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The Torture Career of Egypt's New Vice President: Omar Suleiman and the Rendition to Torture Program
In response to the mass protests of recent days, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has appointed his first Vice President in his over 30 years rule, intelligence chief Omar Suleiman. When Suleiman was first announced, Aljazeera commentators were describing him as a "distinguished" and "respected " man. It turns out, however, that he is distinguished for, among other things, his central role in Egyptian torture and in the US rendition to torture program. Further, he is "respected" by US officials for his cooperation with their torture plans, among other initiatives.
Katherine Hawkins, an expert
on the US's rendition to torture program, in an email, has sent some
critical texts where Suleiman pops up. Thus, Jane Mayer, in The Dark Side, pointed to Suleiman's role in the rendition program:
Each rendition was authorized at the very top levels of both governments....The long-serving chief of the Egyptian central intelligence agency, Omar Suleiman, negotiated directly with top Agency officials. [Former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt] Walker described the Egyptian counterpart, Suleiman, as "very bright, very realistic," adding that he was cognizant that there was a downside to "some of the negative things that the Egyptians engaged in, of torture and so on. But he was not squeamish, by the way" (pp. 113).
Stephen Grey, in Ghost Plane, his investigative work on the rendition program also points to Suleiman as central in the rendition program:
To negotiate these assurances [that the Egyptians wouldn't "torture" the prisoner delivered for torture] the CIA dealt principally in Egypt through Omar Suleiman, the chief of the Egyptian general intelligence service (EGIS) since 1993. It was he who arranged the meetings with the Egyptian interior ministry.... Suleiman, who understood English well, was an urbane and sophisticated man. Others told me that for years Suleiman was America's chief interlocutor with the Egyptian regime -- the main channel to President Hosni Mubarak himself, even on matters far removed from intelligence and security.
Suleiman's role, was also highlighted in a Wikileaks cable:
In the context of the close and sustained cooperation between the USG and GOE on counterterrorism, Post believes that the written GOE assurances regarding the return of three Egyptians detained at Guantanamo (reftel) represent the firm commitment of the GOE to adhere to the requested principles. These assurances were passed directly from Egyptian General Intelligence Service (EGIS) Chief Soliman through liaison channels -- the most effective communication path on this issue. General Soliman's word is the GOE's guarantee, and the GOE's track record of cooperation on CT issues lends further support to this assessment. End summary.
However, Suleiman wasn't just the go-to bureaucrat for when the Americans wanted to arrange a little torture. This "urbane and sophisticated man" apparently enjoyed a little rough stuff himself.
Shortly after 9/11, Australian citizen Mamdouh Habib was captured by Pakistani security forces and, under US pressure, torture by Pakistanis. He was then rendered (with an Australian diplomats watching) by CIA operatives to Egypt, a not uncommon practice. In Egypt, Habib merited Suleiman's personal attention. As related by Richard Neville, based on Habib's memoir:
Habib was interrogated by the country's Intelligence Director, General Omar Suleiman.... Suleiman took a personal interest in anyone suspected of links with Al Qaeda. As Habib had visited Afghanistan shortly before 9/11, he was under suspicion. Habib was repeatedly zapped with high-voltage electricity, immersed in water up to his nostrils, beaten, his fingers were broken and he was hung from metal hooks.
That treatment wasn't enough for Suleiman, so:
To loosen Habib's tongue, Suleiman ordered a guard to murder a gruesomely shackled Turkistan prisoner in front of Habib - and he did, with a vicious karate kick.
After Suleiman's men extracted Habib's confession, he was transferred back to US custody, where he eventually was imprisoned at Guantanamo. His "confession" was then used as evidence in his Guantanamo trial.
The Washington Post's intelligence correspondent Jeff Stein reported some additional details regarding Suleiman and his important role in the old Egypt the demonstrators are trying to leave behind:
"Suleiman is seen by some analysts as a possible successor to the president," the Voice of American said Friday. "He earned international respect for his role as a mediator in Middle East affairs and for curbing Islamic extremism."
An editorialist at Pakistan's "International News" predicted Thursday that "Suleiman will probably scupper his boss's plans [to install his son], even if the aspiring intelligence guru himself is as young as 75."
Suleiman graduated from Egypt's prestigious Military Academy but also received training in the Soviet Union. Under his guidance, Egyptian intelligence has worked hand-in-glove with the CIA's counterterrorism programs, most notably in the 2003 rendition from Italy of an al-Qaeda suspect known as Abu Omar.
In 2009, Foreign Policy magazine ranked Suleiman as the Middle East's most powerful intelligence chief, ahead of Mossad chief Meir Dagan.
In an observation that may turn out to be ironic, the magazine wrote, "More than from any other single factor, Suleiman's influence stems from his unswerving loyalty to Mubarak."
If Suleiman succeeds Mubarak and retains power, we will likely be treated to plaudits for his distinguished credentials from government officials and US pundits. We should remember that what they really mean is his ability to brutalize and torture. As Stephen Grey puts it:
But in secret, men like Omar Suleiman, the country's most powerful spy and secret politician, did our work, the sort of work that Western countries have no appetite to do ourselves.
If Suleiman receives praise in the US, it will be because our leaders know that he's the sort of leader who can be counted on to do what it takes to restore order and ensure that Egypt remains friendly to US interests.
There are some signs, however, that the Obama administration may not accept Suleiman's appointment. Today they criticized the rearrangement of the chairs in Egypt's government. If so, that will be a welcome sign that the Obama administration may have some limits beyond which it is hesitant to go in aligning with our most brutal "friends."
We sure hope that the Egyptian demonstrators reject the farce of Suleiman's appointment and push on to a complete change of regime. Otherwise the Egyptian torture chamber will undoubtedly return, as a new regime reestablishes "stability" and serves US interests.



20 Comments so far
Show AllThe best comment on this appointment has been made by Robert Fisk on the ground in Egypt right now: "In the pantomime world of Mubarak himself - and of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in Washington - the man who still claims to be president of Egypt swore in the most preposterous choice of vice-president in an attempt to soften the fury of the protesters - Omar Suleiman, Egypt's chief negotiator with Israel and his senior intelligence officer, a 75-year-old with years of visits to Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and four heart attacks to his credit. How this elderly apparatchik might be expected to deal with the anger and joy of liberation of 80 million Egyptians is beyond imagination. When I told the demonstrators on the tank around me the news of Suleiman's appointment, they burst into laughter." Robert Fisk, "Egypt: Death Throes of a Dictatorship", 1/30/11.
It must be terribly upsetting to Barack and Hilary to have their Middle East fantasies shattered. We can only hope that they are still capable of learning from events.
Thanks for the Fisk article tip. I will read it now.
I was afraid that the protestors would settle. But then again....I don't think they will. But now the u.s. is going to play it like they did what they could to help the Egyptians, with this new addition, and after that, the u.s. will support Mubarak. It is sooo obviously scripted. I see it already!
duh!
obomber and mubarak are only decoys in the global parasites' game of distraction.
So Hillary Clinton said this morning that having a vice-president was one of the reform measures the US had been asking for. I imagine the Obama Admin called Mubarak in recent days to speed up appointing a VP in case Mubarak is forced to leave. Whether or not the case, Mubarak appointed someone as bad as himself who has been a player in Mubarak's government, yet acceptable to the US government as long as not too much bad publicity is reported by M$M on him.
I say that the US should trade Biden to Egypt for a player to be named later.
LOL
If I'm Egypt then I want cash considerations too!!
Suleima looks OK to me. He dresses well.
I don't know, to me he looks like someone out of Central Casting for the role of evil dictator or head of a drug cartel.
Evil dictators and heads of drug cartels also dress for success.
The dictators must look the part their Owners’ require. They dress well to distinguish themselves for the riff-raff, the little people, the Terrorists.
The drug lords may have higher office in mind.
It is how the Empty Suits gather popular support, in addition to perhaps tossing a few tokens in the direction of the peasants, and controlling the media.
Public prayer is also useful.
Yet another torturing "ex" General is appointed to succeed Mubarak...but wait, Mubarak is a torturing "ex" General. This so-called ally has to go, Egypt needs democracy...our $1.3+ in annual bribes must been withdrawn until this happens.
Yeh, he looks very O.K. Even resembles our own John Negroponte,
ambassador to Honduras during its torture days, and helper of defeating Honduras' bid for democracy. Amazing that evil men don't look the part. Heard McCain saying this AM that the US needs to get on the right side of history. How about starting in our own backyard with Honduras, El Salvador, Haiti. Right now, it looks like the only man who cares and speaks out is Hugo Chavez.
YouTube CHAVEZ : LE DRAME D'HAITI ET L'IMPERIALISME via Haitian PhD, Dr. Pavlov Rameau.
A very good article by Stephen Soldz. Let's hope the facts get wider exposure.
The author is maybe a bit too optimistic about the Obama White House learning its limits on supporting torture abroad. Obama embraced Bush's extraordinary rendition program, or torture by proxy, from the beginning of his Presidency. The Obama administration didn't stand by Canadian citizen Maher Arar when he sued in U.S. courts over his torture by proxy by the Bush administration. Obama didn't close Guantanamo. He never released the torture photos, after promising to do so. We have no assurances that Bush-era secret torture centers were closed. Attorney General Eric Holder did nothing after the CIA lost its torture tapes. Bush officials were never prosecuted, even when they bragged about torture, as Bush and Cheney have done publicly on numerous occasions.
-TIA
This Mr. Suleiman speaks English and likes to torture people. OMG, it's cheney, but with a still beating heart.
If America wants this guy, will he bring freedom, peace and an improved economy? He'll probably do what he always does, but as usual the American press will only report some of the information. He'll just repeat what he has done, and tweak it for the press.
I bet he will bring the Egyptians new swimming pools ( deep enough to stand in, but narrow enough to attach electrical wiring.)
He'll arrange for the protestors to have hair and pedicures done, (but break all their fingers toes.)
He'll invite them to a light show party, ( then zap them with huge amounts of current.)
He'll train them to hang glide ( getting over fear of heights by hanging on meat hooks)
He'll introduce them to kick boxing ( and use them as the targets.)
No, I'm sorry, but based on his history, NOT good. It the U.S., likes then him, then that's a sad and scary recommendation. You see, government, it's supposed to be in the best interests of the people of Egypt, and NOT anyone else.
Fisk has it right, but not quite right enough. People laughed at the appointment, but it is deadly serious.
Mubarak APPOINTS his torture master as his first vice president after three decades as (the U.S. calls him) President, who of course knows where all the bodies are as well as who in the U.S. promoted torture and rendition.
Mubarak's appointment of Suleiman is to cover his ass internationally, not in any effort to "reform" his tyranny.
Very informative article (I know, not by Fisk; I was reflecting on an earlier post here).
-30-
Thank you, Mr. Soldz, for writing this, and thank you, CommonDreams, for posting it. The record of brutality and criminality, testified to by many different sources, needs to be well known and widely disseminated.
One could look at it like Bush having stepped down and appointing Cheney to take over.
One way Mubarak could attack the protesters would be to cut off food imports to Cairo, also water and electricity. Is the Obama administration prepared for such an eventuality? Would they approve it?
Jim Shea
ms crowley of CNN asked secretary clinton on which side does the US stand on egypt, the govrnment or the poeple. clinton replied(more or less) that the US advocated democracy in egypt for the last 30 years.i may agree that bush, reagan clinton and obama administrations , publically, and i repeat publicly advocated democracy in egypt. but the US government gave the egyptian's riot police riot gears, mustard gas canisters and rubber bulltes as was shown by the recent demonstation in egype with samples of these weapons empties printed MADE IN THE USA. now mrs. clinton please tell the world if you truly advocate democracy, then why your government supplies egypt with weapons spicificaly made to supress, democracy( forcefully by the riot plice), freedom of assembly, freedom of expressins like peacefull demonstrations using these police supplies that they recieve from the US. how stupid do you think poeple are to believe such rubbish. what about US credebility in the eyes of the world? does this matter to you at all? with the lies that bush jr propogated as excuses for going to war on iraq, don't you think that the world at large had enough of these deceptions? are you really honostly serving the best interests of the US .why don't you give poeple some a reason, a credble one, to blieve that the US reps speak the truth just once in their lives?
He looks like an unfunny Salvador Dali, actually.
In the current climate of world juntas, he has the official uniform on - the Italian suit. It is STILL a junta. America lives under a junta, too. (I puked when I saw Barry wearing the same Air Force jacket as Chimp when he went to Afghanistan.) It's all bloody SPIN - smoke and mirrors.
I got ill reading about this TORTURER, this WAR CRIMINAL. I am particularly pleased to see that Stephen's article is making the rounds because he pulls no punches - we are exposed to The Brute, as the entire world should be. This is Pinochet, Mach 47. And, eventually, Pinochet was arrested.
The pricey computers which are following all of our Egypt comments are working overtime and they are still indicating that Mubarak&Co can stay on, obviously. Proof: He and his croniess are there, a bunch of vultures using their war toyz to kill and torture ever more people.
This GENOCIDE against Freedom Fighters is torture - and that is true here in Egypt TODAY. The pics of the torturing are buried in most Western news, but France24 published them.
The TRUTH will out.
Please, people - make this article go VIRAL. Send the link t6o your list(s).
Shed light on injustice.