Posted By: marikod
The debate about whether Bush Administration waterboarding is torture or not in many ways obscures the true depravity of the CIA in the Bush administration.
Remember when CIA director George Tenet went on Larry King and told Larry “We don’t torture?” What Tenet left out was that, when real torture was needed, the CIA sent the terrorist suspect to Egypt to extract the information they needed, a practice known as “extraordinary rendition.” The Egyptian secret police had no qualms about torturing the guy and did so.
The CIA had a curious process for transporting these guys. They would strip the guy, stuff a suppository in ?his anus, put him in a diaper - and 'wrap him up like a spring roll, according to several suspects who survived the ordeal.
The case most publicized to date is that of an Al Qaeda suspect known as Ibn Sheikh al-Libi who in 2002 was sent to Egypt and tortured. Under torture, Libi “confessed” that Saddam had WMD and a link to Bin Laden. This information found its way into Sec Powell’s famous speech to the UN and provided serious justification for the invasion of Iraq. After the invasion, Libi admitted he made it all up to stop the torture.
The Egyptian in charge of the torture? Omar Suleiman, the current VP and a personal friend of Tenet. He supposely personally tortured another guy sent him by the CIA.
Now to protect themselves, the Bush CIA would tell the Egyptians “don’t torture the guy” in official communications. No problem, Sulieman would say with a wink.
But with the fall of Mubarik, the new government will have access to Suleiman’s extraordinary rendition files (unless they are destroyed which would be a pretty good idea) and we will finally learn more of the story of this black time in our history when, “to make us safer” the Bush admin sent suspects to Egypt for torture, all the time telling the public that “We don’t torture.”
-- Modified on 2/11/2011 4:35:41 PM
-- Modified on 2/11/2011 5:52:30 PM