Dennis Loo

Sometimes asking for the impossible is the only realistic path

Dennis Loo

Dennis Loo
Location
Los Angeles, California,
Title
Professor of Sociology
Company
Cal Poly Pomona
Bio
Co-Editor/Author of Impeach the President: the Case Against Bush and Cheney, World Can't Wait Steering Committee Member, dog and fruit tree lover. Published poet. Winner of the Alfred R. Lindesmith Award, Project Censored Award and the Nation Magazine's Most Valuable Crusade Award. Punahou and Harvard Honor Graduate. Ph.D. in Sociology from UC Santa Cruz. An archive of close to 500 postings of mine can be found at my blogspot blog, Dennis Loo, link below. I publish regularly at worldcantwait.net (link below) and also at OpEd News and sometimes at Counterpunch. Technorati Profile

OCTOBER 24, 2009 6:02PM

How a Torture Protest Killed a Career

Rate: 23 Flag

A powerful and moving story from Consortium News that everyone should read, told by the former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan, who, upon learning of the torture being carried out there on behalf of the CIA, felt impelled to speak out. As a result, his career was ruined.

As Max Weber, the expert on bureaucracies, pointed out in the 19th century: "as an instrument of 'societalizing' relations of power, bureaucracy has been and is a power instrument of the first order - for the one who controls the bureaucratic apparatus."

It is that part of the picture that Craig Murray, whose account is retold below, still finds perplexing - how decent people can go along with indecent and monstrous things because those above them have ordered it to be done and because those above them have succeeded in frightening the public into going along with profoundly immoral practices.

People tend to believe that people in high office, such as an Ambassador, have the power to right wrongs.

Let us suppose that George W. Bush, while still President (who's more powerful than the President?), was visited by the Ghost of Christmas Past and as a result of that visitation, vowed to become a truthful and decent man, regardless of the consequences. How long before Dick Cheney made sure that Bush had an accident and was unable to serve out his term?

Let us suppose that Dick Cheney was also visited by the Ghost of Christmas Past and also became a changed man. How long before Dick had another, debilitating heart attack, making it impossible for him to serve out his term? (Of course, in George and Dick's case, the Ghost of Christmas Past would probably need numerous nights of successively scarier and scarier visits to accomplish this feat). 

Let us suppose that failing this, their successor, a man who was elected on a platform of change, has a revelation that led him to stop misrepresenting what he was all about to the American people. Suppose he actually starts to do the right and just thing.

How long before this man finds himself the victim of an assassination attempt from some right-wing patsy?

The institutional forces arrayed against doing the right thing are considerable and enough to crush any single individual, no matter how well-placed.

That is precisely why it takes a mass movement to do what must be done. It takes a movement that is large enough (but that starts very small) and clear enough that it cannot rely on leaving the existing structures and processes in place but must radically restructure those structures and processes from top to bottom (and not just at the top). 

From consortiumnews.com

By Craig Murray 

October 24, 2009

Editor’s Note: In this modern age – and especially since George W. Bush declared the “war on terror” eight years ago – the price for truth-telling has been high, especially for individuals whose consciences led them to protest the torture of alleged terrorists.

One of the most remarkable cases is that of Craig Murray, a 20-year veteran of the British Foreign Service whose career was destroyed after he was posted to Uzbekistan in August 2002 and began to complain about Western complicity in torture committed by the country’s totalitarian regime, which was valued for its brutal interrogation methods and its vast supplies of natural gas.

Murray soon faced misconduct charges that were leaked to London’s tabloid press before he was replaced as ambassador in October 2004, marking the end of what had been a promising career. Murray later spoke publicly about how the Bush administration and Prime Minister Tony Blair’s government collaborated with Uzbek dictator Islam Karimov and his torturers. [See, for instance, Murray's statement to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Torture.]

But Murray kept quiet about his personal ordeal as the victim of the smear campaign that followed his impassioned protests to the Foreign Office about torture. Finally, on Oct. 22 at a small conference in Washington, Murray addressed the personal pain and his sense of betrayal over his treatment at the hands of former colleagues.

While Murray’s account is a personal one, it echoes the experiences of many honest government officials and even mainstream journalists who have revealed inconvenient truths about wrongdoing by powerful Establishment figures and paid a high price.

Below is a partial transcript of Murray’s remarks:

I was just having dinner in a restaurant that was only a block from the White House. It must have been a good dinner because it cost me $120. Actually it was a good dinner… 

I’ve never, ever spoken in public about the pain of being a whistleblower. Partly because of the British stiff-upper lip thing and partly as well because if you wish to try eventually to get on and reestablish yourself then it doesn’t do to show weakness. …

I was sitting in this place on my own and feeling rather lonely. And there were a whole bunch of people in dark suits coming from government offices, in many cases in groups, and there they were with the men’s suits sleek and the ladies, the whole office, power-politics thing going on, having after-dinner champagne in the posh bar.

And I was remembering how many times I’d been the center of such groups and of how successful my life used to be. I was a British ambassador at the age of 42. The average age for such a post is 57.

I was successful in worldly terms. And I think I almost never sat alone at such a place. Normally if I had been alone in such a place, I would have ended up probably in the company of a beautiful young lady of some kind.

I tell you that partly because this whole question of personal morality is a complicated one. I would never, ever, no one would have ever pointed at me as someone likely to become or to be a person of conscience. And yet eventually I found myself on the outside and treated in a way that challenged my whole view of the world.

Mission to Tashkent

Let me start to tell you something about how that happened. I was a British ambassador in Uzbekistan and I was told before I went that Uzbekistan was an important ally in the war on terror, had given the United States a very important airbase which was a forward mounting post for Afghanistan, and was a bulwark against Islamic extremism in Central Asia.

When I got there I found it was a dreadful regime, absolutely totalitarian. And there’s a difference between dictatorship of which there are many and a totalitarian dictatorship which unless you’ve actually been in one is hard to comprehend.

There’s absolutely no free media whatsoever. News on every single channel, the news programs start with 12 items about what the president did today. And that’s it. That is the news. There are no other news channels and international news channels are blocked.

There are about 12,000 political prisoners. Any sign of religious enthusiasm for any religion will get you put into jail. The majority of people are predominantly Muslim. But if you are to carry out the rituals of the Muslim religion, particularly if you were to pray five times a day, you’d be in jail very quickly. Young men are put in jail for growing beards.

It’s not the only religion which is outlawed. The jails are actually quite full of Baptists.  Being Baptist is illegal in Uzbekistan. I’m sure that Methodists and Quakers would be illegal, too, It’s just that they haven’t got any so they haven’t gotten around to making them illegal.

And it’s really not a joke. If you are put into prison in Uzbekistan the chances of coming out again alive are less than even. And most of the prisons are still the old Soviet gulags in the most literal sense. They are physically the same places. The biggest one being the Jaslyk gulag in the deserts of the Kizyl Kum.

I had only been there for a week or two when I went to a show trial of an al-Qaeda terrorist they had caught. It was a big event put on partly for the benefit of the American embassy to demonstrate the strength of the U.S.-Uzbek alliance against terrorism.

When I got there, to call the trial unconvincing would be an underestimate. There was one moment when this old man [who] had given evidence that his nephew was a member of al-Qaeda and had personally met Osama bin Laden. And like everybody else in that court he was absolutely terrified.

But suddenly as he was giving his evidence, he seemed from somewhere to find an inner strength. He was a very old man but he stood taller and said in a stronger voice, he said, “This is not true. This is not true. They tortured my children in front of me until I signed this. I had never heard of al-Qaeda or Osama bin Laden.”

He was then hustled out of the court and we never did find out what had happened to him. He was almost certainly killed. But as it happens I was within touching distance of him when he said that and I can’t explain it. It’s not entirely rational. But you could just feel it was true. You could tell he was speaking the truth when he said that.

And that made me start to call into doubt the whole question of the narrative about al-Qaeda in Uzbekistan and the alliance in the war on terror.

Boiled to Death

Something which took that doubt over the top happened about a week later. The West -- because Uzbekistan was our great ally in the war on terror – had shown no interest in the human rights situation at all. In fact, the opposite, going out of its way to support the dictatorship.

So the fact that I seemed to be interested and seemed to be sympathetic came as something of a shock and people [in Uzbekistan] started to come to me.

One of the people who came to me was an old lady, a widow in her 60s whose son had been killed in Jaslyk prison and she brought me photos of the corpse of her son. It had been given back to her in a sealed casket and she’d been ordered not to open the casket but to bury it the next morning, which actually Muslims would do anyway. They always bury a body immediately.

But she disobeyed the instructions not to open the casket. She was a very old lady but very determined. She got the casket open and the body out onto the table and took detailed photos of the body before resealing the casket and burying it. These photos she now brought to me.

I sent them on to the chief pathologist at the University of Glasgow, who actually now by coincidence is the chief pathologist for the United Kingdom. There were a number of photos and he did a detailed report on the body. He said from the photographs the man’s fingernails had been pulled out while he was still alive. Then he had been boiled alive. That was the cause of death, immersion in boiling liquid.

Certainly it wasn’t the only occasion when we came across evidence of people being boiled alive. That was the most extreme form of torture, I suppose, but immersion in boiling liquid of a limb was quite common.

Mutilation of the genitals was common. Suffocation was common, usually by putting a gas mask on people and blocking the air vents until they suffocated. Rape was common, rape with objects, rape with bottles, anal rape, homosexual rape, heterosexual rape, and mutilation of children in front of their parents.

It began with that and became a kind of personal mission for me, I suppose, to do what I could to try to stop this. I spent a great deal of time with my staff gathering evidence on it.

Being a very capricious government, occasionally a victim [of the Uzbek regime] would be released and we’d be able to see them and get medical evidence. More often you’d get letters smuggled out of the gulags and detention centers, evidence from relatives who managed to visit prisoners.

We built up an overwhelming dossier of evidence, and I complained to London about the conduct of our ally in rather strong terms including the photos of the boy being boiled alive.

‘Over-Focused on Human Rights’

I received a reply from the British Foreign Office. It said, this is a direct quote, “Dear Ambassador, we are concerned that you are perhaps over-focused on human rights to the detriment of commercial interests.”

I was taken aback. I found that extraordinary. But things had gotten much worse because while we were gathering the information about torture, we were also learning what people were forced to confess to under torture.

People aren’t tortured for no reason. They’re tortured in order to extract some information or to get them to admit to things, and normally the reason you torture people is to get them to admit to things that aren’t actually true. They were having to confess to membership in al-Qaeda, to being at training camps in Afghanistan, personally meeting Osama bin Laden.

At the same time, we were receiving CIA intelligence. MI-6 and the CIA share all their intelligence. So I was getting all the CIA intelligence on Uzbekistan and it was saying that detainees had confessed to membership in al-Qaeda and being in training camps in Afghanistan and to meeting Osama bin Laden.

One way and another I was piecing together the fact that the CIA material came from the Uzbek torture sessions.

I didn’t want to make a fool of myself so I sent my deputy, a lady called Karen Moran, to see the CIA head of station and say to him, “My ambassador is worried your intelligence might be coming from torture. Is there anything he’s missing?”

She reported back to me that the CIA head of station said, “Yes, it probably is coming from torture, but we don’t see that as a problem in the context of the war on terror.”

In addition to which I learned that CIA were actually flying people to Uzbekistan in order to be tortured. I should be quite clear that I knew for certain and reported back to London that people were being handed over by the CIA to the Uzbek intelligence services and were being subjected to the most horrible tortures.

I didn’t realize that they weren’t Uzbek. I presumed simply that these were Uzbek people who had been captured elsewhere and were being sent in.

I now know from things I’ve learned subsequently, including the facts that the Council of Europe parliamentary inquiry into extraordinary rendition found that 90 percent of all the flights that called at the secret prison in Poland run by the CIA as a torture center for extraordinary rendition, 90 percent of those flights next went straight on to Tashkent [the capital of Uzbekistan].

There was an overwhelming body of evidence that actually people from all over the world were being taken by the CIA to Uzbekistan specifically in order to be tortured. I didn’t know that. I thought it was only Uzbeks, but nonetheless, I was complaining internally as hard as I could.

Retaliation

The result of which was that even when I was only complaining internally, I was subjected to the most dreadful pattern of things which I still find it hard to believe happened.

I was suddenly accused of issuing visas in return for sex, stealing money from the post account, of being an alcoholic, of driving an embassy vehicle down a flight of stairs, which is extraordinary because I can’t drive. I’ve never driven in my life. I don’t have a driving license. My eyesight is terrible. …

But I was accused of all these unbelievable accusations, which were leaked to the tabloid media, and I spent a whole year of tabloid stories about sex-mad ambassador, blah-blah-blah. And I hadn’t even gone public. What I had done was write a couple of memos saying that this collusion with torture is illegal under a number of international conventions including the UN Convention Against Torture.

I couldn’t believe [what was happening], I’d been a very successful foreign service officer for over 20 years. The British Foreign Service is small. Actual diplomats, as opposed to [support] staff, are only about 2,000 people, I worked there for over 20 years. I knew most of them by name. All the people involved in smearing me, trying to taint me on false charges, were people I thought were my friends. It’s really hard when people you think are your friends [lie about you].

I’m writing memos saying it’s illegal to torture people, children are being tortured in front of their parents. And they’re writing memos back saying it depends on the definition of complicity under Article Four of the UN Convention.

I’m thinking what’s happening to their moral sense, and I never, ever considered myself a good person, at all. Yet I couldn’t see where they were coming from and I still don’t; I still don’t understand it to this day.

And then these people – and I’m absolutely certain quite knowingly – tried to negate what they saw as these unpatriotic things. I was told I was viewed now as unpatriotic, by trying to land me with false allegations.

I went through a five-month fight and formal charges. I was found eventually not guilty on all charges, but my reputation was ruined forever because the tabloid media all carried the allegations against me in 25-point headlines and the fact I was acquitted in two sentences on page 19. It’s extraordinary.

Lessons Learned

The thing that came out of it most strongly for me is how in a bureaucratic structure, if the government can convince people that there is a serious threat to the nation, ordinary people who are not bad people will go along with things that they know are bad, like torture, like trying to stain an innocent man.

And it’s circular, because the extraordinary thing about it was that the whole point of the intelligence being obtained under torture was to actually exaggerate the terrorist threats and to exaggerate the strength of al-Qaeda.

That was the whole point of why people were being tortured, to confess that they were members of al-Qaeda when they weren’t members of al-Qaeda and to denounce long lists of names of people as members of al-Qaeda who weren’t members of al-Qaeda.

I always tell my favorite example which is they gave me a long list of names of people whom people were forced to denounce and I often saw names of people I knew.

One day, I got this list from the CIA of names of a couple dozen al-Qaeda members and I knew one really quite well, an old dissident professor, a very distinguished man who was actually a Jehovah’s Witness, and there aren’t many Jehovah’s Witnesses in al-Qaeda. I’d even bet that al-Qaeda don’t even try to recruit Jehovah’s Witnesses. I’m quite sure that Jehovah’s Witnesses would try to recruit al-Qaeda.

So much of this intelligence was nonsense. It was untrue and it was designed to paint a false picture. The purpose of the false picture was to make people feel afraid. What was it really about. …

I want to mention this book, which is the greatest book that I’ve ever written [read]. It’s called Murder in Samarkand and recounts in detail what I have just told you together with the documentary evidence behind it.

But the most interesting bit of the entire book comes before the page numbers start, which is a facsimile of a letter from Enron, from Kenneth Lay, chairman of Enron, to the honorable George W. Bush, governor of the state of Texas. It was written on April 3, 1997, sometime before Bush became president.

It reads, I’ll just read you two or three sentences, “Dear George, you will be meeting with Ambassador Sadyq Safaev, Uzbekistan’s Ambassador to the United States on April 8th. … Enron has established an office in Tashkent and we are negotiating a $2 billion joint venture with Neftegas of Uzbekistan … to develop Uzbekistan’s natural gas and transport it to markets in Europe … This project can bring significant economic opportunities to Texas.”

Not everyone in Texas, of course. George Bush and Ken Lay, in particular.

That’s actually what it was about. All this stuff about al-Qaeda that they were inventing, extreme Islamists in Central Asia that they were inventing.

I have hundreds and hundreds of Uzbek friends now. Every single one of them drinks vodka. It is not a good place for al-Qaeda. They were inventing the threat in order to cover up the fact that their real motive was Enron’s gas contract and that was the plain and honest truth of the matter.

Just as almost everything you see about Afghanistan is a cover for the fact that the actual motive is the pipeline they wish to build over Afghanistan to bring out Uzbek and Turkmen natural gas which together is valued at up to $10 trillion, which they want to bring over Afghanistan and down to the Arabian Sea to make it available for export.

And we are living in a world where people, a small number of people, with incredible political clout and huge amounts of money, are prepared to see millions die for their personal economic gain and where, even worse, most people in bureaucracies are prepared to go along with it for their own much smaller economic gain, all within this psychological mirage which is so much of the war on terror.

It’s hard to stand against it. I do think things are a little more sane now than they were a year or two ago. I do think there’s a greater understanding, but you’ll never hear what I just told you in the mainstream media. It’s impossible to get it there.

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Craig Murray's story deserves a tremendous amount of attention.
A fascinating story, chilling in the extreme, but also cause for some hope, given the courage that shines through. It appears from Wikipedia that his story has gotten a fair bit of attention in Britain, but I had never noticed his name in US or Canadian media before. Thanks for posting this.
Wow, does it ever need more attention. I haven't seen anything like this at all. I'll have to look and see if there are similar stories they've been missing.
Dennis,
Once again I (and others "should be") am in your debt for exposing and quantifying "institutional forces" in a way that shows the immense power they wield and the heartless indifference towards their fellow human beings.
What I find incomprehensible is,
"how can a participant in this horror enjoy their $10,000 bottle of wine, luxury mansion plus all the other trappings of extreme wealth, at the the most horrendous expense of their fellow human being(s)?"
Of course you have gone some way to answering the question "How can we stop it?"
People aren’t tortured for no reason. They’re tortured in order to extract some information or to get them to admit to things, and normally the reason you torture people is to get them to admit to things that aren’t actually true
Most thinking people already know this..
This is VERY depressing and I feel so totally helpless.
PLEASE do not stop your vitally important work, of exposing governments and people (Regardless of nationality) to as many as you possibly can....
My very best wishes to you and the people with whom you share this campaign.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU DENNIS
Mathieu: Thank you. If you find similar stories, which you will, then please publicize them!

Mal: Please don't be depressed. The truth here is extremely painful, but it is not shocking in the sense of being surprising. These heinous acts are occurring for a reason, a bad reason, but a reason nonetheless. These aren't random acts of savagery. They are being carried out purposefully.

The solution to it isn't easy, but it is possible. Many people saw at least enough of this under Bush to recognize the monstrousness of it enough to want to get the GOP out of office. But all too many hope that these terrible things can be fixed by pushing a button every few years.

The problems are deep-seated, but they are institutional. Institutions aren't principally products of "human nature." They are coherent, rational, organizations. They can be undone and overthrown and replaced with coherent, rational, organizations governed by a different logic. It takes, as I say in my prefatory remarks, a mass movement governed by a correct appraisal of the problem and the determination to do what must be done and uproot the problem at its root.

Thank you Kathy!
Extraordinary post, Dennis. I value your contribution more every week.

The system of rewards and punishments herein referenced is sovast and pervasive as to strip us of hope. Who can stand against a serious chance to realize ten trillion dollars? What ethic can remain standing against such forces?
Dave: As I wrote once last year or so, the world is increasingly characterized by "billions v. billions." There are the billionaires and there are the billions of the rest of us in the world. How many are the billionaires? They have vast resources, but they are hugely outnumbered by the rest of the planet. It's true that they have their retinue and their hangers on and those who aspire to that status. But still, there are billions of the rest of us after that. It's a matter of making people aware of what's really going on and why and of organizing the people. Not easy. Very difficult. But nonetheless possible.
Hey Dennis. That's extremely important info. Thanks for getting it out. I'll do the best I can with it and have several ideas in mind.
“Dear Ambassador, we are concerned that you are perhaps over-focused on human rights to the detriment of commercial interests.”

Gotta love that honesty.

Say, didn't 'The Yes Men' do a riff on this kind of thing? (their documentary 'The Yes Men Fix The World'). At least you can have a few laughs while taking in the same kind of sad, sad stories as this post.

Thank you for posting this, now I'm off to make it as viral as I can...
BTW, I came to this post because I saw that Behind Blue Eyes had just rated it in the feed; I will check out most anything BBE feels is rate-worthy. Will keep watching your posts in future! Rated.
Dragon lady: BBE is a winner alright. And as for the quote you excerpted, I tried to make it the title of this post but I couldn't figure out a way to reduce it to the requisite limited number of characters. It is a stunningly revealing comment of how capitalism's goals trump human rights.
It's funny what the massive obsessions of the US gov't produce. When I was in Haiti in the 80s, the Duvalier regime got US funding for keeping a hard line against communism in Haiti. No more Cubas! They just called dissidents communists. Today, they'd be called members of Al-Quaeda.

Not one Haitian I met knew what communism was, except that it was evil. Was it a perverted sexual practice? Was it a cult that practiced cannibalism? Who knew?

Sorry, I did meet one Haitian who had read Marx. He was a member of what was referred to as the Moral Repugnant Elite and he believed in Marx's claim of the inevitability of a communist revolution. His response was to carry a gun and hope, in the event of a communist revolution, he could hold off the revolutionaries long enough to escape.
I have some Uzbek friends. They live in Moscow. I suspect they have no intention of ever living again in their home country. In Moscow, they have religious freedom (although not many would think Russia is a place to freely practice Islam) and they have personal freedom. All things are relative.

Russia is a mecca for people from countries whose governments makes Russia's look enlightened.
Reminds me of an Uzbek fellow I knew in Albania. He was an easy-going, jovial guy, but would shut down if anyone asked him one question: why he had left Uzbekistan. Shut down, as in closing his eyes tight and shaking his head from side to side. Word eventually got around that this was not a topic to be introuced into conversation.
My god. It always comes back to money, doesn't it? It's simply about money and for a few perhaps, the joy of hurting and killing. It's repulsive. How can these horrible things be justified by anyone? How can they?
Odetteroulette: They justify it as the strong dominating the weak. They justify it as "better me than you." They justify it by the pleasures that they enjoy at the expense of others. There is no reason why such selfishness and ugliness should rule. But people such as this, and even more importantly, the systems that promote such behavior, must be swept away in a tide of popular upheaval. Hercules needed two rivers to clean out the Augean Stables. We need the like. Nothing less.

Thanks Benjamin and Malusinka.
Craig Murray's story will be the basis for a film that sweeps the Oscars in 2016; if the Oscars are still around by then.
Lonnie: By all rights, your hypothetical should happen, and well before 2012!
Dennis, I'm having a difficult time seeing this story as 100% credulous. I am shocked that a 20 year veteran of diplomatic service writes so poorly. The lack of corroboration of his claims is problematic. Members of the government were surprisingly forthcoming in their bold assertion that commercial interests trump human rights - rarely do the 'bad guys' so clearly identify themselves as such, with a paper trail.

The fact that Mr. Murray compares the horrors of torture to having his reputation maligned strains credibility: "The thing that came out of it most strongly for me is how in a bureaucratic structure, if the government can convince people that there is a serious threat to the nation, ordinary people who are not bad people will go along with things that they know are bad, like torture, like trying to stain an innocent man."

These do not sound like the words of an educated man with an urgent message. Perhaps there are other sources out there that give this account more dimension, and I am unaware of them.
As Bart says Murray's story is well-known in Britain and I have written about it elsewhere. Kudos for bringing it to the attention of a few Americans.
Gareth Peirce mentions Murray in her brilliant article about torture in the London Review of Books.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n09/peir01_.html

“Equally disturbingly is that later in 2002, some months after MI6 sent its advice, the recently arrived British ambassador to Uzbekistan inquired urgently of the Foreign Office what its legal justification was for receiving information from Islamic dissidents who had been boiled alive to produce it. Craig Murray records his astonishment on being recalled to London to be told that the foreign secretary, Jack Straw, and Sir Richard Dearlove, the head of MI6, had decided that in the ‘War on Terror’ we should, as a matter of policy, use intelligence obtained through torture by foreign intelligence services. A follow-up memo from a Foreign Office legal adviser in March 2003 explained that it was not an offence to do so. How sound was this advice legally? Morally, there is no question. But what of the encouragement to torture resulting from our enthusiastic receipt of information?
There have been no resignations over any of this. The government on whose watch it has occurred may be vulnerable for other reasons, but at present it seems not for possible complicity in grave crimes. From where does it derive its confidence? Control of information is a powerful tool: the answer must undoubtedly lie in the extent to which the secret state believes it has consolidated and can control any mechanism that might allow discovery and challenge, so that it can rely on its citizens never knowing properly, or often at all.”
Myriad: Thank you.

Sandra:

1) Murray was reluctant to come out to tell his own story about this, see the beginning of this post under "Editor's note." "Murray kept quiet about his personal ordeal as the victim of the smear campaign that followed his impassioned protests to the Foreign Office about torture. Finally, on Oct. 22 at a small conference in Washington, Murray addressed the personal pain and his sense of betrayal over his treatment at the hands of former colleagues."

He doesn't claim that his career's end is equivalent to being a victim of torture.

2) See this from my book, Chapter 5:

"According to a U.S. State Department February 2001 report, Uzbek police routinely are guilty of 'beating, often with blunt weapons, and asphyxiation with a gas mask.' Human-rights groups reported that Uzbek jail torture included boiling of body parts, electroshock to genitals, and the use of pliers to pry off fingernails and toenails. Two prisoners were boiled to death, these groups reported. Despite the State Department’s own report on torture, Rice and the Bush administration have nonetheless been flying prisoners—some of whom are 'ghost' prisoners because their identity has been altogether hidden—to places like Uzbekistan. According to an April 4, 2006, Amnesty International investigation, the CIA has flown some thousand flights of this kind, with the number of rendition prisoners unknown—probably, according to Amnesty International, in the hundreds."

Thank you so much Padraig for the further corroboration.
I'm posting this in the comments section because I don't want to occlude this particular post yet. This is Sunday's NYT's editorial in its entirety. I have a couple of comments at the end of it.

October 26, 2009
EDITORIAL
The Cover-Up Continues

The Obama administration has clung for so long to the Bush administration’s expansive claims of national security and executive power that it is in danger of turning President George W. Bush’s cover-up of abuses committed in the name of fighting terrorism into President Barack Obama’s cover-up.

We have had recent reminders of this dismaying retreat from Mr. Obama’s passionate campaign promises to make a break with Mr. Bush’s abuses of power, a shift that denies justice to the victims of wayward government policies and shields officials from accountability.

In Britain earlier this month, a two-judge High Court panel rejected arguments made first by the Bush team and now by the Obama team and decided to make public seven redacted paragraphs in American intelligence documents relating to torture allegations by a former prisoner at Guantánamo Bay. The prisoner, Binyam Mohamed, an Ethiopian-born British national, says he was tortured in Pakistan, Morocco and at a C.I.A.-run prison outside Kabul before being transferred to Guantánamo. He was freed in February.

To block the release of those paragraphs, the Bush administration threatened to cut its intelligence-sharing with Britain, an inappropriate threat that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton repeated. But the court concluded that the actual risk of harm to intelligence-sharing was minimal, given the close relationship between the two countries. The court also found a “compelling public interest” in disclosure, and said that nothing in the disputed seven paragraphs — a summary of evidence relating to the involvement of the British security services in Mr. Mohamed’s ordeal — had anything to do with “secret intelligence.”

The Obama administration has expressed unhappiness with the ruling, and the British government plans to appeal. But the court was clearly right in recognizing the importance of disclosure “for reasons of democratic accountability and the rule of law.”

In the United States, the Obama administration is in the process of appealing a sound federal appellate court ruling last April in a civil lawsuit by Mr. Mohamed and four others. All were victims of the government’s extraordinary rendition program, under which foreigners were kidnapped and flown to other countries for interrogation and torture.

In that case, the Obama administration has repeated a disreputable Bush-era argument that the executive branch is entitled to have lawsuits shut down whenever it makes a blanket claim of national security. The ruling rejected that argument and noted that the government’s theory would “effectively cordon off all secret actions from judicial scrutiny, immunizing the C.I.A. and its partners from the demands and limits of the law.”

The Obama administration has aggressively pursued such immunity in numerous other cases beyond the ones involving Mr. Mohamed. We do not take seriously the government’s claim that it is trying to protect intelligence or avoid harm to national security.

Victims of the Bush administration’s “enhanced interrogation techniques,” including Mr. Mohamed, have already spoken in harrowing detail about their mistreatment. The objective is to avoid official confirmation of wrongdoing that might be used in lawsuits against government officials and contractors, and might help create a public clamor for prosecuting those responsible. President Obama calls that a distracting exercise in “looking back.” What it really is is justice.

In a similar vein, Mr. Obama did a flip-flop last May and decided to resist orders by two federal courts to release photographs of soldiers abusing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq. Last week, just in time to avoid possible Supreme Court review of the matter, Congress created an exception to the Freedom of Information Act that gave Secretary of Defense Robert Gates authority to withhold the photos.

We share concerns about inflaming anti-American feelings and jeopardizing soldiers, but the best way to truly avoid that is to demonstrate that this nation has turned the page on Mr. Bush’s shameful policies. Withholding the painful truth shows the opposite.

Like the insistence on overly broad claims of secrecy, it also avoids an important step toward accountability, which is the only way to ensure that the abuses of the Bush years are never repeated. We urge Mr. Gates to use his discretion under the new law to release the photos, sparing Americans more cover-up."

I'm glad that the New York Times is staying on this topic and not letting Obama get away with his absurd, disingenuous, and exceedingly dangerous and consequential "not looking backwards" argument.

I would like to ask, however, why the Times refused while Bush was still in office to call for his impeachment and prosecution for these war crimes when they and all of us knew these crimes which Obama's trying to cover up (and continue) were going on? That was the best time to go after these criminals. It's not too late, but why spread illusions back then that electing Obama was going to resolve this?
The story sounds crazy. But the whole 'war on terrorism' is crazy.

We know that many people have been tortured in jails to get from them fake confessions. So it can as well happen in Uzbekistan. I have seen there only the airport of Tashkent during the time of the Soviet Union, so I know very little about the conditions there.
I wish I didn't know this.
Sandra: This is a transcript of Craig's oral remarks. So, one, it's not a written speech, and two, transcripts aren't always accurate.

I've seen transcripts of my remarks and they aren't entirely faithful.

This is also evident when someone gets quoted in very brief remarks by journalists. Speaking from personal experience, journalists very rarely get the quote exactly right.
While I don't always comment, and rarely promptly, thanks for the great work. Thanks to those like yourself, committed to exposing the truth, however ugly. I find refuge in satire. I cannot adequately express my gratitude for those like you who can stomach reality enough to share it, and do so eloquently.

Forever grateful,

LW (a.k.a. The Desperate Blogger)
Thank you Desperate Blogger!