The case of Murat Kurnaz:
German complicity in US war crimes

 

Some information around the KSK special forces is kept secret
Photo from "Deutsche Welle" added by GLF

 

By Justus Leicht and Peter Schwarz
2 November 2006

 

German authorities and agencies are much more involved in the illegal practices carried out by the US within the context of the so-called “war on terror” than has been publicly admitted.

A committee of inquiry set up by the German parliament has for some time been investigating the activities of the German intelligence service (BND). One of the cases under review concerns the German citizen Khalid al-Masri, who was kidnapped by the CIA and taken to Afghanistan.

Other cases concern the presence of German agents at interrogations of German prisoners in a Syrian torture prison and the US detention camp at Guantánamo. Already in January this year reports emerged that two German intelligence agents had operated in Baghdad collecting information which was then passed on to the US occupation forces.

Now it has been revealed that German Army special forces (KSK) have been actively supporting the international chain of illegal prisons run by the US. In the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, KSK soldiers guarded prisoners who were later flown to Guantánamo. Among these detainees was Murat Kurnaz, a Turkish citizen who was born and grew up in Germany.

Kurnaz was arrested in the autumn of 2001 in Pakistan and sold for a bounty to the US forces in Afghanistan. In January 2002, he was transferred to Guantánamo, where he remained imprisoned for four-and-a-half years until his recent release, although both the German and American governments knew he was innocent within a few months of his incarceration.

The real nature of the activities of the KSK in Kandahar has come to light only as a result of statements by Kurnaz, who returned to Germany this August. Kurnaz reported that soldiers speaking perfect German and with German flags on their uniforms pulled his hair and smashed his head against the floor. He also said German secret service agents sought to enlist him as an informer.

In the initial interrogations he was confronted with details which indicated knowledge of his background: where he purchased his digital camera before setting off for Pakistan, to whom he sold his cell phone, etc. “I had no doubt they were cooperating with German authorities,” Kurnaz declared.

Two weeks later he was directly questioned by Germans. “I was informed that two German soldiers wanted to see me,” he notes. They were clothed in such a fashion as to hide their identities.

Kurnaz was forced to lie on the floor with his hands tied behind his back. When recently asked by the German magazine Stern whether the men involved were KSK soldiers, Kurnaz answered: “It could be. They bashed my head against the floor, something the Americans found amusing.”

Over the past few weeks, the German Defence Ministry has been at pains to present Kurnaz as a confused person making fantastic claims, while denying any contact between him and German soldiers. Then two weeks ago the ministry suddenly conceded that KSK units were involved in guarding the camp in Kandahar, following a request from the US, and that they had met with Kurnaz.

During their “briefing on guard duty” the Germans were informed that the prisoners included a man with whom they could speak in German. Thereupon there was “contact with a German-speaking prisoner,” according to a Defence Ministry spokesperson. Soldiers had informed the German Defence Ministry about the presence of the prisoner on January 3, 2002, but the defence minister at the time, Rudolf Scharping (Social Democratic Party—SPD), was allegedly not personally informed.

The Defence Ministry denies that KSK soldiers abused Kurnaz. According to the parliamentary defence undersecretary, Christian Schmidt (Christian Social Union—CSU), there was only verbal and no “physical” contact. There were no “clues,” he said, to indicate that Kurnaz’s statements were correct. This was because none of the soldiers present in Kandahar had responded to written requests that they respond to Kurnaz’s version of events.

In the meantime, the defence committee of the German parliament (Bundestag) has assumed the role of a full committee of inquiry to clarify “immediately and without reserve” the claims made by Kurnaz. The committee, however, is pledged to secrecy, so that little can be expected in the way of clarification. Its real task is to guarantee an extension of the mandate of the KSK in Afghanistan, which runs out in November and must be extended by the Bundestag.

The efforts of the committee—and of the media—have concentrated on two issues: whether Kurnaz was physically abused or only “verbally” dealt with by German forces, and why the information regarding his apprehension was not passed on to the head of the Defence Ministry. These are important, but secondary, issues in comparison to the more fundamental question, i.e., the overall role of the KSK in Afghanistan.

 

The role of the KSK

 

The KSK elite unit was created 10 years ago to meet—according to the Internet site of the German Army—the “new challenges and tasks ... which cannot, or cannot adequately, be dealt with by conventional forces.” The web site boasts that the KSK is deployed worldwide and “usually unnoticed by the public.”

In November of 2001, the government at the time—a coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and Green Party—sent the KSK to Afghanistan with a blank cheque. While units of the German army are active in the Afghan capital and the north of the country as part of the UN-sanctioned ISAF force, KSK units operate all over the country as part of the US-led operation “Enduring Freedom” against Al Qaeda fighters and the Taliban.

The clandestine activities of this special unit, comprising approximately 100 men, are considered highly classified. In the Die Welt newspaper, the Free Democratic Party (FDP) deputy Werner Hoyer complained that the foreign affairs committee of the parliament had received no information on the KSK for the past 13 months. “I am deeply troubled by the secretiveness of the Ministry of Defence. I do not know concretely what the KSK is up to in Afghanistan, what orders it has had,” he declared.

With US military and media sources continually dispensing information about large numbers of killed “Taliban fighters”—in the absence of witnesses or proof of their identity as fighters—it must be assumed that the KSK is involved in such actions, operating with a license to kill.

So far there is no hard evidence, apart from the victim’s statements, to prove that the KSK abused Kurnaz, but official denials are already proving threadbare. According to one high-ranking KSK officer, speaking to Stern magazine: “We had already seen how the Americans kicked and struck prisoners in the camp. It was simply mean.”

The fact that the KSK was (and perhaps still is) active in Afghanistan, guarding US prisoners who are being held under conditions that violate international law, reveals the complete hypocrisy of the German government in formally condemning such prison camps. The newspaper Die Welt has cited a former KSK member who claims that the order for KSK members to guard prisoners held by US armed forces in Kandahar came directly from the Ministry of Defence in Berlin.

It also appears that the German government was better informed about the case of Kurnaz than it chooses to admit. The German intelligence service had already informed the chancellor’s office in December 2001 that the “German-born Turkish citizen MK” was imprisoned in a camp in Kandahar and would shortly be transferred to Guantánamo.

According to a confidential report by the government to the parliamentary control committee for the intelligence service (PKG) released by the media, the service wrote: “There is the possibility for German authorities to question MK—possibly even in Afghanistan.”

The Defence Ministry had received the KSK report on Kurnaz some days previously. It is probable that this report was the source of the information passed on by the intelligence service directly to the chancellery, which was headed at the time by the current foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier (SPD). It is also known that in October 2002 the German government turned down an offer from the US to release Kurnaz and return him to Germany.

 

The dangers of militarism

 

The case of Kurnaz exposes the enormous dangers in the turn to militarism. The creation of the KSK has established a secret force that operates free from any effective control, while the German intelligence service is directly implicated in the illegal machinations of the US secret services.

The German grand coalition government between the conservative parties (Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union) and the SPD is determined to maintain this course. Bearing in mind that coalition parties dominate the current parliamentary committees of inquiry, little can be expected in the way of any real clarification of the role of these agencies.

The parliamentary committee of inquiry into the intelligence service has explicitly justified the practice of interrogations carried out in illegal prison camps. The committee’s final report declares euphemistically that the German government accepted “offers from abroad to question terrorist suspects even if arrest and prison conditions did not exactly correspond to international legal and human rights criteria.” Therefore, the questioning of Kurnaz in Guantánamo on the basis of unsubstantiated “indications” of a “Bremen cell” of Al Qaeda was necessary.

Defense Minister Jung, center, on a visit to German troops in Afghanistan. The draft White Paper on German security policy drawn up by Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung (CDU) declares the “fight against international terrorism” to be the central task of the German armed forces. With regard to the activities of the KSK and other special forces, the White Paper states: “The spectrum of action by special forces includes extracting key information, the protection of its own forces from a distance, the defence and rescue from terrorist threats, as well as combat missions in hostile territory.”

The White Paper also emphasises the significance of interdepartmental collaboration in “security decisions on a national and international level.” On this basis, the collaboration had already been intensified between the intelligence service (BND) and military intelligence. In other words, the military forces overseen by the Defence Ministry increasingly consider themselves responsible for upholding domestic security—something strictly banned by the German constitution.

In the past, the German intelligence service BND, although it is exclusively responsible for espionage activities abroad, spied on journalists inside Germany itself, thereby flagrantly violating the freedom of the press. These activities of the BND were revealed last spring in the “Schäfer Report.”

But what about the KSK? If it can act abroad free from control, then why not also at home—in line with the political campaign to enable the armed forces to intervene on the domestic front in the name of the “war on terror”? The emergence of a powerful elite corps that acts free of any legal or public control represents a clear threat to democracy.

 

Reproduced from: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/nov2006/germ-n02.shtml

Photos added to the article by Gnostic Liberation Front (GLF)

 

 

Terrorism | 05.10.2006

Bremen Taliban Tells of Alleged Abuse at German Hands

 
Kurnaz was caught in Pakistan before being moved to Kandahar and then Guantanamo Bay
Bildunterschrift:  
Kurnaz was caught in Pakistan
before being moved to Kandahar
and then Guantanamo Bay

The German defense ministry is launching an investigation into alleged abuses after the man known as the Bremen Taliban revealed in an interview that German Special Forces troops tortured him in an Afghanistan prison.

 

Murat Kurnaz, the 24-year-old, German-born Turk, has revealed that during his five years of imprisonment he was allegedly beaten by members of Germany's elite forces in Afghanistan as well as by US forces when he was moved to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

 

In an interview given to Germany's Stern magazine, Kurnaz described in detail how he was snatched as a terror suspect while traveling in Pakistan in 2001 and moved to a secret US-run prison in Kandahar, Afghanistan. There, he said, he was tortured by German soldiers in the presence of the prison's US guards.

 

"I hadn't even been there for two weeks before I was taken one evening behind two trucks," Kurnaz said in the interview. "One of the guards told me that two German soldiers wanted to see me. They were wearing camouflage uniforms, the kind of camouflage made with computer pixels, and they had German flags on their sleeves.

 

"We are the German power"
 

The KSK were in Afghanistan at the same time as Kunaz

 

Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  The KSK were in Afghanistan at the same time as Kunaz

"I had to lie down with my hands tied behind my back. One of the Germans pulled me up by my hair and said, 'Do you know who we are?' He wanted to brag. 'We are the German power.' He then hit my head against the ground, which the Americans found amusing."

 

Hans-Herman Klare, the chief foreign editor at Stern magazine, said Kunaz' detailed description of the German soldiers gives credibility to his story.

 

"The kind of description he gives to us sounds very credible...we know for example that German Special Forces were in Kandahar at the time of his detention there. He describes the uniform and the particulars of the uniforms."

 

The elite KSK troops were the only German soldiers stationed in Afghanistan at the time of Kunaz' alleged abuse in Kandahar, presumably sometime between December and January 2002. The special forces operate in such secrecy that even the German parliament and its committees are often not aware of their missions or are only informed after the fact.

 

Defense ministry launching in-depth investigation
 

Defense Minister Jung wants a full investigation

 

Defense Minister Jung wants a full investigation

German Defense Minister Franz-Josef Jung said there was no current evidence to support Kurnaz' claims about the interrogation or the alleged abuse but added that he was taking the allegations very seriously.

 

A spokesman for the defense ministry, Thomas Raabe, added that the ministry would be launching a thorough investigation.

 

"According to our initial inquiries, there is no indication that German soldiers ever took part in the interrogation of a German-speaking prisoner being held by the US military. We know nothing about any prisoner abuse," Raabe said in a statement. "The Defense Ministry takes these accusations very seriously. A thorough investigation will be conducted that will clarify these accusations completely."

 

As a first step, the German defense ministry said it would question all the soldiers that had been deployed to Kandahar at the time of Kunaz' detention there.

 

Kunaz moved to a "place without laws"

 

Kurnaz was captive in  Guantanamo Bay for four years
Bildunterschrift: 
Kurnaz was captive in Guantanamo Bay for four years
 

After two months in detention in Kandahar, Kurnaz was transferred to the US prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He has described Guantanamo as a "place without laws" where prisoners were beaten, humiliated and routinely banished to solitary confinement.

 

During his time there, Kurnaz suffered repeated abuse and interrogation techniques including sexual humiliation, water torture and sleep deprivation, he said.

 

Both the United States and Germany eventually concluded that Kurnaz was innocent.

 

Kurnaz' lawyer, Bernhard Docke, said Germany could have pressed for his client's release as early as 2002. But instead, Kurnaz remained imprisoned at Guantanamo for four additional years.

 

An investigative committee of the European Parliament has already been looking into Kurnaz' case, and Germany has in the meantime launched its own parliamentary inquiry.

 

 

Reproduced from "Deutsche Welle" http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,2195176,00.html

 

 

 

 
Pictures from: http://www.defensereview.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=837

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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