. ...
"You [CIA officials] have informed us that Zubaydah also ‘provided significant information on two operatives, [including] Jose Padilla [,] who planned to build and detonate a ‘dirty bomb' in Washington DC area."
However, that last claim conflicts with known evidence about Zubaydah's interrogations and with the time elements of Padilla's arrest. Zubaydah was captured on March 28, 2002, after a gunfight that left him wounded. Padilla, an American citizen who converted to Islam, was arrested on May 8, 2002.
Yet, Bush administration lawyers did not give clearance for the "enhanced interrogation techniques" until late July, verbally, and on Aug. 1, 2002, in writing.
In addition, Zubaydah's information about Padilla and KSM was provided to FBI interrogators who had employed rapport-building techniques with Zubaydah, not the harsh tactics that CIA interrogators insisted upon later, according to published accounts.
FBI Successes
For instance, author Jane Mayer in her book The Dark Side writes that the two FBI agents, Ali Soufan and Steve Gaudin, "sent back early cables describing Zubayda as revealing inside details of the [9/11] attacks on New York and Washington, including the nickname of its central planner, ‘Mukhtar,' who was identified as Khalid Sheikh Mohammad. ...
"During this period, Zubayda also described an Al Qaeda associate whose physical description matched that of Jose Padilla. The information led to the arrest of the slow-witted American gang member in May 2002, at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. ...
"Abu Zubayda disclosed Padilla's role accidentally, apparently. While making small talk, he described an Al Qaeda associate he said had just visited the U.S. embassy in Pakistan. That scrap was enough for authorities to find and arrest Padilla.
"These early revelations were greeted with excitement by [CIA Director George] Tenet, until he was told they were extracted not by his officers but by the rival team at the FBI."
Soon, a CIA team arrived at the secret CIA detention center in Thailand where Zubaydah was being held and took command, adopting more aggressive interrogations tactics. However, the Bush administration did not approve the full battery of harsh tactics, including waterboarding, until mid-summer 2002.
Mayer's account was backed up Thursday by one of the FBI agents, Ali Soufan, who broke his long silence on the topic in an op-ed in the New York Times, citing Zubaydah's cooperation in providing information about Padilla and KSM before the CIA began the harsh tactics.
"It is inaccurate ... to say that Abu Zubaydah had been uncooperative," Soufan wrote. "Under traditional interrogation methods, he provided us with important actionable intelligence." [NYT, April 23, 2009]
Nevertheless, Bush administration defenders cite the information wrested from Zubaydah -- who was waterboarded at least 83 times in August 2002.-- as justification for the interrogation tactics that have been widely denounced as torture. For instance, former Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen has credited the CIA's harsh interrogation techniques for the arrest of Padilla.
Thiessen also was given space in the Washington Post's neoconservative editorial section to cite a claim in the May 30 memo that "in particular, the CIA believes that it would have been unable to obtain critical information from numerous detainees, including [Khalid Sheik Mohammed] and Abu Zubaydah, without these enhanced techniques." (KSM was waterboarded 183 times after his capture in March 2003.)
Thiessen also said the harsh tactics extracted information from Zubaydah and KSM about Zarqawi's operation in Iraq that "helped our operations against al-Qaeda in that country."
However, the timetable again works against these assertions by the CIA and Bush apologists. Zubaydah was captured in March 2002 at a time when Zarqawi was an obscure terrorist holed up in a section of Iraq protected by the U.S.-British no-fly zone, which prevented Saddam Hussein's military from attacking Zarqawi's stronghold.
KSM was captured on March 1, 2003, 18 days before President Bush launched the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. It was not until after the invasion had given way to a U.S. occupation that Zarqawi tapped into a wellspring of anti-Americanism throughout the Middle East and began recruiting young jihadists from across the region to mount suicide and other attacks against U.S. forces.
Zarqawi also built alliances with disgruntled Sunnis as the insurgency grew.
Whatever information Zubaydah and KSM might have provided about Zarqawi would have been dated and - to the degree they built up his importance - could have played into President Bush's desire to view the Iraq War as "the central front in the war on terror."
False Intelligence
The problem of false intelligence had already been demonstrated by the handling of another al-Qaeda captive, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, who had responded to threats of torture by claiming an operational link between Hussein's government and al-Qaeda. It was exactly the kind of information that the Bush administration had been seeking.
A June 2002 CIA report, which was dubbed the "Murky" paper, cited claims by al-Libi that Iraq had "provided" unspecified chemical and biological weapons training for two al-Qaeda operatives. Al-Libi's information also was inserted into a November 2002 National Intelligence Estimate.
In January 2003, another CIA paper expanded on al-Libi's claims of an Iraqi-al-Qaeda connection, saying that "Iraq - acting on the request of al-Qa'ida militant Abu Abdullah, who was Muhammad Atif's emissary - agreed to provide unspecified chemical or biological weapons training for two al-Qa'ida associates beginning in December 2000."
By Feb. 11, 2003, as the countdown to the U.S. invasion progressed, CIA Director Tenet began treating al-Libi's assertions as fact. At a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, Tenet said Iraq "has also provided training in poisons and gases to two al-Qa'ida associates. One of these associates characterized the relationship he forged with Iraqi officials as successful."
But the CIA's confidence about al-Libi's information went against the suspicions voiced by the Defense Intelligence Agency. "He lacks specific details" about the supposed training, the DIA observed. "It is possible he does not know any further details; it is more likely this individual is intentionally misleading the debriefers."
The DIA's doubts proved prescient. In January 2004, al-Libi recanted his statements and claimed that he had lied because of both actual and anticipated abuse, including threats that he would be sent to an intelligence service where he expected to be tortured.
Al-Libi said he fabricated "all information regarding al-Qa'ida's sending representatives to Iraq to try to obtain WMD assistance," according to a Feb. 4, 2004, CIA operational cable. "Once al-Libi started fabricating information, [he claimed] his treatment improved and he experienced no further physical pressures from the Americans."
Despite his cooperation, al-Libi said he was transferred to another country that subjected him to beatings and confinement in a "small box" for about 17 hours. He said he then made up another story about three al-Qaeda operatives going to Iraq "to learn about nuclear weapons." Afterwards, he said his treatment improved.
In September 2006, the Senate Intelligence Committee criticized the CIA for accepting al-Libi's claims as credible. "No postwar information has been found that indicates CBW training occurred and the detainee who provided the key prewar reporting about this training recanted his claims after the war," the committee report said.
The Senate Intelligence Committee skirted making a conclusion about how al-Libi's statements were extracted. But the al-Libi case demonstrated one of the practical risks of coercing a witness to talk. To avoid pain, people often make stuff up.
Buying Time
Though al-Libi's motivation appeared to be simply his desperation to avoid more pain, there is also the risk that al-Qaeda operatives intentionally "surrendered" intelligence that was designed to divert U.S. attentions away from the crucial terrorist base camps and safe houses along the Afghan-Pakistani border and toward Iraq.
In that sense, the interests of Bush's neocon foreign policy team and al-Qaeda were symbiotic. The Bush administration was determined to force regime change in Iraq while al-Qaeda was desperate for a respite from U.S. and NATO assaults in late 2001 and 2002. So, diverting U.S. military and intelligence resources toward Iraq bought al-Qaeda leaders valuable time.
As the U.S. military got bogged down in the Iraq War, al-Qaeda and its Taliban allies strengthened their safe havens inside Pakistan and began expanding their areas of control, threatening to destabilize the fragile government of Pakistan, the only Islamic country that has a nuclear bomb.
There has been other evidence that al-Qaeda's leaders understood the value of tying down the U.S. military in an open-ended war in Iraq, so they could reorganize and emerge as a more deadly threat in the future, especially if Pakistan's nuclear arsenal falls into their hands.
Osama bin Laden even intervened in Election 2004 by releasing a rare videotape on Oct. 29, 2004, railing against President Bush. Bush's supporters immediately dubbed the video tape "Osama's endorsement of John Kerry."
But inside the CIA, analysts concluded that the video was intended as a backdoor way to help Bush gain a second term, according to Ron Suskind's The One Percent Doctrine, which draws heavily from CIA insiders.
According to Suskind's book, CIA analysts had spent years "parsing each expressed word of the al-Qaeda leader and his deputy, [Ayman] Zawahiri. What they'd learned over nearly a decade is that bin Laden speaks only for strategic reasons. ...
"Their [the CIA's] assessments, at day's end, are a distillate of the kind of secret, internal conversations that the American public [was] not sanctioned to hear: strategic analysis. Today's conclusion: bin Laden's message was clearly designed to assist the President's reelection.
"At the five o'clock meeting, [Deputy CIA Director] John McLaughlin opened the issue with the consensus view: ‘Bin Laden certainly did a nice favor today for the President.'"
McLaughlin's comment drew nods from CIA officers at the table. The CIA analysts felt that bin Laden might have recognized how Bush's policies - including the Guantanamo prison camp, the Abu Ghraib scandal and the endless bloodshed in Iraq - were serving al-Qaeda's strategic goals for recruiting a new generation of jihadists.
"Certainly," CIA's deputy associate director for intelligence Jami Miscik said, "he would want Bush to keep doing what he's doing for a few more years," according to Suskind's account.
As their internal assessment sank in, the CIA analysts drifted into silence, troubled by the implications of their own conclusions. "An ocean of hard truths before them - such as what did it say about U.S. policies that bin Laden would want Bush reelected - remained untouched," Suskind wrote.
One consequence of bin Laden breaking nearly a year of silence to issue the videotape the weekend before the U.S. presidential election was to give the Bush campaign a much needed boost. From a virtual dead heat, Bush opened up a six-point lead, according to one poll.
Bush himself said later he considered the bin Laden tape an important turning point in the election. [For details, see our book, Neck Deep.]
Prolonging the War
Al-Qaeda's strategic interest in bogging the United States down in Iraq also was disclosed in a late 2005 letter to Zarqawi from a top aide to bin Laden known as "Atiyah," who upbraided Zarqawi for his reckless, hasty actions inside Iraq.
The message from Atiyah, who is believed to be a Libyan named Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, emphasized the need for Zarqawi to operate more deliberately in order to build political strength and drag out the U.S. occupation. "Prolonging the war is in our interest," Atiyah told Zarqawi.
[To view this excerpt in a translation published by the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, click here. To read the entire letter, click here. ]
Besides the value that al-Qaeda saw in dragging out the Iraq War, the harsh interrogations also had severe consequences for American troops.
As former Navy general counsel Alberto Mora told the Senate Armed Services Committee in June 2008, "there are serving U.S. flag-rank officers who maintain that the first and second identifiable causes of U.S. combat deaths in Iraq - as judged by their effectiveness in recruiting insurgent fighters into combat - are, respectively the symbols of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo."
Zarqawi was killed in June 2006, but only after a new team of military intelligence interrogators arrived in Iraq and rejected the brutal interrogation strategies that had survived the Abu Ghraib scandal two years earlier.
Instead, the team employed FBI-style "rapport-building" techniques and won the confidence of captured Sunni insurgents who gave up Zarqawi's location, which was destroyed by a U.S. aerial attack. [For details, see Washington Post, Nov. 30, 2008, or Consortiumnews.com's "Connecting CIA Torture to Abu Ghraib."]
So, the "enhanced interrogations techniques" may have had two deadly consequences: eliciting misinformation that helped lead the United States into the quicksand of Iraq (while al-Qaeda and its Islamic fundamentalist allies strengthened their position in nuclear-armed Pakistan) and contributing significantly to the deaths of more than 4,200 American soldiers in Iraq.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllWhere is Osama Bin Ladden?
We'll never forget, right?
"Where is Osama Bin Ladden?"
Dead...... We just resurrect him whenever it is convenient.
The Sheriff promised to bring him in dead or alive. But since he lied again; they have changed his name to Osama Bin Forgotten.
deleted by author
H o w _ B u s h ' s _ T o r t u r e _ H e l p e d _ A l - Q a e d a
Duh !
Everything that Darth Cheney and dubious bu$h!t DID, was to nurse, support, create plausible deniability, and grow stronger Al-Qaeda day by day.
The Global War OF Terror, was their choicest and most adored creation to fulfill their warmongering dreams and plans for profitability growth, in spite of the economy collapsing.
Without Al-Qaeda, the entire neoCONing club would have disappeared as useless as a match inside an erupting volcano
Perhaps that is picture perfect for their planned global environment, of spewing hate and red hot fear ?
Masters of the Universe of death and destruction certainly know which side of their toast is not yet BURNT ENOUGH.
Namaste
I think if Osama thought that turning himself in would end the two wars and get us out of there quickly, he would do it.
If not for Osama, what the hell are we doing there?
The War on Terror is nothing more or less than am excuse to consolidate the oil rich Middle East under American military "protection". We do not seek to end terrorism, only to use it strategically.
Every tactic of the Bush administration was designed to increase levels of hostility, to grow and nurture armed insurrection and make our presence there a necessity.
Dick Cheney recently started taunting the Obama administration to de-classify a CIA document Cheney swears he's seen that reportedly substantiates the utility of torture, claiming the Bushies' detainee treatment policies deterred about a dozen 9-11 style terrorist attacks that otherwise would have likely taken place on US soil after 9/11/01, but for the brilliant, ticking-time-bomb enhanced interrogation tactics the Bush White House courageously put in place.
How much you want to bet that, if that CIA report Cheney so eagerly wants made public were de-classified and made public tomorrow, the credible, reliable sources of most of that "valuable" intelligence information which kept America safe for the last seven years of Little George's watch would turn out to be KSM (183 waterboards), Abu Zubaydah (83 waterboards), and/or Al Libi (not one, but two subsequently recanted false confessions, the last one extracted after 17 hours confined in a small box)?
And while we're at it, what ever happened to that sexy, often repeated anecdote parroted around the mainstream media that KSM was initially a tough, impossible nut to crack using orthodox interrogation means, but he spilled his beans within 24 seconds of his very first waterboard exposure session, once its use had been reluctantly okayed?
What was the purpose of the next 182 sessions?
For that matter, was KSM ever asked to name his accomplices on the grassy knoll in Dallas?
Or don't SERE model trained torturers ever use cross-check controls to sniff out disinformation like some polygraph operators do?
For my money, the juiciest bit in this particular Robert Parry article is the Phoenix-like re-emergence of everybody's all time favorite, all purpose Scarlet Pimpernel Boogeyman, the late, great Zarkawi.
I always suspected Zarkawi's startling ability to disappear from sight and suddenly reemerge (like Zelig) into the news cycle with an atrocity du jour to blunt a particularly bad news day for the Iraqi occupation forces was that Zarkawi was actually a CIA asset, or perhaps a former CIA asset turned rogue, upon whom bloody misfortune could be always be conveniently blamed, in order to instantly distract media and public attention away from something else really gruesome and embarrassing.
Shucks, if Parry's right, I was being doubly misled. Mr. Zarkawi might actually have been a disinformation figurehead target conjured up by Osama's boys all along - a red herring that successfully lured the shark pack headlong away from the Afghan tribal regions off on a bloody false scent trail towards Baghdad.
Damn! Fooled again! Will I never learn?
Bill from Saginaw
As usual...very good Bill....
Bush-Cheney were the greatest recruiters Osama ever had: torture, attacking two innocent countries, predatoring civilians in Afghanistan AND Pakistan, raping and murdering civilians, dropping bombs on wedding parties. What decent man would NOT join up to stick it to the Americans?
And by recruiting for Al Qaeda, they ensure that their own interests in defence and oil are secured.
It's self-interest for them to create faux enemies for us. when will ordinary Americans realize that it is defenitely NOT in their own self-interest to let their elites drag them into wars of predation like this?
And are Americans so damaged by media that they can now be fooled all of the time?
The empire's torture policy inhibits its campaign, suggests the author. No problem. Torture has greater benefits. The practice helps keep the stormtroopers alien to peace and morality. No doubt the empire needs its stormtroopers practiced in evil and alien to commie-left ideals. And if you care to notice, you'll see that we have 10x reserve petro-power to drag all of our baggage through all the many ruts we dig. So please forget these problems and "press on".
excellent article.
IT is many more things than MSM that makes USA citizens gullible ------- Pharmaceuticals, Air,Water and ground borne toxins, lack of education, Poor diets, lack of exercise, stress, violent trivial culture to name a few other causes.
The story gets simpler and more coherent if one assumes that bin Ladin fed not Bush and Dick's obsession, but Rove's propaganda system. Remember:
The CIA had known Osama bin Ladin as an associate for decades; they knew he had no alliance with Hussein or anyone similar.
The CIA knew there were no WMD. Iraq had been subjected to a decade of sanctions and world-class invasive inspection. The US made sure there were no weapons, then invaded. Natural, no?
No one could have imagined that bin Ladin, hunted, could not just move, so invading a country makes no sense from a standpoint of tactics
That doesn't mean Bush and D wanted things to spread into Pakistan and so forth, but hey, no one gets to run the whole show here. They just found the fairly straightforward loss of stability in the region from Russia through to India, the loss of lives, and the increased security risks to Americans, let alone to anyone else, to be a small price for whatever bounties they anticipated personally.
We're pushing to prosecute the torturers, and we should. We should push to prosecute fraud and murder in these decisions, too. This was no more a "policy decision" than rape or murder.
Hmmmm, Bill mentions that ex-VP Cheney want to declassify reports to show what great intelligence we recieved. Just pondering here, but IF Cheney himself were waterboarded for several weeks on end, how many acts would HE admit to... I suspect that he'd even confess to knowing what happened to Jimmy Hoffer, and having been on the grassy knoll in Dallas. Information obtained from torture is not reliable. Might be true, might not.
Would Cheney know the location of Judge Crater?
Robert Parry, are you trying to flog the U.S. government lie that Al-Qaeda is a genuine terrorist organisation, when in fact it is a USraeli false flag/state terrorist organisation maintained for the purpose of destabilising Muslim countries from Sudan to Afghanistan to Indonesia?!
Andrew Winkler
Editor/Publisher
Rebel Media Group
I'm glad someone finally mentioned this. I've tried reading through this article a number of times and feel that I need to go back and research other sources. It seems that Parry has built most of this piece on disinformation and is indeed regurgitating the mythology of Al Queda. I'm more than a little puzzled and surprised. The whole promulgation of Bin Laden's role, for instance the Bin Laden tapes, and his trying to influence the 2004 election, certainly raised a red flag for me, since I believe that this is all propaganda (manufactured by the CIA/Pentagon).