Psychologists who designed CIA torture program to testify
The two psychologists who designed the US “enhanced
interrogation” programme that included waterboarding and other forms of
torture, are due to give evidence in open court for the first time this week.
James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen will answer
questions at a pre-trial hearing on the 9/11 attacks before a military tribunal
in Guantánamo Bay.
Lawyers for the defendants, who are among 40
detainees being held at prison camp on the island of Cuba say it will be a
unique opportunity to hold to account those responsible for approving and
carrying out the use of torture, and to demonstrate that both the CIA and FBI
were complicit in torture, with significant implications for any future trial
of suspected 9/11 plotters.
Mitchell and Jessen, were former air force
psychologists who were tasked by the CIA in 2002 to establish a programme of
severe interrogation techniques. They were paid $1,800 a day and in 2005 they
set up a private company, which provided most of the interrogators and most of
the security staff at the ‘black sites’, secret detention facilities. The
company was paid $81m for its services before its contract was terminated in
2009.
“The perverse ‘work’ of these psychologists has
dramatically set back the global fight against torture. The interrogation
methods they championed have had a rippling effect around the world,” said
Julia Hall, a human rights lawyer with Amnesty International who is attending
the hearings.
The American Pyschology Association has disowned
Mitchell and Jessen for “violating the ethics of their profession and leaving a
stain on the discipline of psychology”.
But both men have insisted they did nothing wrong,
arguing they were asked to do things that were declared legal by the George W Bush
administration, and that they had to prevent the worst excesses of other
interrogators.
Defence lawyers and human rights advocates hope
Mitchell and Jessen will cast more light on the scale of the torture programme,
the culpability of senior officials and the role of the FBI, which has hitherto
presented itself as uninvolved.
“The main points that I will be asking the witnesses
about are the deep involvement of the FBI in the rendition detention and
interrogation program, the huge bureaucracy that was necessary to support the
use of coercive pressure as an interrogation tactic, and the elements of the
CIA’s programme that didn’t involve Dr Mitchell and Dr Jessen at all,” said
James Connell, lawyer for one of the defendants, Ammar al-Baluchi, who will lead
the questioning of Mitchell this week. “There are many other people who are
involved.”
Alka Pradhan, another Baluchi lawyer who will take
the lead in questioning Jessen said the coming session was “probably one of the
most consequential hearings we have had yet” in eight years of pre-trial
hearings.
At the core of the prosecution case are a set of
statements made by the defendants in 2007 to FBI investigators. The government
contends that this was a “clean team” of investigators who had nothing to do
with torture. The statements were therefore untainted and admissible in court.
Pradhan said the Mitchell and Jessen testimony would
add to already considerable evidence that the FBI also had dirty hands.
“They knew that they needed “clean interrogations”
in order to be able to prosecute and eventually execute,” she said. The defence
lawyers say there were FBI agents at the black sites during enhanced
interrogations and that the FBI submitted questions for the interrogators to
use, knowing torture was being used.
This week’s hearing has been complicated by a new
set of secrecy rules introduced by the prosecution on Thursday, that prevents
defence lawyers from citing references to the interrogation programme in
published books, even though they had been cleared for publication by the CIA.
On the other hand, defence teams will be allowed to
cite more details of dates, places and techniques used on detainees. The CIA
has acknowledged that at least 39 prisoners were subjected to the enhanced
interrogation techniques that included slamming detainees into a wall,
confining them in a 21x 30in (53x 76cm) box, and waterboarding, the simulation
of drowning by covering a prisoner’s face with cloth and pouring water on it.
The UN and human rights groups have declared waterboarding and some of the
other techniques to be torture.
Defence and prosecution lawyers are due to argue
over classification and other procedural issues in closed session at the
military commission built on the Guantánamo naval base near the detention camp.
Then the presiding judge, Colonel Shane Cohen, is
expected to hold open sessions for at least some of the next two weeks.
Mitchell and Jessen agreed an out of court
settlement in a civil suit brought by the American Council on Civil Liberties
on behalf of Suleiman Abdullah Salim and Mohamed Ben Soud, who were released
without charges after being tortured, and the family of Gul Rahman, who died
under interrogation in 2002 in one of the CIA’s secret detention facilities
around the world, known as “black sites”.
Rahman died after being left shackled overnight
naked from the waist down in a freezing concrete cell. Mitchell and Jessen said
they had complained about Rahman’s treatment but their warnings were ignored by
senior CIA officials.
The psychologists said their interrogation programme
had been designed to induce a “learned helplessness” in detainees that would
make them more compliant. Mitchell wrote a memoir, Enhanced Interrogation, in
which he claimed that the enhanced interrogation techniques helped foil
al-Qaida attacks on the US.
“I concluded that it would be immoral and unethical
to ignore my obligation to use what I knew to defend our citizens and our way
of life against enemies who themselves had initiated the conflict and whose
stated goal was to destroy us,” Mitchell wrote.
His claims over the programme’s success is disputed
by a report by the Senate intelligence committee, which found that the enhanced
interrogations produced no actionable intelligence.