Much ado about nothing.

 

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<http://spiegel.ivwbox.de/cgi-bin/ivw/CP/1007;/international/spiegel/c-676/r
-3393/p-druckversion/a-387185/be-PB64-L2FydGlrZWw_3/pay-backoffice__/szwprof
il-1007?r=http%3A//service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0%2C1518%2
C387185%2C00.html&d=24534.531130124964> 


DER SPIEGEL 48/2005 - November 28, 2005 
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,387185,00.html 

CIA Flights in Europe
 
The Hunt for Hercules N8183J

By Georg Mascolo, Hans-Jürgen Schlamp and Holger Stark 

A bitter debate over torture has erupted in Europe. Washington is believed
to have used EU countries as transit points for moving terrorism suspects to
clandestine locations where they may have been tortured. The Council of
Europe and other organizations are now demanding answers -- from the US and
European countries who looked the other way. 


A solitary confinement cage at Iraq's notorious Abu Ghraib prison.


AP

A solitary confinement cage at Iraq's notorious Abu Ghraib prison.

Dick Marty, a liberal-minded Swiss citizen with a gray beard, glasses and a
high forehead, knows what it's like to face a powerful opponent. As a
prosecutor, he once successfully prosecuted the Mafia. His current adversary
is just as intimidating and perhaps even more secretive than the Mafia. It's
the United States Central Intelligence Agency, which, in an effort to back
the White House, has responded to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks by kidnapping
terrorism suspects and presumably abusing them in secret prisons. Now the
Council of Europe has hired Marty to find out which European countries may
have helped the US agents achieve their objectives.

Last Friday, the Swiss prosecutor made it clear that he has no compunctions
about picking a fight with the world's sole remaining superpower. A
self-confident Marty filed a request with the European Union's satellite
center in Torrejón, Spain for satellite photographs from the past three
years. He hopes to use the images to determine whether the alleged secret
prisons did in fact exist, in countries like Poland and Romania. He also
contacted the European aviation authority, Eurocontrol, asking for data on
the flight movements of 31 aircraft suspected of having served as CIA
shuttles for the transport of prisoners or abducted terrorism suspects.

Marty's mission touches on a hot-button issue -- and it's the first serious
attempt to investigate and expose an arbitrary system Washington has
allegedly used as one of its most effective weapons in combating terrorism.
The US agents have used torture-like methods that many experts believe
violate international law to extract statements from suspected members of
al-Qaida. Until now, Washington's European allies have consistently looked
the other way when it came to this notorious aspect of the worldwide
counterterrorism effort.

A regular CIA gulag appears to have been created in recent years, with many
prisoners kept in Morocco, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and various central Asian
nations, places where the CIA was given access to the prisoners at all
times. Alvaro Gil-Robles, Commissioner for Human Rights at the Council of
Europe, also claims to have seen a suspicious-looking prison camp at Camp
Bondsteel, an American base in Kosovo.

But the highest-ranking al-Qaida members are apparently kept moving with a
small group of CIA interrogation experts, like an invisible caravan, from
one of the so-called black sites to another. Outrage over claims that some
of these secret prisons may be located at former military bases in Eastern
Europe triggered the Council of Europe's investigation.

Turning a blind eye to human rights violations?

In the past, the Europeans turned a blind eye to the Americans' human rights
violations. After all, Islamist terror was considered more dangerous and,
more importantly, was being committed by a common enemy. But now European
politicians have had enough.

Marty secretly hopes for trans-Atlantic cooperation, and he may well get it.
A heated debate has broken out in the United States over whether the West's
leading power can resort to torture when it believes its national security
is under threat. The Bush administration's draconian methods have met with
sharp resistance in the US Senate. US President George W. Bush, for his
part, has threatened to veto an amendment that would require the CIA -- like
any other US government agency -- to use only methods allowed under
international law to extract information from its prisoners. Vice President
Dick Cheney's vehement efforts to obstruct the amendment even prompted
former CIA Director Stansfield Turner to angrily label Cheney a "vice
president for torture."

Another amendment the US Congress recently approved would give the US
government 60 days to present a detailed report on the secret CIA prisons,
or black sites. Specifically, Congress wants information on both the
locations of these sites and all the interrogation methods allegedly used
there. In other words, it appears that the US Congress and Swiss prosecutor
Marty are both urgently seeking the same information.

The Council of Europe's investigator already submitted a discreet request to
the office of Democratic Senator John Kerry, who proposed the amendment,
asking for information on the outcome of the report. Meanwhile, however,
Marty can at least look forward to receiving informal help. In light of the
heated debate over torture in Washington, the prospects of keeping the
highly confidential report under wraps are slim.

The White House is increasingly coming under fire, especially in light of
the difficulties Bush is having in convincing his fellow Americans that he
is, in fact, winning the global war against terrorism. Indeed, every attempt
on the part of the administration to suppress the revolt in the Senate
against White House-sanctioned interrogation practices has so far failed.

The US does not engage in torture, but rather "unique and innovative"
methods of prisoner interrogation, explains CIA Director Porter Goss. But
what these methods entail has since become public knowledge. Under the
policy, blows to the face and the abdomen are allowed, as is the apparently
routine practice of forcing prisoners to stand for 40-hour periods in
ice-cold cells while periodically spraying them with cold water. In an
especially repugnant practice known as waterboarding, the prisoner is made
to believe that he is drowning. "We must never simply fight evil with evil,"
says Republican Senator John McCain, himself a torture victim during the
Vietnam War. "It will kill us."

European governments in the hot seat

The investigations in Europe are also acquiring a new sense of urgency,
prompted by an official investigation request filed by the Council of
Europe, which arrived in European capitals last Tuesday and has made
officials nervous in several member states, including Germany. In a
questionnaire accompanying the request, Terry Davis, the Secretary General
of the Council of Europe, asks for information on the "activities of foreign
services" on German soil and demands an investigation into the possible
abduction of suspected al-Qaida activists. The request also includes
questions about prisoner "transport by air."

The German government will have some explaining to do, especially when it
comes to charges that the German authorities turned a blind eye to the
Americans having used their military base in Frankfurt am Main, which was
just closed in October, Berlin's Schönefeld Airport and the US military base
in Ramstein essentially as European transfer stations for their secret
prisoner transports.

British journalist Stephen Grey, who claims to have a list of the flight
movements of CIA aircraft, says he has discovered 210 suspicious flights in
England alone. In January 2003, the Austrian air force even sent up two
fighter jets to check on a suspicious Hercules flying under registration
number N8183J. An investigation later revealed that the plane had taken off
from the Rhine-Main Airbase in Frankfurt and was operated by Tepper
Aviation, which is considered a CIA front company.

The German government has long been unofficially aware of such episodes. But
it too has no knowledge of what or who was actually being transported on the
aircraft. Nevertheless, Berlin has yet to follow the lead of the Danish
government, which insisted that the Pentagon discontinue flights in Danish
airspace that are "incompatible with international conventions."

The Council of Europe also wants to know how the German government intends
to ensure that such activities on the part of "foreign agencies" are
monitored in the future -- and "to what extent domestic law provides for a
suitable response to such violations of the law," especially when they
relate to the "curtailment of liberty by foreign agencies."

In short, the Council of Europe wants to know what European governments
intend to do about CIA agents being allowed to fly their prisoners across
Europe with impunity. The Germans won't be the only ones with some
explaining to do by Feb. 21, the deadline for all member states to return
the questionnaire. The truth is that hardly any US ally in Europe has
sufficiently met its obligation to comply with the requirements of the
European Convention on Human Rights, which prohibits any form of torture.

In Germany, there is at least one documented case of the CIA
<http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,341636,00.html
>  abducting a German citizen -- Khaled el-Masri from the southern city of
Neu-Ulm.

The story of Masri, who was abducted and taken to Macedonia in late 2003
and, in Jan. 2004, was flown to Afghanistan, is one of the first cases to
expose the secret CIA program.

Masri, who has had a German passport for the past decade, was interrogated
for months in a prison in Afghanistan, where he was likely tortured and,
after no evidence was found to incriminate him, was secretly flown back to
Europe in late May 2004. The case has drawn the attention of both the German
and the Spanish authorities, because the aircraft used to transport Masri, a
Boeing 737 with registration number N313P, was owned by a company with ties
to the CIA and made a stop on the Spanish island of Mallorca.

The German government must have known about the allegations by no later than
June 2004, when Masri's attorney, Manfred Gnjidic wrote to then Foreign
Minister Joschka Fischer and the Federal Chancellery. The authorities
reacted as they often do in embarrassing situations, using behind-the-scenes
diplomacy in an attempt to make the problem go away.

At first, agents with Germany's Federal Intelligence Service (BND), sent a
discreet inquiry to their US counterparts with whom they normally enjoy a
close working relationship. The reply was succinct: it was a mistake, the
kind that happens now and then.

Then, in Feb. 2005, then Interior Minister Otto Schily flew to Washington
and met with CIA Director Goss. Schily demanded an explanation and an
assurance that the abductions would cease. But this time Schily, otherwise
known for his good relationship with the Bush administration, came away more
or less empty-handed.

In a similar case, the Italian Justice Ministry has attempted to exert
pressure on its own judiciary. Justice Minister Roberto Castelli publicly
chastised a Milan public prosecutor who caused trouble for Castelli by
filing an extradition request for 22 CIA agents. Prosecutor Armando Spataro
said that in February 2003 the US agents kidnapped Imam Abu Omar in broad
daylight in Milan, placed him on a Lear jet operated by CIA airline Tepper
Aviation, and sent him to Egypt via the US airbase in Ramstein, Germany. If
Castelli sends the extradition request to Washington, the move will anger
the Bush administration. But if he refuses, he'll irritate many Italians. To
avert either outcome, Castelli first plans to meticulously examine the
prosecutor's petition for signs of "leftist anti-Americanism."

Two Eastern European countries are coming under even more pressure than
Germany or Italy: Poland and Romania, both countries that apparently served
as temporary destinations for the CIA's secret al-Qaida transports. Insiders
in Washington claim that the two countries also contained secret black
sites.

The issue is especially worrisome to the Romanians. If investigator Marty,
currently making inquiries in Bucharest, finds evidence of the existence of
a secret US prison, the country's planned accession to the EU in 2007 could
be in jeopardy. But all other Europeans who, despite not having actively
supported the prisoner transports, looked the other way for too long will
hardly be able to avoid coming clean. "If it becomes apparent that flying
torture chambers are circling over Europe," threatens Martin Schulz, Social
Democratic group leader in the European Parliament, "there will be no
getting around an official inquiry."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan
 

  _____  

© DER SPIEGEL 48/2005
All Rights Reserved
Reproduction only allowed with the permission of SPIEGELnet GmbH

  _____  



More about this issue:


Related SPIEGEL ONLINE links:

  


· 

The Forgotten Prisoner: A Tale of Extraordinary Renditions and
Double-Standards (11/21/2005)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,386033,00.html
<http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,386033,00.html
> 

 


· 

Terror and Diplomacy: The US Stands Accused of Kidnapping (02/14/2005)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,341636,00.html
<http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,341636,00.html
> 

  _____  

 
<http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,grossbild-3850
05-387185,00.html> Graphic: Suspected CIA terror flights in Europe




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