The road to Abu Ghraib began after 9/11, when Washington wrote new rules to fight a new kind of war. A NEWSWEEK investigation
David Hume Kennerly / Getty Images-Pool
Tough tactics: Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld pushed for a Gitmo style approach to prisoner interrogations in Iraq
By John Barry, Michael Hirsh and Michael Isikoff
Newsweek International
May
24 - It's not easy to get a member of Congress to stop talking. Much
less a room full of them. But as a small group of legislators watched
the images flash by in a small, darkened hearing room in the Rayburn
Building last week, a sickened silence descended. There were 1,800
slides and several videos, and the show went on for three hours. The
nightmarish images showed American soldiers at Abu Ghraib Prison
forcing Iraqis to masturbate. American soldiers sexually assaulting
Iraqis with chemical light sticks. American soldiers laughing over dead
Iraqis whose bodies had been abused and mutilated. There was simply
nothing to say. "It was a very subdued walk back to the House floor,"
said Rep. Jane Harman, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee. "People were ashen."
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The
White House put up three soldiers for court-martial, saying the
pictures were all the work of a few bad-apple MPs who were poorly
supervised. But evidence was mounting that the furor was only going to
grow and probably sink some prominent careers in the process. Senate
Armed Services Committee chairman John Warner declared the pictures
were the worst "military misconduct" he'd seen in 60 years, and he
planned more hearings. Republicans on Capitol Hill were notably
reluctant to back Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. And NEWSWEEK has
learned that U.S. soldiers and CIA operatives could be accused of war
crimes. Among the possible charges: homicide involving deaths during
interrogations. "The photos clearly demonstrate to me the level of
prisoner abuse and mistreatment went far beyond what I expected, and
certainly involved more than six or seven MPs," said GOP Sen. Lindsey
Graham, a former military prosecutor. He added: "It seems to have been
planned."
Indeed, the single most iconic
image to come out of the abuse scandal—that of a hooded man standing
naked on a box, arms outspread, with wires dangling from his fingers,
toes and penis—may do a lot to undercut the administration's case that
this was the work of a few criminal MPs. That's because the practice
shown in that photo is an arcane torture method known only to veterans
of the interrogation trade. "Was that something that [an MP] dreamed up
by herself? Think again," says Darius Rejali, an expert on the use of
torture by democracies. "That's a standard torture. It's called 'the
Vietnam.' But it's not common knowledge. Ordinary American soldiers did
this, but someone taught them."
Who might
have taught them? Almost certainly it was their superiors up the line.
Some of the images from Abu Ghraib, like those of naked prisoners
terrified by attack dogs or humiliated before grinning female guards,
actually portray "stress and duress" techniques officially approved at
the highest levels of the government for use against terrorist
suspects. It is unlikely that President George W. Bush or senior
officials ever knew of these specific techniques, and late last —week
Defense spokesman Larry DiRita said that "no responsible official of
the Department of Defense approved any program that could conceivably
have been intended to result in such abuses." But a NEWSWEEK
investigation shows that, as a means of pre-empting a repeat of 9/11,
Bush, along with Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and Attorney General John
Ashcroft, signed off on a secret system of detention and interrogation
that opened the door to such methods. It was an approach that they
adopted to sidestep the historical safeguards of the Geneva
Conventions, which protect the rights of detainees and prisoners of
war. In doing so, they overrode the objections of Secretary of State
Colin Powell and America's top military lawyers—and they left
underlings to sweat the details of what actually happened to prisoners
in these lawless places. While no one deliberately authorized outright
torture, these techniques entailed a systematic softening up of
prisoners through isolation, privations, insults, threats and
humiliation—methods that the Red Cross concluded were "tantamount to
torture."
The Bush administration created a
bold legal framework to justify this system of interrogation, according
to internal government memos obtained by NEWSWEEK. What started as a
carefully thought-out, if aggressive, policy of interrogation in a
covert war—designed mainly for use by a handful of CIA
professionals—evolved into ever-more ungoverned tactics that ended up
in the hands of untrained MPs in a big, hot war. Originally, Geneva
Conventions protections were stripped only from Qaeda and Taliban
prisoners. But later Rumsfeld himself, impressed by the success of
techniques used against Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo Bay, seemingly set
in motion a process that led to their use in Iraq, even though that war
was supposed to have been governed by the Geneva Conventions.
Ultimately, reservist MPs, like those at Abu Ghraib, were drawn into a
system in which fear and humiliation were used to break prisoners'
resistance to interrogation.
"There was a
before-9/11 and an after-9/11," as Cofer Black, the onetime director of
the CIA's counterterrorist unit, put it in testimony to Congress in
early 2002. "After 9/11 the gloves came off." Many Americans thrilled
to the martial rhetoric at the time, and agreed that Al Qaeda could not
be fought according to traditional rules. But it is only now that we
are learning what, precisely, it meant to take the gloves off.
The
story begins in the months after September 11, when a small band of
conservative lawyers within the Bush administration staked out a
forward-leaning legal position. The attacks by Al Qaeda on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon, these lawyers said, had plunged the
country into a new kind of war. It was a conflict against a vast,
outlaw, international enemy in which the rules of war, international
treaties and even the Geneva Conventions did not apply. These positions
were laid out in secret legal opinions drafted by lawyers from the
Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, and then endorsed by the
Department of Defense and ultimately by White House counsel Alberto
Gonzales, according to copies of the opinions and other internal legal
memos obtained by NEWSWEEK.
The Bush
administration's emerging approach was that America's enemies in this
war were "unlawful" combatants without rights. One Justice Department
memo, written for the CIA late in the fall of 2001, put an extremely
narrow interpretation on the international anti-torture convention,
allowing the agency to use a whole range of techniques—including sleep
deprivation, the use of phobias and the deployment of "stress
factors"—in interrogating Qaeda suspects. The only clear prohibition
was "causing severe physical or mental pain"—a subjective judgment that
allowed for "a whole range of things in between," said one former
administration official familiar with the opinion. On Dec. 28, 2001,
the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel weighed in with another
opinion, arguing that U.S. courts had no jurisdiction to review the
treatment of foreign prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. The appeal of Gitmo
from the start was that, in the view of administration lawyers, the
base existed in a legal twilight zone—or "the legal equivalent of outer
space," as one former administration lawyer described it. And on Jan.
9, 2002, John Yoo of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel coauthored a
sweeping 42-page memo concluding that neither the Geneva Conventions
nor any of the laws of war applied to the conflict in Afghanistan.
Cut
out of the process, as usual, was Colin Powell's State Department. So
were military lawyers for the uniformed services. When State Department
lawyers first saw the Yoo memo, "we were horrified," said one. As State
saw it, the Justice position would place the United States outside the
orbit of international treaties it had championed for years. Two days
after the Yoo memo circulated, the State Department's chief legal
adviser, William Howard Taft IV, fired a memo to Yoo calling his
analysis "seriously flawed." State's most immediate concern was the
unilateral conclusion that all captured Taliban were not covered by the
Geneva Conventions. "In previous conflicts, the United States has dealt
with tens of thousands of detainees without repudiating its obligations
under the Conventions," Taft wrote. "I have no doubt we can do so here,
where a relative handful of persons is involved."
The
White House was undeterred. By Jan. 25, 2002, according to a memo
obtained by NEWSWEEK, it was clear that Bush had already decided that
the Geneva Conventions did not apply at all, either to the Taliban or
Al Qaeda. In the memo, which was written to Bush by Gonzales, the White
House legal counsel told the president that Powell had "requested that
you reconsider that decision." Gonzales then laid out startlingly broad
arguments that anticipated any objections to the conduct of U.S.
soldiers or CIA interrogators in the future. "As you have said, the war
against terrorism is a new kind of war," Gonzales wrote to Bush. "The
nature of the new war places a —high premium on other factors, such as
the ability to quickly obtain information from captured terrorists and
their sponsors in order to avoid further atrocities against American
civilians." Gonzales concluded in stark terms: "In my judgment, this
new paradigm renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on
questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its
provisions."
Gonzales also argued that
dropping Geneva would allow the president to "preserve his flexibility"
in the war on terror. His reasoning? That U.S. officials might
otherwise be subject to war-crimes prosecutions under the Geneva
Conventions. Gonzales said he feared "prosecutors and independent
counsels who may in the future decide to pursue unwarranted charges"
based on a 1996 U.S. law that bars "war crimes," which were defined to
include "any grave breach" of the Geneva Conventions. As to arguments
that U.S. soldiers might suffer abuses themselves if Washington did not
observe the conventions, Gonzales argued wishfully to Bush that "your
policy of providing humane treatment to enemy detainees gives us the
credibility to insist on like treatment for our soldiers."
When
Powell read the Gonzales memo, he "hit the roof," says a State source.
Desperately seeking to change Bush's mind, Powell fired off his own
blistering response the next day, Jan. 26, and sought an immediate
meeting with the president. The proposed anti-Geneva Convention
declaration, he warned, "will reverse over a century of U.S. policy and
practice" and have "a high cost in terms of negative international
reaction." Powell won a partial victory: On Feb. 7, 2002, the White
House announced that the United States would indeed apply the Geneva
Conventions to the Afghan war—but that Taliban and Qaeda detainees
would still not be afforded prisoner-of-war status. The White House's
halfway retreat was, in the eyes of State Department lawyers, a
"hollow" victory for Powell that did not fundamentally change the
administration's position. It also set the stage for the new
interrogation procedures ungoverned by international law.
What
Bush seemed to have in mind was applying his broad doctrine of
pre-emption to interrogations: to get information that could help stop
terrorist acts before they could be carried out. This was justified by
what is known in counterterror circles as the "ticking time bomb"
theory—the idea that when faced with an imminent threat by a terrorist,
almost any method is justified, even torture.
With
the legal groundwork laid, Bush began to act. First, he signed a secret
order granting new powers to the CIA. According to knowledgeable
sources, the president's directive authorized the CIA to set up a
series of secret detention facilities outside the United States, and to
question those held in them with unprecedented harshness. Washington
then negotiated novel "status of forces agreements" with foreign
governments for the secret sites. These agreements gave immunity not
merely to U.S. government personnel but also to private contractors.
(Asked about the directive last week, a senior administration official
said, "We cannot comment on purported intelligence activities.")
The
administration also began "rendering"—or delivering terror suspects to
foreign governments for interrogation. Why? At a classified briefing
for senators not long after 9/11, CIA Director George Tenet was asked
whether Washington was going to get governments known for their
brutality to turn over Qaeda suspects to the United States.
Congressional sources told NEWSWEEK that Tenet suggested it might be
better sometimes for such suspects to remain in the hands of foreign
authorities, who might be able to use more aggressive interrogation
methods. By 2004, the United States was running a covert charter
airline moving CIA prisoners from one secret facility to another,
sources say. The reason? It was judged impolitic (and too traceable) to
use the U.S. Air Force.
At first—in the
autumn of 2001—the Pentagon was less inclined than the CIA to jump into
the business of handling terror suspects. Rumsfeld himself was
initially opposed to having detainees sent into DOD custody at
Guantanamo, according to a DOD source intimately involved in the Gitmo
issue. "I don't want to be jailer to the goddammed world," said
Rumsfeld. But he was finally persuaded. Those sent to Gitmo would be
hard-core Qaeda or other terrorists who might be liable for war-crimes
prosecutions, and who would likely, if freed, "go back and hit us
again," as the source put it.
In
mid-January 2002 the first plane-load of prisoners landed at Gitmo's
Camp X-Ray. Still, not everyone was getting the message that this was a
new kind of war. The first commander of the MPs at Gitmo was a one-star
from the Rhode Island National Guard, Brig. Gen. Rick Baccus, who, a
Defense source recalled, mainly "wanted to keep the prisoners happy."
Baccus began giving copies of the Qur'an to detainees, and he organized
a special meal schedule for Ramadan. "He was even handing out printed
'rights cards'," the Defense source recalled. The upshot was that the
prisoners were soon telling the interrogators, "Go f—- yourself, I know
my rights." Baccus was relieved in October 2002, and Rumsfeld gave
military intelligence control of all aspects of the Gitmo camp,
including the MPs.
Pentagon officials now
insist that they flatly ruled out using some of the harsher
interrogation techniques authorized for the CIA. That included one
practice—reported last week by The New York Times—whereby a suspect is
pushed underwater and made to think he will be drowned. While the CIA
could do pretty much what it liked in its own secret centers, the
Pentagon was bound by the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Military
officers were routinely trained to observe the Geneva Conventions.
According to one source, both military and civilian officials at the
Pentagon ultimately determined that such CIA techniques were "not
something we believed the military should be involved in."
But
in practical terms those distinctions began to matter less. The
Pentagon's resistance to rougher techniques eroded month by month. In
part this was because CIA interrogators were increasingly in the same
room as their military-intelligence counterparts. But there was also a
deliberate effort by top Pentagon officials to loosen the rules binding
the military.
Toward the end of 2002,
orders came down the political chain at DOD that the Geneva Conventions
were to be reinterpreted to allow tougher methods of interrogation.
"There was almost a revolt" by the service judge advocates general, or
JAGs, the top military lawyers who had originally allied with Powell
against the new rules, says a knowledgeable source. The JAGs, including
the lawyers in the office of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen.
Richard Myers, fought their civilian bosses for months—but finally
lost. In April 2003, new and tougher interrogation techniques were
approved. Covertly, though, the JAGs made a final effort. They went to
see Scott Horton, a specialist in international human-rights law and a
major player in the New York City Bar Association's human-rights work.
The JAGs told Horton they could only talk obliquely about practices
that were classified. But they said the U.S. military's 50-year history
of observing the demands of the Geneva Conventions was now being
overturned. "There is a calculated effort to create an atmosphere of
legal ambiguity" about how the conventions should be interpreted and
applied, they told Horton. And the prime movers in this effort, they
told him, were DOD Under Secretary for Policy Douglas Feith and DOD
general counsel William Haynes. There was, they warned, "a real risk of
a disaster" for U.S. interests.
The
approach at Gitmo soon reflected these changes. Under the leadership of
an aggressive, self-assured major general named Geoffrey Miller, a new
set of interrogation rules became doctrine. Ultimately what was
developed at Gitmo was a "72-point matrix for stress and duress," which
laid out types of coercion and the escalating levels at which they
could be applied. These included the use of harsh heat or cold;
—withholding food; hooding for days at a time; naked isolation in cold,
dark cells for more than 30 days, and threatening (but not biting) by
dogs. It also permitted limited use of "stress positions" designed to
subject detainees to rising levels of pain.
While
the interrogators at Gitmo were refining their techniques, by the
summer of 2003 the "postwar" insurgency in Iraq was raging. And
Rumsfeld was getting impatient about the poor quality of the
intelligence coming out of there. He wanted to know: Where was Saddam?
Where were the WMD? Most immediately: Why weren't U.S. troops catching
or forestalling the gangs planting improvised explosive devices by the
roads? Rumsfeld pointed out that Gitmo was producing good intel. So he
directed Steve Cambone, his under secretary for intelligence, to send
Gitmo commandant Miller to Iraq to improve what they were doing out
there. Cambone in turn dispatched his deputy, Lt. Gen. William (Jerry)
Boykin—later to gain notoriety for his harsh comments about Islam—down
to Gitmo to talk with Miller and organize the trip. In Baghdad in
September 2003, Miller delivered a blunt message to Brig. Gen. Janis
Karpinski, who was then in charge of the 800th Military Police Brigade
running Iraqi detentions. According to Karpinski, Miller told her that
the prison would thenceforth be dedicated to gathering intel. (Miller
says he simply recommended that detention and intelligence commands be
integrated.) On Nov. 19, Abu Ghraib was formally handed over to
tactical control of military-intelligence units.
By
the time Gitmo's techniques were exported to Abu Ghraib, the CIA was
already fully involved. On a daily basis at Abu Ghraib, says Paul Wayne
Bergrin, a lawyer for MP defendant Sgt. Javal Davis, the CIA and other
intel officials "would interrogate, interview prisoners exhaustively,
use the approved measures of food and sleep deprivation, solitary
confinement with no light coming into cell 24 hours a day.
Consequently, they set a poor example for young soldiers but it went
even further than that."
Today there is no
telling where the scandal will bottom out. But it is growing harder for
top Pentagon officials, including Rumsfeld himself, to absolve
themselves of all responsibility. Evidence is growing that the Pentagon
has not been forthright on exactly when it was first warned of the
alleged abuses at Abu Ghraib. U.S. officials continued to say they
didn't know until mid-January. But Red Cross officials had alerted the
U.S. military command in Baghdad at the start of November. The Red
Cross warned explicitly of MPs' conducting "acts of humiliation such as
[detainees'] being made to stand naked... with women's underwear over
the head, while being laughed at by guards, including female guards,
and sometimes photographed in this position." Karpinski recounts that
the military-intel officials there regarded this criticism as funny.
She says: "The MI officers said, 'We warned the [commanding officer]
about giving those detainees the Victoria's Secret catalog, but he
wouldn't listen'." The Coalition commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ricardo
Sanchez, and his Iraq command didn't begin an investigation until two
months later, when it was clear the pictures were about to leak.
Now
more charges are coming. Intelligence officials have confirmed that the
CIA inspector general is conducting an investigation into the death of
at least one person at Abu Ghraib who had been subject to questioning
by CIA interrogators. The Justice Department is likely to open
full-scale criminal investigations into this CIA-related death and two
other CIA interrogation-related fatalities.
As
his other reasons for war have fallen away, President Bush has
justified his ouster of Saddam Hussein by saying he's a "torturer and
murderer." Now the American forces arrayed against the terrorists are
being tarred with the same epithet. That's unfair: what Saddam did at
Abu Ghraib during his regime was more horrible, and on a much vaster
scale, than anything seen in those images on Capitol Hill. But if
America is going to live up to its promise to bring justice and
democracy to Iraq, it needs to get to the bottom of what happened at
Abu Ghraib.
With Mark Hosenball and Roy
Gutman in Washington, T. Trent Gegax and Julie Scelfo in New York and
Melinda Liu, Rod Nordland and Babak Dehghanpisheh in Baghdad