"The US use of Syria for rendition sits uneasily with Washington's 
portrayal of the country as a pariah state."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1673958,00.html?gusrc=rss

US embassy close to admitting Syria rendition flight

· Statement contradicts ambassador's interview 
· Correction could leave Britain open to challenge

Ewen MacAskill, diplomatic editor
Tuesday December 27, 2005

Guardian

The US embassy in London was forced to issue a correction yesterday 
to an interview given by the ambassador, Robert Tuttle, in which he 
claimed America would not fly suspected terrorists to Syria, which 
has one of the worst torture records in the Middle East. A statement 
acknowledged media reports of a suspect taken from the US to Syria.
Torture is banned in the US but the CIA has been engaged in a policy 
of rendition, flying terrorist suspects to countries in the Middle 
East and other parts of the world where torture is commonplace.

Although Mr Tuttle, a Beverly Hills car dealer and major donor to 
George Bush's re-election campaign, has been ambassador in London 
only since the summer, he is proving to be accident-prone. Last month 
he vigorously denied British media reports that American forces used 
white phosphorus as a weapon in Iraq, only to be undercut by an 
admission from the Pentagon the next day.
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4442988.stm)

Mr Tuttle gave an interview to the BBC Today programme on Thursday 
for broadcast yesterday morning. On Friday, the US embassy returned 
to the BBC with a lengthy statement of clarification, which was also 
broadcast yesterday at the end of the interview.

Asked by the BBC if the US dumped suspects in Syria, Mr Tuttle 
said: "I don't think there is any evidence that there have been any 
renditions carried out in the country of Syria. There is no evidence 
of that. And I think we have to take what the secretary [Condoleezza 
Rice] says at face value. It is something very important, it is done 
very carefully and she has said we do not authorise, condone torture 
in any way, shape or form."

A US embassy spokeswoman contacted the BBC on Friday to say the 
ambassador "recognised that there had been a media report of a 
rendition to Syria but reiterated that the United States is not in a 
position to comment on specific allegations of intelligence 
activities that appear in the press".

The embassy spokeswoman "underscored that the president and secretary 
Rice have made clear that even in today's circumstances, where we are 
confronting a new kind of threat, the United States does not condone 
torture, its officials do not participate in such activities 
anywhere, and we do not hand over anyone in our custody to anywhere 
where we believe that they will be tortured. Full stop.

"We take our actions in the fight against terrorism with full respect 
for our international obligations and with full respect for the 
sovereignty of our partners."

The embassy's statement is close to an admission of at least one 
flight to Syria as it would be unlikely to embarrass the ambassador 
by referring to a media report it considered inaccurate.

Maher Arar, a Canadian software engineer of Syrian descent, says he 
was arrested in New York in 2002 and transferred to Jordan, then to 
Syria, where he said he was tortured. The US use of Syria for 
rendition sits uneasily with Washington's portrayal of the country as 
a pariah state. The Guardian has reported the CIA used British 
airports to refuel for rendition flights, which would contravene 
British law.

Asked if he knew whether the US had sought permission from Britain, 
Mr Tuttle said Ms Rice had maintained that rendition would respect 
each country's sovereignty. His reply would seem to imply the US had 
sought permission, possibly leaving the British government open to 
challenge.

Backstory

US presidents tend to treat the post of ambassador to Britain more as 
a reward for political donors and allies than a job for diplomats, 
and Robert Tuttle fits this pattern. A Beverly Hills car dealer and 
major Republican party donor, he became ambassador this summer. He 
served in Ronald Reagan's White House and was ranked as a "pioneer" 
in George Bush's re-election campaign for raising more than £100,000 
(£57,000). 


Full coverage
CIA rendition flights
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/rendition/0,16889,1662557,00.html

Case studies
06.12.2005: Seized, held, tortured: six tell same tale
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1659302,00.html





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