The CIA Secret Prisons in Europe. Political Camouflage in the EU.
Washington’s “European Partners in Crime”
It is common
knowledge that at end-January 2015 the global
movement Amnesty International published a report, titled “Breaking the conspiracy of silence:
USA’s European “partners in crime” must act after Senate torture report”, which
throws further light upon the information gathered within the US Senate
investigation into torture methods, applied by the Central Intelligence Agency,
by referring to media reports on the way CIA-operated secret detention sites
were run in Europe – in particular, on the territory of Lithuania, Poland and Romania. As a matter of fact, it was
several years ago when it first became known that CIA tortured terror suspects
not only in these countries but also on the territory of another EU Member
State – namely, Great Britain. According to the Lawrence Wilkinson, former
Chief of Staff to the US Secretary of State, after the terror attack of 11th
September 2001 the CIA used the US military base on the island of Diego Garcia,
located in the British Indian Ocean Territory, to conduct interrogations and
torture terror suspects who had been abducted from various countries without
any court order whatsoever.
After the US Senate report got
published, the European Parliament adopted a special resolution on 11th
February 2015 in which it:
“expresses
its deep condemnation of the gruesome interrogation practices that
characterized these illegal counterterrorism operations; underlines the
fundamental conclusion by the US Senate that the violent methods applied by the
CIA failed to generate intelligence that prevented further terrorist attacks;
recalls its absolute condemnation of torture”.
The
resolution also highlights the fact that: “the climate of impunity regarding the CIA programme has
enabled the continuation of fundamental rights violations, as further revealed
by the mass surveillance programmes of the US National Security Agency and
secret services of various EU Member States”.
In
this context, the US Government is called on:
“to
investigate and prosecute the multiple human rights violations resulting from
the CIA rendition and secret detention programmes, and to cooperate with all
requests from EU Member States for information, extradition or effective
remedies for victims in connection with the CIA programme”.
The
European Parliament also:
“reiterates
its calls on Member States to investigate the allegations that there were
secret prisons on their territory where people were held under the CIA
programme, and to prosecute those involved in these operations, taking into
account all the new evidence that has come to light”.
At
the same time it:
“expresses
concerns regarding the obstacles encountered by national parliamentary and
judicial investigations into some Member States’ involvement in the CIA
programme, the abuse of state secrecy, and the undue classification of
documents resulting in the termination of criminal proceedings and leading to
de facto impunity of perpetrators of human rights violations”.
Furthermore, the
resolution “calls for
the findings of existing inquiries relating to Member States’ involvement in
the CIA programme, in particular the Chilcot inquiry, to be published without
further delay”.
Considering
the above, we are unpleasantly impressed by the fact that the Council of Europe
and its
Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) have hitherto failed to demonstrate the due will
to discuss the refusal of the governmental authorities in Vilnius, Warsaw and
Bucharest to investigate the multiple occasions of human rights violations,
ensuing from the agreement of these countries to host the establishment of CIA
black sites on their territory. Such an attitude erodes the very foundations of
the European Union, weakens the belief of European citizens that their
fundamental rights are truly guaranteed, divests the EU of its moral authority
and discredits its allegiance to the universal human values.
The US Senate report
and the one issued by Amnesty International, unequivocally point out that the
above three EU Member States, as well as Great Britain, played a key role in
the implementation of this CIA “operation” on
the territory of the Old Continent. Without the help of these governments the USA would not
have been in the position to detain and torture people for so many years,
applying such inhumane methods as waterboarding and mock execution, sleep
deprivation, use of coffin-sized confinement boxes or sexual threats.
It is high time that
Europe became aware of the fact that the time for paying lip service to the
condemnation of these crimes or the attempts at their covering up is over for
good. The governments of Lithuania , Poland and Romania can no longer hide
behind the unconvincing “national
security reasons” and “state secret” arguments, thus refusing to bring to light
the entire truth about their role for the torture and abduction of people in
their countries. Jozef Pinior, one of the
legendary leaders of
the Polish “Solidarity” trade
union, member of
the European Parliament in the
period 2004 – 2009 and
of the Parliamentary committee on secret CIA prisons in Europe, now a Polish
senator, points out:
“The information in the Washington Post about the fact that
Polish intelligence services received USD 15 million to “host” a secret CIA
prison in the country compromises the entire Polish state which should
elucidate this issue as quickly as possible. This unquestionably confirmed the
grimmest hypothesis that under Leszek Miller Poland turned into a “banana
republic” to the USA. Another deplorable fact is that our national services
have contributed in no way whatsoever to the disclosure of this conspiracy. This
is an extremely disgraceful situation. The Polish state, the judicial system
and the Government should publish the investigation findings as soon as
possible. Otherwise we are going to become Europe’s laughing stock. It turns
out that we while we give lessons in democracy to countries like the Ukraine,
we take money from the US to allow them to practice illicit torture of people
on our territory”.
In
its turn the Bulgarian Government should state its official support for the
appeal of Amnesty International and the European Parliament and urge the
authorities in Vilnius , Bucharest and Warsaw to undertake an immediate and
full investigation of this case and to prosecute those involved in the
tortures. Let us be reminded that most of the victims of these malpractices are Muslims and in the context of
surging anti-Islam mood after the terror attacks in Paris and Copenhagen
it becomes even more important to find out the truth about the secret CIA “black sites” in Europe.
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