Washington Post (11.2.05).
CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons.
Debate Is Growing Within Agency About Legality
and Morality of Overseas System Set Up After 9/11.
By Dana Priest
The CIA has been hiding and interrogating
some of its most important al Qaeda captives at a Soviet-era compound in
Eastern Europe, according to U.S. and foreign officials familiar with the
arrangement.
The secret facility is part of a covert
prison system set up by the CIA nearly four years ago that at various times has
included sites in eight countries, including Thailand, Afghanistan and several
democracies in Eastern Europe, as well as a small center at the Guantanamo Bay
prison in Cuba, according to current and former intelligence officials and
diplomats from three continents.
The hidden
global internment network is a central element in the CIA's unconventional war
on terrorism. It depends on the cooperation of foreign intelligence
services, and on keeping even basic information about the system secret from
the public, foreign officials and nearly all members of Congress charged with
overseeing the CIA's covert actions.
The existence and locations of the
facilities -- referred to as "black sites" in classified White House,
CIA, Justice Department and congressional documents -- are known to only a
handful of officials in the United States and, usually, only to the president
and a few top intelligence officers in each host country.
The CIA and the White House, citing
national security concerns and the value of the program, have dissuaded
Congress from demanding that the agency answer questions in open testimony
about the conditions under which captives are held. Virtually nothing is known
about who is kept in the facilities, what interrogation methods are employed
with them, or how decisions are made about whether they should be detained or
for how long.
While the Defense Department has produced
volumes of public reports and testimony about its detention practices and rules
after the abuse scandals at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison and at Guantanamo Bay, the
CIA has not even acknowledged the existence of its black sites. To do so, say
officials familiar with the program, could open the U.S. government to legal
challenges, particularly in foreign courts, and increase the risk of political
condemnation at home and abroad.
But the revelations of widespread
prisoner abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq by the U.S. military -- which operates
under published rules and transparent oversight of Congress -- have increased
concern among lawmakers, foreign governments and human rights groups about the
opaque CIA system. Those concerns escalated last month, when Vice President
Cheney and CIA Director Porter J. Goss asked Congress to exempt CIA
employees from legislation already endorsed by 90 senators that would bar cruel
and degrading treatment of any prisoner in U.S. custody.
Although the CIA will not acknowledge
details of its system, intelligence officials defend the agency's approach,
arguing that the successful defense of the country requires that the agency be
empowered to hold and interrogate suspected terrorists for as long as necessary
and without restrictions imposed by the U.S. legal system or even by the
military tribunals established for prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.
The Washington Post is not publishing the
names of the Eastern European countries involved in the covert program, at the
request of senior U.S. officials. They argued that the disclosure might disrupt
counterterrorism efforts in those countries and elsewhere and could make them
targets of possible terrorist retaliation.
The secret detention system was conceived
in the chaotic and anxious first months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when
the working assumption was that a second strike was imminent.
Since then, the arrangement has been
increasingly debated within the CIA, where considerable concern lingers about
the legality, morality and practicality of holding even unrepentant terrorists
in such isolation and secrecy, perhaps for the duration of their lives.
Mid-level and senior CIA officers began arguing two years ago that the system
was unsustainable and diverted the agency from its unique espionage mission.
"We never sat down, as far as I
know, and came up with a grand strategy," said one former senior
intelligence officer who is familiar with the program but not the location of
the prisons. "Everything was very reactive. That's how you get to a
situation where you pick people up, send them into a netherworld and don't say,
'What are we going to do with them afterwards?' "
It
is illegal for the government to hold prisoners in such isolation in secret prisons
in the United States, which is why the CIA placed them overseas, according to
several former and current intelligence officials and other U.S. government
officials. Legal experts and intelligence officials said that the CIA's
internment practices also would be considered illegal under the laws of several
host countries, where detainees have rights to have a lawyer or to mount a
defense against allegations of wrongdoing.
Host countries have signed the U.N. Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment, as has the United States. Yet CIA
interrogators in the overseas sites are permitted to use the CIA's approved
"Enhanced Interrogation Techniques," some of which are prohibited by the U.N. convention and by U.S. military
law. They include tactics such as "waterboarding," in which a
prisoner is made to believe he or she is drowning.
Some
detainees apprehended by the CIA and transferred to foreign intelligence
agencies have alleged after their release that they were tortured, although it
is unclear whether CIA personnel played a role in the alleged abuse. Given the
secrecy surrounding CIA detentions, such accusations have heightened concerns
among foreign governments and human rights groups about CIA detention and interrogation
practices.
The contours of the CIA's detention
program have emerged in bits and pieces over the past two years. Parliaments
in Canada, Italy, France, Sweden and the Netherlands have opened inquiries into
alleged CIA operations that secretly captured their citizens or legal residents
and transferred them to the agency's prisons.
More than 100 suspected terrorists have
been sent by the CIA into the covert system, according to current and former
U.S. intelligence officials and foreign sources. This figure, a rough estimate
based on information from sources who said their knowledge of the numbers was
incomplete, does not include prisoners picked up in Iraq.
The detainees break down roughly into two
classes, the sources said.
About 30 are considered major terrorism
suspects and have been held under the highest level of secrecy at black sites
financed by the CIA and managed by agency personnel, including those in Eastern
Europe and elsewhere, according to current and former intelligence officers and
two other U.S. government officials. Two locations in this category -- in
Thailand and on the grounds of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay -- were
closed in 2003 and 2004, respectively.
A second tier -- which these sources
believe includes more than 70 detainees -- is a group considered less
important, with less direct involvement in terrorism and having limited
intelligence value. These prisoners, some of whom were originally taken to
black sites, are delivered to intelligence services in Egypt, Jordan, Morocco,
Afghanistan and other countries, a process sometimes known as "rendition."
While the first-tier black sites are run by CIA officers, the jails in these
countries are operated by the host nations, with CIA financial
assistance and, sometimes, direction.
Morocco, Egypt and Jordan have said that
they do not torture detainees, although years of State Department human rights
reports accuse all three of chronic prisoner abuse.
The top 30 al Qaeda prisoners exist in
complete isolation from the outside world. Kept in dark, sometimes underground
cells, they have no recognized legal rights, and no one outside the CIA is
allowed to talk with or even see them, or to otherwise verify their well-being,
said current and former and U.S. and foreign government and intelligence
officials.
Most of the facilities were built and are
maintained with congressionally appropriated funds, but the White House has
refused to allow the CIA to brief anyone except the House and Senate
intelligence committees' chairmen and vice chairmen on the program's
generalities.
The Eastern European countries that the
CIA has persuaded to hide al Qaeda captives are democracies that have embraced
the rule of law and individual rights after decades of Soviet domination. Each
has been trying to cleanse its intelligence services of operatives who have
worked on behalf of others -- mainly Russia and organized crime.
The idea of holding terrorists outside the U.S. legal system was not
under consideration before Sept. 11, 2001, not even for Osama bin Laden,
according to former government officials. The plan was to bring bin Laden and his top associates into
the U.S. justice system for trial or to send them to foreign countries where
they would be tried.
"The issue of detaining and interrogating
people was never, ever discussed," said a former senior intelligence
officer who worked in the CIA's Counterterrorist Center, or CTC, during that
period. "It was against the culture and they believed information was best
gleaned by other means."
On
the day of the attacks, the CIA already had a list of what it called High-Value
Targets from the al Qaeda structure, and as the World Trade Center and Pentagon
attack plots were unraveled, more names were added to the list. The question of
what to do with these people surfaced quickly.
The CTC's chief of operations argued for
creating hit teams of case officers and CIA paramilitaries that would covertly
infiltrate countries in the Middle East, Africa and even Europe to assassinate
people on the list, one by one.
But many CIA officers believed that the
al Qaeda leaders would be worth keeping alive to interrogate about their
network and other plots. Some officers worried that the CIA would not be very
adept at assassination.
"We'd probably shoot ourselves,"
another former senior CIA official said.
The agency set up prisons under
its covert action authority. Under U.S. law, only the president can authorize a
covert action, by signing a document called a presidential finding.
Findings must not break U.S. law and are reviewed and approved by CIA, Justice
Department and White House legal advisers.
Six days after the Sept. 11 attacks,
President Bush signed a sweeping finding that gave the CIA broad authorization
to disrupt terrorist activity, including permission to kill, capture and detain
members of al Qaeda anywhere in the world.
It could not be determined whether Bush
approved a separate finding for the black-sites program, but the consensus
among current and former intelligence and other government officials
interviewed for this article is that he did not have to.
Rather, they believe that the CIA general
counsel's office acted within the parameters of the Sept. 17 finding. The
black-site program was approved by a small circle of White House and Justice Department
lawyers and officials, according to several former and current U.S. government
and intelligence officials.
Deals
With 2 Countries.
Among the first steps was to figure out where the CIA could secretly
hold the captives. One early idea was to keep them on ships in international
waters, but that was discarded for security and logistics reasons.
CIA officers also searched for a setting
like Alcatraz Island. They considered the virtually unvisited islands in Lake
Kariba in Zambia, which were edged with craggy cliffs and covered in woods. But
poor sanitary conditions could easily lead to fatal diseases, they decided, and
besides, they wondered, could the Zambians be trusted with such a secret?
Still
without a long-term solution, the CIA began sending suspects it captured in the
first month or so after Sept. 11 to its longtime partners, the intelligence
services of Egypt and Jordan.
A month later, the CIA found itself with
hundreds of prisoners who were captured on battlefields in Afghanistan. A
short-term solution was improvised. The agency shoved its highest-value
prisoners into metal shipping containers set up on a corner of the Bagram Air
Base, which was surrounded with a triple perimeter of concertina-wire fencing.
Most prisoners were left in the hands of the Northern Alliance, U.S.-supported
opposition forces who were fighting the Taliban.
"I
remember asking: What are we going to do with these people?" said a senior
CIA officer. "I kept saying, where's the help? We've got to bring in some
help. We can't be jailers -- our job is to find Osama."
Then came grisly reports, in the winter
of 2001, that prisoners kept by allied Afghan generals in cargo containers had
died of asphyxiation. The CIA asked Congress for, and was quickly granted, tens
of millions of dollars to establish a larger, long-term system in Afghanistan,
parts of which would be used for CIA prisoners.
The largest CIA prison in Afghanistan was
code-named the Salt Pit. It was also the CIA's substation and was first housed
in an old brick factory outside Kabul. In November 2002, an inexperienced CIA
case officer allegedly ordered guards to strip naked an uncooperative young
detainee, chain him to the concrete floor and leave him there overnight without
blankets. He froze to death, according to four U.S. government officials. The
CIA officer has not been charged in the death.
The Salt Pit was protected by
surveillance cameras and tough Afghan guards, but the road leading to it was
not safe to travel and the jail was eventually moved inside Bagram Air Base. It
has since been relocated off the base.
By mid-2002, the CIA had worked out
secret black-site deals with two countries, including Thailand and one Eastern
European nation, current and former officials said. An estimated $100 million
was tucked inside the classified annex of the first supplemental Afghanistan
appropriation.
Then the CIA captured its first big
detainee, in March 28, 2002. Pakistani forces took Abu Zubaida, al Qaeda's
operations chief, into custody and the CIA whisked him to the new black site in
Thailand, which included underground interrogation cells, said several former
and current intelligence officials. Six months later, Sept. 11 planner Ramzi
Binalshibh was also captured in Pakistan and flown to Thailand.
But after published reports revealed the
existence of the site in June 2003, Thai officials insisted the CIA shut it
down, and the two terrorists were moved elsewhere, according to former
government officials involved in the matter. Work between the two countries on
counterterrorism has been lukewarm ever since.
In late 2002 or early 2003, the CIA
brokered deals with other countries to establish black-site prisons. One of
these sites -- which sources said they believed to be the CIA's biggest
facility now -- became particularly important when the agency realized it would
have a growing number of prisoners and a shrinking number of prisons.
Thailand was closed, and sometime in 2004
the CIA decided it had to give up its small site at Guantanamo Bay. The CIA had
planned to convert that into a state-of-the-art facility, operated
independently of the military. The CIA pulled out when U.S. courts began to
exercise greater control over the military detainees, and agency officials feared
judges would soon extend the same type of supervision over their detainees.
In hindsight, say some former and current
intelligence officials, the CIA's problems were exacerbated by another decision
made within the Counterterrorist Center at Langley.
The CIA program's original scope was to
hide and interrogate the two dozen or so al Qaeda leaders believed to be
directly responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks, or who posed an imminent threat,
or had knowledge of the larger al Qaeda network. But as the volume of leads
pouring into the CTC from abroad increased, and the capacity of its
paramilitary group to seize suspects grew, the CIA began apprehending more
people whose intelligence value and links to terrorism were less certain,
according to four current and former officials.
The original standard for consigning
suspects to the invisible universe was lowered or ignored, they said.
"They've got many, many more who don't reach any threshold," one
intelligence official said.
Several former and current intelligence
officials, as well as several other U.S. government officials with knowledge of
the program, express frustration that the White House and the leaders of the
intelligence community have not made it a priority to decide whether the secret
internment program should continue in its current form, or be replaced by some
other approach.
Meanwhile, the debate over the wisdom of
the program continues among CIA officers, some of whom also argue that the
secrecy surrounding the program is not sustainable.
"It's just a horrible burden,"
said the intelligence official.
Researcher Julie Tate contributed to this
report.