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	<title>Stephen Grey &#187; Guantanamo</title>
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		<title>UK made use of CIA &#039;torture&#039; evidence</title>
		<link>http://www.stephengrey.com/2009/07/uk-made-use-of-cia-torture-evidence/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stephengrey.com/2009/07/uk-made-use-of-cia-torture-evidence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Jul 2009 09:34:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stephengrey1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Intelligence]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Right or wrong, Britain did benefit from evidence obtained by from the CIA&#8217;s now-notorious programme of High Value Target (HVT) interrogation, the use of methods like waterboarding, sleep deprivation, confinement in boxes, and throwing prisoners against (specially-modified) walls. That&#8217;s what emerged from an investigation I did for BBC Radio&#8217;s File on Four and BBC World [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>Right or wrong, Britain did benefit from evidence obtained by from the CIA&#8217;s now-notorious programme of High Value Target (HVT) interrogation, the use of methods like <span style="font-weight:bold;">waterboarding, sleep deprivation, confinement in boxes, and throwing prisoners against (specially-modified) walls</span>.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s what emerged from an investigation I did for BBC Radio&#8217;s <span style="font-weight:bold;">File on Four</span> and BBC World Service &#8216;<span style="font-weight:bold;">Assignment</span>&#8216; into the vexed question of alleged UK complicity into the methods used by the United States in combatting terrorism.  (<a href="http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/fileon4/fileon4_20090728-1638a.mp3">Download the PODcast of this program here</a> or  <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/file_on_4">Listen to File on Four now</a> 0r World Service version <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/documentaries/2009/07/090729_assignment_300709.shtml">here</a>. )</p>
<p>The former No 2 at Britain&#8217;s <span style="font-weight:bold;">Secret Intelligence Service</span> (SIS), also known as MI6, <span style="font-weight:bold;">Sir Nigel Inkster</span>, was among those on the program. Asked by me if the UK agencies reap the benefits of the most controversial US methods, he said:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;To some degree I would say that the answer to that question is yes they did&#8230;Lets not forget that we’re dealing with a situation in which both the UK and the US had significantly under-invested in intelligence and security capacity for the preceding decade, so neither the CIA nor their British counterparts were exactly staffed up to deal with this global insurgency. And the material that came from these detainee interrogations was unquestionably valuable; one has to say for better or worse because as it now becomes evident you know some of the ways that information was obtained are ones that the UK government could never willingly have gone along with.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>What&#8217;s interesting is that, like some ex high-ups in the CIA I interviewed for this program, the significance Sir Nigel makes of these HVT interrogations is not their revelation of great plots but rather the way they filled in the details of an Al Qaeda network that on 9/11 was still largely un-canvassed. Not much of a ticking bomb scenario, in other words. That&#8217;s not really how it worked at all.<span id="more-78"></span></p>
<p>The program deals with specific cases of alleged UK complicity &#8211; as in the alleged torture in Pakistan of <span style="font-weight:bold;">Ranzieb Ahmed </span>(now convicted in the UK of Al Qaeda membership and directing terrorism), and torture in Pakistan and Morocco of <span style="font-weight:bold;">Binyam Mohamed </span>(released from Guantanamo this year after years inside the CIA rendition system &amp; military detention).</p>
<p>It also includes the first broadcast interview with <span style="font-weight:bold;">Iqbal Madni</span>, another former detainee at Guantanamo who believes he was the first of two prisoners that were sent through the British island of Diego Garcia in CIA renditions. The legal charity, Reprieve, is launching an action in the High Court on his behalf. The crucial point is that, although he ended in &#8216;Gitmo&#8217;, that was only after his interrogation and he says torture had taken place in Egypt. Reprieve says that flight to torture was a crime.  (More details on the <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8170594.stm">BBC website here</a> or in my piece for <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=8194127&amp;page=1">ABC News here)</a>.</p>
<p>Others interviewed on the program include: <span style="font-weight:bold;">Lord (Peter) Goldsmith</span>, the former Attorney General under Blair, who wishes the UK had been more outspoken against renditions etc, <span style="font-weight:bold;">Sir David Omand</span>, the former Intelligence and Security Co-ordinator at Downing Street, and <span style="font-weight:bold;">Fran Townsend</span>, former counter-terrorism adviser to President Bush. Townsend says it&#8217;s unlikely the Brits were informed about waterboarding etc &#8212; because even she wasn&#8217;t briefed on the program and she was at the heart of things.</p>
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		<title>On the trail of torture</title>
		<link>http://www.stephengrey.com/2009/02/on-the-trail-of-torture/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stephengrey.com/2009/02/on-the-trail-of-torture/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2009 12:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stephengrey1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Foreign Office]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MI5]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rendition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Secret Prisons]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[UPDATE: Binyam Mohamed returned to the UK on February 23, 2009 (Published in the Sunday Times, Feb 8, 2009) by Stephen Grey and David Leppard Prisoner No 1458 at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, woke up each day last week in his solitary cell and waited for the inevitable: the arrival of a team of guards to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>UPDATE: Binyam Mohamed returned to the UK on February 23, 2009</p>
<p>(Published in the Sunday Times, Feb 8, 2009)<br />
by Stephen Grey and David Leppard</p>
<p>Prisoner No 1458 at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, woke up each day last week in his solitary cell and waited for the inevitable: the arrival of a team of guards to take him down the corridor in shackles to be painfully force fed through a tube.<br />
This was not another attempt to extract a confession, but an attempt to keep Binyam Mohamed alive. The 30-year-old former resident of Notting Hill, west London, was continuing his hunger strike against what he sees as failed promises to set him free. When he last saw his lawyer two weeks ago, his arms, she said, stuck out of his 6ft body “like little thin twigs”.<br />
Although previously accused by US authorities of plotting a terrorist attack on American soil, Mohamed has not been charged with any crime. His former military prosecutor declared a month ago that he presented no threat to either America or Britain.<br />
After losing almost 50lb in weight, and wasting further by the day, he was probably in no state to be told or even to care that two High Court judges in London last Wednesday were appealing for the public release of “powerful evidence” that might help prove his astonishing claims of mistreatment to be true. The issues at stake, said the British judges, were nothing short of the lofty interests of “law, free speech and democratic accountability”.<br />
Involved shocking allegations of extreme mental and physical torture at the behest of America’s CIA, it is a case that has threatened to embarrass the new administration of President Barack Obama, whose inaugural speech included a pledge to halt such activities, as well as to shed an unwelcome spotlight on what exactly the British government knew and kept secret about potential crimes committed by its closest ally.<span id="more-52"></span><br />
IT was about 10pm local time on July 21, 2002, when the men in black ski masks arrived to collect Mohamed from where he was being held at Islamabad airport. They began by stripping him naked. They put him in a nappy and a tracksuit, blindfolded him and taped a mask across his mouth, he recalled.<br />
They were a CIA paramilitary team that had come to scoop him up and place him on an executive jet used by the US spy agency to “render” terrorist suspects to and from jail cells across the world. In Mohamed’s case, his destination, where he arrived at 3.43am the following day, was the Moroccan capital, Rabat.<br />
Though never confirmed officially by the United States, evidence that verified this “rendition” to Morocco came from the flight logs of the now notorious Gulfstream jet involved. It matched the exact details of Mohamed’s testimony. It has always been much harder to assess the truth of his account of torture that he said occurred in Pakistan before his transfer and in Morocco soon after, even if there are many who report similar treatment.<br />
After he was first arrested in Karachi in April 2002, Mohamed said that soon after the first questions from Americans, Pakistani interrogators followed up by hanging him by a leather strap round his wrist, beating him, and threatening him with a pistol to the head. Then, when this stopped, an agent from British intelligence came to hint to him that he should cooperate or face being sent to be tortured by Arabs. When he was flown to Morocco, he said, it got worse. He was beaten savagely and at one stage his genitals were cut with razor blades.<br />
Again there was a British connection, he alleged. A book of photographs of people at a London mosque had been shown to him, as well as searching questions posed about his life in Notting Hill. The agents called their paperwork the “British file”.<br />
In January 2004, Mohamed said he was rendered onwards by the Americans to Kabul (again confirmed by CIA flight records). This time he was held in a covert CIA “black site” known as the Dark Prison. Inmates here were held day and night without light while being bombarded with constant loud music.<br />
Only after a journey of more than two years between secret prisons, did Mohamed, by his account, emerge from clandestine detention to the more open but still harsh world of US military detention. And in Guantanamo, he finally got to tell his story to the British lawyer Clive Stafford Smith.<br />
Born in 1978, Mohamed had moved to Washington DC with his family when he was young. He and his father, an Ethiopian Airlines official, then moved to London, where he lived from the age of 16 to 22.<br />
Some time in the spring of 2001, Mohamed travelled to Afghanistan. According to later accusations (and it is not clear which, if any, charges US prosecutors still aim to pursue), he attended training at Al-Qaeda camps, went on the run after 9/11, and became a companion of a former street gangster from Chicago named Jose Padilla, or the “dirty bomber”. The pair were said to have associated with Al-Qaeda leaders such as Abu Zubaydah and Khalid Sheikh Mohamed and to have hatched plots to explode a devastating radioactive bomb in the US.<br />
While Padilla was arrested in May 2002 as he returned to the US and later convicted of lesser charges, Mohamed was seized a month earlier in Karachi when trying to board a flight to Europe using a false passport. With American intelligence alerted, his journey through the system began.<br />
During his detention, Mohamed made several confessions. He argued later that these were all forced out of him by torture. But with the US refusing to confirm even in court any aspect of its secret programme of rendition and detention, he, like most of its subjects, has struggled to find positive proof to document that physical abuse.<br />
The twist in his tale came from lawsuits filed in London that in effect forced the British government, against its earlier wishes, to take up the cases of Guantanamo detainees such as Mohamed who, while legally resident in Britain, were not UK citizens. In turn, this forced the government in Mohamed’s case to reveal what evidence was held in secret British intelligence files that might be useful to prove his innocence.<br />
After judgments last year exposed the fact that the UK was holding some secret evidence useful to Mohamed’s defence – mainly information shared with Britain by US intelligence – the US government let Mohamed’s defence team see those documents, provided that they remained secret.<br />
Last week, however, Lord Justice Thomas and Mr Justice Lloyd Jones, took matters further, arguing that while it was not for them to order public disclosure of US secret material, particularly in the face of clear and dire “threats” by the US government to reduce intelligence-sharing with Britain if they did, there was a pressing case for the information to be revealed in public.<br />
In the House of Commons, David Miliband, the foreign secretary, denied there were such explicit threats. But he did confirm that releasing the documents despite strong US protests would result in “real and significant damage” to Britain’s national security.<br />
One way or another, it was a court judgment that put Obama’s White House on the spot. Despite the new president’s condemnations of the Bush administration and its promise to break with the past on issues of rendition and torture: how far was Obama willing to go in exposing the secret trail of evidence that would document the most controversial aspects of the years since 9/11? Was he willing to publish material that could help set free terrorist suspects? Or material that could result in the prosecution of CIA officers or the officials who advised them? Or would he prefer to see the whole matter left buried in a dusty but well-guarded vault?<br />
The 42 secret documents obtained by the High Court – summarised in just seven paragraphs censored from the public judgment – were said to refer only to one part of Mohamed’s treatment, his alleged torture in Pakistan. But establishing the principle of exposing such things, some US officials suggest, could open the floodgates to exposing the secrets of rendition and secret detention.<br />
Even just this limited material, said the judges, gave rise to an “arguable case of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” in law. As “admissions” by US government officials about how Mohamed was treated, they could possibly be used as evidence in a criminal court.<br />
At Thames House, the riverside headquarters of MI5, intelligence officials were understandably made jittery last week by all this attention drawn by the High Court’s judgment. It threatened to expose lingering tensions in the darker side of the agency’s “special relationship” with its American “cousins”.<br />
While the pre-Obama CIA might have believed sleep deprivation and waterboarding were sometimes acceptable ways to interrogate prisoners, Whitehall officials were keen to point out that for Britain they were certainly not. British intelligence had a strict “no torture” policy.<br />
However, for Mohamed’s legal team Britain’s alleged complicity in the case of their client is more subtle – but still significant.<br />
After being told by the Americans of Mohamed’s arrest in 2002, MI5 had dispatched an officer to speak to him in Karachi, evidence in the High Court case confirmed.<br />
Mohamed was said to have told the MI5 officer about his time in the UK. This included details of mosques he attended and how he was recruited to go to Afghanistan for terror training. He admitted he had seen a computer file in Lahore that apparently contained details of how to make a dirty bomb. But Mohamed told the MI5 officer – whom he knew as “John” – that he thought the whole thing was a joke.<br />
“John” was clearly unimpressed. But his report back to Thames House may well come back to haunt him.<br />
“I told [Mohamed] that he had an opportunity to help us and help himself. The US authorities will be deciding what to do with him and this would depend to a very large degree on his level of cooperation.<br />
“I said that if he could persuade me he was telling the complete truth I would seek to use my influence to help him . . . I said it must be obvious to him that he would get more lenient treatment if he cooperated.” Shortly after the interview Mohamed disappeared into the CIA’s rendition programme.<br />
This weekend, amid rumours in Westminster that the police might now be called in to investigate MI5, senior Whitehall officials admitted that “John’s” report could present MI5 with difficulties. Under the 1988 Criminal Justice Act it is illegal for British officials to commission or acquiesce in acts of torture anywhere in the world. The crime can be punished by life imprisonment.<br />
Whether or not Mohamed was tortured, and whether or nor “John” was culpable, his case raises a far larger question. Despite Gordon Brown’s declarations suggesting otherwise, do the British security services use intelligence that has been obtained through torture?<br />
In a little noticed debate in a House of Lords committee last Thursday, Baroness Eliza Manningham-Buller, MI5’s director-general between 2002 and 2007, went further than any of her colleagues in explaining the moral dilemma.<br />
“It is pretty well impractical always to check whether something has been derived from torture unless you have reason to suspect it at the beginning,” she said.<br />
“Literally thousands of pieces of intelligence are shared daily between the UK, our allies and people who might not so reasonably be described as our allies. I hope the minister will be able to confirm my comment on the amount of material that is going round the place and the impracticality of checking each bit for torture.”<br />
That amounts to an admission that MI5 knows it has almost certainly used torture-stained intelligence, despite claiming it does not condone it.<br />
It also emerged last week that none of the 42 documents unearthed by the High Court hearing about the Mohamed case had been passed to a full-scale inquiry into the practice of rendition by parliament’s intelligence and security committee in 2007. The inquiry had cleared the UK government of complicity in the US programme. Britain, the report suggested, was never told by the CIA exactly where it was holding prisoners and what techniques were being used to extract intelligence.<br />
The chief of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), Sir John Scarlett, had told the committee it had never “crossed my mind” that US intelligence was coming from torture. After all, he said: “We are talking about the Americans, our closest ally.”<br />
In their ruling last week the judges said the MPs could now use the new documents to reopen their inquiries and ask witnesses from MI6 and MI5 some “searching and difficult questions”. The conclusions of the inquiry might be different, they suggested.<br />
In Washington the questions may be even tougher. In a US federal court hearing on rendition in San Francisco tomorrow, lawyers for Mohamed and others will hope to hear whether Obama will abandon what has so far been a blanket defence that has sunk every court case lodged on torture and rendition in American courts – namely that any court hearings on the subject would simply violate “state secrets” and should be blocked.<br />
For Mohamed himself, none of these endless hearings seem to move him a step closer to freedom. After 2,248 days in captivity, his last words to his military lawyer as she left were: “They don’t care if I live or die.”</p>
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		<title>The Guantanamo Airlift: how Europe helped transport the prisoners</title>
		<link>http://www.stephengrey.com/2007/11/the-guantanamo-airlift-how-europe-helped-transport-the-prisoners/</link>
		<comments>http://www.stephengrey.com/2007/11/the-guantanamo-airlift-how-europe-helped-transport-the-prisoners/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Nov 2007 00:23:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stephengrey1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA["War on Terror"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[By Stephen Grey / additional research Natalia Viana. For more information, including breakdown of Guantanamo prisoner flights, see www.ghostplane.net / and www.ghostplane.pbwiki.com THE secret flight plans of American military planes have revealed for the first time how European countries helped send prisoners, including British citizens, to the Guantanamo Bay prison camp. Despite widespread criticism of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>By Stephen Grey / additional research Natalia Viana.</p>
<p>For more information, including breakdown of Guantanamo prisoner flights, see <a href="http://www.ghostplane.net/">www.ghostplane.net</a> / and <a href="http://www.ghostplane.pbwiki.com/">www.ghostplane.pbwiki.com</a></p>
<p><span style="font-weight:bold;"> </span></p>
<p>THE secret flight plans of American military planes have revealed for the first time how European countries helped send prisoners, including British citizens, to the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.</p>
<p>Despite widespread criticism of alleged human rights abuses and torture at the US base in Cuba, a Sunday Times investigation has shown that at least five European countries gave the United States permission to fly nearly 700 terrorist suspects across their territory.</p>
<p>Three years ago, The Sunday Times published flight logs of CIA civilian jets in Europe, setting off a controversy over the whether countries across the continent have been secretly involved in America&#8217;s rendition of terrorist suspects to countries that carry out torture.<span id="more-45"></span></p>
<p>The row is now set to be reignited. Inquiries by Ana Gomes, a Portuguese member of the European parliament, have uncovered not only more CIA flight logs but also more sensitive military flight plans, which until now have remained a closely guarded secret.</p>
<p>The logs show how most prisoners changed planes at a Turkish military airbase and flew across Greek, Italian and Portuguese airspace. Others reached Cuba after touching down in Spain, whose governing socialist party once expressed indignation at conditions in Guantanamo.</p>
<p>The flight logs show that three Britons — Shafiq Rasul, Jamal Udeen and Asif Iqbal — were flown across Europe to Cuba on January 14, 2002. Moazzam Begg, another Briton, was taken by the same route to Guantanamo on February 2, 2003; and Binyam Mohamed, a British resident whose release the British government is now trying to negotiate, arrived in Cuba after crossing Europe in a special flight in September 2004.</p>
<p>According to the flight plans, the first 23 prisoners to arrive at Guantanamo — including another British citizen, Feroz Abbasi, then 21, and an Australian, David Hicks — had arrived at the American naval base in Cuba after flying from the Moron airbase in Spain.</p>
<p>Abbasi has claimed in a statement that prisoners were abused within hours of arriving. &#8220;We were made to sit on our heels, one foot over the other, supported by one foot&#8217;s toes alone, for hours. Some of us were old, weak, fatigued, and injured — they were the ones to drop first in the searing Caribbean heat.&#8221;</p>
<p>Described by the Pentagon as the &#8220;worst of the worst&#8221; from Al-Qaeda and the Taliban, the images of prisoners such as Abbasi dressed in orange jumpsuits, their heads shaved and shackled by their wrists and ankles, shocked the world. Within a day, Donald Rumsfeld, then US defence secretary, announced that the Geneva conventions would not apply to what were now called &#8220;enemy combatants&#8221;.</p>
<p>Last week, Europe&#8217;s leading watchdog on human rights alleged that European countries had breached the international convention against torture by giving the US secret permission to use its airspace.</p>
<p>Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe&#8217;s commissioner for human rights, said: &#8220;What happened at Guantanamo was torture and it is illegal to provide facilities or anything to make this torture possible. Under the law, European governments should have intervened and should not have given permission to let these flights happen.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gomes added: &#8220;It&#8217;s clear to me that Guantanamo could not have been created without the involvement of European countries.&#8221;</p>
<p>Methods used at Guantanamo Bay, condemned by Britain&#8217;s Court of Appeal as a legal &#8220;black hole&#8221; and as a &#8220;monstrous failure of justice&#8221; by one law lord, have included the prolonged use of isolation, sleep deprivation, and use of stress positions. &#8220;These are methods that have been declared as unlawful by the European Court of Human Rights,&#8221; Hammarberg said.</p>
<p>The military flight plans show that all key flights arriving in Guantanamo had come across European airspace either through Spain or the Incirlik airbase in southeastern Turkey. The Sunday Times compared the military flight plans against a database compiled by Reprieve, the British-based charity that represents Guantanamo prisoners, of when prisoners first weighed in at the camp.</p>
<p>The investigation, cross-checked against other Pentagon documents, shows for the first time which prisoner arrived on which flight at Guantanamo, and by what route. At least 170 other prisoners flew over Spanish territory, more than 700 crossed Portuguese space, and more than 680 were transshipped at Incirlik. Most flights also crossed Greek and Italian airspace, according to a source in European air traffic control.</p>
<p>On February 7 2003, for example, a US Air Force C-17 Globemaster plane took off from Incirlik with 27 prisoners on board for Cuba. The same day, prisoner number 558 weighed in at 136lb (62kg) at the camp. He can be named as Moazzam Begg, now 39, from Birmingham, who was released in January 2005, and has never been charged with a crime.</p>
<p>Interviewed by phone last week, Begg recalled: &#8220;Inside the plane there was a chain around our waist, and it connected to cuffs around my wrists, which were tied in the back, and to my ankles. We were seated but it was so painful not being able to speak, to hear, to breathe properly, to look, to turn left or right, to move your hands, stretch your legs, or anything.&#8221; At the time flights were landing in Spain and crossing Spanish airspace, socialist leaders there were expressing &#8220;indignation&#8221; over conditions in Guantanamo. Now the socialists are in government after winning an election in March 2004 just after the Madrid train bombings and they are being asked to defend Spain&#8217;s continued collaboration with American operations. Under international law, government and military planes can cross another country&#8217;s territory only with diplomatic permission.</p>
<p>In a statement to the European parliament on the visits of CIA planes to Spain, the foreign minister Miguel Angel Moratinos has testified: &#8220;Our territory may have been used not to commit crimes on it, but as a stopover on the way to committing crime in another country.&#8221;</p>
<p>Spain, it has now emerged, had a specific agreement with the US to allow flights and visits to Spanish airbases for American planes.</p>
<p>In Portugal, the foreign minister Luis Amado has said flights across his country&#8217;s airspace took place &#8220;under the aegis of the UN and Nato and that Portugal naturally follows the principle of good faith in the relations with its allies&#8221;. Nato&#8217;s role in Guantanamo stems from a secret agreement made in Brussels on October 4 2001 by all Nato members, including Britain. Although never made public, Lord Robertson, the former British defence secretary who was later Nato&#8217;s secretary-general, explained that day that Nato had agreed to provide &#8220;blanket overflight clearances for the United States and other allies&#8217; aircraft for military flights related to operations against terrorism&#8221;.</p>
<p>Today, Nato is more coy about its role in helping send prisoners to Guantanamo.</p>
<p>In a letter to Gomes, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the current secretary-general, said no Nato planes had &#8220;flown to or from Guantanamo Bay&#8221; and that Nato &#8220;as an organisation has no involvement or co-ordinating role in providing clearance or overflight rights for other flights&#8221;. Turkey, meanwhile, has declared that its agencies had &#8220;reached no findings regarding any unacknowledged deprivation of liberty conducted by foreign agencies within the territory of the republic of Turkey or any transport by aircraft or otherwise of the persons deprived of their liberty&#8221;.</p>
<p>In London, Clive Stafford Smith, legal director of Reprieve, said, with America threatening that Guantanamo prisoners faced the death penalty, European governments had made &#8220;pious statements&#8221; that<br />
they would never send prisoners to the US without obtaining assurances they would not be executed.</p>
<p>Stafford Smith added: &#8220;Some European governments, it&#8217;s now clear, systematically assisted in clandestine flights and illegal prisoner transfers to Guantanamo Bay. We need a full investigation and Europeans need to face their responsibility for these crimes.&#8221;</p>
<p>See flight logs and complete list of prisoners at www.ghostplane.net</p>
<p>Additional reporting: Natalia Viana</p>
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		<title>Gitmo Underwear Scandal; Who Smuggled the Speedos?</title>
		<link>http://www.stephengrey.com/2007/10/gitmo-underwear-scandal-who-smuggled-the-speedos/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Oct 2007 16:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stephengrey1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA["War on Terror"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ABC News: The Blotter September 24, 2007 4:09 PM Stephen Grey and Brian Ross Report: The discovery that two Guantanamo detainees were wearing unauthorized underwear &#8212; Under Armour briefs and a Speedo bathing suit &#8212; has apparently triggered a full U.S. Navy investigation. In a letter last month to a lawyer representing the two detainees, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><span style="font-size:85%;">ABC News: The Blotter</span><br />
<span style="font-size:85%;">September 24, 2007 4:09 PM<br />
Stephen Grey and Brian Ross Report:</span><br />
<a href="http://blogs.abcnews.com/photos/uncategorized/2007/09/24/gitmounderwear_mn.jpg"></a><br />
The discovery that two Guantanamo detainees were wearing unauthorized underwear &#8212; Under Armour briefs and a Speedo bathing suit &#8212; has apparently triggered a full U.S. Navy investigation.<br />
In a <a href="openPopup(">letter</a> last month to a lawyer representing the two detainees, a U.S. Navy Commander warned, &#8220;We cannot tolerate contraband being surreptitiously brought into the camp&#8221; and said, &#8220;Such activities threaten the safety&#8221; of Guantanamo staff, detainees and visiting lawyers.<br />
The lawyer who received the letter, Clive Stafford-Smith of London, wrote back, &#8220;I have never received such an extraordinary letter in my entire career.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;I cannot imagine who would want to give my client Speedos, or why,&#8221; Stafford-Smith responded about his client, Shake Aamer. He &#8220;is hardly in a position to go swimming, since the only available water is the toilet in his cell. I presume that nobody thinks that Mr. Aamer wears Speedos while paddling in his privy.&#8221;<br />
Aamer, a Saudi Arabian, has been held at Guantanamo for more than five years, according to the Associated Press.<br />
<a href="http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/">Click Here for Full Blotter Coverage.</a><br />
The U.S. Navy Commander, whose name was redacted from copies of the letters provided to ABCNews.com by Stafford-Smith, said the investigation revealed &#8220;the briefs were not issued by JTF-Guantanamo personnel, nor did they enter the camp through regular mail.&#8221;<span id="more-38"></span><br />
Stafford-Smith rejected any implication that he or his colleagues had smuggled in the &#8220;contraband&#8221; underwear to their clients.<br />
&#8220;Does someone seriously suggest,&#8221; he asked, that he or his colleagues &#8220;have been stripping off to deliver underpants to our clients?&#8221;<br />
A U.S. military spokesman, Army Lt. Col. Ed Bush, told the Associated Press earlier this month the investigation was no laughing matter.<br />
&#8220;There is no room for error when working in a dangerous environment, and constant vigilance is of the utmost importance,&#8221; Bush told the AP.<br />
Some 340 men are being held at the prison on suspicion of terrorism or links to al Qaeda.<br />
President Bush has indicated he wants the Guantanamo prison shut down, but to date there have been no details on how or when that might happen.<br />
Stephen Grey is a freelance journalist who contributes to ABC News.<br />
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