CIA flights landed on Med islands

With (most) European countries increasingly concerned about their airspace being used by CIA flights linked to “extraordinary rendition” operations, newspapers in Malta and Cyprus today noted that some of the CIA flights made stopovers in those island nations.

Meanwhile, Swedish foreign minister Laila Freivalds has dismissed the allegation that extraordinary rendition flights landed in Sweden. Interesting — if only because the whole renditions story owes a lot to the investigation into a case in that country by television journalist Fredrik Laurin, and because the Swedish government is supposed to be running an investigation of the matter.

A plane linked to the renditions programme yesterday flew from Iceland to the United States via Newfoundland in Canada. The plane, a turboprop with the number N196D landed at Johnston County Airport in Smithfield, North Carolina.

Britain alone in indifference to CIA flights

Iceland and Sweden have joined the growing list of European countries that want to know whether the CIA used their airports during “extraordinary rendition” operations.

Denmark
has already closed its airspace to such flights. Italy and Germany are seeking CIA agents in connection with with the rendition of Abu Omar. In Spain, police are investigating flights that landed in Mallorca.

Norway also has a criminal investigation underway and a German intelligence source told the Herald that Austria had on one occasion scambled fighters in intercept an unauthorised CIA flight.

Britain is increasingly isolated in Europe on the issue. The Guardian established that British airports were used in CIA flights, and police in Scotland are investigating, but the UK government appears to have no problem with Airstrip One being a hub for the alleged “torture flights”.

The European Commission wants to know more about the alleged CIA “black sites” in Eastern Europe.

Now Spain seeks CIA renditions probe

Spain is joining the growing list of European countries that are investigating CIA “extraordinary renditions” on their territory.

Spanish police have opened a criminal investigation into the frequent stopovers by aircraft linked to renditions on the Spanish island of Majorca.

Italy and Germany are already seeking to arrest CIA agents involved in one rendition operation that allegedly began with a kidnapping on a street in Milan.

(Via War and Piece)

Germany joins Italian probe into CIA rendition

German authorities have joined the Italian investigation into the apparent “extraordinary rendition” of an Egyptian cleric by the CIA, Der Spiegel reports.

Italian prosecutors have already issued warrents for the arrest of 22 CIA agents in the kidnapping of Abu Omar in Milan in 2003. Now German prosecutors are seeking the CIA agents who transferred the kidnapped Egyptian between two aircraft at the US airbase in Ramstein Germany.

At around 2030 on 17 Februar 2003, German prosecutors say, Omar was moved from the Learjet that had taken him from Aviano in Italy to Ramstein onto a Gulfstream that flew him on to Cairo.

Italy requests CIA agents’ extradition

Italian prosecutors have requested the extradition of 22 CIA agents they suspect of involvement of kidnapping a radical Islamic preacher three years ago.

Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, an Egyptian native known as Abu Omar was a member of the radical Muslim group Jamaat al-Islamiya, but had been granted political asylum in Italy.

Abu Omar was under surviellance by Italian police, but suddenly disappeared on 17 February 2003, apparently due to an “extraordinary rendition” operation in which the CIA transported him back to Egypt, where he remains in prison and claims to have been tortured.

U.S. spends $44 billion on spooks

In an apparent slip, a CIA official has revealed that the US intelligence budget is $44 billion.

A long-time CIA official, Mary Margaret Graham mentioned the number, which the US government has long argued must be kept classified, at an intelligence conference in Texas last week.

According to the New York Times,

The figure itself comes as no great shock; most news reports in the last couple of years have estimated the budget at $40 billion. But the fact that Ms. Graham would say it in public is a surprise, because the government has repeatedly gone to court to keep the current intelligence budget and even past budgets as far back as the 1940′s from being disclosed.

Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, expressed amused satisfaction that the budget figure had slipped out.

“It is ironic,” Mr. Aftergood said. “We sued the C.I.A. four times for this kind of information and lost. You can’t get it through legal channels.”

Only for a few past years has the budget been disclosed. After Mr. Aftergood’s group first sued for the budget figure under the Freedom of Information Act in 1997, George J. Tenet, then the director of central intelligence, decided to make public that year’s budget, $26.6 billion. The next year Mr. Tenet did the same, revealing that the 1998 fiscal year budget was $26.7 billion.

But in 1999, Mr. Tenet reversed that policy, and budgets since then have remained classified with the support of the courts. Last year, a federal judge refused to order the C.I.A. to release its budget totals for 1947 to 1970 — except for the 1963 budget, which Mr. Aftergood showed had already been revealed elsewhere.

Oops.

Where in Europe is the CIA ‘gulag’?

UPDATED

The European Commision is investigating a report in Wednesday’s Washington Post that a secret network of CIA prisons for terror suspects includes sites in Europe.

Citing US and foreign officals, the Post says that that for more than four years, the CIA has run a “covert prison system” with sites in eight countries, including Thailand, Afghanistan, a small centre at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba — and “several democracies in Eastern Europe”.

The European sites are said to be ex-Soviet installations. The Post knows which European states are involved, but witheld them at the request of US authorities who fear terrorist reprisals.

If the reports are true, the secret jails would violate European human rights law, a fact that could have serious consequences, according to the Daily Telegraph:

… The justice commissioner, Franco Frattini, made clear that potentially severe legal and political consequences awaited any EU country, or any country seeking EU membership, if it was confirmed that its government had co-operated with the CIA programme.

Mr Frattini said that all member states “are bound” by international legal obligations, in particular the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the Convention against Torture. In theory, nations can be suspended from the EU for grave breaches of such fundamental principles.

While a country of the size and standing of Poland is unlikely to be expelled, the dangers are acute for countries trying to join the EU.

So which European country might be involved? The Guardian’s report is representative of the speculation:

Poland and Romania are thought the most likely locations in Europe, according to the New York-based Human Rights Watch and Polish press reports.

Hungary, Slovakia and Bulgaria have denied involvement. The Czech interior minister, Frantiszek Bublan, said the US had approached Prague to build a camp but the request was turned down.

Bulgaria and Romania are scheduled to join the European Union in 2007 and are compelled to sign up to EU human rights standards. Eight other former Soviet bloc nations, including the Czech Republic and Poland, became members in May 2004.

Eastern European Nato members have been some of Washington’s staunchest allies in the “war on terror” and in Iraq.

The paper also suggests a motive for cooperating with the CIA:

…analysts pointed to the feverish competition among the east Europeans to host new US military bases.

The region’s new Nato members, particularly Poland, Romania and Bulgaria, have been among Washington’s staunchest allies in the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, heightening speculation that they would be the likeliest venues for the secret jails. Romania and Bulgaria made military facilities available to the Americans for the Afghan and Iraq wars. The Pentagon is planning to dispatch 5,000 servicemen to a string of new bases in the two countries from next year.

The Independent has a bit more detail, from Human Rights Watch’s investigation into the movements of a Boeing 757 with the tail number N313P, one of the aircraft known to be involved in “extraordinary rendition” flights:

…in September 2003, it flew directly from Kabul to Szymany airport, near the remote Polish town of Szczytno, north of Warsaw, home to a training facility for the Polish intelligence service.

From there, the plane flew directly to Mihail Kogalniceanu air base, close to the Romanian city of Constanta on the Black Sea coast. The Pentagon is involved in negotiations to take over the airbase’s operation. Throughout 2004, the plane made a number of other visits to Kogalniceanu, on which the US has spent at least $3m upgrading facilities in preparation for taking it over.

In 2003 Kogalniceanu was used as the temporary location for more than 3,500 US troops on their way to northern Iraq.

The Post’s decision not to name names is proving controvertial. The Columbia Journalism Review’s blog, for example, quotes foreign policy analyst Peter Kornbluh:

“This is probably the most important newspaper capitulation since [the New York Times] yielded to JFK’s call for them not to run the full story of planning for the Bay of Pigs. By withholding the country names, the Post is directly enabling the rendition, secret detention, and torture of prisoners at these locations to continue. That is a ghastly responsibility.”

CJR itself is more charitable, sugggesting that the Post may have deliberatly allowed itself to be scoopted on an important aspect of the story:

To Kornbluh, it’s moot that the Financial Times came along and filled in the holes the Post left in its account. We’re not so sure. The editors of the Post have been around the block a few times; they must have known it was inevitable that this information would come out. From outside looking in, it appears their motive was not to keep the information secret, but rather to avoid being the first to expose the location of the “black sites.”

What we do know is that the Post is trying to have it both ways: Getting credit for breaking the story, without breaking the specific details that might have caused it grief from the CIA.

Which raises an old question: Is it the job of a newspaper to tell us what it knows — or to bend over backwards to hide information from us?

It seems like a reasonable analysis. In the age of the Internet, where interested readers can easily turn to other sources from around the world, perhaps all that matters is getting the core of a story onto the grid. The full(er) picture was clearly going to emerge in other papers’ follow-up stories within hours. Negotiating and retaining access to sources, particularly in the intelligence community, is an important aspect of journalism. If your goal is to get information that is in the public interest out in the open, maintaining those relationships is sometimes more important than stating what should be fairly obvious to intelligent readers.

Italy seeks US diplomat in CIA renditions case

An American diplomat is being sought for questioning by Italian authorities investigating the alleged 2003 kidnapping of Egyptian-born cleric Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, who is also known as Abu Omar.

According to Italian daily La Stampa and the Los Angeles Times, a 38-year-old woman who worked at the U.S. embassy in Rome who now works in Latin America is being sought by authorities investigating the case, believed to be an instance of the CIA practice of “extraordinary rendition”.

Abu Omar, who had been granted political asylum in Italy, was suspected of having links with Ansar al-Islam, but Italian authorities had not had enough evidence to arrest him before he was snatched in Milan and taken to the Aviano Air Base, from where he was flown to Egypt for questioning and, allegedly, torture.

Earlier this summer, an Italian judge issued warrants for the arrest of 21 other individuals believed to be CIA operatives in the case and named Robert Seldon Lady as the former CIA station chief in Milan.

The scandal has been a cause for tensions between Rome and Washington.