CACI International, which employed almost half of all interrogators and analysts at Abu Ghraib and whose employees were allegedly guilty of wrongdoing that included ordering treatment that "equated to physical abuse," using dogs to scare prisoners, placing detainees in unauthorized "stress positions," etc. has nevertheless been awarded a $16 million renewal of its contract by the Department of Defense, the Observer (UK) reported Sunday. -- Another civil contractor whose employees were accused of serious crimes, Titan, has been awarded a contract worth $164 million. -- The Observer also notes in this piece the publication of a Cambridge Univ. Press edition of the U.S. torture policy documents, entitled The Torture Papers....
International
ABU GHRAIB ABUSE FIRMS ARE REWARDED By Peter Beaumont
Observer (UK) January 16, 2005
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1391431,00.html
Two U.S. defense contractors being sued over allegations of abuse at Abu
Ghraib prison have been awarded valuable new contracts by the Pentagon, despite
demands that they should be barred from any new government work.
Three employees of CACI International and Titan -- working at Abu Ghraib as
civilian contractors -- were separately accused of abusive behaviour.
The report on the Abu Ghraib scandal implicated three civilian contractors in
the abuses: Steven Stefanowicz from CACI International and John Israel and Adel
Nakhla from Titan.
Stefanowicz was charged with giving orders that 'equated to physical abuse,'
Israel of lying under oath and Naklha of raping an Iraqi boy.
It was also alleged that CACI interrogators used dogs to scare prisoners,
placed detainees in unauthorized 'stress positions' and encouraged soldiers to
abuse prisoners. Titan employees, it has been alleged, hit detainees and stood
by while soldiers physically abused prisoners.
Investigators also discovered systemic problems of management and training --
including the fact that a third of CACI International's staff at Abu Ghraib had
never received formal military interrogation training.
Despite demands by human rights groups in the U.S. that the two companies be
barred from further contracts in Iraq -- where CACI alone employed almost half
of all interrogators and analysts at Abu Ghraib -- CACI International has been
awarded a $16 million renewal of its contract. Titan, meanwhile, has been
awarded a new contract worth $164m.
Despite the allegations in the internal U.S. army report, the two companies
have described the claims against them 'baseless' and as 'a malicious recitation
of false statements and intentional distortions.'
The disclosure of the new contracts comes as Specialist Charles Graner --
described as the ringleader in the group of soldiers leading the abuse of Iraqi
prisoners -- was found guilty on Friday after a court martial rejected his claim
that he was only following orders.
Some of the most graphic evidence against Graner came from Hussein Mutar, an
Iraqi who arrived at Abu Ghraib accused of car theft.
He testified how, after jumping on him, Graner and other guards ordered him
to strip, masturbate and simulate oral sex, and then photographed him and led
him back to a cell, which they had soaked with water, where he had to sleep
naked. Graner is now awaiting a sentence of up to 15 years in jail.
The jury of 10 soldiers deliberated for five hours before convicting the
reservist of assault, conspiracy, maltreatment of detainees, committing indecent
acts and dereliction of duty, as well as one battery count.
However the controversy over abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo
Bay is likely to be reignited later this month with the publication of The
Torture Papers: The Legal Road to Abu Ghraib by Cambridge University Press,
the first compendium of the so called 'torture memos' of the Bush
administration.
Compiled from material already in the public domain and other material
acquired under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, it documents the chilling
progress in the Bush administration's legal advice that allowed it to redefine
the meaning of torture so much that it felt able to use interrogation techniques
that amounted to the most serious physical abuse.
In one memo, Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee advises the legal counsel
to the president, Alberto Gonzales, that 'physical pain amounting to torture
must be equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury
such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function or even death.'
He adds that actions by interrogators 'may be cruel, inhuman or degrading,
but still not produce the pain and suffering of requisite intensity [to be
torture].'
In a new development, the New York Times revealed last week that
Congressional leaders have scrapped fresh
legal measures that would have imposed strict new restrictions on the
use of extreme interrogation techniques by U.S. intelligence interrogators.
The proposal -- which emerged in the fall-out of the Abu Ghraib scandal and
complaints over the treatment of internees at Guantanamo Bay -- had been
approved by the Senate by almost a unanimous vote.
It would have explicitly ensured that U.S. intelligence officers were covered
by the same prohibitions on the use of torture, and required the CIA and
Pentagon to report to Congress on the techniques that they were using.
The issue of the CIA's treat ment of detainees first arose after agency
officials sought legal guidance on how far its employees and contractors could
go in interrogating suspects and whether the law barred the CIA from using
extreme methods, including feigned drowning, in the interrogation of Abu
Zubaydah, the first of the al-Qaeda leaders captured by the U.S. He was
apprehended in Pakistan in early 2002.
It was in response to this reply that Bybee gave his ruling defining the
scope of torture, which was later swiftly revoked when it became public. |