Roots
of Abu Ghraib in CIA techniques
50 years of refining, teaching torture
found
in interrogation manuals
By JAMES HODGE and LINDA COOPER
National Catholic Reporter
November 5, 2004
Last April when Americans found themselves looking at photographs
of U.S. soldiers abusing naked and hooded Iraqis at Abu Ghraib
prison, it's a safe bet that most didn't realize they were
looking at torture techniques refined by the Central Intelligence
Agency over the last half century.
The Bush administration worked overtime to convince Americans
that what they were seeing was the work of a "few bad apples," whom
the president said exhibited "disgraceful conduct" that "dishonored
our country and disregarded our values."
Even as late as July, the Army's inspector general, Paul
Mikolashek, claimed that "these abuses should be viewed as
what they are: unauthorized actions taken by a few individuals."
A month later, after human rights groups pointed to evidence
of much wider culpability, two government reports -- one
released by an Army panel chaired by Major Gen. George Fay,
the other by a commission headed by former Defense Secretary
James Schlesinger -- confirmed what many already sensed:
that the abuse went far beyond the seven arrested MPs.
The 171-page Fay report cites more than two-dozen military
intelligence officers, along with several military contractors.
It details some 44 incidents, including the stripping, hooding
and sodomizing of detainees; subjecting them to temperature
extremes; leading them around naked on leashes; and attaching
electrical wires to their genitals. In one case, two naked
youths were terrorized by snarling, unmuzzled military dogs
held by military personnel who competed to try to make the
teenagers defecate.
The two reports have been presented as sweeping indictments
of U.S. military leadership, but Human Rights Watch, the
largest U.S. human rights group, said the reports utterly
fail to assess the obvious: the role that official government
policies played in bringing about the horrendous abuse.
While the Schlesinger report notes administration policies
-- such as the Aug. 1, 2002, Justice Department opinion that
redefined torture as pain "equivalent in intensity to the
pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ
failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death" --
it fails to evaluate whether the policies played a role in
contributing to the abuses.
The Schlesinger panel, whose members were handpicked by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, "seems to go out of its
way not to find any relationship between Rumsfeld's approval
of interrogation techniques designed to inflict pain and
humiliation and the widespread mistreatment and torture of
detainees in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo," said
Reed Brody, special counsel with Human Rights Watch.
Not only do they leave the dots unconnected, but they fail
to make critical links to the past, said Alfred McCoy, professor
of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and author
of "Closer Than Brothers," a study of the impact of the CIA's
torture methods on the Philippine military.
In an interview with NCR and in his own writings,
McCoy described the photos at Abu Ghraib as snapshots of "CIA
torture techniques that have metastasized over the last 50
years like an undetected cancer inside the U.S. intelligence
community."
Throughout the 1950s and early '60s, the CIA -- the lead
agency doing interrogations at Abu Ghraib -- financed and
conducted secret research on coercion and human consciousness,
McCoy said. "The scale of that research should not be minimized.
By the late '50s, it reached a billion dollars a year. The
agency was providing the majority of the funding for a half-dozen
leading psychology departments."
The research ranged from using electric shock, to giving
LSD to unsuspecting subjects, to employing sensory deprivation.
It was the latter experiments that bore fruit, he said, producing
a revolutionary new psychological torture paradigm that was
superior to various physical methods that had been used for
2,000 years, from ancient Rome's hot irons to the medieval
rack and wheel.
"People will say anything to stop pain," McCoy said. "The
information extracted is inherently unreliable. And that's
the problem the CIA solved with these psychological methods."
The basic techniques -- the use of stress positions, sensory
deprivation and sexual humiliation -- are aimed at making
victims feel responsible for their own pain and suffering.
But McCoy added that while it appears less abusive than physical
torture, the psychological torture paradigm causes deep psychological
damage to both victims and their interrogators, who can become
capable of unspeakable physical cruelties.
The results of the CIA torture experiments were codified
in 1963 in a secret manual known as "KUBARK Counterintelligence
Interrogation." Four years later, the CIA was operating some
40 interrogation centers in Vietnam as part of its Phoenix
Program, McCoy said. Eventually the CIA's psychological methods
were spread worldwide through the U.S. Agency for International
Development's Public Safety program and U.S. Army Mobile
Training Teams.
In 1983, the KUBARK manual provided the model for the CIA's "Human
Resource Exploitation Training Manual," whose methods were
used by the brutal, U.S.-trained Honduran Battalion 3-16
during the tenure of then-U.S. ambassador to Honduras John
Negroponte, now ambassador to Iraq.
About the same time, the CIA compiled the "Psychological
Operations in Guerrilla Warfare" manual for the Nicaraguan
contra commandos, then seeking to overthrow the Sandinista
government with the aid of the Reagan administration.
That's not all. Six manuals, also linked to a CIA program,
were used at the U.S. Army's School of the Americas and distributed
across Latin America by Army Mobile Training Teams in the
1980s. They advocated everything from executions of guerrillas
to extortion, coercion and false imprisonment.
A 1992 Pentagon investigation, whose findings were kept
a secret of state under then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney,
said the six manuals "evolved from lesson plans used in an
intelligence course at [the School of the Americas]. They
were based, in part, on old material dating back to the 1960s
from the Army's Foreign Intelligence Assistance program,
titled 'Project X.' This material had been retained in the
files of the Army intelligence school at Fort Huachuca, Ariz."
Project X documents, which have been linked to the CIA's
Phoenix Program, were destroyed in 1992 by the Defense Department,
but a telling reference to Fort Huachuca is buried in the
Fay report on Abu Ghraib. A five-member U.S. Army Mobile
Training Team from Fort Huachuca was sent to the Iraq prison,
the report says, "to conduct an overall assessment of interrogation
operations, present training and provide advice and assistance."
One of the mobile team members, identified as SFC Walters,
told the Fay panel that he "may have contributed to the abuse
at Abu Ghraib." When questioned by a military contract employee
for ideas on how to get the prisoners to talk, the report
says, "Walters related several stories about the use of dogs
as an inducement."
Walters also gave advice about how detainees are most susceptible
during the first few hours after capture: "The prisoners
are captured by soldiers, taken from their familiar surroundings,
blindfolded and put into a truck and brought to this place
(Abu Ghraib); and then they are pushed down a hall with guards
barking orders and thrown into a cell, naked; and that not
knowing what was going to happen or what the guards might
do caused them extreme fear."
But the report concludes that it "is unclear and likely
impossible to definitively determine" the extent to which "word
of mouth" techniques were passed to the interrogators in
Abu Ghraib by the Mobile Training Team from Fort Huachuca.
It also proved impossible for the Fay and Schlesinger panels
to determine the extent of the CIA's role because neither
had sufficient access to the agency. Both, however, pointed
fingers in its direction.
The Fay report notes that the CIA's detention and interrogation
practices "led to a loss of accountability, abuse, reduced
interagency cooperation, and an unhealthy mystique that further
poisoned the atmosphere at Abu Ghraib." It also states that
CIA officers held "Ghost Detainees" -- including an Iraqi
citizen later found dead in a shower, handcuffed with a sandbag
over his head, and "three Saudi national medical personnel
working for the coalition in Iraq" who were held under false
names. The Army allowed the CIA to imprison unidentified
and unaccounted-for detainees, thereby circumventing the "reporting
requirements under the Geneva Conventions."
Likewise, the Schlesinger panel found that the "CIA's detention
and interrogation practices contributed to a loss of accountability
at Abu Ghraib," but it claims it did not have a mandate or "sufficient
access to CIA information" to pursue the matter.
Fay concludes that techniques such as "removing clothing,
isolating people for long periods of time, using stress positions,
exploiting fear of dogs and implementing sleep and light
deprivation" were "new ideas" that some U.S. interrogators
at Abu Ghraib learned while working in Afghanistan and the
U.S. Navy base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
The methods, however, are anything but "new." An examination
of CIA interrogation manuals shows that they date back before
the Vietnam War, supporting charges by human rights advocates
that Abu Ghraib is no aberration. What is new is that photographic
evidence became public.
Interrogation manual
The authors of the CIA's 1963 KUBARK interrogation manual
-- a guide on the art of using fear, threats and pain to
cause debility or psychological regression -- were fully
aware of the illegality of their methods: "KUBARK's lack
of executive authority abroad and its operational need for
facelessness make it particularly vulnerable to attack in
the courts or the press."
The Fay report noted that the death of the Iraqi found in
the shower remained unsolved due partly to the fact that "CIA
officers operating at Abu Ghraib used alias' [sic] and never
revealed their true names."
The KUBARK manual notes that prior approval "must be obtained
for the interrogation of any source against his will and
under any of the following circumstances: If bodily harm
is to be inflicted" or "if medical, chemical or electrical
methods or materials are to be used."
Before using an interrogation site, "it should be studied
carefully. ... The electric current should be known in advance,
so that transformers and other modifying devices will be
on hand if needed."
It notes that psychological rather than physical debility
will break a suspect sooner: "The threat of coercion usually
weakens or destroys resistance more effectively than coercion
itself. The threat to inflict pain can trigger fears more
damaging than the immediate sensation of pain." Elsewhere,
it notes, "Intense pain is quite likely to produce false
confessions, concocted as a means of escaping from distress."
The manual, which cites numerous psychological studies and
says all detainees should be given a psychological assessment,
contains descriptions of different personality types and
which techniques to use to interrogate them.
"If a coercive technique is to be used, or if two or more
are to be employed jointly, they should be ... carefully
selected to match his personality."
"Persons with intense guilt feelings," it advises, "may
cease resistance and cooperate if punished in some way because
of the gratification induced by punishment."
All of the basic techniques used in Iraq are found in the
manual's pages: sexual humiliation, the use of stress positions
and sensory deprivation.
The manual first advises that a suspect's clothes should
be taken. It later notes, "In the simple torture situation
the contest is one between the individual and his tormenter.
When the individual is told to stand at attention for long
periods, an intervening factor is introduced. The immediate
source of pain is not the interrogator but the victim himself."
The manual lists the principal coercive techniques of interrogation
as "deprivation of sensory stimuli through solitary confinement
or similar methods, threats and fear, debility, pain, heightened
suggestibility and hypnosis, narcosis [use of drugs] and
induced regression."
The response to coercion, it says, typically contains "at
least three important elements: debility, dependency and
dread."
"Disrupting normal time patterns like sleep and food" can
cause disorientation, fear, helplessness and regression. "Deprivation
of stimuli induces regression by depriving the subject's
mind of contact with an outer world," noting that inducing
regression will dissolve resistance and create dependence.
"Results produced only after weeks or months of imprisonment
in an ordinary cell can be duplicated in hours or days in
a cell which has no light ... which is soundproofed, in which
odors are eliminated, etc. An environment still more subject
to control, such as water tank or iron lung, is even more
effective."
The manual also suggests threatening a detainee suspected
of feigning mental illness by telling him that he might need "a
series of electric shock treatments or a frontal lobotomy."
The 1963 KUBARK manual -- and its descendant, the "Human
Resource Exploitation Training Manual 1983" -- were both
released in the 1990s with numerous deletions after The
Baltimore Sun threatened the CIA with a lawsuit. The
newspaper sought the manuals in connection with its 1995
series about the CIA-trained Honduran Battalion 3-16, a secret
army unit whose torture methods mirrored those in the manuals.
Honduras, which shares borders with Nicaragua and El Salvador,
was used by the Reagan-Bush administration in the 1980s as
a base to fight Salvadoran rebels and to topple the Nicaraguan
Sandinista government with the CIA-trained contra rebels.
Washington's key man in Honduras was Gen. Gustavo Alvárez,
a graduate of the U.S. Army's School of the Americas, who
created 3-16 with the CIA's help and who worked closely with
U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte, whose reports gave the impression
that the Honduran military respected human rights.
However, Battalion 3-16 atrocities were detailed in a 1988 New
York Times story, headlined "Testifying to Torture." Florencio
Caballero, a 3-16 interrogator who later fled to Canada,
told the Times that the CIA trained him and two
dozen others in psychological methods. They were taught "to
study the fears and weaknesses of a prisoner. Make him
stand up, don't let him sleep, keep him naked and in isolation,
put rats and cockroaches in his cell, give him bad food,
serve him dead animals, throw cold water on him, change
the temperature."
Caballero said the CIA taught that psychological coercion
was more effective than physical torture, but that interrogations
often degenerated into physical torture. He told of a 24-year-old
woman named Ines Murillo who was stripped, starved, deprived
of sleep, beaten, burned, electrically shocked and sexually
molested.
Fay's Abu Ghraib report makes the same point about dehumanizing
interrogations degenerating: "What started as nakedness and
humiliation, stress and physical training, carried over into
sexual and physical assaults."
Human Rights Watch makes a similar point, saying that U.S.
forces operating in Iraq, Guantánamo and Afghanistan
have "used interrogation techniques including hooding, stripping
detainees naked, subjecting them to extremes of heat, cold,
noise and light, and depriving them of sleep -- in violation
of the Geneva Conventions and the Convention against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.
This apparently routine infliction of pain, discomfort and
humiliation has expanded in all too many cases into vicious
beatings, sexual degradation, sodomy, near drowning and near
asphyxiation. Detainees have died under questionable circumstances
while incarcerated."
The 1983 CIA Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
states, "While we do not stress the use of coercive techniques,
we do want to make you aware of them and the proper way to
use them." It states that if they are to be used, they always
require "prior HQS approval."
The Schlesinger report says U.S. interrogators at Guantánamo
were required to get approval from Rumsfeld or the U.S. Southern
Command before using certain methods such as hooding, stripping,
30-day isolations, stress positions and playing on a detainee's
phobias.
The 1983 manual advises that a subject should be arrested
in the early morning when the subject "least expects it" and
when it would cause "intense feelings of shock, insecurity
and psychological stress." He should be "rudely awakened
and immediately blindfolded and handcuffed" and transported "by
circuitous route." Excessive force should not be used because "if
they break the subject's jaw, he will not be able to answer
questions."
Similarly, the Fay report on Abu Ghraib notes, "It became
a common practice for maneuver elements to round up large
quantities of Iraqi personnel in the general vicinity of
a specified target as a cordon and capture technique. Some
operations were conducted at night, resulting in some detainees
being delivered to collection points only wearing night clothes
or under clothes."
The 1983 manual advises that the subject should be "completely
stripped and told to take a shower. Blindfold remains in
place while showering and guard watches throughout. Subject
is given a thorough medical examination, including all body
cavities."
The Fay report noted that nudity likely "contributed to
an escalating 'de-humanization' of the detainees and set
the stage for additional and more severe abuses to occur." Meanwhile,
Dr. Robert Jay Lifton, writing in the July issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine , said that evidence is
mounting "that U.S. doctors, nurses and medics have been
complicit in torture and other illegal procedures in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay." Doctors, he said,
have "turned over prisoners' medical records to interrogators
who could use them to exploit the prisoners' weaknesses or
vulnerabilities."
The "exploitation" manual goes on to say the interrogation
room is the "battleground" where the interrogator "has total
control over the subject" and can manipulate the environment "to
create unpleasant or intolerable situations to disrupt patterns
of time, space and sensory perception."
The Fay report blames many of the abuses at Abu Ghraib on
misinterpretations of a paragraph in an "outdated" 1987 Army
field manual, which reads in part: "The interrogator should
appear to be the one who controls all aspects of the interrogation
to include the lighting, heating and configuration of the
interrogation room, as well as the food, shelter and clothing
given to the source."
The 1983 interrogation manual states the subject should
be placed in a soundproof cell and not allowed to relax.
Furthermore, "there should be no built-in toilet facilities," and
the subject should "either be given a bucket or escorted
by a guard to the latrine. The guard stays at his side the
entire time."
Cells should have windows that can be "covered to disrupt
the sense of night and day."
"Heat, air and light should be externally controlled." Interrogators
should disrupt the subject's patterns of eating and sleeping. "Meals
and sleep should be granted irregularly" to disorient the
subject and destroy his capacity to resist. "If successful," a
handwritten note adds, "it causes serious psychological damage
and therefore is a form of torture."
The handwritten note was added in the mid-1980s after another
CIA manual was made public and caused a public fury. Other
revisions have also been written in, but the original text
is still easily readable.
The manual also states, "Many psychologists consider the
threat of inducing debility to be more effective than debility
itself."
Like KUBARK, the 1983 exploitation manual lists various
personality types and how to deal with them during questioning.
It advises making a psychological assessment to determine
which personality category the subject fits in, noting "any
psychological abnormalities ... what his potential vulnerabilities
are. How he views his potential for surviving his situation."
The subject must be convinced that the interrogator "controls
his ultimate destiny." The number of variations in techniques,
the manual says, "is limited only by the experience and imagination" of
the interrogator.
"The torture situation is an external conflict, a contest
between the subject and his tormentor. The pain which is
being inflicted upon him from outside himself may actually
intensify his will to resist. On the other hand, pain which
he feels he is inflicting upon himself is more likely to
sap his resistance." One example given was requiring the
subject "to maintain rigid positions, such as standing at
attention or sitting on a stool for long periods of time."
In a section named "Coercive Techniques," interrogators
are advised not to make empty threats. "If a subject refuses
to comply once a threat has been made, it must be carried
out. If it is not carried out, then subsequent threats will
also prove ineffective."
"The purpose of all coercive techniques is to induce psychological
regression in the subject." However, if "the debility-dependency-dread
state is unduly prolonged, the subject may sink into a defensive
apathy from which it is hard to arouse him." The symptoms
most commonly associated with solitary confinement and sensory
deprivation are "hallucinations and delusions."
In an ambiguous note, interrogators are advised to ask themselves
a cautionary question: If the subject is released, "will
he be able to cause embarrassment by going to the newspapers
or courts?"
The CIA developed the "Psychological Operations in Guerrilla
Warfare" manual to help train Nicaraguan contras, whom the
Reagan administration armed and financed in an effort to
overthrow the Sandinista government in the 1980s.
Unlike the 1963 KUBARK and 1983 interrogation manuals, the
CIA contra guide deals not with counterinsurgency measures,
but with creating an insurgent force. Nevertheless, it is
noteworthy in that it sheds light on the Reagan administration's
use of an abusive proxy army, its snubbing of international
law, and again on John Negroponte, who was the ambassador
to Honduras when the contras used Honduras as a staging ground
to attack Nicaragua.
The manual, which The Associated Press exposed in a 1984
story, advocates that contras assassinate Nicaraguan officials,
seize power through acts of torture and terrorism, and create "martyrs" by
placing their supporters in "confrontation with the authorities,
in order to bring about uprisings or shootings, which will
cause the death of one or more persons, who would become
the martyrs."
The training manual, along with the CIA's mining of Nicaraguan
harbors, played a part in a ruling by the International Court
of Justice that the United States had broken international
law, should pay reparations and stop its war against Nicaragua.
But the Reagan administration refused to recognize the court's
jurisdiction.
The current Bush administration has adopted the same stance
toward the International Criminal Court, refusing to join
the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal, partly out
of fear that the court could prosecute U.S. military personnel
and their superiors. In addition, the Bush administration
has withheld military aid and training to nations that refuse
to sign "Article 98 waivers," agreements stating that they
will not extradite U.S. citizens accused of war crimes to
the Hague for prosecution by thecourt.
SOA manuals
The six manuals used at the U.S. Army School of the Americas
and distributed across Latin America by Mobile Training Teams
were used from 1982 to 1991, throughout most of the Reagan
and Bush administrations.
They carried the titles "Handling of Sources," "Revolutionary
War and Communist Ideology," "Terrorism and the Urban Guerrilla," "Interrogation," "Combat
Intelligence," and "Counterintelligence."
A 1992 Pentagon investigation of the manuals found that
they advocated executions of guerrillas, extortion, physical
abuse and coercion. The findings were kept secret until September
1996 when the Pentagon disclosed them, fearing that Congressman
Joseph Kennedy had obtained a copy of the manuals.
Kennedy, who conducted a five-year campaign to close the
school, told the media later that "according to the Pentagon's
own excerpts, School of the Americas students were advised
to imprison those from whom they were seeking information;
to 'involuntarily' obtain information from those sources
-- in other words, torture them; to arrest their parents;
to use 'motivation by fear'; pay bounties for enemy dead;
execute opponents; subvert the press; and use torture, blackmail
and even injections of truth serum to obtain information."
The "Revolutionary War" manual offers perhaps the most timely
tie-in: maintaining that an insurgent "does not have a legal
status as a prisoner of war under the Geneva Convention." The
current Bush administration has tried to reclassify POWs
held at Guantánamo as "unlawful combatants" to strip
them of protections under the Geneva Conventions.
Another manual advised counter-intelligence agents to use
fear and false imprisonment. Up to 90 percent of the detainees
at Abu Ghraib were falsely detained and had no connection
whatever with terrorism, according to the International Committee
of the Red Cross.
The School of the Americas, renamed in 2000 the Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, has produced
hundreds of human rights abusers, which the Pentagon has
repeatedly called "a few bad apples." Its 1992 Pentagon investigation
also claimed that the manuals had been compiled from outdated
instructional material, an argument also made by the Fay
panel in its Abu Ghraib report.
The 1992 Pentagon report on the School of the Americas called
it "incredible" that the use of the manuals "evaded the established
system of doctrinal controls." Nevertheless, the investigators "could
find no evidence that this was a deliberate and orchestrated
attempt to violate Department of Defense or Army policies."
Kennedy, who did his own investigation, said the manuals
were assembled at Fort Huachuca under the supervision of
Maj. Richard L. Montgomery, who had worked in the CIA's Phoenix
program in Vietnam.
Despite the Pentagon's insistence that the material was
not properly reviewed, Kennedy said, the training material
was sent to the Pentagon for review, and it was returned
to the School of the Americas approved and unchanged.
A similar defense has been mounted for the other interrogation
manuals. The Reagan administration, for example, claimed
that the CIA's contra manual had not been officially approved
and was the work of an "overzealous freelancer" under contract
with the CIA.
It's the photographic evidence that separates the current
scandal from those in the past.
"We were caught red-handed," said Peter Kornbluh, a senior
analyst for the National Security Archive. "I think the types
of abuses and human rights atrocities committed by our allies
like Augusto Pinochet had a degree of separation for the
American public. But this scandal eliminates that distance.
The abuse was not only committed directly by the U.S. military
but it was captured on digital camera."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When seeking comment on the evidence that the torture techniques
used at Abu Ghraib are not new, but have a 50-year history, NCR first
talked to a Sgt. Watson at the Defense Department's press
office.
Watson referred the call to Lt. Col. Barry Venable, who
said he couldn't comment, that he was "not too familiar with
the whole detainee operation." Venable turned the call over
to his colleague, Lt. Col. John Skinner, who said he was
not an interrogation expert and couldn't speak to what's
been used in the past. Skinner, in turn, recommended calling
the U.S. Army, which he said is "the executive agent for
detention operations" and could provide a historical look
at what "they might have used in previous conflicts."
Skinner suggested NCR call Army public affairs
officer Dov Schwartz. Upon hearing the question about the
history of the techniques, Schwartz referred us to Skinner.
When told that Skinner had just sent the call to him, Schwarz
then said to call Lt. Col. Barry Johnson in Iraq.
When asked if Johnson would know the history, Schwartz replied: "I
don't know if any of us are going to know the history, but
he's the best one I'm going to be able to give you."
Several calls to Johnson each ended in a recording that
said, "The customer you have dialed is unavailable." There
was no voice mail to leave a message.
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National Catholic Reporter
November 5, 2004
Photos 'speak volumes,' says torture victim
By Linda Cooper and James Hodge
"If you live through this, no one will believe you. No one
will listen. No one will care."
For years, the torturer's words haunted Sr. Dianna Ortiz,
an Ursuline missionary in Guatemala when she was kidnapped
in 1989, blindfolded, burned with cigarettes and repeatedly
raped. U.S. government officials tried to discredit her.
Others refused to believe that her torture came at the hands
of Guatemalan security forces operating under the direction
of an American.
Until the release of pictures showing U.S. military personnel
torturing Iraqis at Abu Ghraib prison, Ortiz told NCR ,
many Americans were skeptical about their government's being
involved in torture. "But photographs speak volumes, they're
really worth a thousand words."
When she first saw the photographs of hooded Iraqis being
sexually humiliated, of vicious dogs within inches of the
faces of the detainees, Ortiz started reliving her own torture. "When
all these photographs came out," said Ortiz, now the head
of Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition International, "I
can't tell you how many survivors, myself included, traveled
back in time."
"It's sad, but what we see in Iraq is not an aberration," said
Maryknoll Fr. Roy Bourgeois, founder of a movement seeking
to close the U.S. Army's School of the Americas, which has
not only graduated hundreds of human rights abusers, but
used manuals advocating torture and assassination. "Hopefully,
this is a teachable moment, when more Americans will be open
to learning about what their government has been doing for
years in their name with their tax dollars."
Like Ortiz, Bourgeois was once abducted by Latin American
security forces trained and backed by the United States.
The priest was a missionary in Bolivia in the 1970s during
the dictatorship of Gen. Hugo Banzer, who had overthrown
the government and operated torture cells around the country.
Bourgeois had earned the ire of the regime for organizing
base Christian communities and visiting political prisoners
at the request of the local bishop. Banzer's secret police
abducted him one Sunday afternoon and took him blindfolded
to a cemetery. When he refused to provide the names of activists
working for reforms, he was beaten and struck in the stomach
with a rifle butt. One of the interrogators put a revolver
to his head and kept shouting, "I hate priests." Bourgeois
survived only because Maryknoll superiors were able to get
the bishop to intercede.
Both Ortiz and Bourgeois were later shocked to learn that
School of the Americas, now known as the Western Hemisphere
Institute for Security Cooperation, had links to Latin American
generals related to their abductions. The U.S. Army school
had invited Guatemalan Gen. Hector Gramajo to speak at its
1991 graduation ceremony six months after Ortiz and 11 Guatemalans
sued him under the Torture Victim Protection Act. Banzer
was elected to the school's hall of fame.
Bourgeois had an awakening in 1993 when the U.N. Truth Commission
on El Salvador released its report naming the officers responsible
for the assassinations of Archbishop Oscar Romero, four U.S.
churchwomen, and six Jesuit priests. School of the Americas
graduates lay behind each of those killings, in addition
to the massacre in El Mozote, El Salvador, where hundreds
of innocent peasants were slaughtered.
Not only has the U.S. Army trained brutal foreign militaries,
Bourgeois said, but the CIA has helped set up foreign intelligence
agencies like Chile's DINA, which was well-known for its
use of torture during the Pinochet dictatorship and was headed
by School of the Americas graduate Manuel Contreras.
What's more, he said, the U.S. government presented the
prestigious Legion of Merit award to the two Salvadoran generals,
José Guillermo García and Carlos Eugenio Vides
Casanova, cited by the U.N. Truth Commission for their roles
in the rapes and murders of the four U.S. churchwomen and
later found responsible in a U.S. court for the torture of
three Salvadorans, including Dr. Juan Romagoza Arce, who
was stabbed, given electric shock, strung up by ropes and
burned with cigarettes.
For Ortiz, the smell of cigarettes can trigger memories
of being burned more than 111 times with cigarettes. She
still sleeps with the light on.
"No one ever fully recovers from torture," Ortiz said. "It
just doesn't go away." That is the message she wants to get
out at a time so many are arguing for its use in the so-called
war on terror. |