PROLOGUE: GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE
GRAYSON SWIGERT COMPLAINS OF BEING CAUGHT IN SOME KAFKA STORY. He’s not even allowed his own name. Courtesy of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Swigert, who has been discussed under his real name for years, must have a pseudonymous existence in official reports, allegedly because terrorists endanger his life. In the meantime, James Elmer Mitchell, to give the fellow back his identity, lives near Tampa, Florida, and goes kayaking to pass the time. Franz Kafka, the Czech author, wrote tales of horror and weirdness. Jim Mitchell, a former Air Force psychologist, perhaps engages in the classic maneuver called projection when invoking Kafka, for the CIA paid him millions, built a Get Out of Jail Free card into his contract, and labors to keep Mitchell from any forum where he might implicate others. The psychologist insists he is the victim, but what he did has been condemned by politicians, the public, and the American Psychological Association.
Swigert asserts himself a patriot, solicited by people at the highest levels of the United States government. He only tried to help, Mitchell would say. Now Dr. Mitchell finds himself in enforced retirement, his license pulled, reporters—and lawyers—yapping at his heels. His retirement may be genteel, but jeopardy hangs in the air.
THE ATTENTION GRAB
On September 11, 2001, terrorists of the group Al Qaeda hijacked four airliners and crashed them into buildings in New York City and Washington, D.C. These mass-casualty attacks, now collectively known as 9/11, killed nearly three thousand persons. The attacks also led to work for Dr. Mitchell. The Counterterrorist Center (CTC) asked Mitchell, a former Air Force officer, to help its secret counterattack. Kirk Hubbard, chief of research and analysis in the Operational Assessment Division and chairman of a CIA psychological advisory committee, introduced him around the CTC. The 2009–2012 Senate intelligence committee investigation into torture establishes that Swigert worked with the agency’s Office of Technical Services (OTS) from late 2001, doing applied research, at times in a high-risk environment, to help “shape the future” of a project “in the area of counter-terrorism and special operations.” The psychologist was to earn $1,000 a day, $1,800 daily if sent abroad.
In the Air Force, Swigert/Mitchell had taught pilots and aircrews to resist enemy interrogation. His lessons formed part of their survival-and-escape training, with scenarios subjecting airmen to conditions of captivity, including harsh treatment and repeated questioning. Mitchell then reprised the scenarios, educating airmen on how they might preserve their persona—and secrets. By Swigert’s own account, he had spent more than fourteen thousand hours observing military personnel in this training, watched hundreds of other instructors doing the same, and conducted more than 215 of the post-role-play debriefs for classes of ten to over one hundred persons. The captivity and interrogation training amounted to an extreme form of the game. CIA people needed training like this too. But here the CTC wanted the psychologist to reverse the logic and technique. Rather than train individuals to preserve their personalities and private knowledge, Mitchell would help the CIA break down detainees by exploiting the Stockholm syndrome—reducing prisoners to dependency upon their inquisitors. Along with Swigert/Mitchell came his sidekick Hammond Dunbar—real name John “Bruce” Jessen. Both participated directly, observing interrogation sessions and devising novel applications when their strong-arm tactics failed. More than that, Swigert and Dunbar collaborated with hard-ass CIA spear carriers to override the objections of the squeamish, namely the field operatives or officials who expressed concern that their methods violated international and U.S. law, morals, and agency regulations or were just plain wrong or ineffective.
James E. Mitchell, under his CIA-demanded pseudonym, Grayson Swigert, designed and supervised the program. It sought to break down the prisoners’ personalities and make them “compliant,” by means of “learned helplessness.” Mitchell suggested methods to be used. Officials of the George W. Bush administration hid them under the euphemism “enhanced interrogation techniques.” Many see those methods as torture.
As Swigert and Dunbar, Mitchell and Jessen were part of Project Greystone, a top-secret operation that created a series of “black sites” or “black prisons,” CIA dungeons spread across the globe to which captives were taken, where they were held. Secrecy barely started with the code name. Everything about the project involved doublespeak. Prisoners were “high-value detainees,” or “high-value terrorists.” Moving them was “rendering.” The black prisons themselves were “HVD detention facilities.” There was a High Value Terrorist Group, for “rendition and detention.” Torture had its own doublespeak. “Enhanced interrogation” included “waterboarding,” “rectal hydration,” “walling,” “slapping,” “hard takedowns,” the “attention grab,” “suspension,” sleep deprivation, extremes of temperature, noise and light, and much more. One captive was threatened with a power drill and mock executions. A director of the CIA publicly dismissed “rectal hydration” as if it were innocuous, not torture.
Swigert and Dunbar strategized on how to disorient captives and make them dependent on their captors, how to teach them “learned helplessness.” This treatment was a preliminary to questioning, although further actions could be taken during interrogation. In other words, victims were to be roughed up until they were judged sufficiently tenderized for interrogation. There should be no doubt that the people who truly lived in Kafka’s twilight world were those whose lives Swigert and Dunbar touched. Detainees’ days passed in a surreal place of dark menace, pain, and oppression—all of Kafka’s classic ingredients. Yet the torturers were rookies, for neither Swigert nor Dunbar had ever interrogated anyone.
The captors denied their prisoners the most fundamental humanity in service of a nation that lauds itself as an exemplar of human rights.
Some among the public, when these excesses stood revealed, comforted themselves with the notion that the prisoners were all terrorists who deserved what they got and that their torture made citizens safer. Neither is true. Victims include people who were CIA agents as well as some complete innocents. To this day, the CIA does not even know how many captives passed through its black prisons. Confronting a necessity to report the number of prisoners, the same CIA director who claimed “rectal hydration” was not torture told an aide to pick any date he wanted so the number reported would be less than a hundred.
In the heyday of Greystone immediately after 9/11, the CIA had so little direct knowledge of its terrorist enemies that it simply thought that its captives must know things the spooks wanted to discover. Captives were tortured because they might know something, not for any specific information bearing on what the CIA already knew. The boundary case is that of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the self-acknowledged Al Qaeda mastermind of the 9/11 plot. The CIA tortured him—including waterboarding the man 183 times—to delve into the plot, whereas the agency’s ostensible purpose had been finding “actionable intelligence” about future terrorism.
This was about revenge as much as intelligence work.
How this desire for revenge unfolded is important. The history begins in the 1990s with terrorist bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa, then metastasizes on September 11, 2001, with the horrific 9/11 attack destroying the old World Trade Center in New York City and gravely damaging the Pentagon in Washington. Extensive investigations established that, but for brave passengers who overcame hijackers to crash their own plane, there would have been another Washington building attacked, perhaps the Capitol Building (Congress) or the White House. It was a paroxysm of mindless violence. The CIA had long fought terrorism, had redoubled its efforts after the embassy bombings, and truly showed its wrath following 9/11. Mobilizing friendly security services across the world, sweeps of known or suspected terrorists nabbed real or imagined enemies for months. The United States also invaded Afghanistan, where Al Qaeda had its home base and where the CIA spearheaded the entire Bush effort. Many Al Qaeda militants were killed or escaped across the mountains into Pakistan. A few were captured.
The security sweeps and the Afghan campaign crystallized the question of what to do about terrorist prisoners. There had already been discussions at the CIA. Through the 1990s, when courts approved American authorities operating abroad, apprehending suspects named in foreign warrants, there had been a steady stream of roundups pursuant to either U.S. law or foreign warrants. The word rendition came into use to describe the capture and remand of prisoners to other countries. The State Department’s annual reports on international terrorism actually contained lists of prisoners “rendered” the previous year, with the countries they were sent to. The CIA often cooperated with other intelligence services. For example, CIA contract agents in Khartoum, Sudan, tracked Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, better known as Carlos the Jackal, until 1994, when Sudanese police and French spies apprehended him. Imprisoned in France for a murder early in his terrorist rampage, Carlos became the exception, his name not listed.
The CIA station chief who presided over the Carlos snatch, Cofer Black, by 9/11 headed the agency’s Counterterrorist Center, Langley’s “fusion center” specializing in measures to combat terrorism. On Black’s watch, CTC’s first big challenge had been the “Millennium Plot,” a kind of frenzy induced by vague fears that enemies would make coordinated strikes worldwide as 1999 turned to 2000. One terrorist was apprehended crossing the Canadian border with the idea of exploding a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport. Another plot was foiled in Jordan. That was all; the expected terrorist offensive never happened.
The next big development was the Bush administration’s decision after 9/11 to make rendition secret. Many prisoners were sent to countries that practice torture, have shaky legal systems, suffer authoritarian regimes, or all three. Over time a certain disquiet evolved. Early thinking considered detention by the United States on boats or islands; some suggested “black” prisons in foreign countries. At first, officials felt that U.S. military bases offered the better option. Those had fine security but were subject to United States courts. After 9/11 spooks deemed the black prisons better, although the speed with which U.S. forces overran Afghanistan resulted in a hybrid system, since prisoners needed to be held immediately, in places that became bases. But black sites were desirable because they lay beyond legal writ.
The first prison was a CIA safe house in Chiang Mai, Thailand. The chief of station in Bangkok cleared this with Thai authorities when the agency faced an immediate need—a place to take the initial “high-value detainee.” The torture investigation by the Senate intelligence committee calls this place Detention Site Green. Site Green was approved by the Thai government during four frantic days in March 2002, when the CIA considered its need so urgent and so secret that the approach was made without reference to the U.S. ambassador, traveling at the time. The station chief went to the Thais. Only afterward did he inform the U.S. deputy chief of mission. The Thais insisted on overall security control, but they authorized the CIA to hold prisoners there.
All this began with the detainee. In Pakistan there were CIA field operations, FBI physical and technical surveillance teams, and, of course, the allied security service, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), often called a state-within-a state in Pakistan. The agency worked with ISI to identify and raid terrorist safe houses. Pakistanis executed the raids, with the CIA and FBI on hand to examine the places—and suspects—once security pronounced the localities safe. The Pakistanis agreed that the Americans could spirit away individuals to third countries. One suspected Al Qaeda member the CTC focused on was a man named Abu Zubaydah.
Toward the end of March 2002, the spooks had enough data to plan a simultaneous strike on not just two or three safe houses but seventeen. The idea was that Abu Zubaydah might be at one of them. The op took place the evening of March 28. At the Shahbaz Cottage, a brightly painted house in Faisalabad, Pakistan, security agents captured Zubaydah after a shoot-out that moved from a second-floor apartment to the stairwell and then the roof. Confusion developed. Teams reported capturing the man at two different locations. The individual identified as Abu Zubaydah did not look much like his picture. A photo taken at the scene and sent to CIA headquarters by satellite got a verdict of 85 percent certainty that the captive was not their man. Dave Falco, an FBI special agent in Pakistan, insisted he was and ultimately was proved right. (Operatives in Afghanistan had shown the picture to a source not familiar with using photos, leading Black’s people to distrust the identification made on the ground at the time of capture.)
John Kiriakou, the CIA case officer in charge, found that a Pakistani Punjab Ranger had wounded Abu Zubaydah gravely in the thigh and lower abdomen. Kiriakou stanched the bleeding long enough for local doctors to stabilize his wounds. The CIA sent a response team overnight with a doctor to treat the prisoner—a noted surgeon from a Johns Hopkins medical center, arranged by agency executive director A.B. “Buzzy” Krongard, who happened to be on the center’s board. The agency also sent an anesthesiologist and a CIA trainee with a medical background, but it had no interrogators ready for immediate departure. The FBI did. Having participated in the raids, the Bureau also had an interest in what was learned, so its team crowded onto the plane. Ali Soufan was team leader. With the team still en route, early CIA questioning took place at the hospital and in an agency safe house in Pakistan. But as soon as Zubaydah could travel, he was moved to Thailand and held at Site Green.
The CIA’s first interrogation plan for Zubaydah closely followed FBI practice, namely that the subject should be engaged by an inquisitor who bonded with him. The plan for Zubaydah merely suggested that if conventional methods failed, foreign government operatives could be introduced for a “hard approach.” Within a few weeks, the CTC substituted a plan for coercive interrogation. At first Swigert/Mitchell only gave advice. The offer to participate in the interrogations followed. Mitchell accepted. Ali Soufan and his FBI colleague protested.
At headquarters, under standing orders George Tenet put in place even before he became CIA director, there were periodic gatherings where counterterrorism specialists updated senior officers on evolving threats. After 9/11 these “threat matrix” sessions took place every afternoon at 5 o’clock. A mood of satisfaction and pride prevailed the day after Zubaydah’s capture. It seemed like the first big win. President George W. Bush personally approved Zubaydah’s rendition to Thailand after CIA deputy director John McLaughlin put in the request. When Bush next convened his National Security Council (NSC) on April 1, the Zubaydah capture was a major subject. President Bush drawled, “We need to hustle to come up with a strategy to deal with this person.” As the Thais approved Site Green, Cofer Black sought greater control. Black’s operations chief, Jose Rodriguez, wanted Zubaydah at Site Green, which the spooks did not tell the Thai government when it considered approving the facility.
A few weeks earlier, according to CIA lawyer John Rizzo, CTC officials told George Tenet they needed to do something to “shift the dynamics” if the agency captured Zubaydah. Overheated, breathless analysts had crafted a psychological profile of Zubaydah that made him out to be a relentless psychopath. The answer would be the torture methods of Swigert and Dunbar. (However, White House lawyer Alberto Gonzales insists that when he saw the president on April 18, George Bush said he had instructed Tenet not to torture the prisoner.)
Only days after the capture, Rizzo opened his office to CTC lawyers and operatives. They named torture methods and demonstrated some. Rizzo, the deputy general counsel, at the time acting as the senior CIA lawyer, asked few questions, “mostly because a lot of what they were telling me was so alien to anything I had ever thought about before then that I was left largely speechless.” Acting counsel Rizzo writes that his first reaction was to tell CTC, at a minimum, to forget about waterboarding. Rizzo thought he could suppress the most aggressive methods.
Director of Central Intelligence George J. Tenet, delighted with Zubaydah’s capture, ordered the stops pulled out on interrogation. After one of the threat-matrix sessions in early April, Tenet kept CTC aides and general counsel Rizzo for private deliberations on the “enhanced interrogation techniques.” Rizzo knew what this portended and told Tenet that some methods seemed all right but others were harsh, even brutal. Cofer Black’s people insisted that they would never do anything that was torture.
“You’re damn right!” the CIA director shot back.
John Rizzo, rather than pare back the proposed techniques, volunteered to take the whole lot to the Justice Department for a legal opinion. The CIA had sought official opinions dozens of times over the years. Next, Rizzo involved the National Security Council (NSC), whose own lawyer, John D. Bellinger III, had been an agency man in the late 1980s. On April 16, Rizzo and Bellinger met at the White House with John Yoo, the deputy chief of the Justice Department unit that would craft the opinions, and Michael Chertoff, who headed the Criminal Division at Justice. Rizzo and a pair of CTC lawyers presented the interrogation techniques. A follow-up meeting took place on July 13, when the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) at Justice had begun drafting its response. Rizzo learned that Justice was going to approve all the techniques. The CIA lawyer writes, “Above all, I wanted a written OLC memo in order to give the Agency—for lack of a better term—legal cover. Something that we could keep, and wave around if necessary, in the months and years to come.”
Meanwhile, the Thais demanded their pound of flesh, obtaining CIA support for some of their budget and activities. Langley acquiesced.
When the Americans started the Zubaydah debriefing, the FBI unit—Ali Soufan and special agent Steve Gaudin—took the lead. According to Soufan, the CIA did not just miss the boat on having an interrogation team ready; it stalled deliberately because Cofer Black and his colleagues in the CTC didn’t think the prisoner really was Zubaydah. Nevertheless, the FBI inquisitors soon connected with the Al Qaeda man and built a rapport that they used to question him. Soufan had worked the terrorism account for the FBI for some time. Fluent in Arabic, he had worked on the investigations of the 1998 African embassy bombings and the explosive boat attack on the USS Cole in 2000.
Soufan used the same principles enshrined in the CIA’s own manual—gain the subject’s trust, be authoritative in what you seem to know, challenge the subject to prove you wrong, and believe that all things are possible. Using those methods, Soufan had convinced one of the Cole attackers to reveal information that identified seven (more than a third) of the 9/11 hijackers.
The FBI had been looking for Abu Zubaydah since the Millennium Plot and were keen on questioning him now. Ali Soufan reports that when he began speaking to the captive, a Palestinian, at the Pakistani safe house, Zubaydah had an eye turning green from infection. There were cuts on his face and splotches of dried blood. Soon after his capture, the prisoner fell into sepsis and required heroic medical treatment to survive. Inquisitors posing as military officers kept up the questioning even then. Zubaydah explained that he was a facilitator, a sort of combination travel agent and logistics expert, and Soufan reported his statement to Langley. Zubaydah yielded the key information that Khalid Sheik Mohammed was an Al Qaeda operative, not an independent terrorist, as the CIA had thought. Zubaydah also named an American Al Qaeda wannabe, Jose Padilla, in good time for Padilla to be arrested in Chicago.
George Tenet sent commendation cables to the FBI team. But Cofer Black, not convinced of the Bureau’s discoveries, remained skeptical. For him the terror war was personal. In the Sudan, Al Qaeda had targeted Black for assassination. He’d been yanked from Khartoum, brought home, and promoted to counterterrorism chief. Black became the general of the secret war. The field marshal, leader of the clandestine service, was James L. Pavitt. Whereas Black looked like a gopher, and Jose Rodriguez, operations chief, like the Latino he was, Pavitt, with his magisterial bearing and shock of silver hair, could have stepped through the doors of central casting.
They were less than enamored of the FBI inquisitors, disputing Soufan’s account, grudging of their success, as some CIA people are in almost every account of the war on terror not invented by agency loyalists. In this case, Rodriguez brings Grayson Swigert into the legend. Rodriguez insists in his memoir that within two days of Zubaydah’s capture—that would still be late March 2002—the CTC went to Swigert to ask him to accompany an agency team to Chiang Mai where Zubaydah would be held.
Coercive interrogation started even before the psychologists became involved, on April 13, 2002, when an agency officer warned the prisoner that if he were not compliant by the time the Americans moved him, things would get very uncomfortable. Inquisitors held medical treatments over Zubaydah’s head to exchange for cooperation, a violation of international conventions. The date is important because the agency, as well as CIA officers, have insisted that all their torture was legal under the Department of Justice (DOJ) approval. But as we have seen, John Rizzo’s first contact with Justice officials took place in a White House office three days later. CIA hostile interrogation began before any DOJ legal memo. The efforts to evade accountability begin here. The problem with them starts with the fact that legal opinions do not have the standing of statutes—and laws and international treaties prohibited the CIA torture. Moreover, Justice’s opinions were flawed on their face. It should not be a matter of having a mere paper to wave. To be truly responsible, the agency should have evaluated Justice’s arguments.
The weakness of the legal opinions was recognized as soon as they were issued. Between 2003 and 2009, the Department of Justice revised the memoranda again and again. Amendments corrected flawed argumentation or tried to extend the umbrella of approval over more torture techniques. Multiple book-length studies, by DOJ itself as well as legal professional organizations, have analyzed the flimsy arguments and the flawed process. Suffice it to say torture is against the law. Equally eye-opening is the fact that both principal authors of the original legal memoranda—Jay S. Bybee and John Yoo—have since (in 2010 and 2014, respectively) observed that the agency went beyond anything they “approved.” The role of CIA lawyers in soliciting the opinions has hardly been touched, and the palaver about “authoritative” Justice Department opinions skirts the defects revealed by the repeated DOJ revisions.
The Bureau team based at Site Green protested the CIA’s interrogation plan. No effect. The inquisitors continued to employ techniques suggested by the CIA contract psychologists. Grayson Swigert went to Thailand in April with a large agency team including support people, inquisitors, and senior agency psychologist R. Scott Shumate. On April 27, with Zubayda at Chiang Mai for barely a week, Cofer Black’s unit sent Bangkok Station a cable asking when videotapes of the interrogations would arrive at headquarters for cataloguing and official records.
At first Swigert/Mitchell was asked only for advice. The offer to participate came later, in June, when the psychologist returned to the United States at CTC request for a round of meetings. Jose Rodriguez, newly promoted CTC chief, huddled on methods to get more from the Al Qaeda prisoner, and Mitchell offered his own version of the hard approach. Rodriguez took him to see George Tenet late one afternoon following a threat-matrix session. Together with lawyer John Rizzo, they sat around a coffee table in Tenet’s outer office. The CTC operative explained that he needed psychologist Mitchell and his coercive interrogation plan. Mitchell executed a new contract with the CIA and returned to Site Green as chief interrogator.
Figures for reports based on the interrogations illuminate the shabbiness of CIA behavior. In April, with Zubaydah on part-time life support, thirty-nine reports circulated based on his information. During May another fifty-six bulletins appeared. On May 6, the CTC thanked Bangkok for overcoming difficulties installing videotape equipment and warned the station not to record over or edit any of the tapes.
During May CIA lawyers put on the table the argument that Zubaydah was withholding information and that “novel interrogation methods” should be introduced, including the simulated-drowning torture called waterboarding. These proposals went to Attorney General John Ashcroft, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, her deputy Stephen Hadley, and National Security Council lawyer John Bellinger. The CIA’s representations were those of officers who wanted approval and would say anything to obtain it.
“REFRAIN FROM SPECULATIVE LANGUAGE”
This is when Grayson Swigert enters the story for real. Swigert and a CIA team went to Bangkok in June. A day after their arrival at Chiang Mai, on Swigert’s instructions, handlers stripped the prisoner naked and put him in a room with no windows, kept brightly lit 24/7, with blaring music (or noise) and cold air blasting. Tracks from the Red Hot Chili Peppers figured among the musical selections. His chair was permitted or taken away, or switched for one more comfortable or less, depending on how captors judged Zubaydah. The FBI’s Soufan watched in horror as the psychologist, whom he calls Boris, kept making new demands to oppress the prisoner, dismantling the cooperation interrogators felt they had already achieved. Swigert wanted Zubaydah to see his jailor as a god. When Soufan objected to his methods and told CIA colleagues that Boris had no experience, he was stunned to learn that Swigert was actually controlling the CIA team. Mitchell charges Soufan with bollixing up the questioning, leading Zubaydah to clam up.
From June 18 until August 4, 2002, jailers kept Abu Zubaydah in complete isolation and asked no questions at all. Zubaydah kept a journal. He recorded, “One month or [a] little over a month went by during which no one came to interrogate me.” During that period, the CIA distributed thirty-seven bulletins based on his intelligence. As a justification of its need to resort to torture, the agency represented, both secretly and to the public later, that Zubaydah had stopped talking and needed to be broken. As the Senate torture report comments drily, “CIA records do not support this assertion.” The agency, by avoiding any questioning of Zubaydah, endowed its demands for strong-arm methods with some plausibility.
Work on legal memoranda began with John Rizzo’s follow-up confab in July, which included Jonathan Fredman, a lawyer who worked for the CTC, the NSC’s John Bellinger, and Justice Department lawyers. The CIA outlined proposed methods, requesting a formal opinion. Two days later, Bangkok Station received a CTC cable outlining next-phase procedures. Only the Chiang Mai base chief would have authority to stop an interrogation in progress. Questioning would take precedence over medical treatment. If the captive died, he should be cremated.
A crucial encounter took place in Washington on July 17. That day Director Tenet met National Security Adviser Rice to further Project Greystone. Officials concerned about the legality of torture had asked Rice for advice. She had been feeling around the issue since the spring. Now she wanted Attorney General Ashcroft to review the advice—those notorious memos—under preparation at his Office of Legal Counsel. John Yoo headed that unit, and presidential counsel Alberto Gonzales met with him that same day. Gonzales had been wrestling with dilemmas of how much to tell President Bush about interrogation strategy, and in addition to discussing with Yoo the form his legal memorandum should take. Gonzales also wanted to avoid tying the president to this discussion. Gonzales insisted that Yoo’s memorandum should be addressed to the CIA, not the chief executive. Over the following days, Gonzales confirmed the approach with Mr. Ashcroft on the phone. On July 23, Gonzales reported to President Bush, who agreed that he did not need to know specifics. The next day, the Justice Department informed the CIA that Ashcroft would find several methods lawful. Late in the afternoon on July 26, after phoning Ashcroft again, Gonzales met with Director Tenet and White House chief of staff Andy Card. After that he briefed the president. On the last day of July, Rice told Tenet’s deputy that if Ashcroft approved, the agency could go ahead with its stepped-up coercion. At headquarters, Tenet’s staff prepared talking points to seek presidential approval. Instead, NSC’s John Bellinger informed the CIA that it could proceed.
Things were beginning to move quickly. The agency had reviewed Bruce Jessen’s résumé in March and now brought him on board to back Mitchell. They became the on-site scientific authorities. Indeed, when Ali Soufan complained that taking away Zubaydah’s chair would hardly make him compliant, Mitchell shot back that he was using “scientific” methods. Never mind that he had never conducted an interrogation nor, for that matter, used a waterboard. The original interrogation plan, described in an April 12 cable, had intentionally provided for the FBI men “TO ESTABLISH A RELATIONSHIP WITH [ZUBAYDAH] THAT CONVEYS RESPECT AND TOLERANCE TO HEAR SPECIFIC AND REVEALING INFORMATION THAT COULD BE SHAMEFUL AND DIFFICULT FOR [HIM] TO DISCLOSE.” The spooks had already begun talking about learned helplessness, but at that time mentioned only bright light and sleep deprivation.
Then came advance word the harsh methods would be approved. On July 23, Site Green’s chief, Gina Haspel, cabled headquarters. She would do her best to be careful, but a danger of death existed. On August 3, immediately after the White House approvals, headquarters instructed field operatives that only Mitchell and Jessen were to have contact. Others—except security men in black costumes and masks, restricted to using hand signals—could only observe. A cable recording the first “aggressive” session, in which Mitchell and Jessen appeared as “IC SERE Psychologists,” “ISCPs,” or simply “Interrogators,” reported that the prisoner had been sealed in a box during final preparations, immediately given an “attention grab” when brought out of it, and then laid on the floor and told to furnish “DETAILED AND VERIFIABLE INTELLIGENCE ON OPERATIONS PLANNED AGAINST THE U.S.” The inquisitors wanted names, phone numbers, e-mail addresses, weapons caches, and safe houses. Referring to the FBI agents, Abu Zubaydah said that “HE HAD ALREADY PROVIDED THE REQUIRED INFORMATION AND DENIED HAVING ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.” Zubaydah would say that dozens of times under interrogation. Before the first session ended, the CIA contract psychologists resorted to administering an “insult slap” and pushing the prisoner up against the “walling wall” each time Zubaydah repeated his litany. The reporting cables for days two through six of the interrogation have been declassified, and they reveal the interrogators’ steadfast refusal to believe what the subject said, their introduction of ever harsher methods, and, of course, the waterboarding—four times the first day alone.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation refused to have anything to do with this business. It brought its team home. CIA inquisitors proceeded to beat on Abu Zubaydah almost 24/7 for nearly three weeks, hardly questioning the naked man but making every effort to break him. The first waterboarding took place at about 6:20 p.m. on August 4.
Inquisitors introduced a big box and a small one. They shut Zubaydah up in one or the other for arbitrary periods of time. It was the prisoner’s only time in darkness. Training the victim to be helpless, they made him climb into the boxes, march to the waterboard, to the walling wall, prompting Zubaydah with the command “You know what to do.” The Pavlovian conditioning was constant. Mitchell and Jessen brought medical personnel into the interrogation cell disguised as security guards. They kept the detainee naked. Zubaydah wrote frankly of his shame when CTC officers visited and participated:
The hood was lifted and I saw two other individuals: a man and a woman in civilian cloth[e]s. It took minutes before I realized that I was completely naked in front of a woman. For moral and religious reasons I rushed to cover my genitals with my hands with expressions of anger on my face. The guy [. . .] said to me: “don’t start getting angry again, otherwise we’ll start again from zero. Understood?” He said this while shoving me several times to the wall and then he put me in a standing position. At this point the woman starting reading questions from a paper she was holding.
Afterward they sent the prisoner back to the big box.
Within a few days, agency officers watching this decided that the prisoner really wasn’t withholding information at all. In a week, it was judged “HIGHLY UNLIKELY.” Chiang Mai officers asked the Counterterrorist Center to send people out to see for themselves. They warned of breaching legal limits. This marked the beginning of a fairly bitter dispute within the CIA itself, for and against torture. At Chiang Mai, officers who thought the interrogations were getting out of hand found the captive “COMPLIANT”—the state the psychologists supposedly sought—only for headquarters to order the torture to continue without letup. Legal issues seemed to sharpen. On August 12, CTC operations chief Rodriguez replied, “STRONGLY URGE THAT ANY SPECULATIVE LANGUAGE AS TO THE LEGALITY OF GIVEN ACTIVITIES . . . BE REFRAINED FROM IN WRITTEN TRAFFIC.” In a cable found to have been authored by the psychologists, Site Green proposed to CTC that Zubaydah’s interrogation become the template for all future inquisitions.
Grayson Swigert and Hammond Dunbar had their way with Abu Zubaydah. The captive presumed terrorist became their guinea pig. Zubaydah endured eighty-three waterboardings. The psychologists noted their prisoner’s reactions, then proposed their techniques to headquarters, whereupon the agency listed them for DOJ lawyers to consider. Approved tortures were then applied. Some that were used, including the “abdominal slap” and the use of diapers to clothe captives for prolonged periods, were not even reviewed at Justice. Line officers and specialists disliked the strongarm measures.
Langley first began a training class for prospective interrogators only after several months of torture. Already by November 2002, a gun and a power drill had been used to threaten one detainee; another had died of hypothermia under interrogation. A Rendition Detention Group (RDG) at CTC assumed all responsibility for the program in December. On January 28, 2003, Director Tenet issued a formal directive. He added medical guidelines. Tenet continued to doubt the extent of presidential support. White House officials interceded for President Bush each time Tenet sought to sound out the top leader, preserving Bush’s deniability at the expense of widening CIA vulnerability. Doubt became a continuing theme, except for the zealots, like Jose Rodriguez, and their confederates, such as Swigert and Dunbar.
By late 2002, discomfort regarding Greystone had already reached such a level that Terrence DeMay, the CIA’s medical services chief, filed a complaint against James Mitchell’s involvement. Rodriguez, recently promoted CTC chief, decided to seek an opinion on psychological ethics. Mel Gravitz, another member of the agency’s advisory committee, considered ethics for a psychologist participating in interrogations. He completed this report in mid-February 2003, emphasizing national security as part of personal ethics. The review satisfied Rodriguez. He continued using Swigert and Dunbar, although narrowing their involvement after the summer of 2003 to advice more than fieldwork.
Psychologist Mitchell has provided his own account, acknowledging his differences with Ali Soufan, whom he portrays in a negative light. But Soufan is only the first with whom the psychologist wanted to settle scores. He clashed with Counterterrorism Center lawyers who found that some techniques that didn’t involve strong-arm methods would still violate laws against torture, with security officers who refused to let him carry secret documents on an airplane, with the agency’s director of Medical Services, and with a chief interrogator for the agency’s Rendition and Detention Group (RDG), plus the base and station chiefs in Afghanistan. At one point, the contract psychologist maintains, he, too, agreed that Zubaydah had become compliant and recommended that Site Green stop strong-arming him. Headquarters sent people to check. Later, at a different site, CIA interrogators (not Swigert/Mitchell, he insists) used harsh (but not violent) methods on Zubaydah. Insisting that he is no Islamophobe, Swigert describes the terrorists’ goal as “replacing our freedoms with a draconian medieval way of life that stopped evolving fourteen hundred years ago.” The sense in which the CIA psychologist believes he exists in a Kafkaesque world is that he succeeded in his interrogations but was defeated by the agency’s inner doubts and the former victims who took him to court.
The thorny question of torture videotapes also reared its head. In September 2002, officials debated what to do with the ones documenting Zubaydah’s torture. Some argued that the tapes were a security risk, that enraged terrorists would endanger “all” Americans if they were revealed. This notion of invoking hypothetical security threats rather than CIA’s legal jeopardy for torture came to dominate explanations for why the tapes were handled as they were, but the officials involved were the same ones who ordered Site Green to keep mentions of legality out of its cables—i.e., off the record.
Just a month later, in October, CTC’s top lawyer, Jonathan Fredman, briefed U.S. military authorities at Guantánamo Bay on his unit’s approach to interrogations. Fredman maintained that vague statutes and international law left room for coercive techniques, that the CIA had lobbied against affording prisoners any of the protections of the Geneva conventions, and that the agency made its own decisions on many interrogation techniques but sought outside approval for some. Of the videotapes Fredman said, “even totally legal techniques will look ‘ugly.’” Notes made at the October 2 meeting indicate participants discussed how smart it would be smart to curb harsher methods when the International Committee of the Red Cross visited Guantánamo. The CIA lawyer expressed views on a version of waterboarding (the “wet towel”), death threats (not as effective as friendly approaches), and identifying and using prisoners’ phobias against them. He reportedly argued torture was a matter of perception—“If the detainee dies you’re doing it wrong.”
When the Senate Armed Services Committee publicized harsh methods in the summer of 2008 it revealed this discussion among inquisitors. Mr. Fredman denied making those statements. In a November 18, 2008, memorandum sent to the committee by the intelligence community’s top legislative liaison, Mr. Fredman admitted attending the meeting but insisted Project Greystone had been classified at the time “and so I was not at liberty to discuss any details of that program.” The lawyer said he had simply reviewed legal matters at a more general level. He also insisted he had repeatedly offered his resignation to successive CIA general counsels. Fredman reportedly wanted to meet with the senators but made no move to do so. In November, a week after the Armed Services Committee announced a vote on release of its report, on the eve of that vote Fredman circulated his memo disputing the committee’s account. But investigators asked other participants in that same 2002 Guantánamo encounter what they remembered of Fredman’s remarks, and most of their replies confirmed the meeting record.
In an October 25, 2002, dispatch, meanwhile, the CIA’s top covert operator, James L. Pavitt, reversed policy on the videotapes. Instead of preserving them, black prisons were to use a tape to chronicle the record long enough to write a summary, then record the next interrogation session over it.
Meantime, the presence of the words CIA and torture in the same sentence was so explosive that operatives found their claims of interrogation successes difficult to sustain. The ghosts of the hostile interrogation applied to certain Soviet spies in the Cold War and to enemy guerrillas in Vietnam stood in the wings to fuel fresh charges. Detention Site Green became the first casualty. State Department officials were uncomfortable having a black site in Thailand in the first place, and their objections had had to be overcome. Within a couple of months of creation of the base, a Thai newspaper had discovered Chiang Mai and its purpose. Only strenuous appeals induced the Thai press to keep silent. Next a major U.S. paper learned what was happening, and the CIA begged it to suppress the story. The Washington Post confined its reporting in December 2002 to hints that the CIA had begun questioning captured terrorists, without mentioning locales other than Afghanistan, remarking that the agency defended interrogations while decrying harsh methods.
For reasons that remain obscure, the Thai government withdrew its support for the secret prison. In any case, the CIA had more prisoners and needed more space. A new system evolved. Black prisons were prepared in several countries simultaneously and prisoners were moved from one to another, with Afghan sites as a constant. Recruiting the host nations, finding suitable facilities, and prepping them became a major task for the CIA executive director. Until 2004 this was Buzzy Krongard; after that, it was Kyle D. Foggo. The latter became the prime action officer starting from March 2003, when he was still with the Office of Technical Services. The next series of foreign prisons included one in Stare Kiejkuty, Poland, a three-hour drive north of Warsaw, called Site Blue. Next, two line officers met with Foggo to recommend Romania and Lithuania. Afghanistan was secure—the CIA eventually had four black prisons there—but Langley worried about legal entanglements. Site Orange, supposed to be a quantum leap in terms of plumbing, lighting, and whatnot, did not open in Afghanistan until 2004.
Nevertheless, when Site Green shuttered its windows and Station Bangkok tried to move tapes, Jose Rodriguez came down hard, firing off precise instructions to log and store tapes of one type and destroy those of another. In that cable of December 3, 2002, the counterterrorism chief added that he was prepared to send a trusted officer to Bangkok to help if necessary. He ordered the station chief to reply, using the priority grade “immediate,” that she had read and understood these instructions.
After a week, Langley had a complete inventory of materials from the interrogations of Abu Zubaydah and another detainee, ‘Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri. A lawyer with the agency’s general counsel undertook a comparison of the tapes and the reporting cables about them. On June 18, 2003, he told investigators he had found nothing unusual. Later, in an official interview with the CIA inspector general, he mentioned discrepancies in tape numbering, tapes with inaudible content or fuzzy visuals, tapes during which the camera had clearly been repeatedly started and stopped, and tapes that were all snow, re-recorded, or partially or totally blank.
“MORE STRINGENT THAN GENEVA REQUIRED”
The Counterterrorist Center began pressing to destroy the tapes almost immediately. Subordinates worried that both the White House and congressional overseers would oppose it. They were right. On January 10, 2003, Director Tenet convened officials to consider the matter. Sensitivity about tapes was one reason Tenet decided Project Greystone needed a more formal directive. Operations director Jim Pavitt and CTC chief Rodriguez told Congress of the tapes and their desire to destroy them in early February. On the House side, both chairman Porter Goss and vice chairwoman Jane Harman warned the agency not to do any such thing. So did presidential counsel Alberto Gonzales.
Equally significant, rather than relying exclusively on the John Rizzo formula of a DOJ memorandum to wave in an emergency, the CIA continually touted the legality of torture, elevating Justice Department opinions to the level of law, all the while declaring the (tortured) legal arguments a secret so precious that even congressional leaders were not entitled to see them. The secret was that the emperor had no clothes. That stance continued for years.
Langley’s frustration that President Bush had not directly signed off on Project Greystone had everything to do with the legality of torture and imprisonment. Not only was torture illegal by multiple statutes, but also the CIA was prohibited from acting as a Gestapo, or secret police, by its original founding law, the National Security Act of 1947. On torture, Bush posed questions; Gonzales answered. Thereafter, the NSC carefully restricted discussions to lawyer Gonzales or security adviser Condi Rice. This continued through the winter and spring of 2003, when CIA Inspector General John Helgerson began looking into Greystone as a result of the death of Gul Rahman, a captive in CIA hands in Afghanistan.
Concern rose so high that, in late June, George Tenet ordered a halt. At this point, agency officials were already looking ahead to moving prisoners to an “Endgame Facility” at Guantánamo Bay. Here officials seemed to be viewing the end of a “resistance to interrogation” protocol. CIA’s Medical Services office commented on the contract psychologists Mitchell and Jessen. The agency conceded weaknesses in its ethics policy for the program, and one official cautioned, “Just hope our myopic view of the interrogation process doesn’t come back to haunt us.” Ambivalence on the torture project is apparent in CIA documents, as RDG operatives were preparing to assign the psychologists to assess detainees for suitability for long-term incarceration. Medical staff believed the psychologists could help design the prison regime but knew no more about long-term assessment than they did about coercive interrogation. They should not be in charge of anything, the medical staff said. There were also fears that the psychologists had blown the CIA’s cover, telling military colleagues about the waterboarding while the agency still pretended that “our interest in these techniques related only to evaluating them for possible use within a training program.”
On July 3, Director Tenet sent Condoleezza Rice a memorandum explaining that his agency, worried about presidential commitment, wanted reassurances. Rice might have countered that plausible deniability required these matters not be aired before President Bush, but she went ahead to convene officials as high as Vice President Cheney and Attorney General John Ashcroft, along with White House, NSC, Justice Department, and CIA lawyers. Their meeting took place on July 29, 2003.
While the White House was willing to convene a high-level meeting to comfort the CIA about topside backing, it wanted nothing on paper. As Vice President Cheney later told a group at the Gerald R. Ford Museum—only half in jest—“I learned early on that if you don’t want your memos to get you in trouble someday, just don’t write any.” Cheney notoriously declared that the vice president of the United States, who chairs a house of Congress and sits at the side of the president, is neither of the legislature nor of the executive and is therefore not subject to federal law on the preservation of records.
In any case, Cheney led the White House group, along with Alberto Gonzales. Rice represented the NSC staff, accompanied by John Bellinger. Attorney General Ashcroft brought a full array of Justice Department officials. Director Tenet’s CIA team included top agency lawyer Scott W. Muller and CTC deputy chief Philip Mudd. Tenet began, emphasizing that the CIA wanted an affirmation that President Bush supported its “enhanced interrogation” policies. In the heat of controversy over the military prison at Guantánamo, the White House had made several statements asserting compliance with the Geneva Protocols or else denying that the United States ever did what the CIA was, in fact, doing. General counsel Muller then briefed the others on the interrogations. The declassified slides demonstrate that the CIA claimed credit for obtaining by torture information that Abu Zubaydah had given the FBI voluntarily. Ashcroft, according to Scott Muller’s record, “forcefully reiterated the view of the Department of Justice that the techniques being employed by the CIA were and remain lawful and do not violate either the anti-torture statute or U.S. obligations under the Convention Against Torture.” Dick Cheney declared—and both Rice and Ashcroft concurred—that the CIA had faithfully executed administration policy. They decided not to convene the full NSC Principals Committee and told Tenet that Cheney, Rice, and Gonzales in “some combination” would carry word to Bush.
John Ashcroft exhibited doubts regarding the use of waterboarding when a CIA official mentioned that detainee Khalid Sheik Mohammed had already been subjected to 119 of these near drownings. Mohammed, captured on March 1, 2003, in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, had so far been in custody for less than five months (150 days), at Site Blue in Poland. The CIA explained that the waterboardings were different than Ashcroft understood. Another round of legal memos papered over those discrepancies. Near the end of 2004, an inspired leak to the New York Times reported that Tenet had issued an order on August 8, 2003, prohibiting officers from even being present at military interrogations where strenuous methods were employed. Here the agency did the same thing the Bureau had done to it, keeping its people safe from dubious legality. Tenet’s order lends weight to the picture of agency discomfort that summer.
White House officials asked if Congress was in the picture. Tenet and his people said it was, that legislators had been introduced to Project Greystone, and that new briefings would be held when Congress returned from summer recess. There was an NSC meeting that same day in the Situation Room, but officials kept the subject of torture out of it. Gonzales notes that the CIA told the group that Al Qaeda remained intent on carrying out another 9/11-style attack during the summer of 2003. No specific target was mentioned, but discussion centered on securing domestic flights as well as those of foreign airlines.
In view of the dispute over the quality of CIA congressional notifications on torture, one has to wonder if Tenet’s crew actually believed what they were saying. When agency officials told the White House that there were going to be more congressional briefings, they meant they would tell only the chairperson and vice chairperson of the House and Senate intelligence committees, each attended by only a single staff person or none at all. The CIA minimized the information flow. Equally problematic is what Congress was told. For example, early in 2004, when the Supreme Court accepted a case for decision that involved whether Guantánamo qualified as U.S. territory for legal purposes, Langley consulted the NSC, White House counsel, and the Justice Department. Agency general counsel Scott Muller informed operations chief Jim Pavitt that DOJ “recommended that CIA move the detainees (except al-Libi) out of GITMO at this time.” However, agency records indicate no briefings of Congress at all between September 2003 and July 2004. No one thought it worth consulting Congress on whether a large-scale relocation of prisoners was a good idea.
Some weeks after the congressional briefings in the autumn of 2003, Inspector General (IG) Helgerson issued a report on how one of the CIA inquisitors, not any of the contract psychologists, had intimidated a prisoner with a power drill and mock executions. No one went to Capitol Hill to inform legislators.
That IG report and, for that matter, the broader report Helgerson released on May 7, 2004, quite critical of Greystone, were both held back. The May 2004 IG report came at the height of the firestorm over U.S. military torture practiced on detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. On May 6, CIA personnel met Senate committee staffers and, keeping the conversation focused on Iraq, avoided mention of Greystone. In a followup briefing four days later—after the IG report had been issued—agency general counsel Scott Muller had the chutzpah to contend that “some of our rules might be described as more stringent than Geneva required.” Then the rash of matters that the CIA needed to justify overcame Muller’s stamina. He resigned that summer, making John Rizzo again acting general counsel.
Congress—but still only the so-called Gang of Four—was told of the IG’s inquiry in July 2004. Stan Moskowitz, agency congressional liaison, waited until late November to record that event. In fact the memos recording conversations at all these CIA briefings, going back to the first one, seem to have been created only on November 30, 2004, suggesting some after-the-fact massaging of history.
That spring, career CIA psychologists, still uncomfortable at the way military survival and evasion training had morphed into agonizing interrogations, complained to the American Psychological Association (APA). That set the organization on course to create explicit ethics standards. The ensuing debate quickly entangled others, including Kirk Hubbard, the CIA psychologist who had first introduced Swigert and Dunbar to the clandestine service. At the APA conference in the summer of 2004, a selection of psychologists met on the side to craft ethics guidelines. The group, also influenced by the Pentagon—for whom psychologists do a lot of work—adopted very permissive standards. Within months Mitchell and Jessen created a company, which hired retired CIA and private psychologists, plus retired agency line officers, especially former interrogators. In turn the company furnished the black sites with consulting psychologists, inquisitors, and strategic advice.
Meanwhile George J. Tenet reached the end of his rope. Observers, assuming Tenet would stay through the fall of 2004, speculated that he stood to become the longest-serving CIA director, outlasting the “Great White Case Officer,” Allen Dulles, spy chief during the Eisenhower era. That did not happen. The White House embroiled the CIA in a very public dispute over blame for egregious errors in speeches President Bush had used to drive the nation into war with Iraq. Director Tenet dutifully fell on his sword and left CIA that July. It was a time of change, with a new director of national intelligence (DNI) to serve as an umbrella authority for the entire community, the CIA chief being reduced to leading only his own agency. The shrinkage in authority no doubt also played some role in Tenet’s decision.
Tenet’s replacement would be Porter J. Goss, formerly chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, representing a case of sheriff turning cattle rustler or vice versa, since Goss, before becoming a politician, had been a CIA case officer. The guard changed in other ways, too. Jose Rodriguez, promoted to head the Directorate of Operations, would begin to lead it into the new DNI era as the National Clandestine Service. It took Bush much longer, until the spring of 2005, to fill the position of director of national intelligence. He brought in John D. Negroponte, then the U.S. ambassador to Iraq.
Evidence of the CIA’s sensitivity about its torture mounted steadily. Slumping morale led President George W. Bush to make the drive out to the agency to buck up the officers himself. “I wanted to assure the people here that their contribution was incredibly vital to the security of the United States,” Bush declared. “Together, we’ve achieved a lot in securing this country.” Director Goss, giving Congress a routine annual evaluation of the threats facing America, left observers thinking that the CIA had been strong-arming prisoners. The New York Times wrote it up that way. Uproar followed. Spokesperson Jennifer Millerwise responded with a public declaration, accusing the newspaper of creating “the false impression that US intelligence may have had a policy in the past of using torture against terrorists captured in the war on terror.” Of course that was precisely correct. Millerwise thundered that it was not so.
Driven by the excesses of military inquisitors at Abu Ghaib in Iraq, Senator John McCain proposed legislation to restrict all United States agencies, including the CIA, to using interrogation methods in the U.S. Army field manual. Even in these days of intense partisanship, the legislation looked to be sailing through. In an attempt to sustain CIA interrogation, Goss got White House permission to break security and tell the senator what the agency was doing. Goss led McCain through a welter of subjects—the terror threat, legal authorities, foreign clients, and such multilateral monitors as the International Committee of the Red Cross. Dick Cheney attended to lend the authority of the White House—and make sure Goss didn’t give away the store. Robert Grenier, a new CTC chief, attended the preparatory session and came away worried—Goss did not have a thorough grasp of Greystone. It didn’t matter.
Director Goss extravagantly asserted that half of all U.S. intelligence on terrorism came from torture. Goss had been McCain’s friend on Capitol Hill. He returned to Langley stunned. “I got nowhere,” he told Rizzo. “I don’t think John even heard a thing I told him. He just sat there, stone-faced and looking straight ahead, like he didn’t know me. No questions, no comments, nothing. When I was done he just said, ‘It’s all torture,’ and got up and left.” Senator McCain, a Navy pilot who had been captured in the Vietnam War, had direct knowledge, being the only member of Congress who had actually been tortured.
Then Vice President Cheney showed up with top CIA officers in tow to brief senators Ted Stevens and Thad Cochran on agency methods. In October 2005, these politicians were the Armed Services Committee managers for the Pentagon appropriation bill, to which McCain had attached his anti-torture provision. National security secrecy suddenly became a very relative thing. Methods so “secret” that knowledge of them was being withheld from oversight committees were extolled to outsiders as particularly effective. Cheney tried but failed to get a CIA exemption written into the new law. McCain didn’t budge. The Detainee Treatment Act passed Congress in December, and President Bush signed it a week later, on New Year’s Eve. The clock had run out on CIA black sites and the Greystone torture program.
When the president signed the new anti-torture law, the denizens of CIA’s Langley headquarters were already backpedaling fast. The top-secret project had been blown. Media had previously reported bits of the story—that the CIA had been holding prisoners, deaths of two detainees in separate incidents in Iraq and Afghanistan, agency “snatch” teams kidnapping suspects right off the street or taking prisoners from one country to another. But by late October 2005, Washington Post reporter Dana Priest had Greystone all teed up: black prisons, torture, a German national mistaken for a terrorist and rendered to Syria, the lot. The Post followed protocol and asked the Bush administration for its reaction. Frantic efforts to suppress this news followed.
First up would be Jose Rodriguez. Director Goss asked him to have a go at Priest. The reporter came out to Langley for a private meeting with the spymaster. They sat on a couch in his office. Priest handed Rodriguez a signed copy of a book she had written. He glanced at Priest’s work on the U.S. military. It did not please him. Priest, having taken the book along to introduce herself, not butter him up, recalls thinking that Rodriguez did not know her.
Priest remembers that the CIA man hardly followed talking points. He divulged real information in hopes of convincing her to drop the story. She was worried, but gamely outlined what she intended to publish. Rodriguez grimaced at the Post’s uncomfortably clear picture. The spy pitched the idea that Priest’s story endangered CIA lives and damaged national security. She disagreed. Rodriguez rejected bringing terrorists to trial on the grounds that they would lawyer up and the CIA wanted information. Priest stood her ground.
Next came the big boys. This time the White House summoned Post executive editor Leonard Downie to the Oval Office. President Bush, Vice President Cheney, and John Negroponte, the director of national intelligence, the newly christened top American spy, all confronted the nonplussed editor. Negroponte took the lead. He made the same arguments as Rodriguez. Downie dismissed them. The Post agreed to suppress names of countries where black prisons were located, but it would publish.
With the boom soon to fall, the Bush people initiated damage control. On Halloween, CTC chief Robert Grenier and Joseph Wippl, the agency’s latest congressional liaison, briefed the Senate leadership on Project Greystone, relying upon the Justice Department legal memos to argue that everything was awesome. Senate leaders wanted a wider conversation. The next day featured a regular Tuesday lunch of Republican senators. Suddenly Vice President Cheney strode into the room. He demanded that all staff persons leave. After the room cleared, Cheney introduced CIA briefers and supervised. Again the tight secrecy surrounding Greystone went by the boards for political expediency. On November 2, the Washington Post led with Priest’s story, headlined CIA HOLDS TERROR SUSPECTS IN SECRET PRISONS.
Once the story appeared, Langley joined Republican congressional leaders in asking the Justice Department to probe the leak and prosecute those responsible. But leak investigations are difficult in principle, and in the climate of that time, rife with charges that the Bush administration had manipulated intelligence to start a war in Iraq, the move to lock up the messenger went nowhere. Instead Dana Priest’s story won the Pulitzer Prize.
The story had much more concrete results. Condoleezza Rice, secretary of state in George Bush’s second term, embarked on a trip to Europe. Priest had revealed that the CIA had located secret prisons in several eastern European lands. Secretary Rice’s trip devolved into a journey of atonement. Reporters dogged Rice at every stop, asking hard questions. The European leaders and diplomats she met pursued more confidential inquiries. A couple of U.S. ambassadors demanded that Rice assure them that the black prisons had been authorized. Goss wanted the State Department’s counterterrorism coordinator, Henry Crumpton, to call the ambassadors. One element of the tale that had become known earlier, the use of CIA airplanes to shuttle prisoners, had been protected by European countries refusing to make official inquiries. Now the gloves came off. There were probes into both the transfer flights and the black sites. Several U.S. partners in the war on terrorism, afraid of their own exposure, protested vociferously. One country instructed the United States to close its black site and demanded that the CIA get out within hours. Another rescinded its previous agreement allowing the CIA to obtain medical help for detainees at local hospitals. A third nation proscribed any CIA use of torture. Others wanted more money. Within months the prisoners remaining within this Kafkaesque world would be crammed into just two CIA black sites.
So began a lengthy denouement. Shadows fell across Greystone. Grenier of the CTC attended countless sessions of high-level Bush administration NSC units like the Principals Committee or the Deputies Committee, all supposed to hash out the endgame. At a Principals meeting on October 28, for example, the CIA complained that it had been attempting to obtain an administration decision on one matter for over a year. Then there were “tiger team” meetings chaired by the deputy national security adviser J.D. Crouch. Bob Grenier and CTC lawyer Robert Eatinger represented the CIA. Crouch begged Grenier to keep the interrogations going despite the McCain anti-torture bill. The agency man objected that his people would have no protection.
A few days later, White House chief of staff Andrew Card suddenly appeared at the center, which Grenier had renamed the Counterterrorism Center. Card gave a pep talk to CTC’s senior people.
“I’d like to know if there is anything I can say that would increase your confidence,” the president’s man said. “Is there anything you would like to hear from me? You should know that I begin every day the same way: I walk into the Oval Office and say, ‘Pardon me, Mr. President.’”
Grenier recalled, “The words rolled out on the table, as though daring someone to pick them up.” George W. Bush’s father, of course, had pardoned CIA, NSC, and Pentagon officials in the Iran-Contra affair. Bob Grenier thought instead of Gerald Ford’s pardoning Richard Nixon.
The CIA man distrusted the proposition. It seemed underhanded. Rather than fight McCain’s legislation, President Bush postured himself as close to Senator McCain in principle; the administration wanted both the highroad spin and the low-road interrogations. Grenier said nothing. A week later, President Bush and Senator McCain posed for a photo opportunity, shaking hands. Bush signed the bill into law on December 30, 2005.
On December 19, CIA lawyer John Rizzo queried the Justice Department as to whether McCain’s Detainee Treatment Act would affect the agency’s methods. Uncertain, he took the problem to Director Goss. In view of the Detainee Treatment Act, on the same day that Andy Card held his séance for the CTC, Porter Goss suspended CIA use of strong-arm tactics. The paper explaining that decision left Langley on New Years’ Eve. It angered national security adviser Stephen Hadley, who had sought to keep the interrogation program intact. Goss would be booted out of the agency four months later, convinced that suspending Greystone, and his memorandum announcing that decision, had been his undoing.
Also out would be Bob Grenier. The Bush people may have demanded Grenier’s head. Jose Rodriguez could have gone after him for allegedly lacking aggressiveness. This remains unclear. His successor, Michael D’Andrea, would be aggressive indeed, with a drone offensive.
General Michael V. Hayden followed Goss. If the Bush administration wanted to pretend that it remained pristine while continuing torture in the shadows, Hayden stood for that. He solicited more DOJ memos, made more vague claims for torture’s “effectiveness.” Since the media had put black sites on the table, there could be no more question of confining contacts with congressional overseers to a Gang of Four or Gang of Eight. One major change would be that Hayden recognized the need for public relations. A week after taking the CIA helm, General Hayden told the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee that he wanted the agency out of the business of being the nation’s jailer. He said no one was being tortured, but he continued to argue the need to maintain his authority for hostile interrogation and did his best to carve out a CIA exemption from the Detainee Treatment Act.
Hayden had been on the job less than a month when the Supreme Court cut the foundation out from under the CIA program with its decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, specifying that all prisoners were subjects of international and U.S. law. On July 11, 2006, six weeks into his tenure, Hayden met with top leaders of the Senate committee to extol the potential offered by reviving the hostile interrogations. In September the full intelligence committees in both houses of Congress received their first briefings on Project Greystone, by then under way for five years.
The September briefs coincided with President Bush’s answer to the quandary of the not-so-secret black sites and the Hamdan case. Bush publicly acknowledged the CIA had had black sites and had conducted interrogations. He shut down the prisons, Bush said, and was sending all those left in CIA custody to Guantánamo Bay. His speech, vetted by the agency, contained exaggerated and misleading information as to the successes of Greystone, according to the Senate intelligence committee’s extensive later study.
The last prisoner subjected to CIA methods, Muhammad Rahim, taken in Pakistan in June 2007, would be interrogated for nearly a year. The vaunted techniques did not produce a single report. At one point, even Jose Rodriguez had had enough, and he refused to recommend extending the interrogation. Michael Hayden overruled him.
On December 7, 2007, while General Hayden served as cheerleader for Greystone, the other shoe fell when journalist Mark Mazzetti reported in the New York Times that CIA officers, two years earlier, had collaborated to destroy videotapes of agency interrogations. A firestorm followed—congressional hearings, subpoenas, a federal grand jury, a federal independent prosecutor. Jose Rodriguez’s name immediately came up. The controversy spilled over into the Obama administration, but the new attorney general, Eric Holder, decided not to prosecute anyone.
Intrepid psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen continued collecting money from the CIA through their corporation. Despite the on-again, off-again character of Project Greystone, the agency maintained its torture capability after September 2006, and even then sought to preserve it as a contingency option. Plus, there was still advice to give on the prisoners moved to Guantánamo. In June 2007 under their aliases, Grayson Swigert and Hammond Dunbar, they went to brief Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in an effort to gain her support. Another time they appeared before the Senate intelligence committee. The CIA provided security certification for a Mitchell Jessen office, equipped it to handle top-secret documents, and detailed an agency officer full time as liaison. When press reports blew the psychologists’ cover, their company engaged a security service to protect them. Langley received a $570,000 bill for that.
The larger aspect is the effect on the Central Intelligence Agency. For all its coming years, Mitchell and Jessen will stand out as bad examples. John Dolibois, a legendary interrogator at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, who obtained his information by getting close to his subjects, has the opposite spot well filled already—Dolibois’s light to Swigert/Dunbar’s shadows. Each time a future project involves capturing and interrogating enemies, CIA officers will remember Project Greystone for making the agency vulnerable and exposing its officers to criminal liability. However, there is no question but that agency people saw the danger going in. That’s why John Rizzo wanted a legal paper and George Tenet sought the president’s explicit approval.
In January 2003, Langley’s chief interrogator, seeing the plan for what he was supposed to do with a prisoner, told Jose Rodriguez he’d decided to retire. He informed colleagues, “This is a train wreak [sic] waiting to happen and I intend to get the hell off.” David Ignatius is a newspaper columnist with extraordinary access to the spooks. Shortly after the black prisons story emerged, a senior officer, watching Greystone’s collapse, confided, “We all knew it would.” In April 2009, when President Barack Obama, George W. Bush’s successor, declassified the now notorious Justice Department legal memos, another retired CIA man told Ignatius why he had avoided joining the inquisitors: “We all knew the political wind would change eventually.” Four months later, a top spook added, “The agency is glad to be out of it.”
They knew. Future generations of intelligence officers will remember. In this way, to cast a shadow is to be a ghost. Many ghosts populate the hallways of CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. The most familiar is Nathan Hale, whose statue adorns the lobby of the old headquarters building. His was the spirit of the American Revolution, evoked by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the World War II predecessor of the agency, carried over into Cold War years. Not all figures in CIA lore were bad ghosts. There have been good ones too.
There have been dreamers and schemers, idealists and rogues, problem solvers and empire builders, political-action specialists and paramilitary types, scientists mad and sane, lawyers and shysters, dedicated officers and those who would go wherever the wind blew. What follows is the story of men and women who built an institution, so influential in so many ways, and became its ghosts. The future of the CIA will be a product of their past.