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Kings of Pain" UK, USA and Israel

john stanton | 12.05.2004 20:24 | Analysis | Anti-militarism | London

UK, USA and Israel bathing the world in violence. Somehow it has to end.

United Kingdom, United States and Israel
Kings of Pain

By John Stanton

A little publicized piece by Ali Abunimah in Lebanon’s Daily Star titled Israeli link possible in US torture techniques: In exchange for interrogation training, did Washington award security contracts? should be getting a lot more attention. While it is doubtful that the Pentagon and its defense contractors would need to barter with Israel to get their interrogation techniques (they’ve had them for decades), the Abunimah article provides a gold-mine worth of resources establishing, yet again, the inseparable and often damaging linkage between US and Israeli interests in the Middle East and Central Asia. Reading through some of the resource material cited by Abunimah, it is difficult to figure out where US foreign and defense policy ends and Israel’s begins. But more on that later.

History records how much of a mess Great Britain made of the Middle East chopping up tribal lands, establishing arbitrary borders, and at one point even threatening to “gas” the Iraqi’s during the failed occupation of their country in the early 1900’s. But little is known about the role that Great Britain played in developing the fine art of torture. It was Great Britain, not Israel or the US, that pioneered the torture tactics so common in military practice in 2004.

Five Techniques

For over 30 years Israel and the US have used time-tested torture practices devised by the British. The British Army pioneered these methods way back in 1971, using them against the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and the Irish people. According to one of the world’s most respected, and underrated, human rights groups B’Tselem (btselem.org), in 1971 British security forces in Northern Ireland used coercive interrogation methods against fourteen IRA suspects. These methods were known as the five techniques and surfaced in a legal proceeding known as Ireland versus the United Kingdom. The five pillars of torture include the following:

 Wall-Standing: Forcing the detainees to remain for periods of some hours in a “stress position,” described by those who underwent it as being “spread-eagled against the wall, with their fingers put high above the head against the wall, the legs spread apart and the feet back, causing them to stand on their toes with the weight of the body mainly on the fingers.
 Hooding: Putting a black or navy colored bag over the detainees’ heads and, at least initially, keeping it there all the time except during interrogation.
 Subjection to Noise: Pending their interrogations, holding the detainees in a room where there was a continuous loud and hissing noise.
 Deprivation of Sleep: Pending their interrogations, depriving the detainees of sleep.
 Deprivation of Food and Drink: Subjecting the detainees to a reduced diet during their stay at the center and pending interrogation.

The United States and Israel have brutally refined British practices adding cultural torture. For prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan, Guantanimo Bay and Israel’s many detention centers housing Palestinian captives, that means assaulting the integrity of one’s culture and religion while physically pushing the prisoners to the brink of death. Modifications made by Israel and clearly adopted by the US for the Arab captives include constant references to hetero-on-hetero sex, forcing nude inmates to role-play as dogs and simulate hetero-on-hetero sex, and the common practice of photographing the prisoner in humiliating circumstances so that in each interrogation session the broken prisoner, or his comrades/family, can see how far he/she has been removed from humanity.

Been There, Done That

In a March 1991 report titled Interrogation of Palestinians During the Intifada: Ill-Treatment, "Moderate Physical Pressure?" or Torture? B’Tselem reported on a method of torture called Shabah which now seems to be the preferred method of the US military and intelligence communities. “Shabah entails tying the detainee's hands in front or behind his body with plastic or metal cuffs. He is blindfolded or his head is covered to the neck by sacking [hood] with only a slit left open to breathe. He stands in this position in an open yard, or sometimes with his hands tied to a pole, for several days during which he is interrogated for several hours each day. He is subjected to inadequate food; sleep deprivation (sometimes for up to a week) and restriction of toilet facilities; beating (with clubs, fists or boots, sometimes on the genitals or head, sometimes banging the head on the wall); the "cupboard" (being placed in a closed dark space, some one meter by one meter for hours or days); partial suffocation (by pressure on the windpipe or by placing sacks on the head and pressing them against the nose and mouth); and Falaqa (beating the soles of the feet with a stick or plastic hose, usually while the detainee is handcuffed and hooded).”

What does Shabah feel like? According to B’Tselem quoting a prisoner, “They had me sit on a chair about 25cm high that is chained to the floor. One leg of the chair is shorter than the others, so the chair is unstable. They shackled my hands behind the back of the chair, and my legs, and put a sack over my head. The shackles are metal. The first day they did this, I felt something drip on me, and the next day I saw that it had been the vomit of a previous detainee. They played music so loud that I couldn’t figure out what it was. Sometimes the chair was really smooth, and I would slide downwards whenever I dozed off to sleep. Anyway, like I said, it wasn't straight. They kept me in Shabah for forty-eight hours…”

Meanwhile, back in the mother country of democracy and torture, Great Britain’s prisons have been the home of brutal practices against the IRA, although they’ve apparently managed to whitewash much of their atrocities. In 1997, Amnesty International reported on the despicable conditions for the Irish in British prisons. “Category A prisoners (prisoners regarded as a high security risk) were held in conditions which led to serious deterioration in their physical and mental health. Róisín McAliskey, who was four months pregnant, was temporarily detained in a filthy cell in the special security unit of an all-male prison. She and other prisoners, including Patrick Kelly, who was suffering from cancer, received inadequate medical treatment.” In another incident in Brixton Prison in the late 1990’s, six Irishmen hanged themselves under suspicious circumstances. Some of the guards responsible for monitoring them were former members of the British military.



Peace is Our Profession

As Abunimah noted in his article, The Jerusalem Fund of Aish AhTorah earlier this year sponsored the first annual Defense Aerospace Executives Mission of Peace to Israel and Jordan ( http://www.jerusalemfund.com). Members of the US Congress such as Friend of Zion award winner Senator Evan Bayh play a critical role in ensuring that the Judeo-Christian lines of communication remain open to negotiate lucrative contracts and ensure that the US will stay in Iraq and support whatever nutty policy the Sharon government comes up with. Another Friend of Zion award winner is Robert Liscouski, an Assistant Secretary of US Homeland Security for Infrastructure Protection. The Jerusalem Fund’s honorary chairs include a former head of Mossad and Israel’s Minister of Internal Security. In this case, appearances are not deceiving.

The Chairman of the Mission of Peace for the Jerusalem Fund is not an Israeli but the Joe Reeder, a former US Army undersecretary and now corporate lobbyist for Greenberg Traurig. Albert Einstein might be surprised to learn that his name is used by the Jerusalem Fund for four classes of the Albert Einstein Award (technology, lifetime achievement, etc.) which, by coincidence, end up in the hands of defense and security contractors, not to groups like B’Tselem. Just how this effort translates into some sort of Mission of Peace is something only George Orwell would understand.

As long as we are talking irony and oddity, it’s worth mentioning that Reeder heads a defense industry ethics study group in the US whose stated purpose is to improve the ethics practices of the industry. In reality, Reeder’s effort goes more toward to defending the image of the defense contractor as ethical patriot in the face of mismanagement of Iraqi reconstruction contracts, abuse of revolving doors, overcharging the government and the nightmarish fact that a former Pentagon official and Boeing employee, Darlene Druyun, is now a convicted felon. So much for ethics.

Even though the January 2004 gathering in Israel was billed as a Defense Aerospace Executives gig, Robert Roth of Viacom and Mark Kamlet of Carnegie Mellon University showed up to talk about telecommunications network and cybersecurity issues. A number of investment banking firms were also present. The celebrity of the event was Jack London, CEO of CACI and Abu Gharib fame, who headed a seminar titled How to work with the Department of Defense: A prime consolidator perspective. Reeder, as noted by Abunimah, gave insights on how to sell to the Pentagon. And this was a Mission of Peace?

Rarefied Web

So what does all this have to do with torture? “The visit of the US delegation that included the CACI head exposes a rarefied web of influence sharing in which US government officials and congressmen, defense contractors and lobbyists parcel out huge contracts, and siphon significant portions off to Israel,” wrote Abunimah. That “rarefied web” includes Great Britain who violated its own sanctions on Israel and adopted the US arms export approach to that country. Commenting on the revised British arms transfer policy, Oxfam stated that “rather than solely basing decisions to export arms components on human rights, conflict and poverty considerations, new criteria were introduced to assess potential deals against their importance for the arms industry.”

And that’s the rub. The liberating principles of human rights that took humanity centuries to adopt are once again being tortured and minimized on behalf of greed, of fanaticism and of fear. We are back to Britain’s five techniques. We are all drowning in violence. Can Crucifixion for the enemy be far behind? The simplistic rationale of British, American and Israeli leaders has led us all into a world where television, the Net, radio, newspapers, magazines, conversations and dreams are focused on war, death, and destruction. Bin Laden is winning big time and dragging us all down with him.

No one is rising above it all and there’s no telling the depths to which this will affect generations of children. And it all begins when leaders become unaccountable and their methods go unchallenged. How can the three enlightened societies that are the UK, US and Israel be so plain stupid when viewing their unpleasant histories with the Arab and Central Asian worlds? How did it come to this? There were no consequences for the political and military dereliction of duty on 911. No consequences for the lies that led to the Iraq War and Occupation which, in turn, led to slaughter of Iraqis and Americans in Falluja, the torture at Abu Gharib and the beheading of American Nick Berg. As more and more Americans view Arabs as “animals” it’s worth posing the question, Does a 500lb precision guided munition released from a US aircraft that ultimately incinerates a Iraqi family make the US any less sick than the group that beheads an American citizen? Are the 2500 US civilians killed on 911 worth 20,000 Afghani and Iraqi civilians killed? Is it ethical that Israel uses British and US military equipment for assassination missions or the killing of the Rachel Corrie’s of the world?

How much retribution, how much torture, how many brains splattered across the earth, how much of the “rarefied web of influence” can the world stand?

When will a Mission of Peace really become a mission of peace?


John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in political and national security matters. He is the author of the forthcoming book A Power, But Not Super. He is also the author along with Wayne Madsen of America’s Nightmare: The Presidency of George Bush II. Rech him at  cioran123@yahoo.com


















john stanton
- e-mail: cioran123@yahoo.com

Comments

Hide the following 16 comments

Kings of pain

12.05.2004 21:59

You really want to take yr blinkers off.

Try this one:

 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3692005.stm

sceptic


Brits send new torture techniques to ayatollahs

13.05.2004 00:06

Many of the torture methods used in ayatollahs prisons come from Britain as well.

Islamist terrorists were first trained on torture methods under british supervision, in Pakistan, where some of the most brutal forces of jihadists come from.

I assume pakistan was a british designed estate just for this purpose!

khomeinism is also a british invension.

what else is new?

xxx


The Brits

13.05.2004 10:21

The Brits are inventors of 'khomeinism'? That's a new one!

Of course we all know the Bris are responsible for communism [Marx & the British library], capitalism, fascism [Hitler and Mussolini were just cheap imitators], apartheid, Mugabe, and Kim Il Sung {Korean War, you know].

Terribly clever chaps, we Brits. And the rest of the world hasn't cottoned on yet!

sceptic


Torture

13.05.2004 13:49

Those methods of torture listed are just the 'official' ones. There is a lot more torture that goes on 'off the record', as we're already seeing coming from Iraq.

Shin Bet has some interesting torture techniques. One that got me was listening to a Palestinian friend describe how he was subjected to this particular technique of holding for a long period of time in a painful position. But before they did this, they got him to do 100 squats, up and down, exercise on his legs. Then he was tied to a chair, and was not able to move his legs. He needed the toilet, but was not allowed to go, so he went down his leg instead. Eventually, they let him go, he went to stand up, but his legs wouldn't work, because of the squat's he had done before being held without being able to move, and he fell down onto the floor. Clever guys these intelligence types. They know all manner of cunning ways to inflict pain and humiliation.

That was just a mild account. He had been held as a kid, because he did graffiti for the intifada, and that was the torture inflicted on him.

Hermes


Why?

13.05.2004 15:24

Why? Because they do not care. The US and Israel are the bad guys according to their world-view and anything else in the world does not merit their attention. Who cares that Arab militias in the Sudan are displacing millions? Lets focus our energy and anger on a small nation that has killed 2,000 people in two years of conflict. Makes loads of sense!!!

take a guess...


...

13.05.2004 16:01

It is terrible, and we should put direct economic pressure, while offering economic incentive, on Sudan to stop what it is doing.
However, we talk about the middle-east, because we are directly in cahoots with what is going on in Iraq, and what is happening to the Palestinians. We are part of that Western block, pushing violently our interests in the middle-east. If we sorted out our own affairs, and start behaving fairly and in the interests of global justice, then we would be doing a lot more for Africa than we currently do. But as it is, these countries are still crippled by debt to us, and we consider it more important to spend billions on bombs to drop on Iraq and on a disastrous occupation, and billions in militiary aid to Israel, rather than feeding and clothing the hungry of the world.

I agree with the sentiment that there should be more on Africa up on Indymedia than there currently is. Instead the focus is on the middle-east. But why? Because that's where the focus of those in power rests upon. The geo-political strategic significance of the region, and all the militiary might that goes into keeping it under OUR CONTROL.

So I tell you what, I'll agree to shut up about the middle-east, and do something about Sudan, when Britain and the US agree to stop spending billions on war and occupation, and militiary aid to Israel. We need to stop playing power games in the region, and actually start trying to help people in the world, instead of continually exploiting them. Can you seriously see the West doing anything in Africa so long as it is fighting in Iraq? It's just impossible...greed and power politics have made sure of that.

Hermes


Two Western Nations Did Intervene in Africa

13.05.2004 19:23

"Can you seriously see the West doing anything in Africa so long as it is fighting in Iraq? It's just impossible..."

Two western nations intervened in Africa last year: The United States and France.

You say you'll stop making a stink “when Britain and the US agree to stop spending billions on...militiary aid to Israel.”

How much military aid does the UK provide to Israel? Does it even provide any?

I do not buy your analysis. I think the reason you are fixated on Israel is its market economy and closeness to the United States. That's ok, but you could at least admit as much. If you are against liberal democracy and support Arab authoritarianism, just say it.

take a guess...


...

13.05.2004 23:51

If you look at the sentence you'll notice how I use the words 'US' in the sentence as providing the billions in aid to Israel. If you want to take that as meaning I think the other word in the sentence, 'Britain' provides the money, then I guess that's your problem, but both you and I know who provides the militiary aid, and we don't need to try and twist around sentences to mean other than they are intended.
And then you try and offer two choices. Either you are with free-market capitalism, or you are with despotic arab regimes. Hmmm, nice choices there, but I choose neither. In fact, one feeds the other. The current dictatorship in Saudi for example is propped up by the huge amounts of cash we give it to secure our oil. Iran was a democracy until the CIA got rid of the democratically elected Prime Minister Mossadeq and installed the despotic Shah to secure Western oil interests, and the Islamic revolution was a reaction to that. A fine example of regime change...do you think we would have the Ayatollahs in Iran if we had left Mossadeq alone?

My analysis stands. In the name of 'the free-market', we have waged open and covert wars, and exploited parts of the world like Africa, while at the same time claiming to help them. We could use our position of privelage to help the world in ways that don't require wasting billions in bombs and weapons. But there is no interest in helping, only in control. Aid to the third world comes with a catch....huge debt. Even Iraq is expected to pay off its debts after we starved and bombed it to hell. Who is going to have control over all the privatised industries in Iraq? It's certainly not looking like the Iraqis.
Tell me, is this aid or control?

I am very happy about the good things in this country, such as freedom of speech and religion. Which is why I don't want to see war-mongering idiots undermining these traditions, and why I don't want to see free-market economies abusing the world in the name of these values. People used to murder in the name of God, now they murder in the name of Freedom. Well, war is both ungodly, and an affront to freedom loving people, and those who support it are the enemies of freedom, to paraphrase Dubya.

Hermes


Let me ...

14.05.2004 11:52

.. rephrase your question for you sceptic:

Why have you never commented on these stories on indimedia:

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2002/08/39363.html

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2001/11/16310.html

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2002/08/39285.html

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2003/09/276722.html

?

Too long for you?

The wrong kind of infomation?

Take the blinkers off and use your search engine (the one that nature provides).

jackslucid
mail e-mail: jackslucid@hotmail.com


Dear Mr Lucid

14.05.2004 12:30

You seem to be making my point for me. Such posts are few and far between - one from 2001, two from 2002, and one from 2003. Compare this with the plethora of postings [such as this one] effectively suggesting the USA and UK are 'bathing the world in violence.'.

Take this one:

 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/05/291317.html

The only response is one of derision.

Sceptic


as usual, you want it both ways!

14.05.2004 15:43

Your point claimed that 'these isssues' - as you call them - never get aired on indymedia.

I them give you a [small] list of what's available - an you use that to claim that they are merely exceptions that prove your rule!

If I had had the time to link all of the pages I found with issues covering roughly the same areas, from indymedia sites from around the world, I would have done so.

Since I haven't, you wouldn't relent anyway and because if you are reading this then you possess all the equipment you need to conduct your own search - I didn't!

Your point is redundant - as is the way you try to obtusificate what is obvious:

The technological lead and the repacious desire to conquer, own and use ALL the worlds resources has thrust the usa, uk and allies into the unique position of being able to advance humanity only in terms of bigger and better theft and murder.

You may be able to find instances where they are not responsible, but seem unable to comprehend that the long list of instances where they are responsible [for theft and murder on industrial scales] is precisly why they are so consistantly highlighted and the natural object of focus for those of us in whos name it is done.

You try to confuse the issues with smug assurances that it is the psychological state of mind of dissenters and resisters that drives them - rather than the more mundane and understandable realisation that it is our duty to put our own house in order.

But then I think you rather like the order it is in already.

jackslucid
mail e-mail: jackslucid@hotmail.com


theft

14.05.2004 17:15

you use the word 'theft'.

What has the US and its Allies 'stolen' rapaciously around the world?

Stolen means you are not going to pay. Any evidence that the oil in Iraq is not being paid for? And what other examples of 'theft' are you going to give us other than taht?

sceptic


Why not ..

14.05.2004 18:20

.. stop wasting my time with such remedial questions?

jackslucid
mail e-mail: jackslucid@hotmail.com


...

14.05.2004 18:41

when you've run out of answers, run away from the argument

sceptic


What R U ON ?

14.05.2004 21:28

What are you on septic , collis brown ? or something that takes the fucking pain away 4 sure .
What have the US and UK robbed from around the world ? are you serious ? have you been further south then potters bar ? I seen loads of your dimbo comments on here before and always thought you were just about to fall of the wall in the village sqaure mamma mia what a twat !

80 million american indians

antisceptic


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