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Inside Guantanamo Bay
Two days. Fifty detainees. Three interrogations. An exclusive
look.
BY PAISLEY DODDS
Associated Press 11 July 2004, GUANTANAMO BAY
NAVAL BASE, Cuba
Sliding a knight into attack mode, a terror suspect teaches
his interrogator chess, pausing briefly to
look at a manual U.S. officials believe holds key intelligence.
Next door, a prisoner in an orange jumpsuit pours tea from a
thermos, smokes a cigarette while he
laughs with a female interrogator who hands him a mugshot of
a man with piercing ebony eyes.
A two-day tour of Guantanamo Bay afforded the Associated Press
the most extensive access ever
allowed to independent journalists, allowing views of 50 detainees,
including those in maximum
security.
The AP witnessed three interrogations through mirrored glass
with the sound turned off. One was in
the part of camp reserved for problem detainees and prisoners
believed to be holding important
information.
No armed guards were present at interrogations, and officers
said they were never used during
sessions.
They said each detainee is generally questioned twice a week,
with sessions usually lasting two to
four hours for a maximum 15 hours a day.
The scenes were vastly different from those at Abu Ghraib, the
U.S.-run prison in Iraq where some
troops are accused of abusing detainees.
But interrogation techniques used here were recommended for
Abu Ghraib by Guantanamo's former
commander, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller.
Miller and others have denied Guantanamo detainees were mistreated.
"This is a wholly different environment," said Brig.
Gen. Jay Hood, who succeeded Miller in March.
QUESTIONING DETAINEES
Two interrogation sessions watched by AP
were at Camp Delta's normal detention center.
The other sessionwas at Camp 5, where alleged leaders, problem
detainees and prisoners believed to have high intelligence value
are held.
One problem detainee asked to see his interrogator. Although
the detainee appeared silent much of the time, the interrogator
viewed the session as a success, saying the man finally talked.
After the interrogator and linguist left the room, the bearded
young man laughed and talked to what could have been another
detainee, next door in the shower.
"Sometimes this detainee is very funny; other times he
is not funny at all," said a female
interrogator, who often brings the prisoners mint tea and Fig
Newton cookies. "Sometimes they are very pleasant at one
moment, and then they tell you calmly and proudly about how they
killed someone."
The senior interrogator, who along with other interrogators
spoke on condition of anonymity, said, "
We've learned about recruiting, how terror cells are financed,
their capabilities and plans that have been sitting on the table
for attacks.
Last month, one prisoner unwilling to talk for more than a year
opened up, the interrogator said. The burly chess player has
been steadily cooperative.
"He often tells his chess opponents, 'Attack, attack, attack!'
You learn an awful lot about some of these people from very simple
methods," said the interrogator,
who occasionally brings the prisoner McDonald's hot fudge sundaes.
The manual near the board was thought to contain prime intelligence
information that officials want the suspects to help interpret.
Interrogators refused to say how they took possession of it or
describe it other than to say it could play a key role in the
fight against terror.
CONCERNS OVER FAIRNESS
The first detainees arrived 212
years ago, shackled, bound and blindfolded. Most were captured
on the battlefields of Afghanistan, accused of links to the fallen
Taliban regime or al-Qaida.
Officials believed the base's remote location on foreign soil
would deny prisoners U.S. constitutional protections, but the
Supreme Court ruled last month that the 595 prisoners from 42
countries ‹ all but three held without charge and denied
lawyers ‹ can
challenge their detentions in U.S. courts.
Military lawyers are trying to determine how the ruling could
affect operations here as well as a
panel reviewing individual detentions and future tribunals.
Three prisoners - an Australian, a Sudanese and a Yemeni ‹ have
been charged with crimes ranging
from conspiracy to commit war crimes to aiding the enemy, and
they will be tried by military
tribunals hoping to begin before Dec. 31.
But lawyers plan a flurry of challenges to the Supreme Court
ruling.
Questions about the fairness of tribunals and the treatment
of detainees have multiplied since
photographs were published of U.S. troops taunting hooded, naked
prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
Two Guantanamo guards were disciplined after one hit a detainee
with a radio and another sprayed
one with a hose.
"The photos that came out of Abu Ghraib were so terrible
that I think it causes people to stop and
wonder," Hood said. "The only way to overcome it is
to invite people here and to have them look for
themselves."
However, officers reviewed the AP's photo portfolio and would
not allow the publication of pictures
they said might reveal detainees' identities.
The Guantanamo camp was criticized when it opened after pictures
showed shackled prisoners
being locked into hastily constructed metal enclosures that rights
activists compared to animal
cages.
Twenty-one detainees have tried to kill themselves.
The International Committee of the Red Cross, the only independent
group allowed to visit
detainees, publicly rebuked conditions in October, contending
the prolonged detention harmed
detainees' mental health.
EXTRACTING INFORMATION
Two interrogators said most detainees know counter-interrogation
techniques, making it more
tedious to extract information.
Before moving to Abu Ghraib, Miller instituted a reward system
to encourage more cooperation from
detainees.
One is a field trip held in medium-security Camp 4, where detainees
can exercise every day and
keep more items, including letters and books, in their cells.
About five of the 100 prisoners at Camp 4 are taken out about
twice a week. Interrogators say the
trips build trust and prompt detainees to divulge more information.
AP journalists were allowed inside a room with four prisoners
during trip to an area called Camp
Iguana for the lizards ambling about.
One prisoner asked a commander in English if he could speak
to the visitors. When told no, he
said he and his friend were journalists, too. The Arab satellite
TV station al-Jazeera has said one of
its cameramen is detained wrongfully at Guantanamo.
ANGRY DETAINEES
The mood was less relaxed in the other camps,
where open-air cell blocks made of chain-link
fences allow detainees to see each other and chat. Most prisoners
turned their backs to avoid
being photographed. Some looked curious or nodded in greeting.
Angry detainees have been known to throw feces at guards.
Detainees in Camp 5 - which holds about 50 detainees considered
uncooperative or of
high-intelligence value - stay in air-conditioned cells
closed with metal doors and a strip covering an
internal window.
A commander peeled back the tape in one cell, where a man was
curled up asleep, a prosthetic leg
lying below his mattress.
The commander said the men have developed routines. Some clean
their cells and wash their
jumpsuits each day. Many reread letters from home or stud k.
Most observe the call to prayer
crackling over the loudspeaker five times daily.
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