CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons
I wish the headline above was an exagerration of some sort but that's actually the headline of this Washington Post story. How can we violate some of the most fundamental principals that this country was built on? What ever happened to the assumption that one was innocent until proven guilty? How can we let people be held indefinitely? Sickening. 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.
[Update 11/3/05] The EU ain't all that happy about this now. Check out this update from the Associated Press.
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2 Comments:
This shit is getting out of control. I'm not really shocked, but now that I've heard so many stories of innocent people who were in the wrong place wrong time, it does freak me out. How many of these people (American citizens mind you) have ended up in these secret camps? Like something out of Soviet Russia -- you dissent and one day your family and neighbors never hear from you again.
don't you think it's funny that these are "secret" prisions but EVERYBODY knows about them?
kinda like area 51?
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