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NYT Says "Military Taking a Tougher Line (Than What!?) With Detainees": Or the 2016 PBS Documentary on Guantanamo
Someday, not too many years from now, when Ric or Ken Burns or their successors makes the definitive elegiac 20-hour documentary of the Iraq war and the irreparable harm it did to our country’s image and vision of itself I predict the following chapter:
Title Card: “Why Am I in Cuba?” Cue PBS/American Experience Dolorous Male Narrator (hereafter: PBSAEDMN) who will, as “Josephine’s Waltz” or some other Irish/Appalachian fiddle lament (hey, maybe the Dixie Chicks) plays in the background, and the camera pans over photos like this and this and this, recount how America, a country founded on the principal of human rights and due process and freedom from tyranny, descended into a pit of barbarity, best exemplified by our treatment of prisoners unlawfully held at Guantanamo Bay.
The PBSAEDMN will explain—along with a gray-haired Michael Beschloss and perhaps an apologetic Peter Beinart or Fareed Zakaria and a still aghast Frank Rich—how the impulse that led to their detentions, their treatment, their lack of legal recourse was perhaps understandable, given how traumatized the nation was after 9/11. The Iraq War; the rush to judgment against Jose Padilla, John Walker Lind, and dozens more U.S. citizens; the enemy combatant limbo imposed upon foreign nationals; the warrantless wiretapping and other corrosions of civil liberties—all these things were supported by good people, smart people, people who went to Harvard.
But then, the PBSAEDMN will explain, the truth about Guantanamo was slowly revealed. The underage prisoners. The chicken farmers sent there because of a bureaucratic mistake or tribal infighting. The torture. The desecration of the Koran. The female guards pretending to smear prisoners with menstrual blood. The rampant depression, psychic breaks, hunger strikes, and suicide attempts—successful and otherwise. The fact that hundreds of prisoners were found to have been misidentified or of “no threat” to the United States (which is to say: innocent).
As the utter miscarriage of justice that was Guantanamo became apparent to the American people and the rest of the world (which was fairly convinced all along) gradually, the PBSAEDMN and various talking heads will explain, the military began to loosen up. Prisoners were divided into population groups depending on their perceived risk and behavior, and scores of non-violent, non-threatening chicken farmers and pencil sellers and taxi drivers and stand-up comedians were quietly released. It seemed, for a while, that some small measure of sanity was creeping into our Guantanamo policy.
But then, in mid December, came news, via the New York Times, that new Gitmo commander Rear Admiral Harry B. Harris—the man who in June told Nightline that, despite all evidence to the contrary, “I believe truly that I am holding no innocent men in Guantanamo” and called the simultaneous suicides of three inmates to be “an act of asymmetric warfare”—had decided that the real problem at Gitmo was that the prisoners had it too easy.
Cue voiceover representing the New York Times:
Security procedures have been tightened. Group activities have been scaled back. With the retrofitting of Camp 6 and the near-emptying of another showcase camp for compliant prisoners, military officials said about three-fourths of the detainees would eventually be held in maximum-security cells. That is a stark departure from earlier plans to hold a similar number in medium-security units.
Officials said the shift reflected the military’s analysis — after a series of hunger strikes, a riot last May and three suicides by detainees in June — that earlier efforts to ease restrictions on the detainees had gone too far.
The commander of the Guantanamo task force, Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., said the tougher approach also reflected the changing nature of the prison population, and his conviction that all of those now held here are dangerous men. “They’re all terrorists; they’re all enemy combatants,” Admiral Harris said in an interview. He added, “I don’t think there is such a thing as a medium-security terrorist.”
Cue PBSAEDMN, who will note that Harris felt confident in asserting that now everyone in Gitmo is a terrorist because “the last of 38 men whom the military had classified since early 2005 as ‘no longer enemy combatants,’ had just been released.”
But, the PBSAEDMN will dryly note, another “100 others who had been cleared by the military for transfer or release remained here while the State Department tried to arrange their repatriation.”
(Fiddle swells…)
“A few days after Harris made his statement,” the PBSAEDM concludes, “another 15 detainees were sent home to Saudi Arabia, where they were promptly returned to their families.”
(Fade to black.)
Posted by Clara Jeffery on 12/16/06 at 3:32 PM | E-mail | Print | Digg | de.licio.us | Reddit | Newsvine | Yahoo! MyWeb | StumbleUpon | Netscape | Google |
Comments
You REALLY pulled your punches with the photographs of detainees tied up, sensory deprived, and uncomfortable. What about the ones (available at thememoryhole.org) showing a man tortured to death, naked men smeared in shit, men being punched by soldiers?
Don't approach this wreckage with a feather duster.
Posted by: Hidro on 12/18/06 at 2:11 AM
Adm. Harry B. Harris will be and is another Gen.Geoffery Miller who will continue the Bush policy of torture at Gitmo. Adm Harris like Gen. Miller will disgrace himself, his family, the american military(as Westmorland and so many others did in Vietnam)and american democratic values and further degrade America as he serves only his own career and not his country. Of course the fact that he was reared in Tennessee and Florida should come as no surprise as these both along with Texas are knee jerk states of phony and short sighted and narrow minded patriotism. Adm. Harris will do much to contribute to the end of our american form of democracy.
Posted by: bob t on 12/19/06 at 7:48 AM
Those prisoners get what they deserve. Actually let me correct myself. They don't get what they deserve. They deserve to be knee capped and let bleed to death.
You people who feel sorry for them are no better than they are. You people need a backbone. I am willing to bet that the people who feel sorry for these Hajis are the same kids who were always picked on in high school and never stood up for themselves. Just afraid to deal with threats cause you think it will go away if you don't pay attention to it. PATHETIC!
Posted by: Your Mother on 06/19/07 at 11:57 PM
Gitmo is a travesty. It is a betrayal of our national honor, our historic principles, and our sacred traditions of honor in combat. We need to be able to hunt and kill the bad guys, but we also need to be able to show that we are better than they are. A just nation should know better than to resort to these self-defeating tactics.
Posted by: Christian on 06/20/07 at 1:46 AM
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Movable Type 3.33
Guantanamo is the story everyone knows about, the story of John Walker Lindh's incarceration is far more telling...
On Nov. 24, 2001, Lindh surrendered to troops under the command of Northern Alliance Gen. Dostum. He was detained at Qala-i Janghi, a military complex near Mazar-e Sharif.
On Dec. 1, 2001, Lindh was transported with other prisoners to Sheberghan, where there is a hospital and prison. Lindh was identified as a US national and given medical assistance by US military personnel.
According to a US medic, Lindh had sustained an apparent gunshot wound in the left leg, was malnourished and in extremely poor overall condition. A US Special Forces officer noted that Lindh appeared to be suffering from hypothermia, and exposure, and acted delirious." Although he received medical treatment, the bullet was not removed from his leg so it could be later used as evidence in any criminal proceedings.
Lindh was moved to the Turkish School House at Mazar-e Sharif where he remained malnourished and dehydrated. He was provided with minimal food and minimal medical assistance.
During this detention, US gov. agents interrogated Lindh. Despite his injuries, Lindh cooperated with his interrogators, and was provided more food.
Next Lindh was moved to Camp Rhino, a US Marine installation.
Upon arrival at Camp Rhino, Lindh was stripped naked and bound to a stretcher with duct tape, and then placed in a metal storage container with no windows, minimal ventilation, and no heat source. A Navy physician present at Camp Rino was informed by the lead military interrogator that sleep deprivaion, cold and hunger might be employed during Lindh's interrogation.
Now who didn't see the "news segment" where the CIA agent remarked to Lindh that he wasn't strong enough to survive the coming interrogation at the Qala-i fortress, which was serving as Gen. Dostum's military headquarters...
That CIA agent was later killed in an escape attempt, and he was lauded as a hero, but The Guardian (UK) quoted Amir Jan, the anti-Taliban commander, as saying, "The prisoners suspected they were about to be shot."
Of course, in its telling of the story, the Western media overlooked how the prisoners had good reason to fear their captors--Gen. Dostum's forces had committed incredible atrocities immediately prior, in the taking of Mazar-i Sharif and the seizure of Kunduz.
Posted by: Michael L. Wagner on 12/17/06 at 2:16 PM