New York Times details secret US military torture operation
By Joe Kay
03/23/6 "WSW" -- -- A New York Times report on
March 19 details the operations of Task Force 6-26, a highly secret US Special
Operations Unit whose members have reportedly engaged in torture
and assassination in Iraq and Afghanistan. The existence and a
hint of the operations of the unit—previously known as Task
Force 121 and since renamed Task Force 145—have been reported in
the press before, however there has never been a complete public
accounting for its illegal activities.
Based on new interviews with military and government officials,
the Times piece (“Before and After Abu Ghraib, a US Unit Abused
Detainees,” by Eric Schmitt and Carolyn Marshall) provides some
additional information about the unit, particularly with regard
to its widespread practice of torturing Iraqi prisoners.
However, the newspaper does more to conceal than to reveal the
real significance of TF 6-26, which has been closely integrated
with a policy of torture and assassination approved at the
highest levels of the American government To this day, TF 6-26
continues to operate, but in an even more secretive environment
than it did during the period covered by the Times article.
According to the Times and previous media reports, TF 6-26/TF
121 was originally formed in the summer of 2003, a few months
after the invasion of Iraq. Its ranks were filled with
highly-trained Special Operations forces, including from the
Army Delta Force and the Navy Seals, and also included
intelligence agents from the Defense Intelligence Agency It has
also worked closely with the CIA, the FBI and foreign
intelligence agencies.
The main task of TF 6-26 was to develop methods to defeat the
insurgency, which during the months following the invasion
became more intense than American military planners had
anticipated. The group also had the task of capturing Saddam
Hussein, which it did in December 2003. The grisly methods it
used to meet these objectives were developed in a small compound
known as Camp Nama, located adjacent to the Baghdad
International Airport. It also apparently used Abu Ghraib prison
as something of an outsourcing post, where it would drop off and
pick up prisoners that it wanted interrogated. TF 6-26 primarily
dealt with “high value” detainees—individuals considered to be
closely involved in the insurgency or with the former Baathist
government.
The Times reports that much of the interrogation at Camp Nama
was done in the “Black Room,” a “windowless, jet-black
garage-size room” where “some soldiers beat prisoners with rifle
butts, yelled and spit in their faces and, in a nearby area,
used detainees for target practice in a game of jailer
paintball.” The Black Room was “nearly bare but for several
18-inch hooks that jutted from the ceiling, a grisly reminder of
the terrors inflicted by Mr. Hussein’s inquisitors,” the Times
notes. “Jailers often blared rap music or rock ’n’ roll at
deafening decibels over a loudspeaker to unnerve their
subjects.”
The newspaper reported that the soldiers posted placards
reading, “NO BLOOD, NO FOUL.” “The slogan, as one Defense
Department official explained, reflected an adage adopted by
Task Force 6-26: ‘If you don’t make them bleed, they can’t
prosecute you for it.’” The newspaper quotes another Pentagon
official, “The reality is, there were no rules there.” The
prisoners who entered Camp Nama disappeared, having no contact
with anyone, including the Red Cross, which by international law
must have access to all prisoners.
In January 2004, TF 6-26 captured the son of one of Saddam
Hussein’s bodyguards. According to the Times, “The man told Army
investigators that he was forced to strip and that he was
punched in the spine until he fainted, put in front of an
air-conditioner while cold water was poured on him and kicked in
the stomach until he vomited.”
According to the Times, evidence of abuse at Camp Nama includes
the period during which the infamous photos at Abu Ghraib were
taken, but extends farther, into early 2004—after the Abu Ghraib
photos were released. This included the beating of an
18-year-old man who was suspected of selling cars to a group led
by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Then, “on June 25, 2004, nearly two months after the disclosure
of the abuses at Abu Ghraib, an F.B.I. agent in Iraq sent an
e-mail message to his superiors in Washington, warning that a
detainee captured by Task Force 6-26 had suspicious burn marks
on his body. The detainee said he had been tortured.”
Shortly after this incident, TF 6-26 moved to a more discrete
location in Balad, 45 miles north of Baghdad.
According to previous reports, TF 6-26 also developed a method
of seizing the wives of men it wanted to capture, holding them
as ransom. This is another clear violation of international law.
After presenting this evidence of systematic torture by TF 6-26,
the Times article proceeds to exonerate the Defense Department
officials from any responsibility. “The tensions laid bare a
clash of military cultures,” the authors write. “Combat-hardened
commandos seeking a steady flow of intelligence to pinpoint
insurgents grew exasperated with civilian interrogators sent
from Washington, many of whom were novices at interrogating
hostile prisoners fresh off the battlefield.” At one point, the
newspaper writes, “one of Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld’s
top aides, Stephen A. Cambone, ordered a subordinate [Lieutenant
General William Boykin] to ‘get to the bottom’ of any
misconduct.”
This attempt to present the history of TF 6-26 as a case of
military commandos gone awry, in the face of opposition and
concern from Bush administration officials, turns reality on its
head. It represents an attempt to cover for the administration’s
policy of torture, either on the part of the Times, the Times’s
sources, or a combination of the two. Rumsfeld, Cambone and
Boykin were among the principal architects of this policy.
The increased role and power of the Special Operations Command,
operating within the framework and direction of the Department
of Defense, has been a specific policy aim of Rumsfeld since at
least 2003. Rumsfeld has championed the idea of small, secretive
military units engaged in “manhunts” and other operations, and
has sought to increase the role of military intelligence—as
opposed to the CIA or FBI—in gathering information in Iraq and
elsewhere.
In carrying out this policy, he has relied heavily on Stephen
Cambone, the under secretary of defense for intelligence. This
post, which Cambone assumed in March 2003, was created by
Rumsfeld for the purpose of increasing the role of the military
in intelligence-gathering. The necessity of this move was
particularly important for Rumsfeld following the disputes that
arose between the Bush administration and the CIA over Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction. Cambone has worked closely with
Boykin, a Christian fundamentalist who has proclaimed that the
war in Iraq is a part of a conflict between Christianity and
Islam, and had said that President Bush was “not elected,” but
rather “appointed by God.”
Seymour Hersh, in a May 15, 2004, article in the New Yorker,
tied the abuse at Abu Ghraib to this new policy. Citing American
intelligence officials, Hersh reported on a Pentagon operation
that “encouraged physical coercion and sexual humiliation of
Iraqi prisoners in an effort to generate more intelligence about
the growing insurgency in Iraq.” He cited a “senior CIA
official” who “said the operation stemmed from Rumsfeld’s
long-standing desire to wrest control of America’s clandestine
and paramilitary operations from the CIA.”
Hersh wrote that Rumsfeld “authorized the establishment of a
highly secret program that was given blanket advance approval to
kill or capture and, if possible, interrogate ‘high value’
targets... A special-access program, or sap—subject to the
Defense Department’s most stringent level of security—was set
up.” After an earlier dispute within the Pentagon, Cambone had
been given authority to control all special-access programs
relevant to the “war on terrorism,” which would include those in
Iraq.
Hersh’s sources claimed that this new program was eventually
transferred to Abu Ghraib and the attempt to defeat the Iraqi
insurgency. This provoked opposition from sections of the CIA,
who had been working with the program but feared that its
transfer to Iraq, accompanied by the inclusion of military
forces that had not been trained to operate clandestinely, would
disrupt the operation and lead to a situation such as happened
in 2004, when photographs of torture were made public.
While Hersh did not mention TF 6-26 in his original article, the
task force appears to have been closely involved in these
operations. A document released by the ACLU in January of this
year was filed by an army investigator who said he could not
continue to pursue an investigation into the torture of the son
of Saddam Hussein’s former bodyguard because the unit accused of
the torture, TF 6-26, was part of a special access program.
The ACLU reported, “A memorandum included in the report states
that ‘fake names were used by the 6-26 members’ and that the
unit claimed to have a computer malfunction which resulted in
the loss of 70 percent of their files. The memorandum concludes,
‘Hell, even if we reopened [the investigation] we wouldn’t get
any more information than we already have.’” A separate report,
dated April 8, 2005, said that the Army investigation could not
pursue 23 criminal cases “due to the suspects and witnesses
involvement in Special Access Programs and/or the security
classification of the unit they were assigned to during the
offense.”
There is other evidence that has been reported linking TF
6-26/121 to Abu Ghraib. In the fall of 2003, when the insurgency
in Iraq was intensifying, Major General Geoffrey Miller, who was
at the time in charge of the Guantánamo Bay prison camp, was
sent to Iraq under the direction of Cambone. It later came to
light that his main task was to “Gitmoize” interrogation
procedure in Iraq, i.e., transfer the techniques used in Cuba to
Iraq. In September, new methods were approved by Lieutenant
General Ricardo Sanchez, the military commander in Iraq, for use
at Abu Ghraib. These methods came directly from TF 6-26/121.
According to a New York Times piece on August 27, 2004, a
classified and unreleased section of a military report on Abu
Ghraib, known as the Fay report, “says that a July 15, 2003,
‘Battlefield Interrogation Team and Facility Policy,’ drafted
for use by Joint Task Force 121 ... was adopted ‘almost
verbatim’ by 519th Military Intelligence Battalion, which played
a leading role in interrogations at Abu Ghraib.” The Times wrote
at the time that the policy “endorsed the use of stress
positions during harsh interrogation procedures, the use of
dogs, yelling, loud music, light control, isolation and other
procedures used previously in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
Prior to being shifted to Iraq, the 519th MI Battalion had
worked closely with TF 121 in Afghanistan, the classified
section of the Fay report said. It is well known that during the
time of the abuse at Abu Ghraib there were many unidentified
military personnel, dressed in civilian clothes, who drifted in
and out of the prison, and who Janis Karpinski, then commander
of the military police unit at the facility, could not identify.
These individuals were likely involved with military
intelligence, TF 121, or otherwise involved in the secret
interrogation programs set up under the direction of the
Pentagon.
The true role of outfits like TF 6-26 have been systematically
covered up by the military, both big-business political parties
and the media. All the investigations carried out by the
government and the military have been so many attempts to
whitewash the crimes of the Bush administration in ordering and
directing the use of torture in Iraq and elsewhere. The handful
of convictions that have been handed down—Including the recent
conviction of an army dog-handler—have targeted only low-level
soldiers, while leaving the actual architects of this policy to
remain at large, indeed to retain their posts in the highest
offices of the government
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