From the Los Angeles Times
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
Trial Illuminates Dark Tactics of Interrogation
By Nicholas Riccardi
Times Staff Writer
January 20, 2006
FT. CARSON, Colo. — It was dubbed the "sleeping bag technique."
Interrogators at a makeshift prison in western Iraq, desperate to break
suspected insurgents, would stuff them face-first into a sleeping bag
with a small hole cut in the bottom for air.
Chief Warrant
Officer Lewis E. Welshofer Jr. used it on an Iraqi general as a
last-ditch grab for information as Welshofer's unit was in the midst of
an offensive against insurgents and desperate for intelligence.
The technique was not in the Army Field Manual, but Welshofer testified
Thursday that he believed it was permitted after top commanders told
interrogators "the gloves were coming off."
But Welshofer got no information.
Military prosecutors allege that Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush, 57,
suffocated in the sleeping bag as Welshofer sat on him. Welshofer's
murder trial, which began this week at the home base of the 3rd Armored
Cavalry Regiment to which he was assigned in Iraq, opens a window into
the murky world of military interrogations.
Issues raised by
the prosecutors and the defense about how to calibrate interrogations
during the war against terrorism echo those made during the Abu Ghraib
prison scandal and the recent debate in Washington over banning
torture.
Welshofer described spending months in Iraq without
any clear directives about how to manage interrogations. When rules
came down, he said, they were vague and he soon found that his training
did not apply.
"There was no preparation from the schoolhouse
at all for what we encountered in Iraq," he said. "The doctrine was
based on an enemy from 60 years ago."
But the prosecutor, Lt.
Tiernan Dolan, said that Welshofer took advantage of, or blatantly
neglected, decades of military standards in how to practice
interrogation. "You use psychological ploys to let [detainees] know you
are in control," he told Welshofer. "But you crossed the line from
psychological control to physical control."
When Welshofer and
Mowhoush met in the fall of 2003, the insurgency was gaining strength
and interrogators were under intense pressure to obtain leads from
Saddam Hussein loyalists, such as the captured general.
U.S.
commanders at the time had asked for what Welshofer called a "wish
list" of new interrogation techniques. Beginning in September, U.S.
generals in Iraq issued a stream of rules on the acceptable bounds of
interrogation, sometimes shifting them from week to week.
A
witness who testified behind a screen on Wednesday — whom an attorney
inadvertently referred to as someone who worked for the CIA — said
Welshofer told him the day before Mowhoush's death that he was aware of
the most recent regulations, but that "he was breaking those rules
every day."
Welshofer said he did not recall the
conversation, but his attorney, Frank Spinner, argued that his client
was navigating a gray zone. Spinner cited disagreements within the Bush
administration about what techniques constituted torture. "There are
not clear-cut rules here," Spinner told the panel of six officers, who
will determine whether Welshofer is guilty. He faces life imprisonment
if convicted.
The interrogations took place at a converted
train station outside of the western Iraqi city of Qaim. Mowhoush was
believed to be directing attacks in the region and had surrendered
himself to authorities in hopes of helping his sons, who were also in
U.S. custody.
At the prison, Welshofer supervised a handful
of other interrogators and 40 military intelligence officers. Another
interrogator had invented the sleeping bag technique, which Welshofer
said was designed to create a claustrophobic effect. Welshofer said a
supervisor had approved the technique, but was concerned whether
prisoners would be able to breathe, and only allowed Welshofer and its
inventor to use it.
Welshofer acknowledged Thursday that when
briefing his superior, he omitted that the technique he used involved
straddling the detainee's chest.
Welshofer said he started
gently with Mowhoush. He said he began by simply questioning the
general. When Mowhoush denied his role in the insurgency, the
interrogations became more heated. Over two weeks, Welshofer progressed
from conversing, to slapping the general in front of other detainees,
to having him held down and pouring water in his face.
During
that time, Welshofer was in an interrogation room when Mowhoush was
severely beaten by a group of Iraqis who, according to published
reports, were in the pay of the CIA. One witness said Welshofer
appeared to be directing that interrogation, but the defendant said he
had "no command and control" over that situation.
Two days
later, Welshofer made his final choice. "I had gone through all my
techniques and all my experience that might have been applicable —
except that one technique," he said.
Army Spc. Jerry L. Loper,
a guard at the prison who is cooperating with the prosecution,
testified that Mowhoush was unable to walk after his beatings by fellow
Iraqis (those allegedly paid by the CIA), and that even on Nov. 26, he
had difficulty moving and was breathing heavily. At 8 a.m., Loper led
the general into the interrogation room and questioning began.
The general was issuing blanket denials, and after the final one, Loper
said, Welshofer told the detainee: "If you don't answer, you're not
going to like what's coming."
Welshofer said that the general
at times appeared tired, but he believed he was faking his fatigue. He
ordered that the olive-green sleeping bag be dropped over his head, and
that he be wrapped in an electrical cord "like winding a yo-yo" to
fasten the bag to his 300-pound frame. The general was lowered to the
ground on his back, and Welshofer straddled his chest and continued to
ask questions, occasionally putting his hand over the general's mouth,
the interrogator said. He said he was stopping the detainee from
calling out to Allah.
Loper and another witness testified that
after several minutes, the general became unresponsive and Welshofer
stood up. Then, they said, the general emitted a loud gasp and
Welshofer expressed relief that he wasn't dead. Welshofer said he did
not recall this occurring.
It was after the general was flipped
on his stomach and Welshofer straddled his back that he became silent
again. Welshofer said he pulled the bag from the general and saw an odd
smile on his face, so he threw water on him to get a response. It was
then, he said, that he realized the general was dead or dying, called
for medics, and began CPR.
The military contends the general
was smothered during the interrogation, but the defense called a
pathologist who testified that the cause of Mowhoush's death was
probably heart failure. Mowhoush had an enlarged heart and other signs
of heart disease.
Welshofer, who has spent 17 years in the
Army, is also charged with slapping another detainee, wrapping him in a
sleeping bag, and body-slamming him. He said he wasn't sure to which of
the many detainees he interrogated the charge referred, but said that
in one case, he had to use his body weight to control a prisoner who
was becoming violent.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times