https://es.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivo:Guantanamo,_Camp_X-Ray,_at_Dusk_January_2002.jpg

In what one ana­lyst described as an impor­tant step to restore the rule of law,” the U.S. Department of Justice has pledged not to use state­ments obtained by tor­ture in its Guantánamo Military Commissions pros­e­cu­tion of Abd Al-Rahim Hussein Al-Nashiri. Al-Nashiri is accused of mas­ter­mind­ing the Al Qaeda sui­cide bomb­ing of the U.S.S. Cole that killed 17 U.S. sailors in October 2000. The U.S. gov­ern­ment is seek­ing the death penal­ty against him. 

In a brief filed January 31, 2022, the Department of Justice said, The gov­ern­ment rec­og­nizes that tor­ture is abhor­rent and unlaw­ful, and unequiv­o­cal­ly adheres to humane treat­ment stan­dards for all detainees. … [T]he gov­ern­ment will not seek admis­sion, at any stage of the pro­ceed­ings, of any of petitioner’s state­ments while he was in CIA custody.”

That promise should be unre­mark­able,” for­mer National Security Council and U.S. State Department legal advis­er Tess Bridgeman wrote in a February 1, 2022 com­men­tary in Just Security, giv­en U.S. human rights oblig­a­tions under the U.N. Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. However, it rep­re­sent­ed a dra­mat­ic depar­ture from plead­ings filed by for­mer mil­i­tary com­mis­sions chief pros­e­cu­tor Brig. Gen. Mark S. Martins, in which U.S. author­i­ties claimed that the fed­er­al Military Commissions Act per­mit­ted the con­sid­er­a­tion in pre­tri­al pro­ceed­ings of evi­dence obtained by torture.

Al-Nashiri’s lawyers filed a peti­tion in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit In October 2021 seek­ing to bar pros­e­cu­tors from pre­sent­ing tor­ture-derived evi­dence” in any pro­ceed­ings in his case. Human rights experts called the U.S. government’s response to the motion a moment of truth’ for the Biden Administration on torture.” 

Although the Department of Justice’s fil­ing does not pre­vent future admin­is­tra­tions from attempt­ing to use evi­dence obtained through tor­ture in oth­er mil­i­tary com­mis­sion cas­es, pros­e­cu­tors told the court that they had reviewed pri­or ex parte sub­mis­sions in the case and dis­cov­ered a pri­or order pred­i­cat­ed on evi­dence admit­ted in vio­la­tion of” the pro­hi­bi­tion against tor­ture. The gov­ern­ment said it would move prompt­ly to cor­rect” that error.

Al-Nashiri’s tri­al has been repeat­ed­ly delayed, most recent­ly due to General Martins’ abrupt retire­ment prompt­ed by the Biden Administration’s objec­tions to the use of evi­dence obtained by tor­ture. The New York Times report­ed that Martins had repeat­ed­ly butt[ed] heads with Biden admin­is­tra­tion lawyers over posi­tions his office had tak­en on the applic­a­ble inter­na­tion­al law and the Convention Against Torture at the Guantánamo court.” 

Al-Nashiri has alleged, sup­port­ed by hun­dreds of pages of doc­u­men­ta­tion, that he was tor­tured by CIA agents. A 2017 peti­tion to the U.S. Supreme Court described how CIA oper­a­tives sub­ject­ed him to 14 years of phys­i­cal, psy­cho­log­i­cal and sex­u­al tor­ture.” They pre­sent­ed evi­dence that al-Nashiri was sub­ject­ed to water­board­ing, forcible sodomy, star­va­tion, rec­tal force-feed­ing, sleep depri­va­tion, being placed in a cof­fin-sized box for a total of 11 days and a box the size of an office safe for 29 hours, and being threat­ened with a racked gun and a revved pow­er drill while being sus­pend­ed, naked and shack­led, from the ceil­ing of a cell in a black site one CIA agent described as the clos­est thing he has seen to a dungeon.”

The CIA’s use of these inter­ro­ga­tion prac­tices is also doc­u­ment­ed in a 2014 report of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, known as The Torture Report.”

Bridgeman offered praise after mil­i­tary pros­e­cu­tors repu­di­at­ed the use of tor­ture-derived evi­dence, writ­ing, The Biden admin­is­tra­tion just took an impor­tant step to restore the rule of law … at the Guantanamo military commissions.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Carol Rosenberg, Biden Administration Rejects Use of Testimony Obtained From Torture in Guantánamo Trial, New York Times, February 1, 2022; Tess Bridgemen, Biden Team Gets It Right on Inadmissibility of Torture Evidence in Al-Nashiri Case, Just Security, February 1, 2022; David Luban, Scott Roehm, Claire O. Finkelstein, Karen J. Greenberg, Lisa Hajjar, Jonathan Hafetz, Elisa Massimino, and Gabor Rona, The Biden Administration’s Moment of Truth on Torture Evidence, Just Security, December 1, 2021; Carol Rosenberg, Chief Guantánamo Prosecutor Retiring Before Sept. 11 Trial Begins, New York Times, July 92021.