Ten Years
Ago, I Saw The Real Guantanamo And It Changed My
Life
By Joseph
Hickman
June 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "ShadowProof"
- Ten years ago today, I was on duty as the sergeant
of the guard at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (GTMO). While I
was standing in a watchtower inside Camp Delta
overlooking the detainees, I saw something that
would radically change my life.
I witnessed
three detainees leave the camp in a white van and be
transported to a top secret CIA facility, only to
return to the camp a few hours later, dead. Over the
next few hours, after the bodies returned to Camp
Delta, I watched a cover-up being orchestrated by
the GTMO Command. My commander flat-out lied to the
media about what happened, claiming the detainees
committed suicide in their cells as a form of
asymmetrical warfare.
That day
ten years ago shook the foundation of all I thought
to be true. Prior to that night, I was a “true
believer”—I was a proud soldier in the U.S.
Military, I was one of the good guys in the Global
War on Terror. After that night, I began to question
those beliefs.
When I
first arrived at GTMO a few months prior to that
evening, I had my doubts about whether GTMO was a
humane place. I was appalled at the conditions of
the camp and the treatment of the detainees. But
somehow I always found a way to rationalize what I
saw. The treatment of the detainees was harsh and
their living conditions inhumane. They looked more
like poor farmers than the “worst of the worst”
terrorists in the world; but my country told me they
were and I believed them.
On June 9,
2006, all of that changed. Three men died on my
watch. I knew the three detainees did not die in
their cells. I knew they were murdered outside of
the camp at a top secret CIA facility that the U.S.
government denied existed. This was inexcusable. It
was a war crime.
Even though
going against the U.S. military’s official story of
what happened that day would most assuredly end my
military career, it was my duty as a soldier to
report it. I went to the U.S. Army Inspector General
and the Justice Department and reported what I
witnessed. After I reported it to the Justice
Department, they opened an official investigation
and the FBI spent almost a year looking into my
allegations.
They
finally contacted my attorney and told him that
while “the gist of what I reported was true,” they
were closing the case, and were not going to pursue
any charges against those involved.
Shortly
after the Justice Department decision, I left the
military. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about
that night. I have spent years investigating the
deaths and other issues concerning GTMO. I wrote a
book laying out all the facts about what happened
that night, hoping that one day another
investigation will be opened and truth and justice
will prevail. Though my hope for that is fading, I
will never give up.
Since that
night, a lot has changed at GTMO. Most of the
detainees have been released and sent home or sent
to different countries to try to start a new life.
Unfortunately, there are still dozens of people
being detained in GTMO with no evidence against
them, living the nightmare of being held without
charge or due process.
GTMO needs
to be closed. Yet it remains open, and the GTMO
command claims it is transparent and has nothing to
hide. They even set up VIP tours for reporters,
politicians, and attorneys. The tours are rehearsed
for weeks prior to the VIPs’ arrival on the Island.
They show the VIPs only what they want them to see,
making it appear as if they are hiding nothing.
In reality,
GTMO is shrouded in secrecy. No reporter,
politician, or attorney, has ever seen the real GTMO.
The only people that have seen it are the detainees,
the guards, and the GTMO command. If they ever did
see the real GTMO, maybe then justice would be
served.
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