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Blackwater-backed Torture Flights Caught in the UK

Posted by Adam Howard at 9:12 PM on June 10, 2007.


The most secret and powerful mercenary firm in America has been bankrolling planes to fly terrorism suspects to secret prisons.
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Blackwater USA, the nefarious sounding and behaving contracting company, whose reputation for treachery rivals Halburton's, has been linked to a plane being used to shuttle "terror suspects" to secret prisons in Poland and Romania. These "torture flights" have been roundly condemned by human rights groups.

The Blackwater connection has come to light because of a plane spotted landing in the UK this past weekend. Inside the supposedly civilian plane were four armed US security policemen.

The Daily Mail reports:

[This] disclosure follows damning findings by the Council of Europe human rights organization, which accused Tony Blair on Friday of colluding in a CIA operation to run secret prisons in Poland and Romania by allowing the agency to use UK airports.

The study was contradicted on the same day by a report from the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), which concluded that there was no evidence to support the claims.

But the director of the human rights group Liberty revealed that ACPO had admitted it restricted its inquiry to a review of media reports on the issue.

She accused them of rushing out their 'cursory' findings as part of a politically-motivated 'spin' operation.

The US plane's arrival was also logged by Touchdown News, a group of enthusiasts who record the movements of military aircraft at RAF Mildenhall and RAF Lakenheath.

The group said the plane used its civilian call sign when talking to air traffic control and took off again early on the morning of Sunday June 3, flying east.

The Daily Mail also includes this graphic of the "ghost flight's" flight path...

flight path

The plane was linked to Blackwater because of its registration number, which had been placed on a list of flights to monitored by the European Parliament committee. The plane is officially registered to two Blackwater subsidiaries. Tracking technology has found that at least twice in the last year this particular plane flew to Camp Peary, the U.S. naval reservation in Virginia known as "The Farm". The Farm is believed to be a CIA training facility.

The Daily Mail reports further on Blackwater's reputation:

A recent book on Blackwater by Jeremy Scahill, an American author, described the company as the world's "most secretive and powerful mercenary firm", carrying out quasi-military operations on behalf of the U.S. government in Iraq, Afghanistan and within the U.S.

It was founded in 1997 by Erik Prince, a former elite Navy Seal and fundamentalist Christian millionaire who bankrolls far-Right causes.

This newspaper first cast doubt on the Government's claim to have no knowledge of the CIA's activities 18 months ago when we published pictures of three planes at Scottish airports which had been linked by human rights activists to rendition.

Flight records showed the planes had been given landing rights by the MoD, despite there being no record of passenger lists or details of the purpose of the flights.

The Council of Europe dossier, compiled by Swiss senator Dick Marty, said the U.S. had used Britain's help to establish a "global spider's web" of jails and airports to pursue a war on terror without rules.

It claimed the secret centres had been set up so it could use interrogation techniques amounting to torture which are illegal in the US.

These include "waterboarding" - the dunking of blindfolded suspects so they believe they are drowning - solitary confinement, shackling in confined cells and exposure of naked captives to extremes of heat, cold and noise.

Stories such as these are a chilling reminder of one of the worst legacies of this war--the embrace of torture as a means to illicit intelligence. The Democratic Congress must be urged to investigate this matter as intensely as the British are and Erik Prince ought to hauled out in public to be made responsible for his involvement in torture.

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Tagged as: blackwater, torture, united kingdom

Adam Howard is the editor of PEEK.


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View:
helzphar
Posted by: helzphar on Jun 11, 2007 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One L in Poland is sufficient. Two question your credibility.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

They Got Caught! Ha ha ha!
Posted by: wagadog on Jun 11, 2007 6:43 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Blackwater: "Shhh! I'm huntin' WABBITS!"

Didn't their CIA buddies tell them how to keep something a secret? Or were you afraid if you were actually good at your jobs, some "Loyal Bushie" would out you to the press anyway like they did Valerie Plame?

Bad all over and a little ugly on the side just isn't enough these days, guys.

I don't give you a B or a C for this -- I give you an "L" ... for

LOSERS!!!!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Torture and the use of psychologists....
Posted by: pjlewis_451 on Jun 11, 2007 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a 4th year doctoral candidate in clincial psychology, I have seen some of the suspicion and degradation aimed toward psychology and its practitioners. Unfortunately, the field of psychology has a long, but unpublicized history of direct and indirect involvement in research funded by our government to understand the limits of psychological corecion and torture. Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment (1971) and Stanley Milgram (1963) are two of many examples of how government grant money was used ostensibly to finance research aimed at determining how someone like Hitler could have enlisted the cooperation of others to murder millions. However, Milgram's and Zimbardo's research and a variety of other related research projects have, instead, been utilized to determine whether average people will comply in the performance of torture against another person. In fact, while Zimbardo's research startled most researchers, including Zimbardo, his experimental data contributed to informing the 30-40 year effort (which is still on-going) by the CIA and the U.S. Government to mature and perfect its torture techniques and overall torture paradigm.

My graduate school hosted a symposium last month on the subject of psychologists' involvement in military torture. The panelists included Dr. Frank Summers, Dr. Gary Walls, and Dr. Brad Olson. The APA's ethics chair, Dr. Behnke, was also in attendance after informing the panel the day before that he would fly in from his Washington office to attend. Summers, Walls, and Olson criticized the APA for a loop-hole in its ethics code in which a psychologist may obey any order, including orders to torture if these orders are delivered by appropriate governing authorities:

1.02: CONFLICTS BETWEEN ETHICS AND LAW, REGULATIONS, OR OTHER GOVERNING LEGAL AUTHORITY

If psychologists’ ethical responsibilities conflict with law, regulations, or other governing legal authority, psychologists make known their commitment to the Ethics Code and take steps to resolve the conflict. If the conflict is unresolvable via such means, psychologists may adhere to the requirements of the law, regulations, or other governing legal authority--(APA, 2002)

It should be noted that in regards to the loop-hole in the APA ethics code, Behnke admitted that the APA had "dropped the ball." Nevertheless Summers, and in particular, Walls, continued unabashed in their critical review of APA policy and severely critized any psychologists' involvement in such military operations.

Behnke attempted to minimize the outrage and sought a compromise. The panel opposed any such compromise short of a moratorium ending the involvement of psychologists in U.S. Military "concentration camps," as Summers referred to them, citing evidence that less than 5% of Abu Gharib detainees are not obtained from combat and in-fact are not combatants, but rather, civilians implicated by military personnel, government officials, and other civilians motivated by the promise of reward money for delivering suspects that provide terror-related intelligence.

For a summary of controversary from inside the APA, here's a link to a journal article by Summers that chronicles his efforts to encourage an investigation into the APA's policies of psychologists' involvement in CIA and military prison interrogations:
linked text

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» Paging Doctor Orwell Posted by: eddie torres
Good Old UK
Posted by: Neiljohn on Jun 11, 2007 11:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yet again the US uses the UK as one of its favorite, and unsinkable, aircraft carriers, no change there then.

I well remember the antics of the USAF at Greenham Common, an off duty service man ran down and killed a child, got arrested by the local police. Within minutes of the base commander being informed the bases ARMED MP's turned up and demanded he be handed over to them.
Next flight out to US he was on it, escaping justice.

Seems justice is a one-way street when it comes down to US interests!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Bushonian Logic Posted by: KeepsonTickn
The fish stinks..
Posted by: 50566 on Jun 11, 2007 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
at the head.

Well known fact, but yet we always examine the tail. Guess it's less smelly that way... more tolerable...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: The fish stinks.. Posted by: willymack