The
Israeli Torture Template
Rape, Feces
and Urine-Dipped Cloth Sacks
By Wayne Madsen
11-19-6
- With mounting evidence that a
shadowy group of former Israeli Defense Force and General Security Service
(Shin Bet) Arabic-speaking interrogators were hired by the Pentagon under a
classified "carve out" sub-contract to brutally interrogate Iraqi prisoners
at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison, one only needs to examine the record of
abuse of Palestinian and Lebanese prisoners in Israel to understand what
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld meant, when referring to new, yet to be
released photos and videos, he said, "if these images are released to the
public, obviously its going to make matters worse."
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- According to a political appointee
within the Bush administration and U.S. intelligence sources, the
interrogators at Abu Ghraib included a number of Arabic-speaking Israelis
who also helped U.S. interrogators develop the "R2I" (Resistance to
Interrogation) techniques. Many of the torture methods were developed by the
Israelis over many years of interrogating Arab prisoners on the occupied
West Bank and in Israel itself.
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- Clues about worse photos and videos
of abuse may be found in Israeli files about similar abuse of Palestinian
and other Arab prisoners. In March 2000, a lawyer for a Lebanese prisoner
kidnapped in 1994 by the Israelis in Lebanon claimed that his client had
been subjected to torture, including rape. The type of compensation offered
by Rumsfeld in his testimony has its roots in cases of Israeli torture of
Arabs. In the case of the Lebanese man, said to have been raped by his
Israeli captors, his lawyer demanded compensation of $1.47 million. The
Public Committee Against Torture in Israel documented the types of torture
meted out on Arab prisoners. Many of the tactics coincide with those
contained in the Taguba report: beatings and prolonged periods handcuffed to
furniture. In an article in the December 1998 issue of The Progressive,
Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb reported on the treatment given to a 23-year old
Palestinian held on "administrative detention." The prisoner was "cuffed
behind a chair 17 hours a day for 120 days . . . [he] had his head covered
with a sack, which was often dipped in urine or feces. Guards played loud
music right next to his ears and frequently taunted him with threats of
physical and sexual violence." If additional photos and videos document such
practices, the Bush administration and the American people have, indeed,
"seen nothing yet."
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- Although it is still largely
undocumented if any of the contractor named in the report of General Antonio
Taguba were associated with the Israeli military or intelligence services,
it is noteworthy that one, John Israel, who was identified in the report as
being employed by both CACI International of Arlington, Virginia, and Titan,
Inc., of San Diego, may not have even been a U.S. citizen. The Taguba report
states that Israel did not have a security clearance, a requirement for
employment as an interrogator for CACI. According to CACI's web site, "a Top
Secret Clearance (TS) that is current and US citizenship" are required for
CACI interrogators working in Iraq. In addition, CACI requires that its
interrogators "have at least two years experience as a military policeman or
similar type of law enforcement/intelligence agency whereby the individual
utilized interviewing techniques."
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- Speculation that "John Israel" may
be an intelligence cover name has fueled speculation whether this individual
could have been one of a number of Israeli interrogators hired under a
classified contract. Because U.S. citizenship and documentation thereof are
requirements for a U.S. security clearance, Israeli citizens would not be
permitted to hold a Top Secret clearance. However, dual U.S.-Israeli
citizens could have satisfied Pentagon requirements that interrogators hold
U.S. citizenship and a Top Secret clearance. Although the Taguba report
refers twice to Israel as an employee of Titan, the company claims he is one
of their sub-contractors. CACI stated that one of the men listed in the
report "is not and never has been a CACI employee" without providing more
detail. A U.S. intelligence source revealed that in the world of
intelligence "carve out" subcontracts such confusion is often the case with
"plausible deniability" being a foremost concern.
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- In fact, the Taguba report does
reference the presence of non-U.S. and non-Iraqi interrogators at Abu Ghraib.
The report states, "In general, US civilian contract personnel (Titan
Corporation, CACI, etc), third country nationals, and local contractors do
not appear to be properly supervised within the detention facility at Abu
Ghraib."
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- The Pentagon is clearly concerned
about the outing of the Taguba report and its references to CACI, Titan, and
third country nationals, which could permanently damage U.S. relations with
Arab and Islamic nations. The Pentagon's angst may explain why the Taguba
report is classified Secret No Foreign Dissemination.
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- The leak of the Taguba report was
so radioactive, Daniel R. Dunn, the Information Assurance Officer for
Douglas Feith's Office of the Under Secretary of Defense, Policy (Policy
Automation Services Security Team), sent a May 6, 2004, For Official Use
Only Urgent E-mail to Pentagon staffers stating, "THE INFORMATION CONTAINED
IN THIS REPORT IS CLASSIFIED; DO NOT GO TO FOX NEWS TO READ OR OBTAIN A
COPY." Considering Feith's close ties to the Israelis, such a reaction by
his top computer security officer, a Certified Information System Security
Professional (CISSP), is understandable, although considering the fact that
CISSPs are to act on behalf of the public good, it is also regrettable..
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- The reference to "third country
nationals" in a report that restricts its dissemination to U.S. coalition
partners (Great Britain, Poland, Italy, etc.) is another indication of the
possible involvement of Israelis in the interrogation of Iraqi prisoners.
Knowledge that the U.S. may have been using Israeli interrogators could have
severely fractured the Bush administration's tenuous "coalition of the
willing' in Iraq. General Taguba's findings were transmitted to the
Coalition Forces Land Component Command on March 9, 2004, just six days
before the Spanish general election, one that the opposition anti-Iraq war
Socialists won. The Spanish ultimately withdrew their forces from Iraq.
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- During his testimony before the
Senate Armed Service Committee, Rumsfeld was pressed upon by Senator John
McCain about the role of the private contractors in the interrogations and
abuse. McCain asked Rumsfeld four pertinent questions, ". . . who was in
charge? What agency or private contractor was in charge of the
interrogations? Did they have authority over the guards? And what were the
instructions that they gave to the guards?"
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- When Rumsfeld had problems
answering McCain's question, Lt. Gen. Lance Smith, the Deputy Commander of
the U.S. Central Command, said there were 37 contract interrogators used in
Abu Ghraib. The two named contractors, CACI and Titan, have close ties to
the Israeli military and technology communities. Last January 14, after
Provost Marshal General of the Army, Major General Donald Ryder, had already
uncovered abuse at Abu Ghraib, CACI's President and CEO, Dr. J.P. (Jack)
London was receiving the Jerusalem Fund of Aish HaTorah's Albert Einstein
Technology award at the Jerusalem City Hall, with right-wing Likud
politician Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and ultra-Orthodox United
Torah Judaism party Jerusalem Mayor Uri Lupolianski in attendance. Oddly,
CACI waited until February 2 to publicly announce the award in a press
release. CACI has also received grants from U.S.-Israeli bi-national
foundations.
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- Titan also has had close
connections to Israeli interests. After his stint as CIA Director, James
Woolsey served as a Titan director. Woolsey is an architect of America's
Iraq policy and the chief proponent of and lobbyist for Ahmad Chalabi of the
Iraqi National Congress. An adviser to the neo-conservative Foundation for
the Defense of Democracies, Jewish Institute of National Security Affairs,
Project for the New American Century, Center for Security Policy, Freedom
House, and Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, Woolsey is close to Stephen
Cambone, the Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, a key person in the
chain of command who would have not only known about the torture tactics
used by U.S. and Israeli interrogators in Iraq but who would have also
approved them. Cambone was associated with the Project for the New American
Century and is viewed as a member of Rumsfeld's neo-conservative "cabal"
within the Pentagon.
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- Another person considered by
Pentagon insiders to have been knowledgeable about the treatment of Iraqi
prisoners is U.S. Army Col. Steven Bucci, a Green Beret and Rumsfeld's
military assistant and chief traffic cop for the information flow to the
Defense Secretary. According to Pentagon insiders, Bucci was involved in the
direction of a special covert operations unit composed of former U.S.
special operations personnel who answered to the Pentagon rather than the
CIA's Special Activities Division, the agency's own paramilitary group. The
Pentagon group included Arabic linguists and former members of the Green
Berets and Delta Force who operated covertly in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran,
Pakistan, and Uzbekistan. Titan also uses linguists trained in the languages
(Arabic, Dari, Farsi, Pashto, Urdu, and Tajik) of those same countries. It
is not known if a link exists between Rumsfeld's covert operations unit and
Titan's covert operations linguists.
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- Another Titan employee named in the
Taguba report is Adel L. Nakhla. Nakhla is a name common among Egypt's
Coptic Christian community, however, it is not known if Adel Nakhla is
either an Egyptian-American or a national of Egypt. A CACI employee
identified in the report, Steven Stephanowicz, is referred to as "Stefanowicz"
in a number of articles on the prison abuse. Stefanowicz is the spelling
used by Joe Ryan, another CACI employee assigned with Stefanowicz to Abu
Ghraib. Ryan is a radio personality on KSTP, a conservative radio station in
Minneapolis, who maintained a daily log of his activities in Iraq on the
radio's web site before it was taken down. Ryan indicated that Stefanowicz
(or Stephanowicz) continued to hold his interrogation job in Iraq even
though General Taguba recommended he lose his security clearance and be
terminated for the abuses at Abu Ghraib.
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- In an even more bizarre twist, the
Philadelphia Daily News identified a former expatriate public relations
specialist for the government of South Australia in Adelaide named Steve
Stefanowicz as possibly being the same person identified in the Taguba
report. In 2000, Stefanowicz, who grew up in the Philadelphia and Allentown
areas, left for Australia. On September 16, 2001, he was quoted by theSunday
Mail of Adelaide on the 911 attacks. He said of the attacks, "It was one of
the most incredible and most devastating things I have ever seen. I have
been in constant contact with my family and friends in the US and the mood
was very solemn and quiet. But this is progressing into anger." Stefanowicz
returned to the United States and volunteered for the Navy in a reserve
status. His mother told the Allentown Morning Call in April 2002 that
Stefanowicz was stationed somewhere in the Middle East but did not know
where because of what Stefanowicz said was "security concerns." His mother
told the Philadelphia Daily News that her son was in Iraq but she knew
nothing about his current status.
-
- Wayne Madsen is a Washington,
DC-based investigative journalist and columnist. He served in the National
Security Agency (NSA) during the Reagan administration and wrote the
introduction to
Forbidden Truth. He
is the co-author, with John Stanton, of "America's
Nightmare: The Presidency of George Bush II."
His forthcoming book is titled: "Jaded Tasks: Big Oil, Black Ops, and Brass
Plates."
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- Reproduced from
www.Rense.com
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