So here's "the second insider to publicly describe as torture the 
so-called 'enhanced interrogation techniques' used by the US." The 
first was Lawrence Wilkerson--and all due props to him.

MCM

Ex-Official: Bush Panicked After 9/11
Former State Dept. Lawyer Describes Bush Administration's Gimto 
Interrogations As Torture
Comments  412
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, March 27, 2009

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/03/27/politics/main4897315.shtml?tag=topHome

(CBS/AP)  A former State Department lawyer tells The Associated Press 
that the Bush administration panicked after 9/11 and tortured 
prisoners.

Former President George W. Bush denied anyone was tortured. But Vijay 
Padmanabhan is at least the second insider to publicly describe as 
torture the so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques" used by the 
U.S.

Padmanabhan was the department's chief counsel on Guantanamo 
litigation. He says it was "foolish" for the Bush administration to 
declare that detainees were beyond the reach of U.S. and 
international laws and the Geneva Conventions.

He told the AP Friday that "Guantanamo was one of the worst 
overreactions of the Bush administration."

Last week, another former official in the Bush State Department 
publicly criticized the administration for its Guantanamo policies.

Lawrence B. Wilkerson, who served as chief of staff to then-Secretary 
of State Colin Powell, said many detainees locked up in the prison 
camp were innocent swept up by U.S. forces unable to distinguish 
enemies from noncombatants

"There are still innocent people there," Wilkerson told The 
Associated Press. "Some have been there six or seven years."

Wilkerson, who first made the assertions in an Internet posting, told 
the AP he learned from briefings and by communicating with military 
commanders that the U.S. soon realized many Guantanamo detainees were 
innocent but nevertheless held them in hopes they could provide 
information for a "mosaic" of intelligence.

"It did not matter if a detainee were innocent. Indeed, because he 
lived in Afghanistan and was captured on or near the battle area, he 
must know something of importance," Wilkerson wrote in the blog. He 
said intelligence analysts hoped to gather "sufficient information 
about a village, a region, or a group of individuals, that dots could 
be connected and terrorists or their plots could be identified."

Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel, said vetting on the battlefield 
during the early stages of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan 
was incompetent with no meaningful attempt to discriminate "who we 
were transporting to Cuba for detention and interrogation."

Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick 
Cheney fought efforts to address the situation, Wilkerson said, 
because "to have admitted this reality would have been a black mark 
on their leadership."

Wilkerson told the AP in a telephone interview that many detainees 
"clearly had no connection to al Qaeda and the Taliban and were in 
the wrong place at the wrong time. Pakistanis turned many over for 
$5,000 a head."

Some 800 men have been held at Guantanamo since the prison opened in 
January 2002, and 240 remain. Wilkerson said two dozen are 
terrorists, including confessed Sept. 11 plotter Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed, who was transferred to Guantanamo from CIA custody in 
September 2006.
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