
The release of secret US Department of Defense files on prisoners held by the US as part of the āwar on terrorā confirms, in the US governmentās own words, the shoddy and unreliable nature of the āevidenceā used to condemn prisoners at its Guantanamo Bay torture camp.
The files released by WikiLeaks also show the mentality of the US government in its attempts to prosecute and gather information about āterroristsā to justify its wars of aggression. Apart from those known to be innocent by their US captors, many others were condemned on the flimsiest of pretexts.
A number of files contain the line: ābackground notes are based solely on the detainee's statementsā, neglecting to mention that these āstatementsā were made in an environment of constant torture and threats.
Other āevidenceā came from fellow detainees who āwere subjected to torture or other forms of coercionā or who āprovided false statements to secure better treatment in Guantanamoā, WikiLeaks.ch said.
Among the torture methods used were prolonged solitary confinement, regular and prolonged beatings, prolonged periods in stress positions, sleep deprivation, water boarding, electric shocks, injections of experimental drugs, exposure to loud music and extreme cold.
The cases of two Australians condemned to Guantanamo Bay ā David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib ā are emblematic of this farce.
Hicks laughed as he read the file about himself, a spokesperson for Hicks told Āé¶¹“«Ć½ Weekly.
The five-page assessment of Hicksā status as a prisoner, written in September 2004, contains many basic errors, as well as speculation and information extracted under torture, used to justify his detention.
Hicksā spokesperson said in a statement: āThis document shows that even back in 2004, Mr Hicks was not suspected and/or accused of hurting any person, or involved in any terrorist acts.ā
Despite this, Hicks was forced to plead guilty to āmaterial support for terrorismā in 2007 after spending more than five years in the US torture camp in order to be returned to Australia.
Hicks maintains his innocence and has never received a fair trial. Nonetheless, he has been publicly labelled one of āthe worst of the worstā terrorists by the US and Australian governments.
The filesā inaccuracy on basic facts ā such as Hicksā middle name, the location of where he was captured, and the name of a US Navy ship ā casts doubt on the basic seriousness and competence of the investigation.
The statement from Hicksā spokesperson debunked 13 errors in his file. The most serious allegations included that Hicks was a āsworn fighterā for al-Qaeda, would probably become a āmercenaryā if released and was a āpossible leader for any extremist organizationā.
Hicksā spokesperson said: āThe report alleges that Mr Hicks led in prayer and was held in high regard by other Guantanamo detainees ā Mr Hicks cannot speak Arabic, and his knowledge of the religion would not qualify him to lead prayer.
āSome detainees thought that Mr Hicks was a spy, so any allegation that he was a leader is simply outrageous.ā
Hicksā spokesperson said any admissions about involvement with al-Qaeda were made under torture. Since his release, Hicks has taken up a career as a gardener, not a mercenary.
The file also falsely claimed that Hicks āflew to East Timor in order to take part in the conflict thereā in 1999.
Sally Neighbour said on April 26 in The Australian that this mistake āsuggests the US was confusing Hicks with another Australian, former soldier Matthew Stewart, who left the Australian army and allegedly joined al-Qa'ida after a stint in East Timor in the late 1990s.
āIt is hard to imagine a more flagrant mistake in a document that purported to be the legal justification for the historic first military commission trial.ā
The file relating to Mamdouh Habib tells a similar story. Along with basic errors of fact, such as incorrect place names and dates, Habibās file cited āadmissions of guiltā made āunder extreme duressā as reasons for his continued imprisonment.
The āadmissionsā ā which the file acknowledges were later retracted ā included that he trained six of the 9/11 hijackers and planned to hijack a Qantas flight. The file also contains speculation that Habib was a money courier for al-Qaeda.
Habib told ABC Radioās AM program on April 26 that he denied ever making the admissions. He also said: āI never been a courier for al-Qaeda. I never deal with al-Qaeda ...
āBecause they know themselves they lied, theyāre dishonest, they tried to fabricate documents.ā
The file also shows Habib was tortured in Egypt before being transferred to Guantanamo Bay. Habib was released without charge in 2005 and recently received a settlement from the Australian government after he launched a lawsuit.
However, despite the highly dubious contents of the files, a number of corporate media outlets reported the speculation in the files as fact. This continued demonisation of Hicks and Habib serves to provide cover for imperialist aggression in the Arab world and to justify attacks on civil liberties as part of the āwar on terrorā.
The Guantanamo Bay prison remains open despite US President Barack Obamaās pre-election promise to close the camp and provide fair trials denied under former president George W Bush.
It still holds 172 prisoners, some with no prospect of trial or release, the Guardian said on April 25.
Obama has signed an order that said dozens of detainees already held for years would continue to be imprisoned indefinitely without any charges, said the March 8 Washington Post. Obama has also shielded from prosecution government and military figures accused of involvement in torture.
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