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CIA tortured terror suspects in Lithuanian secret prison – report

Published: 25 August, 2009, 09:03

(16.3Mb) embed video

TAGS: Crime, Politics, Human rights, Terrorism, Baltic states, USA


It’s claimed Lithuania, a former Soviet republic on the Baltic Sea, provided the CIA with facilities where as many as eight terror suspects were held, according to information given to ABC News by unnamed CIA sources.

The White House is beginning a criminal probe into CIA interrogation methods, after it was revealed they broke Presidential guidelines. Questions continue as to what countries provided the agency with facilities to allegedly torture terror suspects.

Deep woods’ secret

The quiet, bright countryside around the capital of Lithuania is reportedly hiding a dark secret. It’s here, about 20 minutes’ drive south of Vilnius, that some believe was the location of a secret prison where the CIA brought terror suspects to be tortured.

According to ABC News, information received from some CIA sources alleges a so-called “black site prison” existed on the outskirts of Vilnius for more than a year, until 2005.

Flight logs show CIA planes regularly flew in and out of Vilnius during that time. A disused ex-Soviet army base, miles from the nearest house, would serve as a perfect cover.

The base is located in the heart of Lithuania’s fifth-largest forest, about 40 kilometers south of Vilnius, and just 30 kilometers from Vilnius International airport.

The base also has its own airstrip. It’s quiet, undisturbed, and surrounded by the ultimate deterrent to inquisitive journalists – unexploded bombs.

Illegal prison in Lithuania – quite possible?

This isn’t the first time Lithuania has been implicated in the US’s extraordinary anti-terror program. At a Council of Europe debate in 2005, it was named along with Poland and Romania, as the host of an illegal prison, but managed to escape direct accusation.

“The first thing for now is to have a list of the people who have been detained in Lithuania,” said Giulietto Chiesa, former European Parliament member.

“And the problem is that there have been torture, illegal interrogation and very serious violations of human rights there. That means there are political and penal responsibilities”.

Down at Vilnius City Hall, opposition politician Algirdas Paleckis, chairman of Frontas Party, says Lithuania’s foreign policy in the last twenty years makes a CIA prison camp highly likely.

“Lithuania has always acted and still acts as a satellite of the United States in Europe,” believes Paleckis.

“If one day the truth were to be disclosed, the argument would be, you know, ‘we have our privileged relations with the US, we have to pay for it, and the price for our NATO security, and Article Five security guarantees’. The price is to send troops to Afghanistan and Iraq, and to take possible prisoners.”

Lithuania’s government is denying the allegations and has issued an unequivocal statement:

“The Lithuanian Foreign Ministry denies any ungrounded assumptions or rumors about secret CIA prisons in the country”.

On the streets of Vilnius, people have heard the media allegations that up to eight terror suspects may have been held and tortured in their country. But there’s doubt, outright denial, and disbelief.

Despite the US insistence on putting the past behind them, the Lithuanian parliament has announced it will launch an investigation into the allegations. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe is doing the same.

CIA anti-terrorism activity scrutinized

The CIA is releasing a report which reveals how the agency has been interrogating detainees at its secret prisons.

The 2004 review, which had been suppressed until now, reportedly contains details of how CIA officers carried out mock executions to frighten terrorism suspects into giving information.

In the wake of the report, the U.S. Justice Department is calling for a host of prisoner abuse cases to be reopened.

And President Barack Obama has approved the creation of a new interrogation unit led by an FBI official and directly supervised by the White House.

Former Guantanamo Bay detainee Moazzam Begg told RT how badly he was treated at the notorious prison camp.

It has also been reported that CIA and Blackwater had a special relationship. The private military firm was contracted by the U.S. government to provide security services to top U.S. officials in Iraq.

Several years ago, Blackwater’s license to operate in Iraq was revoked by the country’s government following an incident in which 17 Iraqis were killed.

According to Lawrence Wilkerson, the former chief of staff to Colin Powell, contracts with private firms such as Blackwater are very common for the CIA.

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Bianca August 27, 2009, 04:36
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There is just one little problem with all this: the rule of law. It seems that the US media, and their owners keep forgetting that they are under the obligation to support the law of the land. They seem to think that this is "just politics", and keep on applying to the torture the same standards as they would towards the discussion of a supermarket brawl. The US needs to remain the nation of laws, or it will return to its colonial past. Without the adherence to the Constition and the international treaties that have the force of the law in this country, the country is sliding backwards --- dragging with it other helpless countries that put their faith and trust in US. We need to address the media personalities and the media owners in our country. They are not in the entertainment business, and therefore are accountable for their actions. Supporting torture, kidnapping, extrajudicial murder and humiliating treatment of detainess represent the most vile spitting on the laws of the country. The US public selected the new President, in a historic message to its elites: enough is enough. But these elites are not getting it. They are still "resetting" their sights to the "happy" days of Clinton, while the media "analists" look more like actors in costumes. RT is doing great job. Keep it up!!!

Mark4915 August 27, 2009, 02:09
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I understand 98% of where you are coming from. Let me be polite. Sometimes people latch onto figures from the old past. For instance BREZINSKI was fool in 1970's Carter Presidential administration. Like pop and rock stars who fade out -- BREZINSKI is kind of laughing joke in Washington D.C. Old dogs (political fools) and no new tricks. This is what amazes me about intelligence anaylsis. I can tell you (no bragging) in part the last 30-40 years of intelligence and politics in Federal Washington D.C. This is just because I am American citizen and read a lot. Yet -- I can not tell you one affirmative thing that happened in last 30-40 years of Mockba. I am student of American Government and not foreign governments. So it kind of makes me laugh when someone refers to American idiot BREZINSKI. Tell me more about Engle's Father's profit as a capitalist in his small company. You guys give me good laugh. BREZINSKI is more politically dead then Napalm Vietnam -- burn children. Peace.

johnx August 25, 2009, 13:42
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This is pretty much old news a couple of years ago it was revealed that they used the same secret prisons in Poland as the Soviets did as well as prisons in Kosovo and Africa and there was a quite high profile case in Canada were a Muslim passenger who was put on a terror watch list by accident was transported to Syria to be tortured. Don’t expect any of these phoney human rights groups like Soros created Human Rights Watch and his heavy funding of Amnesty International who distract the public with protests about Guantanamo Bay that leisure resort for terrorists captured in Afghanistan training to fight wars in Central Asia, Chechnya, China and India. The question is why are they locating these secret prisons in Eastern Europe towards Russia? Does this tie in with all the other stuff they have been preparing against Russia for the past 2 or 3 decades and as I predicted has dramatically increased since this mad man Brezinski and his puppet Obama came to power shifting from a divided Eurasian/Middle East agenda to a full blown Eurasian driven foreign policy to fragment and destabilise Russia and balkanise Central Asia.