27 Nov 2024
Tuesday 17 May 2016 - 12:00
Story Code : 214303

New Snowden leak reveals key NSA role in Guantanamo torture

TEHRAN (Tasnim) - A new batch document dump from the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden Archives of National Security Agency internal newsletters reveals that the NSA had a direct role in "interrogations" programs in Guantanamo at the outset of the global war on terror.





The documents, released by The Intercept on Monday, also reveal that the intelligence agency offered tailored training to staff on national security issues in Latin America, as well as how to steer the region toward serving US interests, Telesur reported.

Issues of SIDtoday, an internal publication run by the Signals Intelligence Directorate, the division that The Intercept describes as arguably the NSAs most important, reveal information on NSA agents deployment to Guantanamo Bay in 2003 alongside the CIA and US military.

One publication in October 2003 announced the opportunity to "get to GITMO for 90 days!. The vacation-like promotion was a hiring announcement for the NSA Liaison Officer to the Joint Task Force Guantanamo to collaborate with interrogators on Operation Enduring Freedom, the official term for the US war on terror.

The advertisement explained that the staffer would be responsible for working with Department of Defense, CIA, and FBI interrogators to assess and exploit information sourced from detainees, specifically alleged al-Qaida and Taliban terrorists/detainees. The newsletter heralded the gig as an excellent opportunity.

A later issue of the publication from December 2003 offered a report-back from an NSA employees experience working at Guantanamo Bay. It explained that the NSA liaison works day-to-day to pull together intelligence to support an upcoming interrogation, formulate questions and strategies for the interrogation, and observe or participate in the interrogation, a job that the staffer described as extremely interesting, challenging, and fulfilling.

Disturbingly, the personal account then shifts immediately from describing interrogation activities to showing off that fun awaits outside work hours while at Guantanamo Bay. Water sports are outstanding, the NSA agent gushes, going on to talk about Tiki Bars and how relaxing is easy.

The lighthearted and celebratory descriptions of Guantanamo in the NSA newsletter are troublingly out of step with other assessments of what was happening at the US military prison around the same time, when human rights groups raised early alarms about torture and attempts to cover up inhumane interrogation tactics.

According to the 2014 Senate Committee report, techniques used at Guantanamo as part of the US enhanced interrogation program constituted torture.

CIA detainees were tortured, committee chair Dianne Feinstein wrote in the report, adding that the conditions of confinement and the use of authorized and unauthorized interrogation and conditioning techniques were cruel, inhuman, and degrading.

The Intercepts release of 166 documents of the earliest SIDtoday publications, launched just days after the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, is the first batch of NSA archives set to go public in a series of installments.

By Tasnim News Agency

https://theiranproject.com/vdccx0qi12bqs18.-ya2.html
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