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October 19th, 2009

British High Court Rejects U.S./British Cover-up of Torture Evidence

Glenn Greenwald — Salon

There is a vital development — a new ruling from the British High Court — in a story about which I’ve written many times before:  the extraordinary joint British/U.S. effort to cover up the brutal torture which Binyam Mohamed suffered at the hands of the CIA while in Pakistan and while he was “rendered” by the U.S. to various countries.  While Mohamed, a British resident, was in American custody, the CIA told British intelligence agents exactly what was done to him, and those British agents recorded what they were told in various memos.  Last year, the British High Court ruled that Mohamed — who was then at Guantanamo — had the right to obtain those documents from the British intelligence service in order to prove that statements he made to the CIA were the by-product of coercion.

The High Court’s original ruling in Mohamed’s favor contained seven paragraphs which described the torture to which Mohamed was subjected.  It has been previously reported that those paragraphs contain descriptions of abuse so brutal that not even our own American media could dispute that it constitutes “torture”:

The 25 lines edited out of the court papers contained details of how Mr Mohamed’s genitals were sliced with a scalpel and other torture methods so extreme that waterboarding, the controversial technique of simulated drowning, “is very far down the list of things they did,” the official said.

But before the decision was released, the Court decided to redact those seven paragraphs.  And in February, 2009, it issued a new ruling explaining its reason to conceal those paragraphs:  the Bush administration had issued what the Court called a “threat” that the U.S. would reduce or even eliminate intelligence-sharing with the British if those paragraphs were made public.  In other words, British officials needed a reason to tell the High Court that British national security would be jeopardized if those paragraphs were made public, and Bush officials obliged by threatening that the U.S. would withhold information about terrorist plots aimed at British citizens in the future if this information were disclosed.  As the High Court summarized in its new ruling issued yesterday (click images to enlarge):

In that February ruling, the High Court issued an angry denunciation of the U.S. for issuing these threats, but nonetheless concluded that the danger to British citizens compelled the Court to keep those paragraphs concealed:

Throughout 2009, Mohamed’s lawyers, as well as various international newspapers, repeatedly petitioned the British High Court to re-visit its decision on the ground that the Obama administration had replaced the Bush administration, and surely the anti-torture Obama would never embrace or maintain the same threat.  But, obviously in conjunction with British officials, the Obama administration took numerous steps to convey to the British High Court that they were indeed re-iterating the same Bush threats, including: 

(1) a February, 2009 statement issued by Obama’s National Security Council praising the concealment of these paragraphs and pointedly noting that the decision “preserve[s] the longstanding relationship” between the U.S. and Britain;

(2) a May, 2009 letter from the CIA emphasizing that disclosure of those paragraphs “reasonably could be expected to cause serious damage to the United Kingdom’s national security” and warning that in the event of disclosure:  ”we will have to review with the greatest care” information provided to Britain in the future (see British High Court ruling, paragraphs 48-49, 69 and 79);

(3) a June, 2009 letter from Obama’s National Security Advisor Jim Jones — in response to questions from the High Court as to whether the CIA’s threats represented the view of Obama — “emphatically affirming” that the CIA’s letter “indeed speaks on behalf of the United States government” (see British High Court ruling, paragraph 79 and 87); and,

(4) according to the British Foreign Secretary in July, Hillary Clinton “personally intervened to suppress evidence of CIA collusion in the torture” by re-iterating the threats first made by the Bush administration that intelligence-sharing might be in jeopardy if those paragraphs were made public (see British High Court ruling, paragraph 42 and 83-84).

Until yesterday, all of that caused the British High Court to continue to conceal those paragraphs based on the insistence from the British Foreign Minister that the Obama administration was re-iterating the same threats made by the Bush administration.  Yesterday, in a 38-page decision (.pdf), the Court reversed itself, and ruled that these paragraphs detailing Mohamed’s torture should be publicly disclosed.  It did so by making clear that, in essence, it simply did not believe that the U.S. would meaningfully reduce intelligence sharing; understood the Obama statements to be made at the request of British officials as a meaning of justifying ongoing concealment; interpreted the Obama administration to say only that disclosure ”could” lead to reductions in intelligence-sharing, not that it “would“; and, most of all, that there are vital public interests that outweigh the minimal risk that the U.S. would withhold evidence of a terrorist plot from Britain as punishment for disclosure . . .

Read more on Salon

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