Why I Will Never Return To The USA, Reason 1,222 and Counting*

In Case of Sore Arse, Break Open and Inflate

This is just fucking brutal.

To get the full horror of this Lancet story from Strange Attractor, via BoingBoing, a little medical knowledge is required. An anal fistula is not a pleasant experience: it’s a channel or hole in or around the anus and/or rectum caused by infection or abscess. Even doctors try not to do a internal exam of infected fistulae:

“Even digital examination may be impossible because of extreme tenderness.”

and a seton is a medical device inserted in the anus to close off such a fistula.

Ouch, ouch, ouch. To have a condition like that must be excruciatingly painful. Sitting for hours on a plane must hurt like buggery, if you’ll excuse the pun.

Now imagine being in such exquisite pain and some min-wage, medically-unqualified Homeland Security goon at an airport forcibly sticking his finger up your sore ass and trying to pull that device out in case it’s a bomb.

Yes, I’m wincing too:

2007; 369:370 Correspondence

Homeland security reaches the anus

“I wish to bring to your attention difficulties one of my patients recently encountered when entering the USA. He is a 48-year-old man with a fistula-in-ano managed with a long-term seton to control perianal sepsis.

[…]

On arrival in New York in August, 2006, for a holiday, the patient was interrogated by immigration officials, then examined and searched. The presence of the seton gave rise to much concern, I assume because of a suspicion that a drug package or terrorist weapon was in some way attached to it. A rectal examination was done, during which the examining official pulled very hard on the seton, causing severe pain, but fortunately not damaging the anal sphincter muscles encircled by it.

The patient was refused entry into the country unless the seton was removed. Given the somewhat stark choice, he chose removal of the seton, which was done by a doctor at the airport who claimed never to have come across one before. The patient now requires an examination under general anaesthetic to insert a replacement.

I thought I should highlight this rather bizarre manifestation of “homeland security” because I suspect that it might become a more frequent problem. I suggest that any patient with a seton who is planning to travel to the USA or any other country where they are likely to be searched in this manner should carry a letter from their specialist explaining the nature of their condition and treatment.

I would have left the country first. Put myself through that for a holiday?

It’s nothing but state sanctioned assault, if not a species of torture. What’s next, the compulsorily opening up of fresh surgical scars to check there are no terroristic lite-brites hidden inside?

[*Anticipating the troll: Yes, I know you don’t want me anyway.]

Home. Chickens. Roost.

Nemesis, nemesis, everywhere you look.

I made a flippant comment a while back that doesn’t seem quite so snarky now; I said that the administration should’ve issued its torturers and kidnappers with cyanide capsules in case of apprehension, so they couldn’t be made to spill on their bosses in the White House.

BBC, Spiegel and others:

Germany issues CIA arrest orders

Germany has issued arrest warrants for 13 people over the alleged CIA-backed kidnapping of one of its citizens.

Munich prosecutors said the arrest warrants were linked to the case of Khaled al-Masri, a German national of Lebanese descent.

Mr Masri says he was seized in 2003 in Macedonia, flown to a secret prison in Afghanistan and mistreated there.

CIA Rendition flights Europe
Click for map of European rendition flights

No wonder the minor functionaries of the CIA have been so anxious about their liability insurance. Remember this?

Worried CIA Officers Buy Legal Insurance
Plans Fund Defense In Anti-Terror Cases

By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 11, 2006; Page A01

CIA counterterrorism officers have signed up in growing numbers for a government-reimbursed, private insurance plan that would pay their civil judgments and legal expenses if they are sued or charged with criminal wrongdoing, according to current and former intelligence officials and others with knowledge of the program.

The new enrollments reflect heightened anxiety at the CIA that officers may be vulnerable to accusations they were involved in abuse, torture, human rights violations and other misconduct, including wrongdoing related to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. They worry that they will not have Justice Department representation in court or congressional inquiries, the officials said.

The anxieties stem partly from public controversy about a system of secret CIA prisons in which detainees were subjected to harsh interrogation methods, including temperature extremes and simulated drowning. The White House contends the methods were legal, but some CIA officers have worried privately that they may have violated international law or domestic criminal statutes..

May have violated the law? Did violate the law and did so knowingly. Don’t tell me those goons thought kidnap and torture was lawful, they knew damned well it was not. Why else be so worried about their insurance cover? That alone presupposes knowledge of iilegality.

Names and nationalities are to follow later this afternoon, but we can’t expect arrests of any Americans accused:

German arrest warrants are not valid in the US but if the suspects were to travel to the European Union they could be arrested.

It would be karmically pleasing though if, instead of applying for extradition, the Germans were to just round the accused up off the streets and fly them back to Germany in goggles, chains and nappies, never to be seen again. But civilised societies don’t do things like that, do they?

But with warrants being issued all over those agents must realise that although they may never be arrested or charged in the US, nevertheless they’re going to be named. This means that they’lll have to take the entire fall for Bush, Cheney and Gonzalez’ torture policy publicly, without even the benefit of a trial (unlike those Europeans who may be accused of colluding) and not one of their bosses will lift a finger to help. Deniability, see. The loyalty only ever went one way.

We’ll see if these ‘few bad apple’ agents will choose to tell all rather than be exposed to the fuill blast of public notoriety.

If they do the White House, if they didn’t issue the poison pills along with the Halliburton Secret Agent kits, may be rather wishing they had.

Shock Treatment

Yet another asshole who’s internalised ’24’. Via Raw Story:

Friday, January 26, 2007 · Last updated 3:23 p.m. PT

Man zaps wife’s grandma in dispute at North Bonneville home

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NORTH BONNEVILLE, Wash. — A man who used a stun gun on his 79 year-old grandmother-in-law after an argument over how to discipline his toddler son was arrested for investigation of domestic violence assault.

Aaron de Bruyn, 26, was cited with fourth-degree domestic violence assault Wednesday and was released from the Skamania County Jail Thursday afternoon, said Calvin Owens, police chief in this town about 30 miles up the Columbia River from Portland, Ore.

The argument began Wednesday morning when his 7-month-old son tried to reach behind the family’s entertainment system to grab the electrical wires, de Bruyn told The Columbian newspaper of Vancouver.

Fearing the boy would shock himself, he told the boy “no” a couple of times and gave the child a swat on his diapered bottom.

De Bruyn said his grandmother-in-law, Rosemary Garlock, told him that was child abuse and threatened to have the child taken away. He said he then told Garlock to leave and she refused.

After an argument that lasted several minutes, he pulled out his Taser stun gun and told her he would use it on her if she didn’t leave within 60 seconds. He counted down, and when she didn’t leave, he shocked her on her right shoulder as she sat on the living room couch.

“She yelped, because getting Tased hurts,” de Bruyn said. “She started screaming at the top of her lungs to call 911.”

Garlock did not need medical attention.

De Bruyn said he had the 50,000-volt Taser X26 energy weapon in case he was confronted with a burglar in his house. He said he was the one who called authorities, saying he had a relative in his house who would not leave.

De Bruyn’s stun gun was confisicated.

“If I had to do it over again, I wouldn’t,” he said of the incident. “It’s pretty intimidating, everything that’s been going on. I’ve never been in jail or in court, never been in trouble with the law.”

Since when is a 7-month old baby a toddler? This is a 7-month old baby:

Canadian PM gets nose tweaked

So we have a situation where a man, (and I use the term merely to describe his gender, niot his character) is ‘disciplining’ 7-month old baby. Then we find that he had a Taser on his person – ‘he pulled out his Taser stun gun’ – and the baby was, as they do, investigating something interesting, in this case loose wires.

How very co-incidental.

The circumstances are certainly capable of the construction that Daddy Dearest might possibly been planning to show the baby what a real electric shock felt like – a swat on the ass, my ass – when Grandma, quite reasonably, protested.

What an asshole. de Bruyn says he wouldn’t do it again, not because it’s wrong to attack a 79-year old great-grandmother or hit a baby, but because he was scared of the police.

The Wheels Of Justice Grind Exceeding Slow, But Exceeding Fine

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Members of the CIA and Bush administration had better think twice about setting foot in Europe: EU warrants have been issued for CIA agents involved in renditions in Italy, according to Der Spiegel:

MILAN’S EXTRAORDINARY RENDITIONS CASE

The CIA in the Dock

By Georg Mascolo and Matthias Gebauer

A Milan prosecutor is making the CIA nervous. Despite the opposition of his own government he wants to indict 26 US agents and five Italian secret agents for the kidnapping of a terror suspect. Rome and Washington would prefer that the embarrassing trial would just go away.

The extraordinary renditions program is turning into an embarassment for the CIA

The proceedings in Milan’s historic Palace of Justice on Tuesday morning were kept under tight wraps. Judge Caterina Interlandi was holding court on the seventh floor, behind closed doors — and only lawyers directly involved with the case were allowed to enter. The governments in Rome and Washington would have preferred if the hearing had not taken place at all.

However they had not reckoned with Armando Spataro. Without the lively Milan prosecutor, who is balding and has a moustache, things would never have got quite so far.

The case being heard behind the court’s doors could turn out to be highly unpleasant for Washington and Rome. Judge Interlandi must determine whether 26 CIA agents and five Italian secret service agents are to be indicted for one of the boldest kidnappings of a terror suspect to happen yet. If the court takes the case, it would be the first time anyone has been tried in connection with the CIA’s controversial “extraordinary renditions” program. Under the secret renditions program, suspected terrorists were kidnapped and interrogated at secret “black” sites.

There was no immediate result after the hearing on Tuesday, except the announcement that the case was adjourned until the end of January.

The statements afterwards were nevertheless revealing. For example, Daria Pesce, the lawyer representing former Milan CIA bureau chief Robert Seldon Lady said she was withdrawing from the case. “Robert Seldon Lady said that a political and not legal solution should be found.” Her client, she said, would prefer “an agreement between Italy and the US” to a trial.

Pesce described her client as “disappointed” by the Italian officers because they revealed details of the operation they had sworn to keep secret. “He feels betrayed because he is still convinced he did the right thing for the US and all the other countries fighting international Islamism,” she said.

Lady’s position is understandable, because the case is an embarrassment. The fate of the Egyptian imam Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, better known as Abu Omar, is one of the best-documented cases of the controversial abductions by the US. In February 2003, a CIA team kidnapped the radical cleric in Milan as he was on his way to his mosque. From the point of view of the US investigators Abu Omar was a suspect who could have knowledge of the activities of jihadists in Europe — perhaps.

Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, who allegedly was kidnapped in Milan by the CIA.

In these kinds of situations, things are rarely done gently. Drugged and tied-up, Abu Omar was bundled into a white mini-van and taken to the US base at Aviano, and then by jet via the US airbase in Ramstein, Germany more or less directly to an Egyptian jail. During his weeks of interrogation there, Abu Omar claims to have been tortured by the local officials. In a letter that was smuggled out of the jail, he reports of electrical shocks and writes that his face has been disfigured by these methods. He is being held in a jail in Alexandria to this day.

It is now known that in the fight against international terror following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks this was common CIA practice — something the US has indirectly admitted, without expressing any regret. Instead of waiting for the necessary due process, the agency preferred to kidnap those it had decided were suspects. Instead of placing them in US jails they were stuck in holes somewhere in countries that were known for torture and therefore speedy interrogation results. It is precisely these practices that are now the subject of several investigations in EU countries.

During their tough actions the bosses back home in the US probably never expected that they would ever have someone like prosecutor Spatoro spying on them in turn. He has impressive evidence in dozens of files. He knows the names of the CIA agents. He knows when and where they travelled to Italy, who they called and when, in order to kidnap Abu Omar. Even their fondness for luxury hotels is in the files — and that they collected valuable frequent flyer miles. There is no point talking about a secret operation any more.

No other case has caused so much internal disquiet in the CIA as the arrest warrants from Italy. Even if the White House has promised that there is no need to fear prosecution or extradition, there is concern in the agency about what will happen after President Bush leaves office. The Democrats now control Congress and hearings about the CIA program are looming. Legal insurance has been the hot topic among CIA agents for months. The agents are aware that the small fry are always the first to be sacrificed.

In the case of the kidnapping in Italy, this concern is well founded. After all it is the names of the CIA worker ants that appear in the indictments. Due to Spataro’s tireless efforts they will also be issued arrest warrants in the European Union. From now on the agents will have to worry about possible arrest during any future foreign visit — even if one of them just wants to visit Florence instead of Florida with his wife. However the Italian Foreign Ministry never sent the prosecutor’s extradition warrant — out of loyalty to its partner, the US.

The dark prediction of Cofer Black, the CIA’s former head of counter-terrorism, is being remembered in corridors of the agency these days: “One day we will all be in court for what we are doing now.” At the same time, the agents of what is supposedly the best secret service in the world didn’t act particularly clandestinely in Milan. Many now shake their head in disbelief that it only takes a few Google searches to find the first traces of the CIA’s aircraft. The term “secret flights” is long obsolete.

Even the agents were not much of a secret. Of the first 13 suspects public prosecutor Spataro was able to identify, 11 were easily traced back to the CIA. The insurance numbers and post office boxes they kept in Virginia revealed more than they hid.

And even though it is now clear that the CIA acted carelessly in Italy, the fact that high-level agents in Rome gave their nod of approval to the operation has only served to increase anger over their negligence. “It’s not only bad tradecraft, but it’s stupid,” commented Richard Stolz, a former CIA deputy director of operations.

Even for the renditions program, the action in Italy was highly unusual — and also particularly risky. In most operations, countries arrested suspected terrorists and then turned them over to the United States. But in Italy, the CIA chief in Rome was looking to achieve his own success, and insiders believe that goes a long way towards explaining why the CIA there played a direct role in the kidnapping. “If I had taken a plan to my bosses to kidnap someone in Europe, it better have been Osama himself, and I doubt I would have gotten permission even then,” said Michael Scheuer, former head of the CIA program.

There’s more to the Milan case than simply a suit against CIA agents (who wouldn’t even be present in the Milan Palace of Justice if it were to be heard). Instead, it is the Italian secret service and the former government of Silvio Berlusconi who will be placed in the political dock. Berlusconi routinely swears that Italy never would have permitted or provided help for any operation like this. But few believe him these days. In fact, it appears unlikely that the operation would even have been possible without logistical aid from the US’s close partner.

,P>The most extensive testimony could come from a former Italian agent who also now stands as a defendant. For months, former Italian top spy Nicolo Pollari refused to testify. Now he is threatening what could be an almost “spontaneous defense.” But his lawyer says he would only be willing to do so if Berlusconi and the current prime minister, Romano Prodi, also appeared in court. For the time being, the main issue is to lift the veil of secrecy that had initially been imposed on the Abu Omar case. Still, uncomfortable questions would likely be directed at the top politicians.

It’s still impossible to tell if the Milan trial will even open. Nevertheless, through sheer persistence, Prosecutor Spataro has already cut his way through considerable political resistance. At the end of the day, the decision will lie with the judge, who is under enormous pressure. So far, the judge has held up well under pressure — so much so that German Prosecutor Eberhard Bayer has described his colleague’s work as “excellent.” Bayer has often met with Spataro and spoken to him on the telephone because he is currently investigating CIA planes that landed in Germany and were involved in Abu Omar’s kidnapping.

However, it is unlikely that Bayer’s case will ever progress as far as the Milan investigation. “We’ve hit a dead end because the Americans aren’t providing us with any information,” Bayer said. But Bayer does know that Abu Omar was taken to Egypt on a flight that also landed at the US air base in Ramstein, Germany, which is also under his prosecutorial jurisdiction. Each time he contacts the base, authorities tell him politely but firmly that Washington has instructed them to provide no information whatsoever. “To be honest, we’re at our wits end,” Bayer said.

But prosecutors in Germany are following the progress in Milan with great interest. Privately, they hope the trial will open — almost more because of the hard work of their colleague than because of their hopes for a public tribunal against the CIA.

“Of course it’s true that we’re dealing with big political issues here,” says Bayer, deliberately speaking in abstract terms. “But even if a crime is a political one, it still remains a crime.”

We’ll get these bastards in the end, legally, and when we do they’ll sing like canaries about their bosses just to save their miserable slimy hides, no rendition or torture required.

Cartoon copyright Martin Rowson, The Guardian

Read more: War On Terror, US, Europe, Italy, CIA, Rendition, Kidnap, Prosecutions, Arrests

And You Thought Condi Was Bad Enough…

Yahoo News is reporting that John “Death Squad’ Negroponte is to become No 2 at the US State department, directly deputising for Condoleeza Rice.

I simply cannot wait for the confirmation hearings, with a newly sworn-in Democratic majority in Congress. Finally they’ll have an opportunity – with subpoena power – to take the lid off Bush, Rumsfeld, Cheney & Negroponte’s Iraq death squad initiative, if they only choose to take it.

Do you think they’ll bring up Negroponte’s time in Honduras this time?

During the Reagan administration, and while Negroponte was ambassador to the country, “Contra” militias were trained in Honduras. The Contras had hitherto made relatively small attacks across the border into Nicaragua until in 1982 thousands of marines arrived with up to 200 military advisers — airstrips were built, arms supplied and radar stations erected, all courtesy of the US taxpayer.

The Contras were trained in some of the most gruesome guerrilla war techniques. Some were trained by military officers from Argentina’s dirty war who knew nothing about the jungle but plenty about torture and execution. Others were trained in Florida and California while many others, like Honduras’ military dictator, General Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, were educated in torture techniques, execution and combat at the School of the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia. While it was purported by Reagan that the Contras were fighting the evil scourge of communism, referring to them as “freedom fighters,” the Contras raped, tortured and terrorised the civilian population throughout the subsequent decade, leaving the destroying the civilian infrastructure, leaving tens of thousands dead and many more displaced.

Negroponte’s role in Honduras was crucial as it meant maintaining US dominance in the region. Jeane Kirkpatrick, Negroponte’s predecessor at the UN once declared that “Central America is the most important place in the world for the United States today.” Maintaining political control of the region meant controlling its vast and rich natural resources. The Sandinistas were beginning to take matters into their own hands and started to redistribute wealth and land in Nicaragua, thus threatening US dominance in the region. Panic in the Reagan administration reached feverish and sometimes surreal levels, with the president declaring that the Sandinistas were on the verge of invading the United States. The real cause for alarm among Reaganite neo-conservatives (including the virulent anti-communist Negroponte) was that the Sandinista revolution would spread throughout El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala. It had nothing to do with communism, just as the invasion of Iraq has nothing to do with preventing terrorism. More, it was that the economic system the US had maintained in Central America since 1945 was falling apart — it was simply untenable for the impoverished masses who barely had enough to eat. Washington’s solution, like its present incarnation in the Middle East, was one of force and overwhelming military power in order to maintain US hegemony. Just as Negroponte acted as the strong arm of US imperialism in Central America in the 1980s he will protect US business and political interests in the Middle East, now the “most important place in the world for the United States today.”

So what about his sterling work in Iraq? Will the confirmation hearings consider that? Let’s hope so:

El Salvador-style ‘death squads’ to be deployed by US against Iraq militants

From Roland Watson in Washington

John Negroponte was in Honduras when American money was used to train Contras to fight Nicaragua’s Sandinista regime. (AL-RAYA/AP)

THE Pentagon is considering forming hit squads of Kurdish and Shia fighters to target leaders of the Iraqi insurgency in a strategic shift borrowed from the American struggle against left-wing guerrillas in Central America 20 years ago.

Under the so-called “El Salvador option”, Iraqi and American forces would be sent to kill or kidnap insurgency leaders, even in Syria, where some are thought to shelter.

The plans are reported in this week’s Newsweek magazine as part of Pentagon efforts to get US forces in Iraq on to the front foot against an enemy that is apparently getting the better of them.

Iyad Allawi, the interim Iraqi Prime Minister, was said to be one of the most vigorous supporters of the plan.

The Pentagon declined to comment, but one insider told Newsweek: “What everyone agrees is that we can’t just go on as we are. We have to find a way to take the offensive against the insurgents. Right now, we are playing defence. And we are losing.”

Hit squads would be controversial and would probably be kept secret.

The experience of the so-called “death squads” in Central America remains raw for many even now and helped to sully the image of the United States in the region.

Then, the Reagan Administration funded and trained teams of nationalist forces to neutralise Salvadorean rebel leaders and sympathisers. Supporters credit the policy with calming the insurgency, although it left a bitter legacy and stirred anti-American sentiment.

John Negroponte, the US Ambassador in Baghdad, had a front-row seat at the time as Ambassador to Honduras from 1981-85.

Death squads were a brutal feature of Latin American politics of the time. In Argentina in the 1970s and Guatemala in the 1980s, soldiers wore uniform by day but used unmarked cars by night to kidnap and kill those hostile to the regime or their suspected sympathisers.

[….]

The thrust of the Pentagon proposal in Iraq, according to Newsweek, is to follow that model and direct US special forces teams to advise, support and train Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and Shia militiamen to target leaders of the Sunni insurgency.

It is unclear whether the main aim of the missions would be to assassinate the rebels or kidnap them and take them away for interrogation. Any mission in Syria would probably be undertaken by US Special Forces.

Nor is it clear who would take responsibility for such a programme — the Pentagon or the Central Intelligence Agency. Such covert operations have traditionally been run by the CIA at arm’s length from the administration in power, giving US officials the ability to deny knowledge of it.

Will they ask Negroponte about the Wolf Brigade, I wonder?

The very existence of the Wolf Brigade underscores the criminality of the US occupation and the utter fraud of the Bush administration claims to be bringing “liberation” and “democracy” to Iraq. Many of the commandos would have been involved in murder and torture on behalf of Saddam Hussein’s regime. The American military deliberately recruited them in order to make use of their experience in mass repression and has directly modeled their operations on those of right-wing death squads in Central America.

The main US advisor to the Wolf Brigade from the time of its formation until April 2005 was James Steele. Steele’s own biography, promoting him for the US lecture circuit, states that “he commanded the US military group in El Salvador during the height of the guerilla war” and “was credited with training and equipping what was acknowledged to be the best counter-terrorist force in the region”. In a 12-year campaign of murder and repression, the Salvadoran units, trained and advised by people like Steele, killed over 70,000 people.

Media outlets like the WaPo can gloss the death squads over as

…how Iraqi Interior Ministry commando and police units have been infiltrated by two Shiite militias, which have been conducting ethnic cleansing and rounding up Sunnis suspected of supporting the insurgency.

But the ‘Salvador Option’ was deliberate US policy in Iraq, just as in Central America: that the psychopaths recruited, licensed and trained by Negroponte and his aides have now gone totally feral and out of US control in no way negates that original responsibility.

Of the memories of death and mutilation I witnessed in El Salvador, the sight of six Jesuit priests, their cook and her 16-year-old daughter with their brains blown across the neatly cropped lawn of their house, is the one that still haunts the most. They were among the country’s leading intellectuals, and I knew them well.

~

Hassan an-Ni’ami, an outspoken anti-occupation cleric, was seized by police commandos in Baghdad in late May. His hideously tortured body was dumped at a morgue 12 hours later, with police handcuffs still attached to his wrist. His chest had been burned, possibly with cigarettes. He had been whipped. His nose and one arm were broken. Horrifically, his kneecaps had been drilled through with what appeared to have been an electric drill. Finally, he had been shot multiple times in the chest and head.

Another man, Tahar Mohammed Suleiman al-Mashhadani, was detained by commandos in west Baghdad. His body was found 20 days later, “tortured almost beyond recognition” according to his family. A man calling himself “Abu Ali” told Beaumont he was detained by commandos in mid-May. He said he was beaten on his feet, hung by his arms from the ceiling and threatened with being sodomised with a bottle if he did not confess to being a “terrorist”.

Congressional Democrats can bring Bush and his entire cabal of armongers and ghouls down if they use the Negroponte hearings correctly: the evidence is all there if only they choose to grow a spine and call for it, if they not only subpoena winesses and evidence but take the bastards all the way to the Supreme Court if they have to.

If they do – and it’s a big if – appointing Negroponte could be turn out to be one of the dumbest things Bush has ever done, and he’s done quite a few.

Read more: US politics, Negroponte, State Department, Iraq, Central America, Death Squads. Confirmation hearings