Torture as a tool of democracy
Ghost Plane The True Story of the CIA Torture Program
Stephen Grey St. Martin's: 384 pp., $25.95
BOOK REVIEW By Tim Rutten | Los Angeles Times | October 25, 2006
OF all the dreadful novelties to which we have accustomed ourselves after Sept.
10, 2001, none is more grotesque than our continuing national debate over torture's
moral and legal legitimacy.
The existence of a clandestine network of CIA prisons where suspected Al Qaeda
terrorists and other alleged Islamic militants are held and tortured to obtain
information first was revealed by the Washington Post's Dana Priest in a series
of Pulitzer Prize-winning reports. Ron Suskind's excellent account of the war
on terror, "The One Percent Doctrine," sketched in further insights.
British journalist Stephen Grey now builds on that work in "Ghost Plane:
The True Story of the CIA Torture Program." His account is an impressively
detailed investigation that includes original reporting, public documents and
a rather remarkable number of on-the-record interviews.
The title describes the fleet of executive jets the United States' intelligence
agency has used to ferry captured Islamic militants secretly around the world.
Some have gone to the CIA's own "black site" facilities. Many more have
gone to prisons in the Middle East and Central Asia, where repressive foreign
governments, including the Assad regime in Syria, have been all too happy to torture
them on the Americans' behalf. This process is known as "extraordinary rendition,"
and one of the services Grey performs in this dossier-like volume is to chart
the practice's origins during the Clinton administration. In those days, the White
House was at pains to make sure that prisoners were sent to countries only where
they were wanted on what passed for the local equivalent of a valid warrant.
Even then, though, the intelligence professionals were nervous about the legality
and utility of the process. Michael Scheuer was in charge of the CIA's effort
to fight Osama bin Laden in those years, and he told Grey, "The practice
of capturing people and taking them to third countries arose because the executive
branch assigned to us the task of dismantling and disrupting and detaining terrorist
cells and terrorist individuals. And basically, when the CIA came back and said
to the policy maker, where do you want to take them, the answer was 'that's
your job.' "
Thus, extraordinary rendition was born and, after 9/11, Bush's administration
embraced it with a vengeance. While Grey's account of the Bush administration's
program of secret prisons and institutionalized torture is rich in detail and
more clearly sourced than many previous accounts, most of this material is essentially
fascinating infill material connected with sensational revelations already broadly
known, particularly through Priest's and Suskind's reporting.
Some of Grey's freshest insights come somewhat obliquely and are all the more
convincing for that reason. For example, Grey returns several times and in various
contexts to the fact that many CIA and FBI employees involved with extraordinary
renditions have felt the need to retain private counsel to "lawyer
up," as the jargon goes. That's because, from the start of the Bush administration's
retooling of the rendition process, many of those involved have believed they
were breaking the law and might be called to account. As Scheuer, the functional
founder of the system, told Grey, "The whole rendition process has been conducted
under the guillotine. You just wait for the blade to fall."
That's because in 1994, the United States wrote the U.N. Convention Against Torture
into its federal criminal code. The convention defined torture as any act "specifically
intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain
or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody
or physical control." As Grey points out, "the maximum sentence for
violators was to be 20 years in jail or the death penalty if the torture
victim died. The statute had particular relevance for the CIA, as it was aimed
specifically at what U.S. officials do overseas
. The statute prohibited
not only torture by the CIA itself, but also any conspiracy to torture. Conspiring
to torture would be 'subject to the same penalties' as torture itself, except
for the death penalty."
Still, according to Grey, since 9/11, the CIA has held and tortured the senior
most Al Qaeda captives: "These high-value detainees disappeared into what
came to be known as 'black sites.' These were true ghost prisoners, undeclared
to the Red Cross, and held, in some cases, for years without any outside communication,
even with their families." They include Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, captured
in 2003; Abu Zubaydah, captured in March 2002; Ramzi Binalshibh, captured in September
2002; and the Indonesian Islamic militant Hambali, who was taken in 2003. Because
all have been tortured, they cannot be used as witnesses in criminal trials nor
their statements to interrogators introduced as evidence.
One of the documents Grey has uncovered is a 2002 memo from an FBI special agent
based in Guantanamo who clearly had this in mind when he objected to techniques
such as "water-boarding," which was then being used on "senior
Al Qaeda detainees." The agent also denounced a plan to send a detainee "to
Jordan, Egypt or another third country to allow those countries to employ interrogation
techniques that will enable them to obtain the requisite information" because
it would be a "per se violation of the U.S. Torture Statute." Moreover,
the agent wrote, "any person who takes any action in furtherance of implementing
such a plan would inculpate all persons who were involved in creating this plan."
Viewed against the backdrop of these apprehensions and grave reservations among
the intelligence and law enforcement professionals, the Bush administration's
eagerness to embrace contrary opinions from legally and intellectually marginal
figures such as John Yoo or for that matter then White House counsel
and current U.S. Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales comes into clearer focus.
Another of the telling points in Grey's account is that the intelligence professionals
again, from the start have believed that the administration's program
of institutionalized torture and extraordinary renditions has fueled Islamic radicalism
and undercut the only remaining rationale for the war in Iraq, which is the extension
of democracy into the Middle East. In large part, that's because the outsourcing
of torture goes to some of the most sinister regimes in the region, not simply
sympathetic tough guys like the Moroccans, Egyptians and Jordanians, but the real
bad actors, like Syria and Uzbekistan. (In Uzbekistan, prisoners quite literally
are boiled alive.) As the CIA's Scheuer told Grey, "Any kind of detainee
capture is a technical success, but in the strategic sense we are losing, and
one of the main reasons is because of our support for dictatorships in the Muslim
world."
Former CIA officer Reuel Marc Gerecht, another of Grey's on-the-record sources,
is even more specific: "Eventually, the contradictions between the practice
of prisoner transfer
and the Bush Administration's intent to work for the
democratic transformation of the Middle East could paralyze the administration's
foreign policy."
Oh, right.
You'd think among all those policy intellectuals advising the White House, there'd
have been an old Russian hand who'd read Alexander Herzen on the problem of means
and ends: "The houses of free men never will be built by prison architects."
Abraham Lincoln was this country's greatest wartime president. A gloss on his
famously pithy summation of the case against slavery cuts to the heart of this
debate, for all sorts of reasons: If torture isn't wrong, then nothing is wrong
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times