I read nearly 140,000 formerly classified documents about America’s abuse of prisoners since 2001. Here is what I learned.
It began with one document.
On Sept. 17, 2001, six days after the terrorist attacks in
Washington, D.C., President George W. Bush sent a 12-page Memorandum of
Notification to his National Security Council. That memorandum, we know
now, authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to set up and run secret
prisons. We still don’t know exactly what it says: CIA attorneys have
told a judge the document is so off-limits to the courts and the
American people that even the font is classified. But we do know what it
did: It literally opened a space for torture.
Thanks to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit—a lawsuit the New York Times has called “among the most successful in the history of public disclosure”—we now know much of what happened in those secret spaces the Bush administration created. Under that litigation, the American Civil Liberties Union
gathered nearly 140,000 formerly classified documents from the
Department of Defense, the Justice Department, and the CIA that detail
the abuse of prisoners in U.S. custody in the “War on Terror.” My job,
as the author of the website www.thetorturereport.org and then of the book The Torture Report: What the Documents Say About America’s Post-9/11 Torture Program, was to dig through that incredible trove of documents and figure out for myself what, exactly, my country had done.
Read on...
Read on...
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