By H.P. Albarelli Jr. and Jeffrey Kaye
On Tuesday, February 10, the British High Court finally released
a "seven-paragraph court document showing that MI5 officers were
involved in the ill-treatment of a British resident, Binyam Mohamed."
The document is itself a summary of 42 classified CIA documents given
to the British in 2002. The US government has threatened the British government that the US-British intelligence relationship could be damaged if this material were released. The revelations
regarding Mohamed's torture, which include documentation of the fact
the US conducted "continuous sleep deprivation" under threats of harm,
rendition, or being "disappeared," were criticized by the British court
as being "at the very least cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment by
the United States authorities," and in violation of the United Nations
Convention Against Torture.
The Mohamed case is the most prominent of a number
of cases that have come to public attention. While the timeline of
Mohamed's torture places the implementation of the Bush
administration's so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques" many months prior
to their questionable legal justification in the August 1, 2002, Jay
Bybee memo to the CIA, the use of torture and rendition has a much
earlier provenance. Over the past decade, many Americans have been
shocked and disturbed about the CIA's secret program of rendition and
torture carried out in numerous secret sites (dubbed "black sites" by
the CIA) around the globe. The dimensions of this program for the most
part are still classified "Eyes Only" in the intelligence community,
but the program's roots can be clearly discovered in the early 1950's
with the CIA's Artichoke Project. Perhaps the best and strangest case
illustrating this can be found in the agency's own files. This is the
so-called "Lyle O. Kelly case." The facts of this case are drawn from
declassified government documents.
An Early Example of Torture and Rendition: "The Kelly Case"
In late January 1952, Morse Allen, a CIA Security
Office official, was summoned to the office of his superior, security
deputy chief Robert L. Bannerman, where he met with another agency
official to discuss what Bannerman initially introduced as "the Kelly
case." Wrote Allen, in a subsequent memorandum for his files, the
official "explained in substance the Kelly case as follows: "Kelly,
(whose real name is Dimitrov), is a 29-year-old Bulgarian and was the
head of a small political party based in Greece and ostentively [sic]
working for Bulgarian independence." The official described Dimitrov
[whose first name was Dimitre] to Allen as "being young, ambitious,
bright ... a sort of a 'man-on-a-horse' type but a typical Balkan
politician."
The official continued explaining to Allen that
months earlier CIA field operatives discovered that Dimitrov was
seriously considering becoming a double agent for the French
Intelligence Service. "Accordingly," states the memo, "a plot was
rigged in which [Dimitrov] was told he was going to be assassinated and
as a protective he was placed in custody of the Greek Police."
Successfully duped, Dimitrov was then thrown into prison. There he was
subjected to interrogation and torture, and he witnessed the brutal
torture of other persons the CIA had induced authorities to imprison.
Greek intelligence and law enforcement agencies were especially
barbaric in their methods. Highly respected Operation Gladio historian
Daniele Ganser describes the treatment of prisoners: "Their toes and
fingernails were torn out. Their feet were beaten with sticks, until
the skin came off and their bones were broken. Sharp objects were
shoved into their vaginas. Filthy rags, often soaked in urine, and
sometimes excrement, were pushed down their throats to throttle them,
tubes were inserted into their anus and water driven in under very high
pressure, and electro shocks were applied to their heads."
According to Allen's memo, after holding Dimitrov
for six months the Greek authorities decided he was no more than "a
nuisance" and they told the CIA "to take him back." Because the agency
was unable to dispose of Dimitrov in Greece, the memo states, the CIA
flew him to a secret interrogation center at Fort Clayton in Panama. In
the 1950's, Fort Clayton, along with nearby sister installations Forts
Amador and Gulick, the initial homes of the Army's notorious School of
the Americas, served as a secret prison and interrogation centers for
double agents and others kidnapped and spirited out of Europe and other
locations. Beginning in 1951, Fort Amador, and reportedly Fort Gulick,
were extensively used by the Army and the CIA as a secret experimental
site for developing behavior modification techniques and a wide range
of drugs, including "truth drugs," mescaline, LSD and heroin. Former
CIA officials have also long claimed that Forts Clayton and Amador in
the 1950's hosted a number of secret Army assassination teams that
operated throughout North and South America, Europe and Southeast Asia.
There in Panama, Dimitrov was again aggressively
interrogated, and then confined as "a psychopathic patient" to a
high-security hospital ward at Fort Clayton. Allen's memo makes a point
of stating: "[Dimitrov] is not a psychopathic personality."
The Artichoke Treatment
This remarkable summary brought the official to the
purpose of his meeting with CIA security official Morse Allen. After
months of confinement in Panama, Dimitrov had become a serious problem
for the agency and the military officials holding him in the hospital.
Dimitrov had become increasingly angry and bitter about his treatment
and he was insisting that he be released immediately. Dimitrov, through
his strong intellect and observation powers, was also witnessing a
great deal of Project Artichoke activity and on occasion would engage
military and agency officials in unauthorized conversations. The
official explained to Allen that the CIA could release Dimitrov to the
custody of a friend of his in Venezuela, but was prone not to because
Dimitrov was now judged to have become extremely hostile toward the
CIA. "Hence," explained the official, "[CIA] is considering an
'Artichoke' approach to [Dimitrov] to see if it would be possible to
re-orient [Dimitrov] favorably toward us."
Wrote Allen in his subsequent summary memorandum:
"This [Artichoke] operation, which will necessarily involve the use of
drugs is being considered by OPC with a possibility that Dr. Ecke and
Mike Gladych will carry out the operation presumably at the military
hospital in Panama. Also involved in this would be a Bulgarian
interpreter who is a consultant to this Agency since neither Ecke nor
Gladych speak Bulgarian." Allen noted in his memo that security chief
Bannerman "pointed out" that this type of operation could "only be
carried out" with his or his superior's (security chief Sheffield
Edwards) authorization, and "that under no circumstances whatsoever,
could anyone but an authorized M.D. administer drugs to any subject of
this Agency of any type." (The "Dr. Ecke" mentioned above was Dr.
Robert S. Ecke of Brooklyn, New York, and Eliot, Maine, where he died
in 2001. "Mike Gladych," according to former CIA officials, was a
decorated wartime pilot who after the war became "deeply involved in
black market trafficking in Europe and the US," and then in the early
1950's was recruited to join a "newly composed Artichoke Team operating
out of Washington, DC.")
Allen also wrote that Bannerman was concerned that
the military hospital at Fort Clayton may not approve of or permit an
Artichoke operation to be conducted on the ward within which Dimitrov
was being held, thus necessitating the movement of Dimitrov to another
location in Panama. Lastly, Bannerman stated to the official and Allen
that "[the CIA's Office of] Security [through its Artichoke Committee]
would have to be cognizant" of the operation, and may even want to "run
the operation themselves since this type of work is one which Security
handles for the Agency. Here it is interesting to note that among the
many members of the agency's Artichoke Committee in 1952 was Dr. Frank
Olson, who would about a year later be murdered in New York City.
Morse Allen concluded his memo: "While the
[Artichoke] technique that Ecke and Gladych are considering for use in
this case is not known to the writer [Allen], the writer believes the
approach will be made through the standard narco-hypnosis technique.
Re-conditioning and re-orientating an individual in such a matter, in
the opinion of the writer, cannot be accomplished easily and will
require a great deal of time.... It is also believed that with our
present knowledge, we would have no absolute guarantee that the subject
in this case would maintain a positive friendly attitude toward us even
though there is apparently a successful response to the treatment. The
writer did not suggest to [Bannerman and the CIA official] that perhaps
a total amnesia could be created by a series of electro shocks, but
merely indicated that amnesia under drug treatments was not certain."
Interesting also is that Allen noted in his memo, about thirty days
prior to his meeting, an official in the CIA's Technical Services
Division, Walter Driscoll, discussed "the Kelly case" with him. No
details of that discussion were provided.
About a month later, according to former CIA
officials, after Artichoke Committee approval to subject Dimitrov to
Artichoke techniques, a high-ranking CIA official objected to treating
Dimitrov in such a manner. That objection delayed application of the
techniques for about "three weeks." In March 1952, according to the
same former officials, Dimitrov was "successfully given the Artichoke
treatment in Panama for a period of about five weeks."
In late 1956, the CIA brought Dimitrov, at his
request, to the United States. Apparently, the Agency felt comfortable
enough with Dimitrov's diminished hostility and anger to agree to bring
him to America from Athens, where he had returned for undetermined
reasons. CIA files state, "The Agency made no further operation use of
Dimitrov after he came to the United States, however, former CIA
officials dispute this and relate that Dimitrov was "used on occasion
for sensitive jobs."
This, however, was not the end of Dimitre Dimitrov's story.
After being relocated to the United States, Dimitrov
either remained bitter or resumed his bitterness toward the CIA. In
June 1960, he contacted the CIA's Domestic Contact Division and
requested financial assistance for himself and additional covert
support and assistance for activities against Bulgaria. In 1961, he
contacted an editor at Parade, a Sunday newspaper magazine then with
reported strong ties to the CIA, with the intention of telling his
story. A Parade editor contacted the CIA and was informed, according to
CIA documents, that Dimitrov was "an imposter" who was "disreputable,
unreliable, and full of wild stories about the CIA."
About ten years after the JFK assassination,
Dimitrov, operating sometimes under the aliases Lyle Kelly, James
Adams, General Dimitre Dimitrov and Donald A. Donaldson, informed a
number of people that he had information about who ordered the murder
of JFK and who had committed the act. Reportedly, he had encountered
the assassins while he had been imprisoned in Panama. He also told
several people that he knew about military snipers who had murdered
Martin Luther King. In 1977, Dimitrov actually met with US Sen. Frank
Church, head of a Senate Committee investigating the CIA, and President
Gerald Ford to share his information. Dimitrov said after the meeting
that Ford had asked him to keep the information confidential until he
could verify a number of facts. Immediately following the March 29,
1977, death of Lee Harvey Oswald's friend George de Mohrenschildt,
Dimitrov became extremely frightened and contacted a reporter with a
foreign television station who either mistakenly, or intentionally,
revealed Dimitrov's name publicly on American television. Not long
after this, Dimitrov disappeared in Europe where he had fled. He has
never been seen or heard from since. Former CIA officials say
privately, "Dimitrov was murdered" and "His body will never be found."
A 1977 memorandum written, before Dimitrov's
disappearance, by an attorney in the CIA's General Counsel's Office, A.
R. Cinquegrana, states: "[It appears] to me that the nature of the
Agency's treatment of Dimitrov might be something which should be
brought to the attention of appropriate officials both within and
outside the Agency. The fact that he is still active and is making
allegations connected with the Kennedy assassination may add yet
another dimension to this story."
Binyam Mohamed's Torture
Dimtrov's story takes on added significance when one
considers the latest stories of the unraveling torture conspiracy and
operations conducted by the American CIA and Department of Defense, in
conjunction with their British allied organizations, and a host of
other governments, including Israel, Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, Poland
and numerous others. After a series of exposures during the 1970's,
many assumed the worst excesses of the Cold War torture research
program, and its implementation in programs such as the CIA's Operation
Phoenix in Vietnam were a fixture of the past. However, subsequent
revelations, e.g. the appearance of a US-sponsored torture manual
for use in Latin America in the 1980's, including documentation of
torture by US forces in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 and the
invasion of Afghanistan, demonstrate that a direct line exists between
the torture and rendition programs of the past and the practices of the
present day. Recently, articles
have detailed how the 2006 rewrite of the Army Field Manual allowed for
use of ongoing isolation, sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation,
induction of fear and the use of drugs that cause temporary derangement
of the senses.
The Binyam Mohamed story is unfortunately not unique, but it does demonstrate that the implementation of a SERE-derived experimental torture program
began months before it was given legal cover by the memos written by
John Yoo and Jay Bybee. Other stories, for instance of "War on Terror"
captives being drugged and tortured, have been related by the prisoners
themselves, by their attorneys, and by US and international rights
agencies, including the International Committee of the Red Cross, whose
report on the torture of CIA "high-value detainees" was leaked to Mark Danner of the New York Review of Books.
While Binyam in many ways had a very different
personal background than Dimitrov, like the Bulgarian political leader,
he was rendered to a US foreign ally for torture. He was drugged. He
was considered unreliable and a "disposal" problem for US leaders, who
kept secret the actual treatment they endured. Both were victims of a
torture program run by the CIA. Both were sent from their foreign
torturer back to US custody, where they endured intense psychological
torture.
Binyam Mohamed was arrested in Pakistan in April
2002, where his torture, as evidenced by the latest UK court release,
was supervised by US agents. This torture was akin to the treatment
meted out to Abu Zubaydah. Binyam was subsequently sent to Morocco in
July 2002, where he was hideously tortured for 18 months, including a
period where multiple scalpel cuts were made to his penis, and a hot
stinging fluid poured on the wounds in an attempt to get him to confess
to a false "dirty bomb" plot. (The US only dropped the bombing claims in October 2008.) At one point, a British informer
was used to try to "turn" Mohamed into an informant for the US or
Britain, just as the Artichoke treatment was used to "re-orient"
Dimitrov in a pro-US direction. Mohamed also indicated that he had been
drugged repeatedly.
In January 2004, Binyam Mohamed was flown to a CIA
"black" site in Afghanistan, the infamous "Dark Prison." Mohamed is one
of five plaintiffs in an ACLU suit against Boeing subsidiary Jeppesen DataPlan Inc., which ran the aircraft for the CIA's "extraordinary rendition" program. According to an ACLU account:
In US custody, Mohamed was fed meals of raw rice,
beans and bread sparingly and irregularly. He was kept in almost
complete darkness for 23 hours a day and made to stay awake for days at
a time by loud music and other frightening and irritating recordings,
including the sounds of "ghost laughter," thunder, aircraft taking off
and the screams of women and children.
Interrogations took place on almost a daily basis.
As part of the interrogation process, he was shown pictures of Afghanis
and Pakistanis and was interrogated about the story behind each
picture. Although Mohamed knew none of the persons pictured, he would
invent stories about them so as to avoid further torture. In May 2004,
Mohamed was allowed outside for five minutes. It was the first time he
had seen the sun in two years.
Amazingly, this was not the end of Mohamed's ordeal.
From the Dark Prison he was sent to Bagram prison, and then later to
Guantanamo. In August 2007, the British government petitioned the US
for release of their subject. Eighteen months later, and after being
subjected to more abuse at Guantanamo, he was finally able to leave US
custody and return to Britain.
The Use of Drugs in Torture by the United States
The allegations of drugging by Mohamed and other
prisoners are redolent of the use of hallucinogenic and other powerful
mind-altering drugs by the US in its Artichoke, MK-ULTRA and other
programs. A recent account, by Joby Warrick of The Washington Post,
described some of these allegations of drugging of "detainees." The
Post article subsequently led to an ongoing DoD Inspector General
investigation into Possible Use of Mind Altering Substances by DoD
Personnel during Interrogations of Detainees and/or Prisoners Captured
during the War on Terror (D2007-DINT01-0092.005)
"to determine if DoD personnel conducted, facilitated, or otherwise
supported interrogations of detainees and /or prisoners using the
threat or administration of mind altering drugs." According to his
attorney's filings in the Jose Padilla case, Padilla, who was also
originally implicated in the "dirty bomb" so-called plot with Binyam
Mohamed, was forced to take LSD or other powerful drugs while held in solitary confinement in the Navy brig in South Carolina.
Another former Guantanamo prisoner, Mamdouh Habib, an Egyptian-born Australian Muslim released in 2005, has consistently told his tale of being subjected to electroshock, beatings and drugging while in US custody.
The CIA has been accused of involvement in
continuing interrogation experimentation upon prisoners. The recent
release of the previously censored summary of Mohamed's treatment in
Pakistan notes that "The effects of the sleep deprivation were
carefully observed." As Stephen Soldz notes in an article on the
British court revelations, "Why were these effects being 'carefully
observed' unless to determine their effectiveness in order to see
whether they should be inflicted upon others? That is, the observations
were designed to generate knowledge that could be generalized to other
prisoners. The seeking of "generalizable knowledge" is the official
definition of "research," raising the question of whether the CIA
conducted illegal research upon Binyan Mohamed." The role of doctors,
psychologists and other medical professionals in the CIA/DoD torture
program has been condemned by a number of individuals in their
respective fields, and by organizations such as Center for Constitutional Rights and Physicians for Human Rights.
Most recently, in an important article
by Scott Horton at Harpers, the reexamination of the evidence in the
supposed 2006 suicides of three prisoners at Guantanamo pointed to the
possibility that the prisoners were killed in a previously unknown
black site prison on the Guantanamo base - "Camp No" - run by the CIA
or Joint Special Operations Command. This raises the question of why
they were taken off site at all. One prisoner, 22-year-old Yasser Talal
Al-Zahrani, had needle marks on both of his arms. The marks were
notably not documented in the US military's autopsy report.
Where Do We Go From Here?
The tale of Dmitri Dimitrov documents the existence
of a US-run torture and rendition program decades before the post-9/11
scandals of the Bush administration. Both the CIA and the Department of
Defense have been implicated in both the research and implementation of
torture for much of post-World War II US history. And yet, aside from
the famous Church and Pike Congressional investigations of the 1970's,
and the hearings and report from the Senate Armed Services Committee in
2008-09 on detainee abuse, the perpetrators of these crimes have gone
unpunished. The current administration of President Barack Obama has
clearly stated that it had little appetite to "look backwards" and seek
accountability for the abuses of the past. Yet these abuses are never
really "past," as the suffering of the victims and their families
continues into the present. Additionally, the practice of torture, or
use of "cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment" of prisoners has not
ended, and the same generals, colonels, admirals and intelligence
agency bureaucrats and politicians who have been linked to past
programs are free to research or implement ongoing abuse of prisoners
and experimentation.
This country needs a clear and definite accounting
of its past and present use of torture. Like a universal acid, torture
breaks down the sinews of its victims, and in the process, the links
between people and their government are transformed into the naked
exercise of pure sadistic power of rulers over the ruled. The very
purpose of civilization is atomized in the process. We need a full,
open and thorough public investigation into the entire history of the
torture program, with full power to subpoena, and to refer those who
shall be held accountable for prosecution under the due process of law.
TruthOut