A branch of the US Navy secretly contracted a 33-plane fleet that included two Gulfstream jets reportedly used to fly terror suspects to countries known to practice torture, according to documents that were obtained by the Associated Press.
At least 10 US aviation companies were issued classified contracts in 2001 and 2002 by the obscure Navy Engineering Logistics Office for the "occasional airlift of USN [Navy] cargo worldwide," according to Defense Department documents the AP obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Chartered
Two of the companies -- Richmor Aviation Inc. and Premier Executive Transport Services Inc. -- chartered luxury Gulfstreams that flew terror suspects captured in Europe to Egypt, according to US and European media reports.
Once there, the men told family members, they were tortured.
Authorities in Italy and Sweden have expressed outrage over flights that they say were illegal and orchestrated by the US government.
While the Gulfstreams came under scrutiny in 2001, what hasn't been disclosed is the navy's role in contracting planes involved in operations the CIA terms "rendition" and what Italian prosecutors call kidnapping.
"A lot of us have been focusing on the role of the CIA but also suspecting that certain parts of the armed forces are involved," said Margaret Satterthwaite, a New York University School of Law researcher who has investigated renditions.
The navy contracts involve more planes than previously reported -- other news outlets totaled 26 planes; the AP identified 33 planes.
CIA operatives
Italian judges have issued arrest warrants for 19 purported CIA operatives who allegedly snatched a Muslim cleric from Milan in 2003 and flew him to Cairo, according to FAA records cited by the Chicago Tribune, aboard Richmor's Gulfstream IV.
The jet belongs to a part-owner of the Boston Red Sox, who told the Boston Globe that the team's logo was covered when the CIA leased the plane.
Another case involves two men who were taken from Sweden to Egypt in 2001 aboard Premier's Gulfstream V.
Neither the CIA nor a navy spokeswoman at the Pentagon would comment on this story.
Officials at the Navy Engineering Logistics Office, or NELO, in Arlington, Virginia, didn't respond to messages requesting comment.
Joseph Duenas, counsel for the logistics office, declined to provide the contracts, saying they "involve national security information that is classified."
Secrecy
The secrecy surrounding the deals makes it unclear why NELO issued them, but one reason may be the office's anonymity -- the agency is so buried within the Pentagon bureaucracy that some career navy officials have never heard of it.
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