THE GRAY ZONE
by SEYMOUR M. HERSH
How a secret Pentagon program came to Abu Ghraib.
Issue of 2004-05-24
Posted 2004-05-15
The roots of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal lie not in
the criminal inclinations of a few Army reservists but in a decision,
approved last year by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, to expand a
highly secret operation, which had been focussed on the hunt for Al
Qaeda, to the interrogation of prisoners in Iraq. Rumsfeld’s
decision embittered the American intelligence community, damaged the
effectiveness of élite combat units, and hurt America’s
prospects in the war on terror.
According to interviews with several past and present
American intelligence officials, the Pentagon’s operation, known
inside the intelligence community by several code words, including Copper
Green, encouraged physical coercion and sexual humiliation of Iraqi
prisoners in an effort to generate more intelligence about the growing
insurgency in Iraq. A senior C.I.A. official, in confirming the details
of this account last week, said that the operation stemmed from
Rumsfeld’s long-standing desire to wrest control of
America’s clandestine and paramilitary operations from the C.I.A.
Rumsfeld, during appearances last week before Congress
to testify about Abu Ghraib, was precluded by law from explicitly
mentioning highly secret matters in an unclassified session. But he
conveyed the message that he was telling the public all that he knew
about the story. He said, “Any suggestion that there is not a
full, deep awareness of what has happened, and the damage it has done, I
think, would be a misunderstanding.” The senior C.I.A. official,
asked about Rumsfeld’s testimony and that of Stephen Cambone, his
Under-Secretary for Intelligence, said, “Some people think you can
bullshit anyone.”
The Abu Ghraib story began, in a sense, just weeks
after the September 11, 2001, attacks, with the American bombing of
Afghanistan. Almost from the start, the Administration’s search
for Al Qaeda members in the war zone, and its worldwide search for
terrorists, came up against major command-and-control problems. For
example, combat forces that had Al Qaeda targets in sight had to obtain
legal clearance before firing on them. On October 7th, the night the
bombing began, an unmanned Predator aircraft tracked an automobile convoy
that, American intelligence believed, contained Mullah Muhammad Omar, the
Taliban leader. A lawyer on duty at the United States Central Command
headquarters, in Tampa, Florida, refused to authorize a strike. By the
time an attack was approved, the target was out of reach. Rumsfeld was
apoplectic over what he saw as a self-defeating hesitation to attack that
was due to political correctness. One officer described him to me that
fall as “kicking a lot of glass and breaking doors.” In
November, the Washington Post reported that, as many as ten times since
early October, Air Force pilots believed they’d had senior Al
Qaeda and Taliban members in their sights but had been unable to act in
time because of legalistic hurdles. There were similar problems
throughout the world, as American Special Forces units seeking to move
quickly against suspected terrorist cells were compelled to get prior
approval from local American ambassadors and brief their superiors in the
chain of command.
Rumsfeld reacted in his usual direct fashion: he
authorized the establishment of a highly secret program that was given
blanket advance approval to kill or capture and, if possible, interrogate
“high value” targets in the Bush Administration’s
war on terror. A special-access program, or sapsubject to the
Defense Department’s most stringent level of securitywas set
up, with an office in a secure area of the Pentagon. The program would
recruit operatives and acquire the necessary equipment, including
aircraft, and would keep its activities under wraps. America’s
most successful intelligence operations during the Cold War had been
saps, including the Navy’s submarine penetration of underwater
cables used by the Soviet high command and construction of the Air
Force’s stealth bomber. All the so-called “black”
programs had one element in common: the Secretary of Defense, or his
deputy, had to conclude that the normal military classification
restraints did not provide enough security.
“Rumsfeld’s goal was to get a capability
in place to take on a high-value targeta standup group to hit
quickly,” a former high-level intelligence official told me.
“He got all the agencies togetherthe C.I.A. and the
N.S.A.to get pre-approval in place. Just say the code word and
go.” The operation had across-the-board approval from Rumsfeld and
from Condoleezza Rice, the national-security adviser. President Bush was
informed of the existence of the program, the former intelligence
official said.
The people assigned to the program worked by the book,
the former intelligence official told me. They created code words, and
recruited, after careful screening, highly trained commandos and
operatives from America’s élite forcesNavy seals, the
Army’s Delta Force, and the C.I.A.’s paramilitary experts.
They also asked some basic questions: “Do the people working the
problem have to use aliases? Yes. Do we need dead drops for the mail?
Yes. No traceability and no budget. And some special-access programs are
never fully briefed to Congress.”
In theory, the operation enabled the Bush
Administration to respond immediately to time-sensitive intelligence:
commandos crossed borders without visas and could interrogate terrorism
suspects deemed too important for transfer to the military’s
facilities at Guantánamo, Cuba. They carried out instant
interrogationsusing force if necessaryat secret C.I.A.
detention centers scattered around the world. The intelligence would be
relayed to the sap command center in the Pentagon in real time, and
sifted for those pieces of information critical to the
“white,” or overt, world.
Fewer than two hundred operatives and officials,
including Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, were “completely read into the program,”
the former intelligence official said. The goal was to keep the operation
protected. “We’re not going to read more people than
necessary into our heart of darkness,” he said. “The rules
are ‘Grab whom you must. Do what you want.’”
One Pentagon official who was deeply involved in the
program was Stephen Cambone, who was named Under-Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence in March, 2003. The office was new; it was created as part
of Rumsfeld’s reorganization of the Pentagon. Cambone was
unpopular among military and civilian intelligence bureaucrats in the
Pentagon, essentially because he had little experience in running
intelligence programs, though in 1998 he had served as staff director for
a committee, headed by Rumsfeld, that warned of an emerging
ballistic-missile threat to the United States. He was known instead for
his closeness to Rumsfeld. “Remember Henry II‘Who
will rid me of this meddlesome priest?’” the senior C.I.A.
official said to me, with a laugh, last week. “Whatever Rumsfeld
whimsically says, Cambone will do ten times that much.”
Cambone was a strong advocate for war against Iraq. He
shared Rumsfeld’s disdain for the analysis and assessments
proffered by the C.I.A., viewing them as too cautious, and chafed, as did
Rumsfeld, at the C.I.A.’s inability, before the Iraq war, to state
conclusively that Saddam Hussein harbored weapons of mass destruction.
Cambone’s military assistant, Army Lieutenant General William G.
(Jerry) Boykin, was also controversial. Last fall, he generated unwanted
headlines after it was reported that, in a speech at an Oregon church, he
equated the Muslim world with Satan.
Early in his tenure, Cambone provoked a bureaucratic
battle within the Pentagon by insisting that he be given control of all
special-access programs that were relevant to the war on terror. Those
programs, which had been viewed by many in the Pentagon as sacrosanct,
were monitored by Kenneth deGraffenreid, who had experience in
counter-intelligence programs. Cambone got control, and deGraffenreid
subsequently left the Pentagon. Asked for comment on this story, a
Pentagon spokesman said, “I will not discuss any covert programs;
however, Dr. Cambone did not assume his position as the Under-Secretary
of Defense for Intelligence until March 7, 2003, and had no involvement
in the decision-making process regarding interrogation procedures in Iraq
or anywhere else.”
In mid-2003, the special-access program was regarded
in the Pentagon as one of the success stories of the war on terror.
“It was an active program,” the former intelligence
official told me. “It’s been the most important capability
we have for dealing with an imminent threat. If we discover where Osama
bin Laden is, we can get him. And we can remove an existing threat with a
real capability to hit the United Statesand do so without
visibility.” Some of its methods were troubling and could not bear
close scrutiny, however.
By then, the war in Iraq had begun. The sap was
involved in some assignments in Iraq, the former official said. C.I.A.
and other American Special Forces operatives secretly teamed up to hunt
for Saddam Hussein andwithout successfor Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction. But they weren’t able to stop the evolving
insurgency.
In the first months after the fall of Baghdad,
Rumsfeld and his aides still had a limited view of the insurgency, seeing
it as little more than the work of Baathist “dead-enders,”
criminal gangs, and foreign terrorists who were Al Qaeda followers. The
Administration measured its success in the war by how many of those on
its list of the fifty-five most wanted members of the old
regimereproduced on playing cardshad been captured. Then, in
August, 2003, terror bombings in Baghdad hit the Jordanian Embassy,
killing nineteen people, and the United Nations headquarters, killing
twenty-three people, including Sergio Vieira de Mello, the head of the
U.N. mission. On August 25th, less than a week after the U.N. bombing,
Rumsfeld acknowledged, in a talk before the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
that “the dead-enders are still with us.” He went on,
“There are some today who are surprised that there are still
pockets of resistance in Iraq, and they suggest that this represents some
sort of failure on the part of the Coalition. But this is not the
case.” Rumsfeld compared the insurgents with those true believers
who “fought on during and after the defeat of the Nazi regime in
Germany.” A few weeks laterand five months after the fall of
Baghdadthe Defense Secretary declared,“It is, in my view,
better to be dealing with terrorists in Iraq than in the United
States.”
Inside the Pentagon, there was a growing realization
that the war was going badly. The increasingly beleaguered and baffled
Army leadership was telling reporters that the insurgents consisted of
five thousand Baathists loyal to Saddam Hussein. “When you
understand that they’re organized in a cellular structure,”
General John Abizaid, the head of the Central Command, declared,
“that . . . they have access to a lot of money and a lot of
ammunition, you’ll understand how dangerous they are.”
The American military and intelligence communities
were having little success in penetrating the insurgency. One internal
report prepared for the U.S. military, made available to me, concluded
that the insurgents’“strategic and operational intelligence
has proven to be quite good.” According to the study:
Their ability to attack convoys, other vulnerable
targets and particular individuals has been the result of painstaking
surveillance and reconnaissance. Inside information has been passed on to
insurgent cells about convoy/troop movements and daily habits of Iraqis
working with coalition from within the Iraqi security services, primarily
the Iraqi Police force which is rife with sympathy for the insurgents,
Iraqi ministries and from within pro-insurgent individuals working with
the CPA’s so-called Green Zone.
The study concluded, “Politically, the U.S. has
failed to date. Insurgencies can be fixed or ameliorated by dealing with
what caused them in the first place. The disaster that is the
reconstruction of Iraq has been the key cause of the insurgency. There is
no legitimate government, and it behooves the Coalition Provisional
Authority to absorb the sad but unvarnished fact that most Iraqis do not
see the Governing Council”the Iraqi body appointed by the
C.P.A.“as the legitimate authority. Indeed, they know that
the true power is the CPA.”
By the fall, a military analyst told me, the extent of
the Pentagon’s political and military misjudgments was clear.
Donald Rumsfeld’s “dead-enders” now included not
only Baathists but many marginal figures as wellthugs and criminals
who were among the tens of thousands of prisoners freed the previous fall
by Saddam as part of a prewar general amnesty. Their desperation was not
driving the insurgency; it simply made them easy recruits for those who
were. The analyst said, “We’d killed and captured guys who
had been given two or three hundred dollars to ‘pray and
spray’”that is, shoot randomly and hope for the best.
“They weren’t really insurgents but down-and-outers who
were paid by wealthy individuals sympathetic to the insurgency.”
In many cases, the paymasters were Sunnis who had been members of the
Baath Party. The analyst said that the insurgents “spent three or
four months figuring out how we operated and developing their own
countermeasures. If that meant putting up a hapless guy to go and attack
a convoy and see how the American troops responded, they’d do
it.” Then, the analyst said, “the clever ones began to get
in on the action.”
By contrast, according to the military report, the
American and Coalition forces knew little about the insurgency:
“Human intelligence is poor or lacking . . . due to the dearth of
competence and expertise. . . . The intelligence effort is not
coördinated since either too many groups are involved in gathering
intelligence or the final product does not get to the troops in the field
in a timely manner.” The success of the war was at risk; something
had to be done to change the dynamic.
The solution, endorsed by Rumsfeld and carried out by
Stephen Cambone, was to get tough with those Iraqis in the Army prison
system who were suspected of being insurgents. A key player was Major
General Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the detention and interrogation
center at Guantánamo, who had been summoned to Baghdad in late
August to review prison interrogation procedures. The internal Army
report on the abuse charges, written by Major General Antonio Taguba in
February, revealed that Miller urged that the commanders in Baghdad
change policy and place military intelligence in charge of the prison.
The report quoted Miller as recommending that “detention
operations must act as an enabler for interrogation.”
Miller’s concept, as it emerged in recent
Senate hearings, was to “Gitmoize” the prison system in
Iraqto make it more focussed on interrogation. He also briefed
military commanders in Iraq on the interrogation methods used in
Cubamethods that could, with special approval, include sleep
deprivation, exposure to extremes of cold and heat, and placing prisoners
in “stress positions” for agonizing lengths of time. (The
Bush Administration had unilaterally declared Al Qaeda and other captured
members of international terrorist networks to be illegal combatants, and
not eligible for the protection of the Geneva Conventions.)
Rumsfeld and Cambone went a step further, however:
they expanded the scope of the sap, bringing its unconventional methods
to Abu Ghraib. The commandos were to operate in Iraq as they had in
Afghanistan. The male prisoners could be treated roughly, and exposed to
sexual humiliation.
“They weren’t getting anything
substantive from the detainees in Iraq,” the former intelligence
official told me. “No names. Nothing that they could hang their
hat on. Cambone says, I’ve got to crack this thing and I’m
tired of working through the normal chain of command. I’ve got
this apparatus set upthe black special-access programand
I’m going in hot. So he pulls the switch, and the electricity
begins flowing last summer. And it’s working. We’re getting
a picture of the insurgency in Iraq and the intelligence is flowing into
the white world. We’re getting good stuff. But we’ve got
more targets”prisoners in Iraqi jails“than
people who can handle them.”
Cambone then made another crucial decision, the former
intelligence official told me: not only would he bring the sap’s
rules into the prisons; he would bring some of the Army
military-intelligence officers working inside the Iraqi prisons under the
sap’s auspices. “So here are fundamentally good
soldiersmilitary-intelligence guysbeing told that no rules
apply,” the former official, who has extensive knowledge of the
special-access programs, added. “And, as far as they’re
concerned, this is a covert operation, and it’s to be kept within
Defense Department channels.”
The military-police prison guards, the former official
said, included “recycled hillbillies from Cumberland,
Maryland.” He was referring to members of the 372nd Military
Police Company. Seven members of the company are now facing charges for
their role in the abuse at Abu Ghraib. “How are these guys from
Cumberland going to know anything? The Army Reserve doesn’t know
what it’s doing.”
Who was in charge of Abu Ghraibwhether military
police or military intelligencewas no longer the only question that
mattered. Hard-core special operatives, some of them with aliases, were
working in the prison. The military police assigned to guard the
prisoners wore uniforms, but many othersmilitary intelligence
officers, contract interpreters, C.I.A. officers, and the men from the
special-access programwore civilian clothes. It was not clear who
was who, even to Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, then the commander of
the 800th Military Police Brigade, and the officer ostensibly in charge.
“I thought most of the civilians there were interpreters, but
there were some civilians that I didn’t know,” Karpinski
told me. “I called them the disappearing ghosts. I’d seen
them once in a while at Abu Ghraib and then I’d see them months
later. They were nicethey’d always call out to me and say,
‘Hey, remember me? How are you doing?’” The
mysterious civilians, she said, were “always bringing in somebody
for interrogation or waiting to collect somebody going out.”
Karpinski added that she had no idea who was operating in her prison
system. (General Taguba found that Karpinski’s leadership failures
contributed to the abuses.)
By fall, according to the former intelligence
official, the senior leadership of the C.I.A. had had enough.
“They said, ‘No way. We signed up for the core program in
Afghanistanpre-approved for operations against high-value terrorist
targetsand now you want to use it for cabdrivers, brothers-in-law,
and people pulled off the streets’”the sort of
prisoners who populate the Iraqi jails. “The C.I.A.’s legal
people objected,” and the agency ended its sap involvement in Abu
Ghraib, the former official said.
The C.I.A.’s complaints were echoed throughout
the intelligence community. There was fear that the situation at Abu
Ghraib would lead to the exposure of the secret sap, and thereby bring an
end to what had been, before Iraq, a valuable cover operation.
“This was stupidity,” a government consultant told me.
“You’re taking a program that was operating in the chaos of
Afghanistan against Al Qaeda, a stateless terror group, and bringing it
into a structured, traditional war zone. Sooner or later, the commandos
would bump into the legal and moral procedures of a conventional war with
an Army of a hundred and thirty-five thousand soldiers.”
The former senior intelligence official blamed hubris
for the Abu Ghraib disaster. “There’s nothing more
exhilarating for a pissant Pentagon civilian than dealing with an
important national security issue without dealing with military planners,
who are always worried about risk,” he told me. “What could
be more boring than needing the coöperation of logistical
planners?” The only difficulty, the former official added, is
that, “as soon as you enlarge the secret program beyond the
oversight capability of experienced people, you lose control.
We’ve never had a case where a special-access program went
sourand this goes back to the Cold War.”
In a separate interview, a Pentagon consultant, who
spent much of his career directly involved with special-access programs,
spread the blame. “The White House subcontracted this to the
Pentagon, and the Pentagon subcontracted it to Cambone,” he said.
“This is Cambone’s deal, but Rumsfeld and Myers approved
the program.” When it came to the interrogation operation at Abu
Ghraib, he said, Rumsfeld left the details to Cambone. Rumsfeld may not
be personally culpable, the consultant added, “but he’s
responsible for the checks and balances. The issue is that, since 9/11,
we’ve changed the rules on how we deal with terrorism, and created
conditions where the ends justify the means.”
Last week, statements made by one of the seven accused
M.P.s, Specialist Jeremy Sivits, who is expected to plead guilty, were
released. In them, he claimed that senior commanders in his unit would
have stopped the abuse had they witnessed it. One of the questions that
will be explored at any trial, however, is why a group of Army Reserve
military policemen, most of them from small towns, tormented their
prisoners as they did, in a manner that was especially humiliating for
Iraqi men.
The notion that Arabs are particularly vulnerable to
sexual humiliation became a talking point among pro-war Washington
conservatives in the months before the March, 2003, invasion of Iraq. One
book that was frequently cited was “The Arab Mind,” a study
of Arab culture and psychology, first published in 1973, by Raphael
Patai, a cultural anthropologist who taught at, among other universities,
Columbia and Princeton, and who died in 1996. The book includes a
twenty-five-page chapter on Arabs and sex, depicting sex as a taboo
vested with shame and repression. “The segregation of the sexes,
the veiling of the women . . . and all the other minute rules that govern
and restrict contact between men and women, have the effect of making sex
a prime mental preoccupation in the Arab world,” Patai wrote.
Homosexual activity, “or any indication of homosexual leanings, as
with all other expressions of sexuality, is never given any publicity.
These are private affairs and remain in private.” The Patai book,
an academic told me, was “the bible of the neocons on Arab
behavior.” In their discussions, he said, two themes
emerged“one, that Arabs only understand force and, two, that
the biggest weakness of Arabs is shame and humiliation.”
The government consultant said that there may have
been a serious goal, in the beginning, behind the sexual humiliation and
the posed photographs. It was thought that some prisoners would do
anythingincluding spying on their associatesto avoid
dissemination of the shameful photos to family and friends. The
government consultant said, “I was told that the purpose of the
photographs was to create an army of informants, people you could insert
back in the population.” The idea was that they would be motivated
by fear of exposure, and gather information about pending insurgency
action, the consultant said. If so, it wasn’t effective; the
insurgency continued to grow.
“This shit has been brewing for months,”
the Pentagon consultant who has dealt with saps told me. “You
don’t keep prisoners naked in their cell and then let them get
bitten by dogs. This is sick.” The consultant explained that he
and his colleagues, all of whom had served for years on active duty in
the military, had been appalled by the misuse of Army guard dogs inside
Abu Ghraib. “We don’t raise kids to do things like that.
When you go after Mullah Omar, that’s one thing. But when you give
the authority to kids who don’t know the rules, that’s
another.”
In 2003, Rumsfeld’s apparent disregard for the
requirements of the Geneva Conventions while carrying out the war on
terror had led a group of senior military legal officers from the Judge
Advocate General’s (jag) Corps to pay two surprise visits within
five months to Scott Horton, who was then chairman of the New York City
Bar Association’s Committee on International Human Rights.
“They wanted us to challenge the Bush Administration about its
standards for detentions and interrogation,” Horton told me.
“They were urging us to get involved and speak in a very loud
voice. It came pretty much out of the blue. The message was that
conditions are ripe for abuse, and it’s going to occur.”
The military officials were most alarmed about the growing use of
civilian contractors in the interrogation process, Horton recalled.
“They said there was an atmosphere of legal ambiguity being
created as a result of a policy decision at the highest levels in the
Pentagon. The jag officers were being cut out of the policy formulation
process.” They told him that, with the war on terror, a fifty-year
history of exemplary application of the Geneva Conventions had come to an
end.
The abuses at Abu Ghraib were exposed on January 13th,
when Joseph Darby, a young military policeman assigned to Abu Ghraib,
reported the wrongdoing to the Army’s Criminal Investigations
Division. He also turned over a CD full of photographs. Within three
days, a report made its way to Donald Rumsfeld, who informed President
Bush.
The inquiry presented a dilemma for the Pentagon. The
C.I.D. had to be allowed to continue, the former intelligence official
said. “You can’t cover it up. You have to prosecute these
guys for being off the reservation. But how do you prosecute them when
they were covered by the special-access program? So you hope that maybe
it’ll go away.” The Pentagon’s attitude last
January, he said, was “Somebody got caught with some photos.
What’s the big deal? Take care of it.” Rumsfeld’s
explanation to the White House, the official added, was reassuring:
“‘We’ve got a glitch in the program. We’ll
prosecute it.’ The cover story was that some kids got out of
control.”
In their testimony before Congress last week, Rumsfeld
and Cambone struggled to convince the legislators that Miller’s
visit to Baghdad in late August had nothing to do with the subsequent
abuse. Cambone sought to assure the Senate Armed Services Committee that
the interplay between Miller and Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, the
top U.S. commander in Iraq, had only a casual connection to his office.
Miller’s recommendations, Cambone said, were made to Sanchez. His
own role, he said, was mainly to insure that the “flow of
intelligence back to the commands” was “efficient and
effective.” He added that Miller’s goal was “to
provide a safe, secure and humane environment that supports the
expeditious collection of intelligence.”
It was a hard sell. Senator Hillary Clinton, Democrat
of New York, posed the essential question facing the senators:
If, indeed, General Miller was sent from
Guantánamo to Iraq for the purpose of acquiring more actionable
intelligence from detainees, then it is fair to conclude that the actions
that are at point here in your report [on abuses at Abu Ghraib] are in
some way connected to General Miller’s arrival and his specific
orders, however they were interpreted, by those MPs and the military
intelligence that were involved.. . .Therefore, I for one don’t
believe I yet have adequate information from Mr. Cambone and the Defense
Department as to exactly what General Miller’s orders were . . .
how he carried out those orders, and the connection between his arrival
in the fall of ’03 and the intensity of the abuses that occurred
afterward.
Sometime before the Abu Ghraib abuses became public,
the former intelligence official told me, Miller was “read
in”that is, briefedon the special-access operation. In
April, Miller returned to Baghdad to assume control of the Iraqi prisons;
once the scandal hit, with its glaring headlines, General Sanchez
presented him to the American and international media as the general who
would clean up the Iraqi prison system and instill respect for the Geneva
Conventions. “His job is to save what he can,” the former
official said. “He’s there to protect the program while
limiting any loss of core capability.” As for Antonio Taguba, the
former intelligence official added, “He goes into it not knowing
shit. And then: ‘Holy cow! What’s going on?’”
If General Miller had been summoned by Congress to
testify, he, like Rumsfeld and Cambone, would not have been able to
mention the special-access program. “If you give away the fact
that a special-access program exists,”the former intelligence
official told me, “you blow the whole quick-reaction
program.”
One puzzling aspect of Rumsfeld’s account of
his initial reaction to news of the Abu Ghraib investigation was his lack
of alarm and lack of curiosity. One factor may have been recent history:
there had been many previous complaints of prisoner abuse from
organization like Human Rights Watch and the International Red Cross, and
the Pentagon had weathered them with ease. Rumsfeld told the Senate Armed
Services Committee that he had not been provided with details of alleged
abuses until late March, when he read the specific charges. “You
read it, as I say, it’s one thing. You see these photographs and
it’s just unbelievable. . . . It wasn’t three-dimensional.
It wasn’t video. It wasn’t color. It was quite a different
thing.” The former intelligence official said that, in his view,
Rumsfeld and other senior Pentagon officials had not studied the
photographs because “they thought what was in there was permitted
under the rules of engagement,” as applied to the sap. “The
photos,” he added, “turned out to be the result of the
program run amok.”
The former intelligence official made it clear that he
was not alleging that Rumsfeld or General Myers knew that atrocities were
committed. But, he said, “it was their permission granted to do
the sap, generically, and there was enough ambiguity, which permitted the
abuses.”
This official went on, “The black
guys”those in the Pentagon’s secret
program“say we’ve got to accept the prosecution.
They’re vaccinated from the reality.” The sap is still
active, and “the United States is picking up guys for
interrogation. The question is, how do they protect the quick-reaction
force without blowing its cover?” The program was protected by the
fact that no one on the outside was allowed to know of its existence.
“If you even give a hint that you’re aware of a black
program that you’re not read into, you lose your
clearances,” the former official said. “Nobody will talk.
So the only people left to prosecute are those who are
undefendedthe poor kids at the end of the food chain.”
The most vulnerable senior official is Cambone.
“The Pentagon is trying now to protect Cambone, and doesn’t
know how to do it,” the former intelligence official said.
Last week, the government consultant, who has close
ties to many conservatives, defended the Administration’s
continued secrecy about the special-access program in Abu Ghraib.
“Why keep it black?” the consultant asked. “Because
the process is unpleasant. It’s like making sausageyou like
the result but you don’t want to know how it was made. Also, you
don’t want the Iraqi public, and the Arab world, to know.
Remember, we went to Iraq to democratize the Middle East. The last thing
you want to do is let the Arab world know how you treat Arab males in
prison.”
The former intelligence official told me he feared
that one of the disastrous effects of the prison-abuse scandal would be
the undermining of legitimate operations in the war on terror, which had
already suffered from the draining of resources into Iraq. He portrayed
Abu Ghraib as “a tumor” on the war on terror. He said,
“As long as it’s benign and contained, the Pentagon can
deal with the photo crisis without jeopardizing the secret program. As
soon as it begins to grow, with nobody to diagnose itit becomes a
malignant tumor.”
The Pentagon consultant made a similar point. Cambone
and his superiors, the consultant said, “created the conditions
that allowed transgressions to take place. And now we’re going to
end up with another Church Commission”the 1975 Senate
committee on intelligence, headed by Senator Frank Church, of Idaho,
which investigated C.I.A. abuses during the previous two decades. Abu
Ghraib had sent the message that the Pentagon leadership was unable to
handle its discretionary power. “When the shit hits the fan, as it
did on 9/11, how do you push the pedal?” the consultant asked.
“You do it selectively and with intelligence.”
“Congress is going to get to the bottom of
this,” the Pentagon consultant said. “You have to
demonstrate that there are checks and balances in the system.” He
added, “When you live in a world of gray zones, you have to have
very clear red lines.”
Senator John McCain, of Arizona, said, “If this
is true, it certainly increases the dimension of this issue and deserves
significant scrutiny. I will do all possible to get to the bottom of
this, and all other allegations.”
“In an odd way,” Kenneth Roth, the
executive director of Human Rights Watch, said, “the sexual abuses
at Abu Ghraib have become a diversion for the prisoner abuse and the
violation of the Geneva Conventions that is authorized.” Since
September 11th, Roth added, the military has systematically used
third-degree techniques around the world on detainees. “Some jags
hate this and are horrified that the tolerance of mistreatment will come
back and haunt us in the next war,” Roth told me.
“We’re giving the world a ready-made excuse to ignore the
Geneva Conventions. Rumsfeld has lowered the bar.”