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The United States has detained more than 83,000 foreigners in the four
years of the war on terror, enough to nearly fill the country's largest football
stadium.
The administration defends the practice of holding detainees in prisons from
Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay as a critical tool to stop the insurgency in Iraq,
maintain stability in Afghanistan and get known and suspected terrorists off
the streets.
Roughly 14,500 detainees remain in U.S. custody, primarily in Iraq.
The number has steadily grown since the first CIA paramilitary officers touched
down in Afghanistan in the fall of 2001, setting up more than 20 facilities
including the "Salt Pit," an abandoned factory outside Kabul used
for CIA detention and interrogation.
In Iraq, the number in military custody hit a peak on Nov. 1, according to
military figures. Nearly 13,900 suspects were in U.S. custody there that day
_ partly because U.S. offensives in western Iraq put pressure on insurgents
before the October constitutional referendum and December parliamentary elections.
The detentions and interrogations have brought complaints from Congress and
human-rights groups about how the detainees _ often Arab and male _ are treated.
International law and treaty obligations forbid torture and inhumane treatment.
Classified memos have given the government ways to extract intelligence from
detainees "consistent with the law," administration officials often
say.
In Congress, Sen. John McCain is leading a campaign to ban cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody. The administration says the
legislation could tie the president's hands. Vice President Dick Cheney has
pressed lawmakers to exempt the CIA.
"There's an enemy that lurks and plots and plans and wants to hurt America
again. And so you bet we will aggressively pursue them. But we will do so under
the law," President Bush said last week.
Some 82,400 people have been detained by the military alone in Afghanistan
and Iraq, according to figures from officials in Baghdad and Washington. Many
are freed shortly after initial questioning.
To put that in context, the capacity of the Washington Redskins' FedEx Field,
the NFL's largest, is 91,704. The second largest, Giants Stadium, holds 80,242.
An additional 700 detainees were sent to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Just under 500
remain there now.
In Iraq, the Defense Department says 5,569 detainees have been held for more
than six months, and 3,801 have been held more than a year. Some 229 have been
locked up for more than two years.
Many have been questioned by military officials trained at the main U.S. interrogation
school, Fort Huachuca in Arizona. Pentagon officials say those mistreated are
relatively few when the sheer numbers are considered.
Yet human rights groups say they don't know the extent of the abuse. "And
there is no way anyone could, even if the military was twice as conscientious.
It is unknowable, unless you assume that every act of abuse is immediately reported
up the chain of command," said Tom Malinowski, Washington director for
Human Rights Watch.
As of March, 108 detainees were known to have died in U.S. military and CIA
custody, including 22 who died when insurgents attacked Abu Ghraib and others
who died of natural causes. At least 26 deaths have been investigated as criminal
homicides.
Last week, Senate Armed Services Chairman John Warner, R-Va., said that more
than 400 criminal investigations have been conducted and 95 military personnel
have been charged with misconduct. Seventy-five have been convicted.
Through the CIA, a much smaller prison population is maintained secretly by
the agency and friendly governments. A network of known or suspected facilities
_ some of which have been closed _ have been located in places including Thailand,
Central Asia and Eastern Europe.
The governments of Thailand and a number of Eastern Europe countries have denied
the CIA operated prisons within their borders. The agency consistently declines
to comment.
About 100 to 150 people are believed to have been grabbed by CIA officers and
sent to their home countries or to other nations where they were wanted for
prosecution, a procedure called "rendition." Saudi Arabia, Jordan
and Egypt are known to cooperate.
The practice has taken on a negative connotation, but that wasn't always the
case. In a December 2002 speech touching on intelligence successes, former CIA
Director George Tenet said the agency and FBI had "rendered 70 terrorists
to justice."
While officials won't confirm the number, another two to three dozen "high-value"
detainees are also believed to be in CIA custody. Among them, Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed, an alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks.
As House Intelligence chairman in 2004, CIA Director Porter Goss took a strong
stand on some of the gray areas of detention practices. In an AP interview,
he said, "Gee, you're breaking my heart" in response to complaints
that Arab men found it abusive to have women guards at the Guantanamo Bay prison
camp.
Before Goss took over the agency, its inspector general completed a report
on the treatment of detainees, following investigations into at least four prisoner
deaths that may have involved CIA personnel. To date, one agency contractor
has been charged.
The inspector general's report discussed tactics used by CIA personnel _ called
"Enhanced Interrogation Techniques." Former intelligence officials,
who spoke on condition of anonymity because the practices are classified, say
some interrogation techniques are well-known: exposing prisoners to cold, depriving
them of sleep or forcing them to stand in stressful positions.
Perhaps the most publicly controversial technique is waterboarding, when a
detainee is strapped to a board and has water run over him to simulate drowning.
AP Military Writer Robert Burns contributed to this report.