The following is mirrored from its source at:
http://www.tmtmetropolis.ru/stories/2004/03/19/120.html


                                Night Sweats
                    The Pentagon Archipelago's purpose 
             is to establish the principle of arbitrary rule.
                               by Chris Floyd
                              The Moscow Times
                               19 March 2004


     This is the story of three innocent men, held in brutal captivity
     for more than two years; three innocent men, stripped, blinded,
     beaten, tortured, caged and silenced, all in the name of freedom
     and civilization; three innocent men, ground into the dust by an
     implacable power that defends its "enduring moral values" with the
     boot in the groin, the gun to the head -- and the abetting of
     atrocity and murder.

     It's the story of three Britons released last week from the U.S.
     concentration camp in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba -- 26 months after they
     began their progress through the guts of the Pentagon Archipelago,
     the chain of U.S. detention camps and "interrogation centers" that
     now encircle the Earth. In the Observer -- a pro-war British paper
     -- Shafiq Rasul, Ruhal Ahmed and Asif Iqbal from Tipton, England,
     told reporter David Rose of their sojourn in the Bush Regime's
     legal purgatory.

     The three men, lifelong friends in their early 20s, went to
     Pakistan in September 2001 for Iqbal's wedding. The following
     month, as Afghanistan's civil war flared under the shadow of the
     impending U.S. attack, the friends joined Muslim relief efforts in
     war-ravaged Afghan villages. As avowed moderates, they were under
     constant threat from the Taliban -- the virulent extremists who'd
     been armed, funded and sustained in power by U.S. ally Pakistan
     and the Bush Family's business partners in Saudi Arabia, as
     Salon.com reports.

     When American bombs started falling, the friends tried to flee the
     country. But they were trapped in Kunduz with thousands of
     refugees when the city fell to U.S.-backed warlord Rashid Dostum,
     a former Soviet collaborator turned jihadnik. Known for his
     macabre punishments -- he liked to see his victims torn apart by
     tanks -- Dostum fell upon the surrendered masses with his wonted
     fury. Thousands died on a death march through the mountains to
     Shebargan, where Dostum linked up with U.S. Special Forces. There,
     the captives, including the Tipton men, were packed by the
     hundreds into metal truck trailers, where they were left for days
     to suffocate and die. Fires were lit under some of the trailers,
     roasting those trapped inside. Of the 35,000 who left Kunduz, only
     4,500 remained alive.

     The survivors were crammed into Shebargan's open-air prison, where
     they continued to die in droves -- as U.S. forces watched coolly
     from the perimeter. Finally, the three friends were sent to an
     American camp in Kandahar, where, hooded and chained, they were
     "processed": stripped, rectally probed, beaten, forced to kneel
     for hours, naked, their necks pressed to the floor by a guard's
     boot. Then came the first "interrogation": again kneeling,
     chained, with beatings and kicking followed by questioning -- as
     an agent stood on the back of their legs, pressing a pistol to
     their heads. This routine went on for weeks. The only relief came
     when British spies appeared for a session: "Don't worry, they
     won't beat you while we're here," the jolly James Bonds would say.
     At night, there were head counts every hour to prevent the
     prisoners from sleeping.

     One day, for reasons unexplained -- perhaps, as often happened, a
     false confession was beaten out of someone who gave names of
     "accomplices" to satisfy his interrogators -- the Tipton men were
     frog-marched onto a plane bound for Cuba, triple-chained and
     beaten along the way, beaten and kicked upon their arrival.

     Then began the long, dazed limbo-life of Guantánamo. Endless
     interrogations: Each man was grilled at least 200 times, sometimes
     for 12 hours at a stretch, always kneeling, chained to the floor.
     Constant punishments: for "back talk," or seeking privacy for
     their bowel movements, or arranging their utensils incorrectly.
     And always, over and over, the farcical accusations that could
     have easily been disproved with five minutes of investigation.

     But their captors weren't interested in the truth; they wanted
     "results." Finally, after two years of relentless physical and
     psychological pressure -- including the ever-present threat of a
     military tribunal and execution without appeal -- the friends
     cracked and signed false confessions to the most ludicrous charge
     of all: that they were top bin Laden lieutenants, pictured with
     him in a video from August 2000, despite the existence of
     documentary evidence -- witnesses, pay stubs, school records --
     that proved they were in England at the time. But before their
     show trial could begin, British intelligence belatedly examined
     the charge and confirmed the alibis of all three men.

     Now they're free, as the Regime flushes the most embarrassing
     cases out of the system before the Supreme Court rules on the
     "legality" of the Bush gulag this summer. The treatment of these
     three innocent men, chained and beaten for two years, is not just
     a crime, but also -- like that other crime, the invasion of Iraq
     -- an enormous waste of time and resources in the "war on
     terrorism." We saw the grim fruit of this waste in Madrid last
     week.

     But of course, the Pentagon Archipelago wasn't designed to fight
     terrorism; it's designed to advance terrorism -- state terrorism.
     Its purpose is to establish the principle of arbitrary rule -- in
     the name of "military necessity" -- above the rule of law, in
     America and around the world. It's part of an overarching system
     of terror -- aggressive war, assassination, indefinite detention,
     torture -- employed to achieve the Regime's openly stated
     ideological goal: "full-spectrum dominance" of global politics and
     resources, particularly energy resources. Al-Qaida has the same
     goal, and uses the same methods, albeit on a smaller,
     "asymmetrical" scale.

     Now we are all at the mercy of these entwined terrorist factions
     -- both led by fundamentalist sons of two financially linked
     elitist clans. We will see more Guananamos, more Madrids, before
     this long, dark night is over.



     Annotations

        * How We Survived Jail Hell, The Observer, March 14, 2004
        * The Full Story of the Guantánamo Britons, The Observer, March
          14, 2004
        * Did the Saudis Buy a President?, Salon.com, March 12, 2004
        * Even Death Row is Preferable to This, The Observer, Feb. 22,
          2004
        * My Hell in Camp X-Ray, The Daily Mirror, March 12, 2004
        * This Creeping Sickness, The Guardian, March 13, 2004
        * Five Are Free, But Bush Shows No Remorse, Glasgow Sunday
          Herald, March 14, 2004
        * Pentagon Dismisses as 'Lies' Guantanamo Tales of Abuse,
          Agence France Presse, March 15, 2004
        * The Empire Backfires, The Nation, March 29, 2004
        * The Getaway, The New Yorker, Jan. 21, 2001
        * For Some Defendants, An American Gulag, St. Petersburg Times,
          March 14, 2004
        * For More Years of Camp Bush?, The Nation Institute, March
          2004
        * The House of bin Laden, The New Yorker, Nov. 12, 2001
        * Who is Osama bin Laden?, Centre for Research on
          Globalization, Sept. 11, 2001
        * Bush's Death Squads, Ratical.org, Jan. 31, 2002
        * Bush Has Widened Authority of CIA to Kill Terrorists, New
          York Times, Dec. 15, 2002
        * Special Ops Get OK to Initiate Its Own Missions, Washington
          Times, Jan. 8, 2003
        * The Enemy Within, The Observer, Oct. 27, 2002
        * CIA Worked in Tandem With Pakistan to Create Taliban, The
          Times of India, March 7, 2001
        * The Role of Pakistan's Military Intelligence in the Sept. 11
          Attacks, Centre for Research on Globalisation, Nov. 2, 2001
        * Gen Mahmud''s exit due to links with Umar Sheikh, Dawn
          (Pakistan), Oct. 9, 2001
        * The Search for Osama, New Yorker, July 28, 2003
        * Terror in the Saudi Kingdom, Salon.com, Aug. 1, 2003
        * General Ashcroft's Detention Camps, Village Voice, Sept. 10,
          2002
        * Blowback: Bin Laden Comes Home to Roost, MSNBC.com, Aug. 24,
          1998
        * FBI Claims Bin Laden Inquiry was Frustrated, The Guardian,
          Nov. 7, 2001
        * M16 Halted Bid to Arrest bin Laden, The Observer, Nov. 10,
          2002
        * Knowing Much, Bush Did Little to Protect America, Village
          Voice, March 16, 2002
        * Bin Laden Money Flow Leads to Midland, Texas, In These Times,
          October 2001
        * Bush Planned Iraq 'Regime Change' Before Becoming President,
          Glasgow Sunday Herald, Sept. 15, 2002
        * Rebuilding America's Defenses, Project for a New Century,
          September 2000
        * Statement of Principles, Project for a New American Century,
          June 3, 1997
        * National Security Strategy of the United States, The White
          House, September 2002
        * Cheney Dirtied by Iraqi Oil, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Sept.
          5, 2002
        * Coward's War in Yemen, Spiked, Nov. 8, 2002
        * Drones of Death, The Guardian, Nov. 6, 2002



     Copyright © 2004 Chris Floyd
     Copyright © 2004 The Moscow Times
     Reprinted for Fair Use Only.




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