James Mitchell, one of a pair of psychologists paid $81 million to oversee the CIA's interrogation of suspected terrorists, said detainee Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri "liked" being in a box used to torture him. by Brett Wilkins Posted on May 06, 2022
One of the psychologists paid tens of millions of dollars by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency to oversee the interrogation of prisoners in the so-called War on Terror provided new details on Monday about the torture of a Guantánamo Bay detainee at CIA black site in Thailand.
The New York Times reports James E. Mitchell told a military judge during a pretrial hearing at Guantánamo that Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri a Saudi national facing possible execution for allegedly masterminding the deadly 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen broke quickly under torture and became so obedient that he would crawl into a cramped confinement box before guards ordered him to do so.
Initially, guards had to force al-Nashiri into the box. But according to Mitchell, the prisoner liked being in the box and would get in and close it himself.
Annie W. Morgan, a former Air Force defense attorney who is a member of al-Nashiris legal team, told the Times that when she heard Mitchells testimony, I got the image of crate-training a dog and became nauseous.
That was the goal of the program, to create a sense of learned helplessness and to become completely dependent upon and submissive to his captors, she added, referencing a tactic taught in UStorture programs and documents dating back to the 1950s.
Gail Helt, a former CIA analyst who advocates Guantánamos closure, tweeted, Imagine the hell Mr. Nashiri experienced outside of that box that made him prefer being inside it.
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