rcp | In a secret CIA prison in Thailand, codenamed Detention Site Green,
Abu Zubaydah sat shackled to a chair, naked except for a hood over his
head. The windowless cell was painted white and illuminated by four
halogen lights.
The terrorist said to have ranked third in al-Qaeda had been captured
in Pakistan five months earlier, in March 2002. He had endured
relentless questioning, but this day would be different: an American
former military psychologist working as a CIA contractor and identified
last week by the pseudonym Grayson Swigert would run the interrogation.
For the first time, Swigert had been authorised to use up to 11
“enhanced interrogation techniques”. According to critics of the
Orwellian-sounding “EIT programme”, the US was entering the torture
business.
The CIA officers interrogating Abu Zubaydah were directed by Swigert
and a fellow PhD in psychology, given the name Hammond Dunbar, to place a
rolled towel around his neck. They removed his hood, grabbed his face
and forced him to watch a coffin being brought into the cell. He was
slapped and slammed against a wall.
Six hours later, Swigert decreed that “waterboarding” would begin.
Abu Zubaydah was held down as water was poured on to a cloth over his
face, simulating drowning.
According to CIA records, Abu Zubaydah vomited and had “involuntary
spasms of the torso and extremities”. He was to be waterboarded at least
83 times over the next 17 days. On one occasion, he “became completely
unresponsive with bubbles rising through his open, full mouth”.
An incendiary 525-page report summary released by Democrats on the
Senate select committee on intelligence last week portrayed Swigert as
the architect of a regime of torture. It depicted Swigert and Dunbar as
profiteers who had duped the CIA into paying their company $81m (£51m).
“Neither psychologist had any experience as an interrogator, nor did
either have specialised knowledge of al-Qaeda, a background in
counterterrorism, or any relevant cultural or linguistic expertise,” the
report stated.
Speaking at his home outside Tampa, Florida, James Mitchell, 62, a
veteran of US air force special forces and a former instructor at its
Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) school, acknowledged
that he was Swigert. He blasted the report, which has been bitterly
criticised by the CIA and branded by Republicans as a partisan “hit
job”. Dunbar was identified as a one-time Mormon bishop from Idaho
called Bruce Jessen.
“It’s like being caught up in a Kafka novel,” said Mitchell. “They’re
just interested in burning down the CIA and smearing the names and
reputations of people who died protecting this country.”
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