Soldier Lifts Lid on
Camp Delta
By Paul Harris
The Observer UK
Sunday
08 May 2005
For
the first time, an army insider blows the whistle on human rights abuses at Guantánamo.
An
American soldier has revealed shocking new details of abuse and sexual torture
of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay
in the first high-profile whistleblowing account to
emerge from inside the top-secret base.
Erik
Saar, an Arabic speaker who was a translator in
interrogation sessions, has produced a searing first-hand account of working at
Guantánamo. It will prove a damaging blow to a White
House still struggling to recover from the abuse scandal at Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq.
In
an exclusive interview, Saar told The Observer that
prisoners were physically assaulted by 'snatch squads' and subjected to sexual
interrogation techniques and that the Geneva Conventions were deliberately
ignored by the US
military.
He
also said that soldiers staged fake interrogations to impress visiting
administration and military officials. Saar believes
that the great majority of prisoners at Guantánamo
have no terrorist links and little worthwhile intelligence information has
emerged from the base despite its prominent role in America's war on terror.
Saar paints a picture of a base where interrogations of
often innocent prisoners have spiralled out of
control, doing massive damage to America's image in the Muslim
world.
Saar said events at Guantánamo
were a disaster for US
foreign policy. 'We are trying to promote democracy worldwide. I don't see how
you can do that and run a place like Guantánamo Bay.
This is now a rallying cry to the Muslim world,' he said.
Saar arrived at Guantánamo Bay
in December 2002, and worked there until June 2003. He first worked as a
translator in the prisoners' cages. He was then transferred to the
interrogation teams, acting as a translator.
Saar's book, Inside the Wire, provides the first fully
detailed look inside Guantánamo Bay's
role as a prison for detainees the White House has insisted are the 'worst of
the worst' among Islamic militants. His tale describes his gradual
disillusionment, from arriving as a soldier keen to do his duty to eventually
leaving believing the regime to be a breach of human rights and a disaster for
the war on terror.
Among
the most shocking abuses Saar
recalls is the use of sex in interrogation sessions. Some female interrogators
stripped down to their underwear and rubbed themselves against their prisoners.
Pornographic magazines and videos were also used as rewards for confessing.
In
one session a female interrogator took off some of her clothes and smeared fake
blood on a prisoner after telling him she was menstruating. 'That's a big deal.
It is a major insult to one of the world's biggest religions where we are
trying to win hearts and minds,' Saar
said.
Saar also describes the 'snatch
teams', known as the Initial Reaction Force (IRF), who remove unco-operative prisoners from their cells. He describes one
such snatch where a prisoner's arm was broken. In a training session for an IRF
team, one US
soldier posing as a prisoner was beaten so badly that he suffered brain damage.
It is believed the IRF team had not been told the 'detainee' was a soldier.
Staff
at Guantánamo also faked interrogations for visiting
senior officials. Prisoners who had already been interrogated were sat down
behind one-way mirrors and asked old questions while the visiting officials
watched.
Saar also describes the effects
prolonged confinement had on many of the prisoners. He details bloody suicide
attempts and serious mental illnesses. One detainee slashed his wrists with
razors and wrote in blood on a wall: 'I committed suicide because of the
brutality of my oppressors.'
Saar details a meeting with an
army lawyer where linguists, interrogators and intelligence workers at the base
were told the Geneva Conventions did not apply to their work as the detainees
could not be considered normal prisoners of war. At the end of the meeting the
group was told: 'We still intend to treat the
detainees humanely, but our purpose is to get any actionable intelligence we
can and quickly.'
But Saar said that many, if not
most, of the detainees were rarely interrogated at all after their initial
arrival. They just sat listlessly in their cells for months on end. He believes
that many of them were either simple footsoldiers
caught up in the war in Afghanistan
or elsewhere, or innocent men sold out to the Americans by local enemies
settling a grudge or looking to collect reward money.
Saar accepts that some genuine
terrorists have been held at Guantánamo. 'There are
individuals there who I hope will never be set free,' he said, but he contends
that they are in the minority. 'Overall, it is counter-productive,' he said.
Saar was an enthusiastic supporter of George Bush in the
2000 elections but he has changed his world view after being exposed to Guantánamo
Bay. 'I believe in America and
American troops,' he said, 'but it has drastically changed my world view and my
politics.'
Saar left the army and has
become a hate figure for some right-wing groups which say he and his book are
unpatriotic. But Saar believes exposing the abuses of
Guantánamo will lessen the damage done to America's
reputation in the long run. 'The camp is a mistake. It does not need to be that
way. There should be a better way, more in line with American morals,' he said.