The CIA and the US Senate Intelligence Committee prefer to avoid the word “torture,” preferring euphemisms like “enhanced interrogation techniques” and “rendition, detention and interrogation program.” Many of the techniques employed by the CIA after capturing high-value targets have been documented in CIA memos released by US President Barack Obama’s administration and in numerous leaks, including a report written by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
Here are some of the techniques known to have been used, and the effects on detainees:
‧ Rectal feeding and rehydration
Illustration: Mountain People
The torture report contains new information on the CIA’s use of rectal feeding and rehydration. At least five detainees were subjected to the process, the report states. The report details how accused USS Cole bomber Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri was placed “in a forward-facing position [Trendlenberg] with head lower than torso,” whilst undergoing rectal feeding.
Another detainee, Majid Khan, a legal resident of the US and accused confidant of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, was also subjected to rectal feeding. According to a CIA cable released in the report, his “‘lunch tray’ consisting of hummus, pasta with sauce, nuts and raisins was ‘pureed and rectally infused.’”
Mohammed was also subjected to rectal rehydration “without a determination of medical need.”
Mohammed’s chief interrogator described use of the process as emblematic of their “total control over the detainee.”
‧ Waterboarding
The process of suffocation by water involves strapping the individual to a tilted board, with legs above their head, placing a cloth over their face, covering their nose and mouth. Water is then poured continuously over the cloth to prevent breathing, simulate drowning and induce panic.
The process is carried out for about 40 seconds and is known to have been repeated a number of times during interrogation.
The process was carried out on three detainees, former US president George W. Bush administration officials have said. However, the number could be higher, according to a 2012 report from Human Rights Watch.
One of the detainees, Abu Zubaydah, a suspected senior Osama bin Laden lieutenant, told the ICRC: “I struggled without success to breathe. I thought I was going to die. I lost control of my urine.”
He underwent the process 83 times, while another of the CIA’s highest-value detainees, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, said to be the principal architect of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, was subjected to waterboarding 183 times.
‧ Beatings and threats
Many detainees have reported being beaten by interrogators, and the CIA memo mentions a number of approved methods of physical contact, including “facial holds,” “insult slaps” and “attention grasps.”
Most of those interviewed by the ICRC alleged that these beatings often occurred in the immediate aftermath of their capture, often multiple times a day.
One detainee said: “I was punched and slapped in the face and on the back, to the extent that I was bleeding. While having a rope round my neck and being tied to a pillar, my head was banged against the pillar repeatedly.”
Six of the detainees said they were slammed into walls after having a collar placed around their necks.
The CIA called it “walling”: A fake, flexible wall is constructed and a detainee is thrown against it, creating a loud noise. The noise is designed to make the detainee believe they are injured.
Detainees also reported threats of severe violence and sexual assault made against them and their families. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed told the ICRC he was threatened with being brought to the “verge of death and back again.”
Nashiri was also reportedly threatened with a gun and a power drill.
‧ Confinement in a box and the use of cold water
Placing the subject inside a confined box to restrict their movement was approved by the Bush administration in the case of Abu Zubaydah.
Zubaydah says he was placed in number of different confinement boxes in an intense period of interrogation in Afghanistan in 2002. He told the ICRC that the boxes made it difficult to breathe and reopened wounds in his legs. He could not recall how long he spent in each confinement box, saying he might have passed out inside.
The use of insects inside the box was also approved, to exploit a phobia Abu Zubaydah had. This element was not eventually used, according to memos.
A number of those interviewed by the ICRC said they were often subjected to dousings in cold water during interrogation. Khalid Sheikh Mohammad’s codefendant Walid bin Attash said that for the first two weeks of his detention in Afghanistan, his naked body was wrapped in plastic after being doused, and kept inside the cold envelope of water for several minutes.
In November 2002, a suspected Afghan militant, Gul Rahman, died of hypothermia inside a CIA black site north of Kabul known as the “Salt Pit.” Rahman had been left in a cold cell, stripped from the waist down and had been doused in water, according to reporters.
‧ Stress positions
A variety of stress positions were used by the CIA. Ten terror suspects alleged to the ICRC that these included being told to stand upright and shackled to the ceiling for up to three days, and in some cases at intervals for more than three months. Other stress positions included being shackled to the floor with arms stretched over the head.
Three detainees interviewed by the ICRC said they were forced to urinate and defecate on themselves in these positions and were left standing in their own excrement.
The use of stress positions was designed to cause muscle fatigue, physical discomfort and exhaustion.
‧ Sleep deprivation
Sleep deprivation was employed routinely and was seen as a key tool in enhanced interrogations. Many of these techniques overlap with other interrogation procedures — the use of stress positions, and in particular shackling a standing detainee with his hands in front of his body.
Among the most infamous was the use of loud music and white noise, sometimes played for 24 hours a day on short loops. Cells were also reportedly kept deliberately cold to prevent detainees from falling asleep. The agency was authorized to keep a detainee awake for up to 180 hours — about a week and a half — but told the US Department of Justice it only kept three detainees awake for 96 hours maximum.
Eleven of the 14 detainees interviewed by the ICRC said they had been subjected to sleep deprivation.
One said: “If I started to fall asleep, a guard would come and spray water in my face.”
‧ Forced nudity and restricted diets
The CIA viewed certain techniques as “conditioning” measures, designed to get detainees used to their helplessness rather than yielding any intelligence value on their own. Sleep deprivation was in this category. So was stripping a detainee naked, which a 2005 memo from the Department of Justice to the CIA said carried the benefit of “reward[ing] detainees instantly with clothing for cooperation.” (While keeping a detainee naked “might cause embarrassment,” a Department of Justice lawyer wrote, it did not itself constitute “sexual abuse” or the threat of sexual abuse.)
Another “conditioning” technique involved feeding a detainee “a bland, commercial liquid meal” instead of normal food. The CIA set caloric intake guidelines — a recommended minimum was 1,500 calories daily — and relied on medical personnel, who are sworn to do no harm to their patients, to ensure detainees did not lose more than 10 percent of their body weight. A Department of Justice memo understood the dietary manipulation could “increase the effectiveness of other techniques, such as sleep deprivation.”
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