Untitled Document
On November 2, the Washington
Post carried an explosive front-page story
about secret Eastern European prisons set up by the CIA for the interrogation
of terrorism suspects. While the Post article, by reporter
Dana Priest, gave readers plenty of details, it also withheld the most crucial
information--the location of these secret prisons--at the request of government
officials.
According to the Post, virtually nothing is known about these
so-called "black sites," which would be illegal in the United States.
Given the abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay, news that the U.S. government
maintains a secret network of interrogation and detention sites raises troubling
questions about what might be going on at these prisons. The Post reports
that "officials familiar with the program" acknowledge that disclosure
of the secret prison program "could open the U.S. government to legal challenges,
particularly in foreign courts, and increase the risk of political condemnation
at home and abroad."
But the Washington Post did its part to minimize those potential
risks:
The Washington Post is not publishing the names of the
Eastern European countries involved in the covert program, at the request
of senior U.S. officials. They argued that the disclosure might disrupt counterterrorism
efforts in those countries and elsewhere and could make them targets of possible
terrorist retaliation.
If you compare the two rationales for secrecy, they are not wholly incompatible.
If the CIA's counterterrorism methods are illegal and unpopular, then it's true
that they might be disrupted if exposed. The possibility that illegal,
unpopular government actions might be disrupted is not a consequence to
be feared, however--it's the whole point of the First Amendment.
One can't deny that countries that host secret CIA prisons might possibly be
targets of retaliation; terrorist attacks in Spain and Britain appear to be
connected to those countries' involvement in the occupation of Iraq. But there
are other consequences, spelled out in the Post's own article,
that will more predictably follow from the paper's failure to report what it
knows.
Without the basic fact of where these prisons are, it's difficult if not impossible
for "legal challenges" or "political condemnation" to force
them to close. As the Post notes, there has been "widespread
prisoner abuse" in U.S. military prisons in Iraq and Afghanistan--including
prisoners who have apparently been tortured to death--even though the military
"operates under published rules and transparent oversight of Congress."
Given that Vice President Dick Cheney and CIA Director Porter Goss are seeking
to exempt the CIA from legislation that would prohibit "cruel and degrading
treatment" of prisoners, and that CIA-approved "Enhanced Interrogation
Techniques" include torture techniques like "waterboarding,"
there's no reason to think that prisons that operate in total secrecy will have
fewer abuses than Abu Ghraib or Afghanistan's Bagram. Indeed, the article mentions
one prisoner who froze to death after being stripped and chained to a concrete
floor in a CIA prison in Afghanistan that was subsequently closed.
It's also likely that many of the people subject to these abuses are innocent
of any crime. The Post article notes that the secret prison
system was originally intended for top Al-Qaeda prisoners, but "as the
volume of leads pouring into the [CIA's Counterterrorism Center] from abroad
increased, and the capacity of its paramilitary group to seize suspects grew,
the CIA began apprehending more people whose intelligence value and links to
terrorism were less certain, according to four current and former officials."
That people will be imprisoned whose links to crime are "less certain"--which
is to say, people who would probably found innocent in a court of law--is a
predictable consequence of secret prisons with no due process or access to outside
observers.
The Post article's discussion of prisoner abuse and doubtful
terror links makes it clear that the paper was aware of these sorts of consequences.
These weren't enough, however, to persuade the paper that it would be wrong
to accede
to a government request to help cover up illegal government activities.
(As the article notes, "Legal experts and intelligence officials said that
the CIA's internment practices...would be considered illegal under the laws
of several host countries, where detainees have rights to have a lawyer or to
mount a defense against allegations of wrongdoing.")
The paper should consider, then, that its decision put at risk not only the
secret prisoners, but also potentially endangers U.S. soldiers and civilians.
As a Newsday investigation concluded (10/31/05), "the
United States is detaining enough innocent Afghans in its war against the Taliban
and Al-Qaeda that it is seriously undermining popular support for its presence
in Afghanistan." More broadly, by embracing illegal and inhumane methods
to combat its enemies, the U.S. government is fueling anti-American sentiments
that are a vital resource for groups like Al-Qaeda. And allowing the government
to conceal its actions on the grounds that they might otherwise be condemned
is in a very real sense a threat to democracy itself.
The Post's decision has struck some experts as enormously
significant. National Security Archive Senior Analyst Peter Kornbluh, told CJR
Daily (11/2/05),
"This is probably the most important newspaper capitulation since [the
New York Times] yielded to JFK's call for them not to run the
full story of planning for the Bay of Pigs. By withholding the country names,
the Post is directly enabling the rendition, secret detention,
and torture of prisoners at these locations to continue. That is a ghastly responsibility."
But the Post is not the only U.S. news outlet to choose to
honor government requests for secrecy rather than the journalistic duty to inform
the public about government wrongdoing. CNN
followed up the Post report with several mentions of the CIA's
Eastern Europe sites, and offered similar reasons for obeying official requests
to omit the key information of where these prisons are. CNN
reporter David Ensor said (11/2/05), "U.S. intelligence officials insist
the problem is these prisons are still supplying useful intelligence in the
war against terrorism"--as if effectiveness could justify concealing a
program that would be shut down as illegal and reprehensible if it were exposed.
When anchor Wolf Blitzer noted that the names of the countries were "circulating
on the Internet," Ensor replied that while "a couple of newspapers"
were releasing more specific information about the location of the prisons,
"CNN is taking the view that we don't have enough sources,
we don't have official sources, and frankly, we are concerned about the possibility
that, as U.S. officials have said to us, lives could be as stake." Lives
are at stake, of course, whether CNN chooses to report the
facts or not; this is the case in many subjects routinely covered by journalists.
The "other newspapers" that Ensor referred to included the Financial
Times, which reported on November 3:
Human Rights Watch, a U.S. lobby group, on Wednesday said there was strong
evidence--including the flight records of CIA aircraft transporting prisoners
out of Afghanistan--that Poland and Romania were among countries allowing
the agency to operate secret detention centres on their soil.
Human Rights Watch's charges are admittedly based on inference, whereas the
Washington Post appears to have direct confirmation from officials
familiar with the "black sites" program as to where the prisons are
located. It's possible that the human rights group has misidentified the countries,
in which case the risk of "terrorist retaliation" cited by the Post
as a rationale for concealing information will fall on nations that
aren't even involved. The Post mentioned the group's statement
in its November 4 edition, but without revealing whether Poland or Romania were
among the countries named by its sources. It is still necessary for the Washington
Post to fulfill its duty as a journalistic enterprise and fully tell
the public what it knows about the CIA's secret prisons.
ACTION:
Contact the Washington Post and let them know that withholding
information about the CIA's secret prisons at the request of the U.S. government
was the wrong journalistic decision.
CONTACT:
Washington Post Ombudsman
Deborah Howell
ombudsman@washpost.com
Phone: 202-334-7582