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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: usa

Bush “impressed” by Gamal Mubarak’s posse

Posted on 11/09/200602/02/2021 By 3arabawy

US president Bush has given an interview to The Wall Street Journal, where he showered Egypt’s “young reformers” with praise. He doesn’t mean of course the Youth For Change secular activists who brave police beatings, torture, and sexual abuse, demanding an end to Mubarak’s autocratic rule, and calling for freedom of expression and association. Neither was Bush referring to the young Muslim Brotherhood activists, who were arrested in the hundreds after marching last spring in support of Egypt’s judiciary’s fight for independence from Mubarak’s mammoth executive authorities. He did not mean the young women activists who were sexually assaulted by Mubarak’s NDP thugs on May 25, 2005 referendum day..

Bush meant the “young reformers” in Nazif’s cabinet who are pushing for “free” trade and only-God-knows-what reform.

This is probably the first time Bush comes forward with such a statement, where he specifies certain figures in Gamal Mubarak’s group, centered around the NDP’s Policies Secretariat. It’s a strong signal that Washington has thrown its lot with the Mubaraks’ succession scheme in Egypt.

Bush says impressed by Egypt’s “young reformers”
Mon Sep 11, 2006
CAIRO (Reuters) – President Bush has praised a group of “young reformers” close to an influential son of the Egyptian president, including the trade and industry minister who local press have mooted as the next prime minister.
Bush also said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal published on Monday that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak should release Ayman Nour, an opposition politician jailed last year.
“I’ve talked to … a group of young reformers who are now in government. There’s an impressive group of younger Egyptians — the trade minister and some of the economic people — that understand the promise and the difficulties of democracy,” he said.
Trade and Industry Minister Rachid Muhammad Rachid together with Finance Minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali and Investment Minister Mahmoud Mohieldin are policymakers at the heart of economic reforms in Egypt over the last two years.
They are seen as close to Gamal Mubarak, one of the most influential figures in the ruling National Democratic Party, who analysts, diplomats and opposition groups say has been positioned to take over from his 78-year-old father.
Bush told The Wall Street Journal that Nour’s jailing was disappointing. Washington has described his imprisonment as a setback for democracy in Egypt. “I have spoken to Mubarak a lot about democracy”, Bush said.
Nour, who came a distant second to Mubarak in the country’s first multi-candidate presidential election last September, was sentenced to five years in jail in December on charges of forging signatures to found his opposition Ghad Party. Nour says the charges were fabricated by the authorities.
Egypt’s highest appeal court in May rejected his appeal for a retrial.
The United States condemned Nour’s jailing but has exerted less public pressure for greater political freedoms in Egypt after a strong performance by Islamists in parliamentary elections last year.
Bush said he had spoken to Gamal about the liberal Nour. “We were disappointed” about Nour, The Wall Street Journal quoted Bush as saying. Asked whether he thought President Mubarak should release Nour, Bush said: “Yes, I do, but he’ll make those decisions based upon his own laws.”

Here’s the full WSJ article:

The Weekend Interview with George W. Bush: ‘Most People Want Us to Win’
By Paul A. Gigot
9 September 2006
ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE — Speaker Nancy Pelosi?
“That’s not going to happen,” snaps the president of the United States, leaning across his desk in his airborne office. He had been saying that he hoped to revisit Social Security reform next year, when he “will be able to drain the politics out of the issue,” and I rudely interrupted by noting the polls predicting Ms. Pelosi’s ascension.
“I just don’t believe it,” the president insists. “I believe the Republicans will end up being — running the House and the Senate. And the reason why I believe it is because when our candidates go out and talk about the strength of this economy, people will say their tax cuts worked, their plan worked. . . . And secondly, that this is a group of people that understand the stakes of the world in which we live and are willing to help this unity government in Iraq succeed for the sake of our children and grandchildren, and that we are steadfast in our belief in the capacity of liberty to bring peace.”
Love or loathe President George W. Bush, you can’t say he lacks the courage of his convictions. Down in the polls, with the American people in a sour mood over Iraq, Mr. Bush isn’t changing his policy or hunkering down in the Oval Office. Instead he’s doubling down, investing whatever scarce political capital he has to frame the November contest as a choice over the economy and taxes and especially over his prosecution of the war on terror.
The strategy carries no small risk, because if Republicans lose, Democrats will feel even more emboldened to challenge him on national security. The final two years of his presidency could be dreadful and the chances of a U.S. retreat in Iraq would multiply. On the other hand, his senior aides say, Mr. Bush will be blamed if Republicans lose in any case, so he might as well play his strongest hand to prevent such a result. And if the GOP holds both houses, he’ll deserve much of the credit.
—
The president is certainly in feisty, even passionate, form as I meet him for 40-some minutes Thursday afternoon, coming off the third of his speeches this week on the lessons of 9/11 and a fund-raiser in Savannah, Ga., for GOP House candidate Max Burns. The critics are saying the Bush Doctrine of spreading democracy in the Middle East is dead, but the Beltway coroners must not have talked with Mr. Bush. I pose the frequent complaint that his policy has succeeded only in unleashing the radical Furies in Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq.
“I would remind the critics of the freedom agenda that the policy prior to September 11th was stability for the sake of stability: Let us not worry about the form of government. Let us simply worry about whether or not the world appears stable, whether or not we achieve short-term geopolitical gain,” he says. “And it looked like that policy was working, and, frankly, it made some sense when it came to dealing with the Middle East vis-a-vis the Communists.
“The problem with that philosophy, or that foreign policy, was that beneath the surface boiled resentment and hatred, and that resentment and hatred helped fuel this radical Islam, and the radical Islam is what ended up causing the attacks that killed 3,000 of our citizens. So I vowed, and made the decision that not only would we stay on the offense and . . . get these people before they could attack us again. But in the long run the only way to make sure your grandchildren are protected, Paul, is to win the battle of ideas, is to defeat the ideology of hatred and resentment.”
But would he concede that elections have so far empowered mainly the radicals? “It’s a part of the process. I think Americans must remember we had some growing pains ourselves. It wasn’t all that smooth a road to the Constitution to begin with in our own country. Democracy is not easy,” he says, coiled and intense in his presidential flight jacket.
Take the Palestinian elections that elevated the terrorist group Hamas to power. “I wasn’t surprised,” he says, “that the political party that said ‘Vote for me, I will get rid of corruption’ won, because I was the person that decided on U.S. foreign policy that we were not going to deal with Mr. Arafat because he had let his people down, and that money that the world was spending wasn’t getting to the Palestinian people. . . . They didn’t say, ‘Vote for us, we want war.’ They said, ‘Vote for us, we will get you better education and health.’ ”
Mr. Bush concedes that Hamas’s “militant wing,” as he calls it, is “unacceptable.” But he says he sees a virtue in “creating a sense where people have to compete for people’s votes. They have to listen to the concerns of the street.” The answer is for other Palestinian leaders to out-compete Hamas to respond to those concerns. “Elections are not the end. They’re only the beginning. And, no question, elections sometimes create victors that may not conform to everything we want. . . . On the other hand, it is the beginning of a more hopeful Middle East.”
—
I try to dig a little deeper on Egypt, where the political opening of 18 months ago seems to have been abruptly closed by President Hosni Mubarak, with a muted U.S. response to the arrest of the moderate opposition leader, Ayman Nour. Has the U.S. given up on promoting reform in Egypt?
“Of course we have not given up,” Mr. Bush says. “We were disappointed” about Ayman Nour. Does he believe Mr. Mubarak should release Mr. Nour? “Yes, I do, but he’ll make those decisions based upon his own laws.” Mr. Bush says he’s spoken to Mr. Mubarak’s son and heir-apparent, Gamal, about Mr. Nour, “and I have spoken to Mubarak a lot about democracy. And, equally importantly, I’ve talked to . . . a group of young reformers who are now in government. There’s an impressive group of younger Egyptians — the trade minister and some of the economic people — that understand the promise and the difficulties of democracy.”
The pace of Middle East reform will vary by country, he adds. In Kuwait, they now let women vote. “And so if you look at the Middle East from 10 years to today, there’s been some significant change. Jordan changed, Morocco, the Gulf Coast countries, Qatar,” and of course the nascent democracies of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Regarding Iraq, Mr. Bush is a bit reflective, if also insistent about the costs of failure. “I’m not surprised that this war has created consternation amongst the American people,” he concedes. “The enemy has got the capacity to take — got the willingness to take innocent life and the capacity to do so, knowing full well that those deaths and that carnage will end up on our TV screens. So the American people are now having to adjust to a new kind of bloody war.
“Now, my view of the country is this: Most people want us to win. There are a good number who say, get out now. But most Americans are united in the concept — of the idea of winning.”
On that point, I ask Mr. Bush to address not his critics on the left who want to withdraw, but those on the right who worry that he isn’t fighting hard enough to win. “No, I understand. No, I hear that, Paul, a lot, and I take their word seriously, and of course use that as a basis for questioning our generals. My point to you is that one of the lessons of a previous war is that the military really wasn’t given the flexibility to make the decisions to win. And I ask the following questions: Do you have enough? Do you need more troops? Do you need different equipment?” The question I failed to ask but wish I had is: Does this mean that, like Lincoln, Mr. Bush should have fired more generals?
With sectarian strife in Iraq, some critics (such as Sen. Joe Biden) are saying the best strategy now is for the country to divide into three — Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni. Mr. Bush says partition would be “a mistake,” though he does add that “the Iraqi people are going to have to make that decision.” But he says Iraqis didn’t vote for partition when they approved their new constitution or new government, and “this government has been in place since June; 90 days is a long time for some, but it’s really not all that long to help a nation that was brutalized under a tyrant to get going.”
Mr. Bush is most emphatic when he links Iraq to the larger struggle for Mideast reform. “In the long run, the United States is going to have to make a decision as to whether or not it will support moderates against extremists, reformers against tyrants. And Iraq is the first real test of the nation’s commitment to this ideological struggle. . . . I believe it strongly. One way for the American people to understand the stakes is to envision what happens if America withdraws.” He has been hitting that last point hard in his recent speeches, and it is the linchpin of the argument Mr. Bush will make through November against the Democrats who insist on pulling out immediately.
Intriguingly, the president broke a little news on the subject of Iran, acknowledging that he personally signed off on the U.S. visit this week by former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami. The trip has angered many conservatives because Mr. Khatami presided over the nuclear weapons development and cheating that Mr. Bush has pledged to stop. Why let him visit?
“I was interested to hear what he had to say,” Mr. Bush responds without hesitation. “I’m interested in learning more about the Iranian government, how they think, what people think within the government. My hope is that diplomacy will work in convincing the Iranians to give up their nuclear weapons ambitions. And in order for diplomacy to work, it’s important to hear voices other than [current President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad’s.”
One thing Mr. Khatami has said this week is that because the U.S. is bogged down in Iraq it will never have the will to stop Iran’s nuclear program. Is he right? “Well, he also said it’s very important for the [coalition] troops to stay in Iraq so that there is a stable government on the Iranian border,” Mr. Bush replies, rather forgivingly.
On other hand, Mr. Bush remains as blunt as ever about the nature of the Iranian regime when I ask if one lesson of North Korea is that Iran must be stopped before it acquires a bomb. “North Korea doesn’t teach us that lesson. The current government [in Iran] teaches that lesson,” Mr. Bush says. “Their declared policies of destruction and their support for terror makes it clear they should not have a nuclear weapon.”
The impression Mr. Bush leaves is of a man deeply engaged on the Iran problem and, like several presidents before him, trying to understand what kind of diplomatic or economic pressure short of military means will change the regime’s behavior. One way or another, Iran will be the major dilemma of the rest of his presidency, and Mr. Bush knows it.
—
Five years after 9/11, I ask the president if he is surprised that — and can explain why — both Iraq and his larger antiterror policies have become so politically polarized. “Well, first of all, I do believe there’s a difference between the political rhetoric out of Washington and what the citizens feel,” he says.
“But this is a different kind of war. In the past, there was troop movements, or, you know, people could report the sinking of a ship. This is a war that requires intelligence and interrogation within the law from people who know what’s happening. . . . Victories you can’t see. But the enemy is able to create death and carnage that tends to define the action.
“And I think most Americans understand we’re vulnerable. But my hope was after 9/11, most Americans wouldn’t walk around saying, ‘My goodness, we’re at war. Therefore let us don’t live a normal life. Let us don’t invest.'” Mr. Bush calls it an “interesting contradiction” that he wants “people to understand the stakes of failure” in this conflict. But on the other hand, he also wants “the country to be able to grow, invest, save, expand, educate, raise their children.” This is another way of saying how hard it is for a democracy to maintain support for a war without a tangible, ominous enemy such as the Soviet Union or Imperial Japan.
Could he have done more, as president, to win over more Democratic allies? “I met with a lot of Democrats over the course of this war, and” — he pauses for the longest time in our interview — “you know, it’s hard for me to tell, Paul, whether I could have done a better job. . . . I don’t know. I just don’t know.”
He then says that he has GOP majorities, and thus Republican leaders, to deal with. “Obviously, I wish that the effort were more bipartisan; it has been on certain issues. It certainly was when it came time for people to assess the intelligence that they had seen and knew about and vote on a resolution to remove Saddam Hussein from power.” And it was as well on his policy of pursuing state sponsors of terror. But then the 2004 campaign intervened, he says, and now it’s another campaign season.
Mr. Bush is an avid reader of history, and he has a contest with political aide Karl Rove to see who reads the most books. (“I’m losing,” Mr. Bush says.) So I ask him if any current Democrat could play the role that Republican Sen. Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan played in helping Harry Truman establish new policies in the 1940s at the dawn of the Cold War.
Notably, he talks about Truman first. “I doubt Truman would have been able to predict how long the Cold War would last, but I applaud Truman for beginning to wage the Cold War” — pregnant pause — “for which he was very unpopular, for which the country was viewed as polarized.” He never does mention a contemporary Vandenberg, and in truth the only one I can think of is Joe Lieberman, of late and by necessity not a Democrat but an “independent.”
—
The Truman reference is nonetheless revealing, because it suggests that perhaps Mr. Bush has begun to realize he will get little credit for his Middle East policies during his own presidency. His critics on the left in particular want to portray him as another LBJ, forlorn over a misbegotten war, and destined for historical disdain because of it. But Mr. Bush hardly resembles the LBJ who more or less came to agree with his Vietnam critics. He seems far more like Truman, both in his personal combativeness and also in his conviction that his vindication will come down the road.
One of his main goals now, also like Truman, is to institutionalize some of his antiterror policies by putting them on firmer legal and political ground so future presidents can use them. That’s what his speech this week on military tribunals was mainly about, and the same goes for warrantless wiretaps and CIA interrogations of al Qaeda suspects. For all of the controversy they’ve caused, Mr. Bush is convinced that the next president will be grateful to have these tools. And despite all the partisan rancor surrounding them, Mr. Bush’s legacy in defending them is likely to be lasting.
When I put to him the criticism made by Newt Gingrich, among others, that the U.S. security bureaucracy is too slow and unwieldy, he couldn’t rebut it fast enough. “I disagree strongly,” he says. “We were stove-piped in the past. We had an FBI whose primary responsibility was white-collar crime or criminality. We had a CIA that couldn’t talk to criminal investigators. And we’ve changed all that.”
Mr. Bush adds that the intelligence he receives is “quantifiably better” than it was before 9/11. One reason is the warrantless al Qaeda wiretaps, which gather intelligence from what he calls “the battlefield” in this conflict. “And so the data points are becoming richer, and the analysis is more complete, because now the reports I get on analysis have input from different parts of the intelligence community that John Negroponte is overseeing.” Mr. Bush isn’t likely to call legislation he signed a failure, but this is still the most reassuring thing I’ve heard about the CIA in years.
This is the fourth time I’ve interviewed Mr. Bush at length in the last eight years, going back to his time as Texas governor. One of the notable things about him is how similar he seems. He has always been supremely confident in his decisions and focused above all else on pushing forward, not looking back. If he is tortured by doubt, he doesn’t show it to journalists. Some see this as obstinance, but he sees it as firmness of conviction.
Whether or not he’s right about the elections this fall, you have to respect his willingness to put that conviction on the line. “I said in my Inaugural Address, we should end tyranny in the 21st century,” he says. “And I meant that.”

US Senate: ‘No Saddam, al-Qaeda link’

Posted on 09/09/200601/02/2021 By 3arabawy

With the fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the US nearing, and well after three years from the start of the war on Iraq, the US Senate’s Intelligence committee has stated the OBVIOUS fact that many of us in the Arab World who’ve been following the Islamist scene believed–There were no links between Iraq’s former dictator and Al-Qaeda’s network. A lie, among many, put forward by the Bush administration as a justification for the war on Iraq. What’s even more ludicrous, Bush repeated the same claim two weeks ago.

US Senate: No Saddam, al-Qaeda link
Bush said in August that Saddam had al-Qaeda links
Friday 08 September
Reuters
A report published by the US senate intelligence committee has said that there were no links between Saddam Hussein, the former Iraqi leader, and any members of al-Qaeda.
Democrat politicians have said that the report – issued on Friday – contradicts claims made by the US government in the lead up to its invasion of Iraq.
The report has been issued to mark the fifth anniversary of 9-11. It draws on previous undisclosed CIA assessments of Saddam’s relationship with Al-Qaeda.
“Saddam Hussein was distrustful of Al-Qaeda and viewed Islamic extremists as a threat to his regime, refusing all requests from al-Qaeda to provide material or operational support,” the report said.
Democrats said the report showed the Bush’s government had deliberately distorted the intelligence findings to boost public support for invading Iraq.
“Today’s reports show that the administration’s repeated allegations of a past, present and future relationship between al-Qaeda and Iraq were wrong and intended to exploit the deep sense of insecurity among Americans in the immediate aftermath of the September 11th attacks,” John Rockefeller, the senator for West Virginia and the panel’s ranking Democrat, said.
Saddam opposed al-Qaeda
“Postwar information indicates that Saddam Hussein attempted unsuccessfully to locate and capture Zarqawi, and that the regime did not have a relationship with, harbor, or turn a blind eye toward Zarqawi,” the report said, citing CIA intelligence.
In response, Pat Roberts, the committee’s Republican chairman and the senator for Kansas, accused Democrats of presenting a misleading version of the committee’s findings.
“The additional views of the committee’s Democrats are little more than a rehashing of the same unfounded allegations they’ve used for over three years,” he said.
Carl Levin, the Democrat senator for Michigan, said the report showed that Bush had made false statements about ties between Saddam and Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, the one-time al-Qaeda in Iraq leader killed in action by US forces.
“The CIA’s October 2005 assessment [found] that Saddam’s regime did not have a relationship, harbor or turn a blind eye toward Zarqawi and his associates,” he said.
War justified
President Bush has always said that, while he was Iraq’s president, Saddam Hussein had contacts with Zarqawi, a Jordanian militant who had attended Al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan.
Prior to the US invasion of Iraq, Zarqawi was member of Ansar Al-Islam, an armed Islamist group then based in Iraqi Kurdistan – an area not under the control of the Iraqi government.
Levin said that despite the CIA’s findings, only two weeks ago Bush repeated his claim that Hussein had links to Zarqawi.
“The president’s statement, made just two weeks ago, is flat-out false,” Levin said. “A devastating indictment of the Bush-Cheney administration’s unrelenting, misleading and deceptive attempts to convince the American people that Saddam Hussein was linked with al-Qaeda.”
In the run-up to the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, Bush’s government had pointed to the supposed links between Saddam and al-Qaeda to justify the war to remove the Iraqi leader.
The assessment in the CIA report was similar to the conclusion reached by the bi-partisan 9-11 Commission, which found that there had been no “collaborative relationship” between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda.
Top US officials also told Americans that Saddam posed a threat to his neighbors and US interests because he possessed large WMD stockpiles.
No such weapons were found.

Oops!

US interrogation manuals

Posted on 07/09/200601/02/2021 By 3arabawy

Following up on the previous posting, the new US army manual has been issued finally yesterday, supposedly “banning torture” and other inhumane treatment of prisoners in the army’s, but not the CIA’s custody.

Here’s a report from Al-Jazeera website:

Updated US Army manual bans torture, mock executions and electric shocks
Thursday 07 September 2006
A new US Army manual has been published which bans torture and the degrading treatment of prisoners, detailing for the first time some of the abuses which have become infamous since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Banned procedures include forced nakedness, hooding and threatening prisoners with dogs.
Delayed more than a year amid criticism of the defense department’s treatment of prisoners, the revised Army Field Manual released on Wednesday updates a 1992 version.
It also explicitly bans beating prisoners, sexually humiliating them, depriving them of food or water, performing mock executions, shocking them with electricity, burning them, causing other pain and a technique called “water boarding” that simulates drowning, said Lt. Gen. John Kimmons, army deputy chief of staff for intelligence.
Officials said the revisions are based on lessons learned since the US began taking prisoners in response to the September 11 attacks on the United States.
Release of the manual came amid a flurry of announcements about US handling of prisoners, which has drawn criticism from Bush administration critics as well as domestic and international allies.
President George W Bush acknowledged the existence of previously secret CIA prisons around the world where terrorist suspects have been held and interrogated, saying 14 such al-Qaeda leaders had been transferred to the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay and will be brought to trial.
Secret section
Though defense officials earlier this year debated writing a classified section of the manual to keep some interrogation procedures a secret from potential enemies, Kimmons said that there was no secret section to the new manual.
Bush decided shortly after the September 11 attacks that since it was not a conventional war, “unlawful enemy combatants” captured in the fight against al-Qaeda would not be considered prisoners of war and thus would not be afforded the protections of the Geneva convention.
The new manual, called “Human Intelligence Collector Operations,” applies to all the armed services, not just the army.
However, it does not cover the Central Intelligence Agency, which has also come under investigation for mistreatment of prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan and for keeping suspects in secret prisons elsewhere around the world since the September 11 attacks.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch was not that impressed by Bush’s speech yesterday, charging that the US president is justifying CIA detainee abuse.

U.S.: Bush Justifies CIA Detainee Abuse
Proposed Military Commissions Deeply Flawed
(Washington, D.C., September 6, 2006) – President George W. Bush’s defense of abusing detainees betrays basic American and global standards, Human Rights Watch said today.
Despite the euphemisms that Bush employed in his nationwide address this afternoon, the “alternative set of [interrogation] procedures” that he tried to justify includes grossly abusive treatment.
Detainees in the custody of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have been “disappeared,” and by numerous credible reports, tortured. While the Bush administration’s announcement that it transferred 14 so-called high-value detainees from CIA to military custody is an important step forward – one that Human Rights Watch has long called for – this advance is limited by the president’s stated intention of leaving the door open for future CIA detentions.
“President Bush’s speech was a full-throated defense of the CIA’s detention program and of the ‘alternative procedures’ – read torture – that the CIA has used to extract information from detainees,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “Although the president adamantly denied that the U.S. government uses torture, the United States has used practices such as waterboarding that can only be called torture.”
President Bush’s transfer announcement accounts for only some of the detainees thought to be in CIA custody, Human Rights Watch said. President Bush said that other former CIA detainees have been returned to their home countries for detention or prosecution, but Human Rights Watch expressed concern that some of these detainees were from countries that practice torture.
In his speech, President Bush claimed that useful information has been obtained using such “alternative” techniques, but he pointedly omitted mentioning the information obtained from Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, one of the first top suspects placed in CIA detention. Al-Libi was excluded from President Bush’s long narrative successive detainee captures because under “enhanced interrogation” al-Libi reportedly told interrogators that Iraq had provided chemical and biological weapons training to al Qaeda. This information – which turned out to be entirely wrong – was used in Secretary of State Colin Powell’s speech to the United Nations to justify war with Iraq. Sources later told ABC News that al-Libi “had no knowledge of such training or weapons and fabricated the statements because he was terrified of further harsh treatment.”
At a Pentagon briefing this morning for the release of the Army’s new field manual on interrogation, Lieutenant General John F. Kimmons, the Army’s Deputy Chief of Intelligence, put the matter succinctly: “No good intelligence comes from abusive interrogation practices.”
A new Department of Defense directive emphasizes that “[a]ll detainees shall be treated humanely and in accordance with U.S. law, the law of war and applicable U.S. policy.” In other words, no “alternative” methods are allowed.
“Almost everyone ultimately talks under torture, and sometimes they may blurt out something useful,” said Roth. “But torture discourages a source of intelligence that tends to be far more important for cracking secretive conspiracies – tips from the general public. The ephemeral gains from torture thus undermine efforts to curb terrorism by discouraging cooperation from members of the public who want nothing to do with ‘dirty war’ techniques.”
In his speech, President Bush also announced that some of the detainees just transferred to military custody at Guantánamo would be brought to justice before military commissions. The draft military commission legislation he announced today would allow the use of statements obtained under coercion, and would allow the accused to be convicted on the basis of secret evidence. With these and other serious failings, the proposed legislation lacks basic procedural protections necessary to a fair trial, Human Rights Watch said.
“Under the administration’s proposed military commission legislation, public attention will remain focused on the unfairness of the trials rather than the alleged crimes of the suspects,” said Roth.
The proposed legislation would also make the Geneva Conventions, the touchstone for humane treatment of detainees during armed conflict, unenforceable in court.
Human Rights Watch called on the administration to release the names of all detainees who have been held in CIA custody, as well as to state when and to what country they were transferred. In December 2005, Human Rights Watch issued a list of 26 detainees that it had reason to believe were in CIA custody. While 13 of these detainees have now been transferred to Guantánamo, the fate of the other 13 is not known.
A number of suspected detainees – such as al-Libi, a Libyan who was reportedly arrested on November 11, 2001 in Pakistan; Saif al Islam el Masry, an Egyptian reportedly arrested in the Pankisi Gorge in Georgia in September 2002; and Mohammed Omar Abdel-Rahman (aka Asadullah), an Egyptian who was reportedly arrested in Quetta, Pakistan, in February 2003 – are from countries that routinely practice torture.
In addition, Human Rights Watch has received information regarding possible additional detainees, such as Mustafa Setmariam Nasar, a dual Syrian-Spanish citizen reportedly arrested in Pakistan in November 2005 who was believed to have been transferred to U.S. custody.

Previous US Army and CIA interrogation manuals could be found on this website that has declassified US national security documents.

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