Gina Haspel CIA Torture Cables
Declassified
By Tom Blanton - National
Security Archive
August 10, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
-
Washington D.C., August 10, 2018
– Current CIA director Gina
Haspel described graphic acts of
deliberate physical torture including
the waterboarding of a suspected Al-Qa’ida
terrorist under her supervision when she
was chief of base at a CIA black site in
Thailand in 2002, according to
declassified CIA cables – most of which
she wrote or authorized – obtained by
the National Security Archive through a
Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and
posted on the Web today.
The Haspel cables detail conditions
the public has only seen in the infamous
Abu Ghraib photographs from Iraq of
detainees hooded and shackled, forced
nudity, wall slamming, and box
confinement, as well as “enhanced
techniques” never photographed such as
the simulated drowning of suspects on
the waterboard. Waterboarding is a war
crime under both U.S. and international
law, dating back to U.S. prosecution of
Japanese solders for torturing U.S. POWs
during World War II.[1]
Although the CIA redacted Haspel’s
name and those of the CIA contract
psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce
Jessen who administered the waterboard,
other declassified documents (including
the 2004 CIA Inspector General report)
and public statements confirm their
leadership of the torture of alleged
terrorist Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri at the
black site between November 15 and
December 4, 2002.
“Release of Gina Haspel’s torture
cables shows the power of the Freedom of
Information Act to bring accountability
even to the highest levels of the CIA,”
said Archive director Tom Blanton, who
first identified the Haspel cables from
a footnote (336 on p. 67) in the Senate
Intelligence Committee torture report
declassified in 2014.
The Archive filed its FOIA request
for the Haspel cables on April 16, 2018,
after she was nominated by President
Trump to be CIA director. Despite the
clear public interest in the documents,
the CIA denied the Archive’s request for
expedited processing, and the Archive
went to court on April 27. The U.S.
Senate confirmed Haspel as CIA director
on May 17 (by a vote of 54-45) on the
basis of a record amassed almost
exclusively in closed hearings, with no
declassification or public release of
information even remotely approaching
that of previous CIA nominees.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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David Sobel, FOIA expert and former
Archive counsel, drafted and filed the
initial Archive complaint in federal
court; and the Archive’s pro bono
counsel Peter Karanjia and Lisa
Zycherman of the law firm Davis Wright
Tremaine took on the task of negotiating
with the U.S. Attorney’s office over
release of the documents.
In addition to the work of Sobel,
Karanjia and Zycherman, Blanton credited
two other lawsuits with paving the way
for release of the Haspel cables. The
civil lawsuit Salim v. Mitchell
brought by the ACLU against the CIA
contract psychologists who were the
architects of the torture program forced
the CIA to search and review as many as
24,000 documents from the massive
database used by the Senate Intelligence
Committee staff in the writing of their
report. The FOIA lawsuit by freelance
journalist Daniel DeFraia[2]
then compelled release of key documents,
including five Haspel cables included in
this posting, even after the August 2017
settlement in the Salim v. Mitchell
case.
The released Haspel cables feature
extensive redactions by the CIA,
including their dates (although those
can be ascertained from the declassified
CIA Inspector General’s report, among
other sources) and most of the
information results from the torture
(although those have been summarized by
the Senate Intelligence Committee report
and two of the Haspel cables even admit
failure to produce actionable
intelligence).
The biggest mystery in the released
cables is whether Gina Haspel wrote
Cable 11359, from December 1, 2002,
which uses remarkably vivid language to
describe the torture sessions: The
interrogators “strode, catlike, into the
well-lit confines of the cell at 0902
hrs [redacted], deftly removed the
subject’s black hood with a swipe,
paused, and in a deep, measured voice
said that subject – having ‘calmed down’
after his (staged) run-in with his
hulking, heavily muscled guards the
previous day – should reveal what
subject had done to vex his guards to
the point of rage.”
Document
01
Torture
orders
from
CIA
ALEC
Station
to
Gina
Haspel
at
Thailand
black
site
CIA,
ALEC
Station,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Application
of
Enhanced
Measures
to 'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
11,
2002.
Declassified
12/27/2017,
CO6717868,
as a
result
of
civil
litigation
Salim
v.
Mitchell
and
FOIA
litigation,
DeFraia
v.
CIA.
2002-11-11
This
document
authorized
Gina
Haspel,
as
chief
of
base
at a
CIA
black
site
in
Thailand,
to
torture
the
suspected
terrorist
al-Nashiri,
who
was
in
the
process
of
rendition
to
that
site.
Although
Haspel's
name
(or
cover
name)
along
with
the
cable
date
and
time,
cable
number,
and
more
are
all
redacted
by
CIA,
other
published
sources
fill
in
many
of
the
gaps.
"Senior
government
officials"
quoted
by
ProPublica
and
The
New
York
Times
established
that
Haspel
arrived
at
the
black
site
as
chief
of
base
in
"late
October
2002." [3]
Open
source
flight
records
published
by
The
Rendition
Project
show
rendition
flights
for
Nashiri
from
Dubai
(where
he
had
been
arrested
in
October)
to
Afghanistan
(the
site
known
as
COBALT,
or
the
"Salt
Pit")
on
November
10-11,
2002,
and
then
on
to
Thailand
(the
site
known
as
GREEN)
in
the
November
13-16
time
period. [4]
The
declassified
CIA
Inspector
General
report
on
torture
established
that
al-Nashiri
arrived
at
the
Thailand
black
site
on
November
15,
2002,
and
"immediately
upon
his
arrival"
began
being
tortured. [5]
The
declassified
deposition
given
by
Jose
Rodriguez
(who
was
Haspel's
boss
at
the
time
as
head
of
CIA's
Counterterrorism
Center)
in
the
Salim
v.
Mitchell
case
brought
by
the
ACLU
described
CIA
contract
psychologist
James
Mitchell
as
the
"HVTI
psychologist"
whose
name
is
redacted
here,
who
accompanied
Nashiri
on
his
rendition
flight
and
performed
the
first
assessment
of
him,
as
described
in
this
document.
[6]
Key
to
the
torture
order
was
the
"HQS
[headquarters]
assessment
that...
Nashiri...
has
access
to
perishable
threat
information
that
he
will
not
willingly
share...."
Ultimately,
after
two
months
of
torture,
first
in
Thailand
and
then
in
Poland
(the
site
known
as
BLUE),
CIA
interrogators
concluded
this
was
not
the
case.
This
document
provides
support
to
the
Senate
Intelligence
Committee
torture
report
conclusion
that
the
useful
intelligence
from
the
CIA
detainees
came
before
any
torture
took
place,
from
regular
interrogation:
Here
the
cable
admits
"we
have
so
far
uncovered
Nashiri's
plots
to
sink
ships
in
the
straits
of
Hormuz"
-
which
Nashiri
had
admitted
while
in
Dubai.
This
order
helps
explain
how
Mitchell
kept
selling
his
torture
services
to a
credulous
CIA
-
despite
the
Dubai
evidence,
Mitchell
self-servingly
tells
headquarters
that
Nashiri
is a
"sophisticated
resister"
who
would
require
Mitchell's
torture
techniques
to
give
up
useful
information,
and
further
was
"no
more
at
risk
for
severe
or
prolonged
mental
harm"
from
torture
than
"any
other
captive."
Document
02
Gina
Haspel's
Day
One
report
to
CIA
on
the
torture
of
Nashiri
CIA
Cable
11246,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of [redacted,
probably
15]
November
2002
Debriefing
of 'Abd
al-Rahim
al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
15,
2002.
Declassified
7/31/2018,
C06665557,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-15
This
cable
is
the
first
one
of
12
listed
in
footnotes
336
and
337
on
page
67
of
the
Senate
Intelligence
Committee
torture
report,
declassified
in
2014,
as
documenting
Nashiri's
detention
and
interrogation.
The
declassified
CIA
Inspector
General
report
on
torture
set
the
likely
date
for
this
document
as
November
15,
2002,
since
that
was
Day
One
of
Nashiri's
detention
at
the
Thailand
black
site
commanded
by
Gina
Haspel,
and
"aggressive"
interrogation
had
started
"immediately"
on
his
arrival.
As
chief
of
base,
Haspel
was
responsible
for
all
communications
with
headquarters,
including
this
cable
back
to
CIA's
ALEC
Station
describing
the
interrogation
of
Nashiri.
CIA
contract
psychologists
James
Mitchell
and
Bruce
Jessen
led
the
torture
session
starting
at
0415
hours
by
placing
Nashiri
against
"the
walling
board,"
and
telling
him
"they
wanted
to
know
who,
what,
when
where
and
how
ongoing
operations
would
take
place,
and
would
stop
at
nothing
to
get
it."
When
Nashiri
began
to
describe
the
earlier
Hormuz
plots
instead
of
current
threat
information
he
did
not
have,
Mitchell
and
Jessen
threw
him
to
the
floor
and
the
"security
team"
ripped
off
his
clothes,
shaved
his
head
"while
subject
moaned
and
wailed,"
and
locked
him
in
the
confinement
box
at
0445
hours.
According
to
former
CIA
lawyer
John
Rizzo,
a
prisoner
could
stand
in
this
"large"
box
roughly
the
size
of a
coffin,
while
the
"small"
box
reserved
for
shorter
stays
was
only
big
enough
to
"curl
up"
in.
The
cable
below
established
that
Nashiri
stayed
in
the
confinement
box
for
over
12
hours,
until
1703.
Document
03
Gina
Haspel's
report
to
CIA
on
two
more
torture
sessions
with
Nashiri
CIA
Cable
11258,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
Second
[redacted,
probably
15]
November
2002
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
15,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665558,
as
the
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-15
Although
the
date
and
time
on
this
cable
are
redacted,
internal
evidence
such
as
the
cable
number
and
timing
of
interrogation
sessions
points
to
the
Day
One
date
of
November
15.
The
cable
reported
the
"base
officers"
"planning
session"
presided
over
by
Gina
Haspel,
and
the
focus
on
"imminent
Al-Qa'ida
plots
against
U.S."
Details
included
removing
Nashiri
from
the
"large
box"
at
1703
hours
(he
had
been
locked
in
at
0445,
more
than
12
hours
earlier),
adjusting
his
shackles,
and
removing
his
hood.
Interrogators
"walled"
Nashiri
(slamming
him
against
the
"walling"
panel)
when
he
started
describing
what
they
called
"failed
operations
and
old
information,"
and
then
confined
him
in
the
"small"
box
for
30
minutes.
When
allowed
to
talk,
Nashiri
provided
extensive
detail
of
plans
and
names
involved
in
the
Hormuz
and
Dubai
operations
he
had
previously
admitted
to
in
his
Dubai
interrogations.
Haspel's
report
to
headquarters
commented
that
Nashiri's
admissions
"were
disjointed
and
appeared
to
conflict
in
certain
places,
but
contained
some
information
that
may
be
actionable."
Document
04
Gina
Haspel's
report
to
CIA
on
three
torture
sessions
with
Nashiri
CIA
Cable
11263,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Interrogations
of 'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
16-17,
2002.
Declassified
7/31/2018,
C06665559,
as
the
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-17
Although
the
CIA
censored
the
date
of
this
cable,
the
cable
number
and
internal
evidence
point
to
the
second
day
(November
16)
of
Nashiri's
torture
at
the
black
site
commanded
by
Gina
Haspel.
As
base
commander,
Haspel
was
responsible
for
this
cable
reporting
on
three
separate
interrogation
sessions,
featuring
hooded
confinement
in
the
"large"
box,
multiple
applications
of
"the
walling
technique,"
one
use
of
the
"small"
box,
and
the
first
reference
in
these
cables
to
"the
water
table"
as a
threat
-
the
waterboarding
that
would
later
be
applied
to
Nashiri
three
times.
CIA
censored
the
final
six
pages
of
this
cable
in
full.
Document
05
Gina
Haspel's
fourth
report
to
CIA
on
the
Nashiri
torture
CIA
Cable
11270,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
17-18,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665560,
as
the
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-18
This
cable
likely
covered
the
third
or
fourth
day
(November
17-18)
of
Nashiri's
interrogation
at
the
Thailand
black
site
commanded
by
Gina
Haspel.
CIA
redacted
most
of
the
description
of
the
two
sessions
on
that
day,
one
that
started
at
1013
local
time,
and
the
other
-
"following
lunch
and
several
strategy
meetings
between
base
personnel"
- at
1555
local
time.
Before
and
after,
Nashiri
was
hooded
and
confined
to
the
"large"
box;
while
during
the
sessions,
he
was
"backed
against
the
walling
panel."
Document
06
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Five
first
session
of
Nashiri
torture
CIA
Cable
11284,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
First
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri
[redacted],"
circa
November
19,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665561,
as
the
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-19
Even
though
CIA
redacted
the
date
of
this
cable
and
other
identifying
information
in
the
first
and
second
paragraphs,
the
similarities
between
this
cable
and
one
released
in
February
2018
as a
result
of
the
ACLU's
Salim
v.
Mitchell
civil
lawsuit,
followed
by
the
DeFraia
v.
CIA
FOIA
lawsuit,
suggest
that
this
cable
covers
the
first
torture
session
on
Day
Five
of
Nashiri's
detention,
that
is,
November
19,
2002.
The
deletion
in
the
first
paragraph,
about
the
request
to
headquarters
to
"provide
us
with
a
copy
[redacted]
to
facilitate
future
debriefings,"
was
apparently
released
in
February:
"provide
us
with
a
copy
of
pocket
litter
found
on
subject,
to
facilitate
future
debriefings."
The
Day
Five
first
session
lasted
over
an
hour,
starting
at
0950,
when
"subject
was
removed
from
the
large
box
and
was
led,
hooded,
to
the
walling
wall."
The
session
included
the
"attention
grab"
technique
and
the
"walling
technique
for
emphasis,"
and
an
extended
discussion
of
Nashiri's
failed
attempts
to
acquire
small
boats
for
attacks
in
the
Strait
of
Hormuz
-
one
of
his
recruits
apparently
diverted
his
wooden
ship
to
the
sheep
trade
between
Somalia
and
Yemen.
"Subject
was
locked
in
the
large
box
at
1054
hours."
Document
07
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Five
second
torture
session
with
Nashiri
CIA
Cable
[redacted],
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Second
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
19,
2002.
Declassified
2/28/2018,
C06718443,
as a
result
of
civil
litigation
Salim
v.
Mitchell
and
FOIA
litigation
DeFraia
v.
CIA.
2002-11-19
Although
CIA
redacted
the
cable
number
from
this
document,
similarities
with
Cable
11284
above
and
11294
below
and
the
substance
of
the
discussion
place
this
cable
in
the
same
sequence,
and
associate
the
cables
that
do
have
numbers
with
the
"Day
Five"
attribution
that
was
released
here.
Also
released
here
but
redacted
from
11284
is
the
request
for
the
subject's
pocket
litter.
But
the
numbered
cables
include
much
more
detail
on
the
interrogation
process;
while
here,
after
"subject
was
removed
from
the
large
box
and
moved
to
the
walling
wall,"
and
asked
about
the
timeline
after
the
late
March
2002
cancellation
of
the
Hormuz
operation,
almost
all
of
the
text
is
redacted.
Document
08
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Five
Nashiri
torture
"Part
III"
CIA
Cable
11293,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri
-
Part
III,"
circa
November
19,
2002.
Declassified
7/31/2018,
C06665563,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-19
There
is
some
contradiction
between
this
cable
and
the
next
in
number
sequence.
This
one
reported
the
"final
afternoon
session"
started
at
1345
while
11294
says
the
"third
session
lasted
from
1545
hours
to
1700
hours."
The
cables
may
be
talking
about
two
different
"third"
sessions,
or
perhaps
an
afternoon
session
that
started
with
an
unusual
outside
questioner
and
then
moved
back
to
the
regular
interrogators.
Here,
the
person
asking
questions
was
not
Mitchell
or
Jessen,
the
HVTI
psychologists
who
were
the
usual
interrogators,
but
someone
outside
the
core
torture
group,
perhaps
sent
from
headquarters
to
pose
questions
about
the
"ref
requirements."
Notably,
the
questioner
was
repeatedly
"asked
to
leave
the
room"
while
the
interrogators
apply
the
"attention
grab"
and
walling
"on
several
occasions."
Document
09
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Five
third
session
of
Nashiri
torture
CIA
Cable
11294,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Third
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
19,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665562,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-19
The
cable
number
sequence
connects
this
cable
to
11293
and
11284
above,
and
the
Day
Five
torture
sessions
with
Nashiri.
Questions
apparently
focused
on
Nashiri's
associates
in
Yemen,
and
the
interrogators
employed
on
multiple
occasions
the
"attention
grab"
and
the
"walling
technique."
Most
of
the
text
is
redacted.
At
the
end,
"subject
was
also
warned
to
drink
more
of
his
water,
and
was
then
locked
in
his
box
at
1700
hours."
Document
10
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Seven
of
Nashiri
torture
including
"Base
Comment"
CIA
Cable
[redacted],
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted,
likely
21]
November
2002
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
21,
2002,
1415Z.
Declassified
2/28/2018,
C06718444,
as a
result
of
civil
litigation
Salim
v.
Mitchell
and
FOIA
litigation
DeFraia
v.
CIA.
2002-11-22
While
CIA
redacted
the
cable
number
and
date
(while
leaving
in
the
Zulu
time
when
the
cable
was
sent),
CIA
released
the
reference
in
the
first
line
of
paragraph
two
to
"Day
Seven"
of
Nashiri's
detention,
which
would
make
this
date
November
21.
This
cable
included
an
unusual
"Base
Comment"
probably
written
by
Haspel,
the
base
chief,
on
the
difficulties
of
translation,
both
of
questions
and
answers,
during
interrogation.
Haspel
wrote,
"For
much
of
the
first
hour,
most
of
subject's
responses
came
piecemeal,
and
in
response
to
direct
questions.
Subject
appeared
confused
at
times,
and
[redacted]
later
observed
that
many
of
subject's
Arabic
sentences
had
been
disjointed
and
may
have
reflected
subject's
misunderstanding
of
questions.
After
a
subsequent
mid-interrogation
meeting
identified
this
problem,
subject's
responses
appeared
more
coherent."
Details
in
this
cable
included
references
to
"the
chain
connecting
his
leg
shackles
to
his
handcuffs,"
Nashiri's
forced
nudity
replaced
by a
"towel
to
wear,"
the
forcible
shaving
of
his
head
and
beard
"while
subject
cried
and
grimaced
theatrically,"
after
which
he
"was
led
back
into
his
large
box."
Document
11
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
Day
Eight
of
Nashiri
torture
CIA
Cable
[redacted],
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted,
likely
22]
November
2002
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
22,
2002,
0902Z.
Declassified
2/28/2018,
C06718445,
as a
result
of
civil
litigation
Salim
v.
Mitchell
and
FOIA
litigation
DeFraia
v.
CIA.
2002-11-22
While
CIA
redacted
the
cable
number
and
date
(while
leaving
in
the
Zulu
time
when
the
cable
was
sent),
CIA
released
the
reference
in
the
first
line
of
paragraph
two
to
"Day
Eight"
of
Nashiri's
detention,
which
would
make
this
date
November
22
(a
CIA
typo
renders
the
year
2001,
actually
2002).
Most
of
the
substance
in
this
report
was
redacted,
but
two
sections
detailed
Mitchell
and
Jessen's
torture
techniques.
At
the
beginning,
one
[redacted
name]
interrogator
"snarled"
at
Nashiri,
"You
are
our
prisoner,
we
are
your
keepers,
and
it
doesn't
get
much
lower
than
that,"
while
using
"the
walling
technique"
and
saying
"in
fact
I'd
like
to
do
it
just
based
on
general
principles."
Later,
interrogators
explained
to
Nashiri
that
"until
it
became
clear
that
subject's
information
was
false,
he
would
be
given
solid
food
and
allowed
to
sleep
on
the
floor
of
his
cell
with
a
mat
and
a
towel
to
cover
himself"
-
meaning
the
usual
routine
had
been
liquid
food,
nudity,
and
the
confinement
box.
"Security
team
also
removed
the
small
box
from
his
cell,
leaving
it
on
the
other
side
of
the
bars."
Document
12
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
the
first
waterboarding
of
Nashiri,
Day
12
CIA
Cable
11322,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
First
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
26,
2002.
Declassified
7/31/2018,
C06665564,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-26
CIA
redacted
the
date
of
this
cable,
but
the
declassified
CIA
Inspector
General
report
described
the
waterboarding
of
Nashiri
as
beginning
on
the
12th
day
of
his
detention,
which
would
make
the
date
November
26,
2002.
This
cable
from
the
Thailand
black
site
commanded
by
Gina
Haspel
back
to
CIA
ALEC
Station
reported,
"Interrogation
escalated
rapidly
from
subject
being
aggressively
debriefed
by
interrogators
while
standing
at
the
walling
wall,
to
multiple
applications
of
the
walling
technique,
and
ultimately,
multiple
applications
of
the
watering
technique."
At
one
point,
Nashiri
"was
left
strapped
to
the
waterboard
to
contemplate
his
fate"
for
20
minutes;
afterwards,
Mitchell
and
Jessen
told
him
"no
matter
what
subject
thought
might
happen
to
him,
interrogators
were
not
going
to
let
subject
come
to
grave
harm;
indeed,
they
were
going
to
ensure
that
he
would
be
able
to
answer
the
questions
they
would
pose
to
him
again
and
again."
"The
water
treatment
was
applied
at
1214
hours,"
after
which
"Interrogators
covered
subject's
head
with
the
hood
and
left
him
on
the
water
board,
moaning,
shaking
and
asking
God
to
help
him
repeatedly...."
Mitchell
and
Jessen
applied
another
"water
treatment"
at
1340
hours
(likely
a
typo
for
1240)
saying
"they
wanted
to
know
of
operations
against
the
U.S.
Subject
was
not
being
honest
with
them,
and
they
were
willing
to
continue
to
give
subject
the
same
treatment,
day
in
and
day
out,
for
months
if
need
be,
until
subject
decided
to
cooperate."
But
"Subject
again
said
that
there
were
no
operations,
they
weren't
talking
operations,
and
begged
interrogators
to
tell
him
more
so
that
he
would
be
able
to
remember
what
they
wanted."
The
cable
included
some
confusing
reports
on
timing:
paragraph
12
gave
1340
as
the
time
for
the
second
waterboarding,
while
paragraph
13
listed
1252
as
the
time
when
Nashiri
was
locked,
naked,
in
the
small
box,
and
the
second
paragraph
reported
the
whole
torture
session
as
lasting
from
1107
to
1252,
so
1240
was
likely
the
actual
time
of
the
waterboarding.
Document
13
Gina
Haspel
report
to
CIA
on
second
waterboard
torture
session
of
Nashiri,
Day
12
CIA
Cable
11344,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Second
Interrogation
Session
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,"
circa
November
26,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665568,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-26
Again
CIA
redacted
the
date
of
this
cable,
but
the
text
describes
the
precise
timing
of
two
torture
sessions
that
were
also
mentioned
in
Cable
11322
above,
which
is
likely
the
"Ref
A"
cable
that
is
deleted
here.
The
declassified
CIA
Inspector
General
report
established
that
the
waterboarding
of
Nashiri
began
on
Day
12
of
his
detention,
which
would
make
this
date
November
26,
2002.
This
second
torture
session
lasted
from
1655
to
1850,
and
included
one
"water
board
treatment"
after
"interrogators
told
subject
he
was
not
being
helpful,
that
he
was
taking
their
words
and
spitting
them
back,
and
that
subject
was
leaving
them
with
no
choice
in
the
matter.
Interrogators
advised
that
they
could
not
believe
subject
when
all
he
was
telling
them
were
lies;
interrogators
were
going
to
get
the
truth
out
of
subject
eventually.
Over
subject's
protests,
the
water
technique
was
applied.
Interrogators
told
subject
they
were
going
to
do
this
again,
and
again,
and
again
until
subject
decided
to
be
truthful;
subject
mumbled
something
unintelligible."
Document
14
Thailand
black
site
report
to
CIA
on
two
torture
sessions
with
Nashiri
CIA
Cable
11352,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted]
November
2002
Interrogation
Sessions
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Husayn
Muhammad
'Abdu
Nashir,"
circa
November
27-29,
2002.
Declassified
6/26/2018,
C06665565,
as a
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-11-29
This
cable
from
the
Thailand
black
site
to
CIA
ALEC
Station
reported
on
two
interrogation
sessions
with
Nashiri,
and
included
several
new
elements
different
from
the
previous
cables
in
this
series.
First
was
Nashiri's
name,
previously
rendered
as 'Abd
Al-Rahim
Al-Nashiri,
and
now
as 'Abd
Al-Rahim
Husayn
Muhammad
'Abdu
Nashir.
Second
was
the
mention
that
Nashiri
would
soon
be
"moved
to
another
facility
(described
as a
much
worse
place)"
-
the
Thailand
site
would
be
closed
on
December
4,
2002
because
of
tensions
with
the
Thai
government
and
CIA's
discovery
that
a
major
U.S.
newspaper
was
on
to
the
location,
according
to
the
Senate
Intelligence
Committee
torture
report.
Third
was
the
"base
note"
included
in
paragraph
3
about
Nashiri's
small
gesture
towards
privacy,
that
the
"small
box
had
been
moved
by
subject
overnight
to
the
far
corner
of
the
cell,
to
block
the
view
of
subject's
waste
bucket
from
direct
view
through
the
cell
bars"
- to
which
"interrogators
informed
subject
that
this
was
not
his
space
at
all
- it
was
their
space,
and
he
was
not
to
do
anything
with
it
without
their
permission."
Fourth
was
the
actual
admission
of
failure
by
the
interrogators
Mitchell
and
Jessen:
"Interrogators
then
told
subject
that
his
non-compliance
with
their
requests
for
accurate,
meaningful
information
was
really
all
their
fault,
for
not
conditioning
subject
properly.
Likening
the
conditioning
process
to
tenderizing
a
fine
steak,
interrogators
told
subject
that
perhaps
he
similarly
just
needed
conditioning
and
'tenderizing'
to
be
ready
for
what
interrogators
were
asking
of
him."
This
was
after
extended
sessions
of
physical
violence,
wall
slamming,
box
confinement,
sleep
deprivation,
forced
nudity,
shackling,
stress
positions,
and
waterboarding.
The
marked
differences
between
the
prior
cables
and
the
cables
after
this
date
from
the
Thailand
black
site
suggest
the
possibility
that
someone
other
than
Gina
Haspel
may
have
authored
or
authorized
them.
Haspel
may
have
finished
her
temporary
duty
assignment
as
chief
of
base
(the
end
of
November
would
have
been
30
days
since
she
arrived),
and
been
succeeded
by a
new
base
chief.
The
U.S.
Senate
process
that
confirmed
Haspel
as
CIA
director
in
2018
failed
to
establish
any
actual
dates
for
her
responsibilities
at
the
Thailand
black
site
and
other
CIA
posts,
leaving
her
as
the
first
undercover
CIA
director
in
U.S.
history.
Document
15
Thailand
black
site
report
to
CIA
ALEC
Station
on
Day
16
of
Nashiri
torture
CIA
Cable
[redacted],
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted,
likely
30]
November
2002
Interrogation
Sessions
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Husayn
Muhammad
'Abdu
Nashir,"
circa
December
1,
2002,
1021Z.
Declassified
2/28/2018,
C06718451,
as a
result
of
civil
litigation
Salim
v.
Mitchell
and
FOIA
litigation
DeFraia
v.
CIA
2002-12-01
Although
CIA
censored
the
date
and
cable
number
(while
leaving
the
Zulu
time
the
cable
was
sent),
the
first
line
of
paragraph
2 is
designated
"Day
16"
of
Nashiri's
torture,
which
makes
the
date
of
the
interrogation
sessions
November
30,
2002.
Again,
this
cable
reported
Nashiri
was
told
of
"the
new,
much
worse
place"
to
which
"he
would
be
going
within
days."
The
cable
also
reported
continued
failure
by
Mitchell
and
Jessen:
"During
the
interrogation,
subject
exhibited
signs
of
resistance
and
provided
little
new
or
verifiable
information."
In
response,
the
interrogators
cooked
up
what
the
cable
called
"a
theatrically
flawless
'rescue'
scenario
designed
to
accomplish
four
things,
all
aimed
at
decreasing
subject's
ability
to
predict
or
control
events
as a
resistor"
including
"anxiety
for
his
safety,"
"conditioning
of
learned
helplessness,"
and
"fear
of
the
unknown."
"Security
team
members
burst
into
the
subject's
cell,
shouting
and
howling"
while
one
of
the
interrogators
"who
could
not
be
seen
by
hooded
subject"
"walled
him
five
times"
and
then
pretended
to
interrupt
the
mock
killing
and
rescue
him.
Afterwards,
Nashiri
could
be
seen
"crying
and
blowing
his
nose,
and
after
perhaps
10
minutes
composed
himself,
and
could
be
seen
sitting
quietly
in
the
corner
of
his
cell
on
some
tissue
paper
which
he
had
carefully
folded
into
a
pad."
The
contract
psychologists
of
course
"judged
that
the
rescue
theatrics
had
gone
exactly
as
planned
and
had
served
their
intended
purpose."
Document
16
Thailand
black
site
report
to
CIA
ALEC
Station
on
"catlike"
torture
December
1,
2002
CIA
Cable
11359,
"Subject:
Eyes
Only
-
Details
of
[redacted,
likely
1]
December
2002
Interrogation
Sessions
with
'Abd
Al-Rahim
Husayn
Muhammad
'Abdu
Nashir,"
circa
December
1,
2002.
Declassified
7/31/2018,
C06665566,
as
the
result
of
FOIA
litigation,
National
Security
Archive
v.
CIA.
2002-12-01
It’s
unknown
if
Gina
Haspel
was
still
the
chief
of
base
of
detention
site
GREEN
in
Thailand
on
December
1,
2002.
But
whoever
was
in
charge
and
authored
or
authorized
this
cable
back
to
CIA
ALEC
Station,
the
report
marked
a
descent
into
language
right
out
of
spy
novels
or
the
"Shades
of
Gray"
series
to
describe
potentially
criminal
behavior
by
CIA
employees.
"HVTI
[redacted,
either
Mitchell
or
Jessen]
and
linguist
[redacted]
strode,
catlike,
into
the
well-lit
confines
of
the
cell
at
0902
hrs
[redacted],
deftly
removed
the
subject's
black
hood
with
a
swipe,
paused,
and
in a
deep,
measured
voice
said
that
subject
-
having
'calmed
down'
after
his
(staged)
run-in
with
his
hulking,
heavily
muscled
guards
the
previous
day
[see
Document
15
above]
-
should
reveal
what
subject
had
done
to
vex
his
guards
to
the
point
of
rage."
Notes
[1]
See
Glenn
Kessler,
“Cheney’s
claim
that the
U.S. did
not
prosecute
Japanese
soldiers
for
waterboarding,”
Fact-Checker
column, Washington
Post,
December
16,
2014.
Kessler
gave
former
vice
president
Cheney
three
Pinocchio’s
for the
falsehood.
Kessler
cites an
authoritative
law
review
article,
by Judge
Evan
Wallach,
“Drop by
Drop:
Forgetting
the
History
of Water
Torture
in U.S.
Courts,” Columbia
Journal
of
Transnational
Law (2007).
[2]DeFraia
co-authored
with Tim
Golden
and
Stephen
Engelberg
of
ProPublica
the most
comprehensive
account
of
Haspel's
career,
published
on May
7, 2018
at
ProPublica,
quoting
at
length
from the
Nashiri-related
cables
obtained
by
DeFraia's
lawsuit.
The
cables
obtained
by the
Archive
lawsuit
confirm
the
ProPublica
account
and add
significant
new
details
including
the
three
specific
waterboarding
sessions.
[3]
See
ProPublica, “Correction:
Trump’s
Pick to
Head CIA
Did Not
Oversee
Waterboarding
of Abu
Zubaydah,”
March
15,
2018.
[4]
See
https://www.therenditionproject.org.uk/prisoners/nashiri.html
[5]
See
https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu//dc.html?doc=4446942-Document-1-CIA-IG-report-on-torture-of-Al-Nashiri
[6]
See Jose
Rodriguez
deposition,
Salim v.
Mitchell,
March 7,
2017, p.
140.
This article was
originally published by "National
Security Archive"
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