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Mr. President, the CIA Is Already Talking to Syria
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
March 2, 2007
President Bush has decided that the U.S. government is now going to talk to Syria. The reason the president has steadfastly refused to talk to Syria before now is that Syria, he has repeatedly emphasized, is a state sponsor of terrorism.
There is one part of all this, however, that is quite
befuddling: The U.S. government has already been talking
to Syria, at least if the CIA is still considered part of
the U.S. government.
If you dont believe me, just ask Maher Arar. He is
the Canadian citizen who was kidnapped by U.S. officials
while changing planes in New York on an international
flight back to Canada, his country of citizenship. After
U.S. officials accused Arar of being a terrorist, the CIA
forcibly boarded him onto one of its
rendition planes and flew him to be tortured
in Syria. Yes, Syria! Thats the country that
President Bush has repeatedly said that the U.S.
government would not talk to because it is a state
sponsor of terrorism!
Why did the CIA deliver Arar to Syria, instead of,
say, France? Because Syrian officials are renowned for
being excellent torturers, which shouldnt be too
surprising, given that they are also renowned for being
excellent terrorists. Who better to torture someone than
a state sponsor of terrorism?
Youve probably already grasped my point: In order
to make the arrangements to have Arar tortured to get
information from him, CIA officials had to have talked to
Syrian officials. Those talks had to have encompassed
discussions about torturing Arar and how information
acquired from him would be transmitted back to U.S.
officials. After all, its not as though the CIA would
have just flown into Syrian airspace without permission,
dropped off a complete stranger at the Syrian airport,
and said goodbye. No, there had to be detailed
discussions between certain officials of the CIA and
certain officials of the Syrian government.
But how does something like this happen? Doesnt it
almost defy credulity? Why, here you have a regime that
the president repeatedly condemns as a state sponsor of
terrorism and with whom the U.S. government simply is not
going to communicate. Meanwhile, CIA officials, somehow
or other, cut a deal with Syrian officials to torture a
citizen of Canada on behalf of the U.S. government.
Who were those Syrian officials who cut the torture deal
with the CIA? Were there negotiations over which torture
techniques would be used? Waterboarding? Electric shocks
to the genitals? Forced nudity? Isolation and sensory
deprivation? What did the Syrian government get out of the deal? Was it paid for its
services and, if so, in what form? Was the contract put into writing? Did CIA
officials monitor performance of the contract? How much
information was acquired and how was it transmitted from
Syria to the CIA? Did President Bush approve the deal?
Unfortunately, we dont know the answers to any of
those questions because the mainstream press has simply
chosen not to ask them. Wouldnt you think that just
one reporter would ask, Mr. President, how can you
say that you havent been talking to Syria when in
fact your CIA officials obviously talked to Syria when
they cut their torture deal regarding Maher Arar?
Better yet, what would be wrong with a full investigation
by Congress into the kidnapping, rendition, and torture
of Maher Arar, who, by the way, was ultimately exonerated
of any involvement in terrorism? It could begin by
subpoenaing every CIA official involved in the matter,
who could be required to describe under oath in a public
hearing all the details of the torture agreement that was
cut with a terrorist regime with whom President Bush has,
until now, supposedly refused to communicate.
Now that President Bush is talking to Syria,
wouldnt it be a good idea if he and the CIA talked
to the American people about the deal they cut with Syria
to torture Maher Arar?
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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