The Bush Planetary Lock-Up
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Nick Turse
by Tom Engelhardt and
Nick Turse
DIGG THIS
The evil nature
of our enemies has, it turns out, certain advantages at least
when secret imprisonment and torture are at stake. The Bush administration
has proved adamantly unwilling to talk to, or deal with, the regime
of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, except when it came to parking
terror suspects we wanted tortured on his lot. In fact, the Syrians
proved so handy and so eager to be good allies in the shadow world
of global incarceration that U.S. officials turned over at least
7 of their prisoners to Syrian ministrations, according to a recent
piece in the
British Guardian.
There was
nothing unique about administration reliance on the Syrians for
this. From Uzbekistan to Egypt, autocratic regimes willing to torture
have been destinations for CIA secret prisoner "rendering" operations.
Following kidnappings or captures elsewhere on Earth, the Agency
has sent planes hopscotching sometimes thousands of miles
across the globe to our jailors of choice. Though the aircraft
used were posh indeed, such assignments proved so rigorous for CIA
handlers that they evidently regularly repaired to five-star hotels
in Italy,
on the Spanish island of Majorca, and possibly elsewhere for a little
of the recuperative good life. In places like the Marriott Son Antem,
a golfing resort in the Majorcan city of Palma, they could "journey
to deep inner peace" (as the hotel spa advertised) at American taxpayer
expense, even while on "extraordinary rendition" trips.
In fact, when
it comes to what Nick Turse calls the Bush administration's "prison
planet," little bits of news about further horrors seep out almost
daily. Just in the last week, for instance, thanks to the
Israeli paper Haaretz, we learned for the first time
that at least some CIA rendition flights stopped at Ben-Gurion International
Airport in Tel Aviv on their way to and from Cyprus, Jordan, Morocco,
and other spots east and west, north and south and that the
first case "of the United States handing Israel a world jihadi suspect"
in a rendition operation has been confirmed.
At the same
time, if you happened to be checking the
South African press, you might have noticed a report that, a
year ago, 10 unidentified men in several "luxury vehicles"
luxury being a good sign that the CIA is probably involved
pulled up in front of a home in the medium-sized town of Estcourt,
ransacked it at gunpoint, shooed away the police, and then hooded
and dragged off two Muslim men, one of whom was later released (thanks
to the intercession of a South African lawyer). The other, Rashid
Khalid, a Pakistani national, is suspected of being somewhere in
the system of American secret global detention centers, but his
fate remains a mystery twelve months later.
Meanwhile,
in Iraq, the International Red Cross, it was reported,
had "its first opportunity in more than 20 months" to see hundreds
of former Abu Ghraib prisoners now rehoused in a state-of-the-art
multimillion dollar prison, Camp Cropper, that the Bush administration
has built, almost without notice, near Baghdad International Airport.
Finally (but not exhaustively), back in our growing
homeland security state, "in a stealth maneuver, President Bush
has signed into law a provision which, according
to Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), will actually encourage
the President to declare federal martial law." The John Warner Defense
Authorization Act of 2007, according to Frank Morales, "allows the
President to declare a ‘public emergency' and station troops anywhere
in America and take control of state-based National Guard units
without the consent of the governor or local authorities, in order
to ‘suppress public disorder.'"
And that's
just a modest grab bag of recent Bush administration global incarceration
news, another humdrum week on what's increasingly coming to look
like an American prison planet. These bits and pieces of information
seeping out are undoubtedly merely suggestive of what we don't yet
know. Now, let Nick Turse, in his usual vivid, well-researched fashion,
make a little sense of all this for you. ~ Tom
American
Prison Planet:
The Bush Administration as Global Jailor
By Nick
Turse
Today, the
United States presides over a burgeoning empire not only
the "empire
of bases" first described by Chalmers Johnson, but a far-flung
new network of maximum security penitentiaries, detention centers,
jail cells, cages, and razor wire-topped pens. From supermax-type
isolation prisons in 40 of the 50 states to shadowy ghost jails
at remote sites across the globe, this new network of detention
facilities is quite unlike the gulags, concentration camps, or prison
nations of the past.
Even with
a couple million prisoners under its control, the U.S. prison network
lacks the infrastructure or manpower of the Soviet gulag or the
orderly planning of the Nazi concentration-camp system. However,
where it bests both, and breaks new incarceration ground, is in
its planet-ranging scope, with sites scattered the world over
from Europe to Asia, the Middle East to the Caribbean. Unlike colonial
prison systems of the past, the new U.S. prison network seems to
have floated almost free of surrounding colonies. Right now, it
has only four major centers the "homeland," Afghanistan,
Iraq, and a postage-stamp-sized parcel of Cuba. As such, it already
hovers at the edge of its own imperial existence, bringing to mind
the unprecedented possibility of a prison planet. In a remarkably
few years, the Bush administration has been able to construct a
global detention system, already of near epic proportions, both
on the fly and on the cheap.
Sizing
Up a Prison Planet
Soon after
the attacks of September 11th, 2001, the U.S. began the process
of creating what has been termed "an
offshore archipelago of injustice." In addition to using "the
Charleston Navy Brig" and locking up "one prisoner of war in
Miami, Florida," according to the International Committee of the
Red Cross, the Bush administration detained people from around the
world in sweeps, imprisoned them without charges and kept them incommunicado
at U.S. detention facilities at a CIA prison outside Kabul, Afghanistan
(code-named the "Salt Pit"), at Bagram military airbase in Afghanistan,
and at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station, Cuba, among other sites.
Since it was
set up in 2002, the detainment complex at Guantanamo Bay has been
the public face of the Bush administration's semi-secret foreign
prison network a collection of camps, cells, and cages that
today holds 437 prisoners. But "Gitmo" has always been the tiny
showpiece, the jewel in a very dark crown, for a much larger, less
visible foreign network of military detention facilities, CIA "black"
sites, and outsourced foreign prisons. It is a prison camp that
rightly attracts opprobrium, but it also serves to focus attention
away from shadowy ghost jails, borrowed third-nation facilities,
much larger prisons holding thousands in Iraq, and a full-scale
network of detention centers and prisons in Afghanistan.
We may never
know how many secret prisons exist (or, for a time, existed) in
the shape-shifting American mini-gulag, but according to the
Washington Post, some locations for these black sites
include itinerant CIA detention centers "on ships at sea," a site
in Thailand, and another on "Britain's Diego Garcia island in the
Indian Ocean." Uzbekistan
has been reported as one possible location, Algeria another. Denials
were issued about ghost jails being located in Russia
and Bulgaria. The British Guardian
named "a US airbase in the Gulf state of Qatar" as another suspected
site. And while proposed prisons on "virtually unvisited islands
in Lake Kariba in Zambia" were evidently nixed, various black sites
located in "several
democracies in Eastern Europe" apparently did come into being.
ABC
News reported that the "CIA established secret prisons in Romania
and Poland in 20022003" before shutting them down in early
2006 and moving the disappeared prisoners on to "a facility in North
Africa." Following this report, Tomdispatch contacted Major General
Timothy Ghormley, then the commander of the Combined Task Force
Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) for U. S. Central Command, to inquire
about the prisoner transfer. Ghormley stated: "There are no other
U.S. bases in the Horn of Africa besides Camp Lemonier [in Djibouti]."
He went on to assert, "There are no prisons under CJTF-HOA's command,
and Camp Lemonier does not do prisoner transfers." When asked about
CIA operations at the camp, he said he was barred from talking about
"any security operations worldwide" and could not speak for the
CIA. It is, however, worth noting that Amnesty
International reported earlier this year on a Yemeni man who
was "disappeared" and "flown on a small US plane to a site probably
in Djibouti, where he was questioned by officials who told him they
were from the FBI."
While these
illegal sites, mainly run by the CIA, were intermittently identified
in the U.S. or foreign press, it was only this September that President
George W. Bush finally acknowledged the existence of the CIA's
secret prisons. Still, it's unknown how many CIA black sites
are still active and how many clandestine military prisons are still
in operation.
What little
we do know, however, indicates that the "archipelago of injustice"
has grown to world-spanning proportions. For example, in an investigative
article in the
British Guardian in March 2005, Adrian Levy and Cathy
Scott-Clark reported that a network of over 20 U.S. prisons was
believed to exist in Afghanistan, including "an official US detention
centre in Kandahar, where the tough regime has been nicknamed ‘Camp
Slappy' by former prisoners." Just recently, Trevor
Paglen and A.C. Thompson, authors of Torture
Taxi: On the Trail of the CIA's Rendition Flights, confirmed
this, reporting that "the U.S. military has erected some 20 detention
centers [in Afghanistan]… which all operate in near total secrecy.
These are facilities that the U.N., the Afghan government, journalists,
and human rights groups can't get into."
We know as
well that suspects, swept up around the world, have been outsourced
to the prisons and torture chambers of third countries in "extraordinary
rendition" operations. The number of prisons operated by other countries
is shadowy, but certainly geographically wide-ranging. Foreign facilities
available for Bush administration use evidently have included the
al-Tamara interrogation center, located in "a forest five miles
outside [Morocco's] capital, Rabat"; sites in Jordan including "prisons
in the capital, Amman, and in desert locations in the east of the
country"; facilities in Saudi Arabia; "a series of jails in Damascus,"
Syria; "the interrogation centre in the general intelligence directorate
in Lazoughli and in Mulhaq al-Mazra prison" in Egypt; "facilities
in Baku, Azerbaijan"; and "unidentified locations in Thailand,"
among others.
The treatment
given in 2002 to Canadian Maher
Arar, recently the recipient of the Letelier-Moffitt International
Human Rights Award, offers a glimpse into the American prison planet
in action in its early stages of formation. Arar has described how
he was detained and then held incommunicado shackled and
chained in a terminal in New York's JFK Airport before being
transported to Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center. At that
Federal prison, Arar recalls an Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) agent telling him, "The INS is not the body or the agency
that signed the Geneva Convention… against torture."
"For me,"
said Arar, a Canadian citizen born in Syria, "what that really meant
is we will send you to torture and we don't care." He was, in fact,
soon flown to Jordan, where he was beaten, and then driven to Syria.
There, he was locked in a filthy, dark cell "about three feet wide,
six feet deep and about seven feet high" where he was kept in isolation
for 10 months and 10 days when not being physically assaulted. Despite
being tortured into a false confession, Arar was found to have no
links to terrorism and was never charged with crimes of any sort
by the United States, Canada, Jordan, or Syria. Instead, he was
sent back to Canada without so much as an apology or explanation
by the Bush administration. His is the archetypal tale of the American
prison planet that has been under construction these last years
a torture tour of the globe's most dismal hell holes.
How many others have suffered variations of this treatment remains
unknown. The few useful figures we do have, such as the European
parliament's April 2006 findings
of over 1,000 secret CIA flights over European Union territory alone
since 2001, suggest a large number of "extraordinary renditions"
have been carried out.
When President
Bush finally came (somewhat) clean about the CIA's illegal prisons
(even turning them, along with his torture policies, into
a proud election issue), a senior State Department official
also asserted that there were "no
detainees" still in them. Within days, however, newspapers
began to point to evidence that people presumed to have been disappeared
by the U.S. were still unaccounted for. In mid-October, a specific
case hit the press when it was disclosed
that "a Syrian with Spanish citizenship, was captured in Pakistan
in October 2005 and is held in a prison operated by the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency."
Operation
Iraqi Freedom?
The war in
Iraq boosted the profile of the American prison planet immeasurably,
especially after the Abu Ghraib prison revelations burst into public
view in the spring of 2004. At that time, approximately
20,000 Iraqis were imprisoned by U.S. forces, including
a report
that year disclosed more than 100 children as young as 10
years of age.
Over two years
later, there are still many thousands of Iraqis held by U.S. forces
in that country including about 3,550 in a brand new "$60-million
state-of-the-art detention center" at Camp Cropper near Baghdad's
airport and another almost 9,500 in somewhat more primitive
prison conditions at Camp Bucca in the south and Fort Suse in
the Kurdish north.
Meanwhile,
the number of prisoners and detainees held by the U.S.-backed Iraqi
government and allied militias and death squads is murky at best,
but probably sizeable. Secret prisons where the grimmest
kinds of torture are performed, often with power drills are
reputed to be scattered around Baghdad, the capital. In November
2005, then-Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari admitted receiving
word on conditions in just one of these. According to the BBC,
"173 detainees had been held [in an Interior Ministry building],
that they appeared malnourished, and may have been 'subjected to
some kind of torture.'" The next month, the
Washington Post reported the discovery of a "second Interior
Ministry detention center where cases of prisoner abuse have been
confirmed by U.S. and Iraqi officials."
By June of
this year, it was reported
that the Iraqi Interior Ministry was still holding 1,797 prisoners;
the Defense Ministry a smaller undisclosed number; and the Justice
Ministry, at least 7,426.
Lockdown,
USA
The offshore
archipelago of injustice garners the headlines, but it's the homeland
prison network that locks up far more people and provides at least
one possible model for what the foreign network could morph into
given the time and funds to expand and harden into a permanent supermax
system. Comprised of federal and state prisons, territorial prisons,
local jails, "facilities operated by or exclusively for the Bureau
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement," military prisons, "jails
in Indian country," and juvenile detention facilities, the homeland
prison system is a truly massive apparatus.
Just as the
global network has expanded in the years since 9/11, so has incarceration
in the U.S. In fact, it has climbed
steadily in recent years. Today, the U.S. stands preeminent
among all nations in treating people like caged animals. According
to statistics provided to the BBC
by the International Centre for Prison Studies, 724 people per 100,000
are imprisoned in the U.S., overwhelmingly trumping even increasingly
authoritarian Russia, the world's second-ranked prison power, who's
rate of caging humans is only 581 per 100,000.
All told,
the U.S. now has 2,135,901 prisoners in domestic detention facilities,
alone several hundred thousand more than are imprisoned in
both China and India, the world's two most populous countries, combined.
Of these people, 192,198 are imprisoned in federal facilities
though just 5.3% of them for the violent crimes of most people's
nightmares: homicide, aggravated assault, kidnapping, and sex offenses.
Instead, most 53.6 % are locked up on (often small-time)
drug charges.
Of the federal
prison population, the government classifies about 0.1 % (100 people)
as having committed "national
security" offenses. There's no category in the U.S. system for
political prisoners, which doesn't mean they don't exist. According
to a 2002 Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal article by J. Soffiyah
Elijah, there were, prior to September 11, 2001, "nearly 100 political
prisoners and prisoners of war incarcerated in the United States"
many of them the surviving victims of Vietnam-era government
campaigns against activists.
There is also
another group of political prisoners of indeterminate number not
listed on the rolls war resisters. Just recently Iraq War
veteran turned resister Kevin Benderman was released from a military
prison where he had been held for over a year for refusing to redeploy
to Iraq due to his conscientious objection to the war. While Army
Lieutenant Ehren Watada is currently facing an eight-year prison
sentence, if convicted, for similar opposition to Iraq. One website
lists 27 war resisters "presently in legal jeopardy, or currently
incarcerated" who have gone public with their stories.
Additionally,
in the immediate wake of 9/11, the government conducted sweeps
of Muslim immigrants (and Muslim-Americans) reminiscent of the
detentions of Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II,
"locking up large numbers of Middle Eastern men, using whatever
legal tools they can." There was never any full accounting of these
mass roundups, codenamed PENTTBOM, or what happened to all the people
who were rousted from beds or yanked out of places of work by federal
agents. What little is known suggests
that "762 of the 1,200 PENTTBOM arrestees were charged with immigration
violations at the behest of the FBI because agents thought they
might be associated with terrorism... [but] almost every one was
either deported or released within a few months." Only a small percentage
of the 1,200 are thought to have even been processed through the
federal criminal justice system.
This summer
the Washington Post announced that, after 5 years of captivity,
Benamar Benatta, "believed to be the last remaining domestic detainee
from the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, was released." In mid-October,
however, word surfaced that Ali Partovi, also caught in the dragnet,
was still being held captive although he "is
not charged with a crime, not suspected of a crime, [and] not
considered a danger to society."
Preemptive
Incarceration
From time
to time, certain people in the U.S. also find themselves tossed
into special kinds of detention facilities. For example, during
the 2004 Republican National Convention (RNC) in New York City,
protesters (and also bystanders) swept up in indiscriminate mass
arrests or illegal acts of preemptive incarceration were temporarily
locked up in "Marine and Aviation Pier 57," a filthy facility of
razor-wire topped chain-link cages that was soon dubbed "Guantanamo
on the Hudson." While being imprisoned in New York City's own Gitmo
didn't begin to compare to being tossed in the real McCoy or any
other secret offshore site, there was one striking similarity. U.S.
intelligence officials estimated that 7090% of prisoners
detained in Iraq "had been arrested by mistake." That was also 2004.
The next year, it was revealed that, of the large majority of RNC
arrest cases that had run their course, 91%
of the arrests were dismissed or ended in acquittals.
On the American
prison planet, not only has the principle of habeas corpus
been formally abolished and torture proudly added to the mix, but
that crucial tenet of the legal system, the presumption of innocence,
has been cast aside. Whether at home or abroad, the solution for
U.S. security forces is a simple one, identify the likely suspects,
conduct sweeps, and preemptively lock them up.
Concentration
Camp, USA?
According
to recent statements by the Department Homeland Security 's Immigration
and Customs Enforcement bureau, some time in the future undocumented
economic migrants may be imprisoned on
"old cruise ships." Other illegals may even find themselves
in a KBR concentration camp.
Earlier this
year, news broke that Halliburton subsidiary, KBR the firm
infamous for building prison facilities at Guantanamo Bay and for
scandals stemming from work in the Iraq war zone received
a $385 million contract from the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) to build detention centers, according
to the New York Times, "for an unexpected influx of immigrants"
or "new programs that require additional detention space." For anyone
who remembers the First World War-era proposal by four state governors
to imprison members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
for the duration of the conflict, or the 1939 Hobbs ("Concentration
Camp") Bill that sought the detention of aliens, or the forcible
relocation and imprisonment of Japanese and Japanese-Americans during
World War II, or the 1950 McCarran Act's provisions for setting
up concentration camps for subversives, or the Vietnam-era plans
to round up and jail radicals in the event of a national emergency
and conduct mass detentions in the face of possible urban insurrections,
the announcement may have seemed less than startling. But thought
of in the context of prison-planet planning, it nonetheless strikes
an ominous note indeed.
One Vietnam-era
radical, former Pentagon analyst Daniel Ellsberg, grasped
the implications immediately. "Almost certainly this is preparation
for a roundup after the next 9/11 for Mid-Easterners, Muslims and
possibly dissenters," he said. "They've already done this on a smaller
scale, with the 'special registration' detentions of immigrant men
from Muslim countries, and with Guantanamo."
Fear of
a Prison Planet
In
2005, Irene Khan, Amnesty International's general secretary, described
Guantanamo Bay as "the
gulag of our time." But the American gulag is so much more than
Guantanamo and so much worse. The combination of U.S. "homeland"
prisons, where "one
in 140 Americans, or as many people as live in Namibia, or nearly
five Luxembourgs" are locked away, the offshore imperial detention
facilities, the shadowy CIA black sites, and the ever-shifting outsourced
detention facilities operated by other nations adds up to something
new in history the makings of a veritable American prison
planet.
November
3, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Nick Turse is the associate editor and research director
of Tomdispatch.com. He has written for the San Francisco Chronicle,
the Nation, the Village Voice, and regularly for Tomdispatch.
Articles from his recent Los Angeles Times series, "The War
Crimes Files" can be found here.
Copyright
© 2006 Nick Turse
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Engelhardt Archives
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