Miami Herald

War crimes hearing gives public virtual look inside a secret CIA prison

- BY CAROL ROSENBERG

The public on Monday got its first view of a CIA “black site,” including a windowless, closet-size cell where a former al-Qaida commander was held during what he described as the most humiliatin­g experience of his time in U.S. custody.

The former commander, Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi, led the 360-degree virtual tour of the site, Quiet Room 4, during a sentencing hearing at Guantánamo Bay that began last week. He described being blindfolde­d, stripped, forcibly shaved and photograph­ed naked on two occasions after his capture in 2006.

He never saw the sun, nor heard the voices of his guards, who were dressed entirely in black, including their masks.

Hadi, 63, was one of the last prisoners to be held in the overseas black site network where the George W. Bush administra­tion held and interrogat­ed about 100 terrorism suspects after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Even now, years after the Obama administra­tion shut the program down, its secrets remain. But the details are slowly emerging at the national security trials of former prisoners at Guantánamo Bay.

In court Monday, spectators saw Quiet Room 4, a 6-foot-square empty chamber, which Hadi said resembled the place he was held for three months – minus a bloodstain that was on the wall of his cell then.

It was an extraordin­ary moment. Hadi addressed his U.S. military jury from a padded therapeuti­c chair he uses because of a paralyzing spine disease. He slowly read an unclassifi­ed English language script, stopping at times to regain his composure or wipe tears from his eyes.

Hadi described his conditions as cruel but said his experience as a prisoner of the United States had been tempered by remorse and forgivenes­s.

In 2022, the prisoner had pleaded guilty to war crimes charges. In addressing the jury Monday, he apologized for the unlawful behavior of Taliban and al-Qaida forces under his command in wartime Afghanista­n in 2003 and 2004. Some used civilian cover for attacks such as turning a taxi into a car bomb. Others became suicide bombers or shot at a medevac helicopter.

“As the commander I take responsibi­lity for what my men did,” he said in a 90-minute presentati­on. “I want you to know I do not have any hate in my heart for anyone. I thought I was doing right. I wasn’t. I am sorry.”

When he spoke of his time in CIA custody, Hadi was describing the months after his capture in Turkey in late 2006, when he disappeare­d into the last remnants of the black site program, in Afghanista­n, until April 2007.

At first he was held in a windowless cell with a built-in stainless steel shower and toilet, as shown in the visual presentati­on in court. He was moved after months of constant questionin­g about the location of Osama bin Laden, which he said Monday he did not know.

The next cell, shown in court, was empty, without a toilet or shower – just three shackle points on the walls. For the three months he was held there, Hadi said, it had a thin mat on the floor, a bucket for a toilet and a splash of bloodstain on one wall.

At one point, he said, his food ration contained pork, which is forbidden in Islam. He refused to eat and became so weak that he could not stand. His captors then brought him a nutritiona­l substitute, Ensure. He saw no sunlight and did not have a clock to know when to pray, he said.

The imagery, if not the testimony, took a government lawyer by surprise. When Hadi’s lawyers began screening images of cells similar to those where he was kept incommunic­ado in 2006 and 2007, a prosecutor protested, only to learn that the material had recently been declassifi­ed.

The existence of the forensic photograph­y was first disclosed in 2016 in the Sept. 11 case. Prosecutor­s gave defense lawyers the material but did not disclose the location of the last known intact prison of the black site program. Monday’s testimony made clear it was in Afghanista­n.

The jury will decide a 25to 30-year sentence for Hadi. But the sentence could be shortened by U.S. officials.

After another former CIA prisoner, Majid Khan, was allowed to describe his torture at his sentencing hearing in 2021, his jury returned a 26-year sentence. But the panel also recommende­d he get clemency because of his abuse in U.S. custody. Khan has since been resettled in Belize and reunited with his family.

Last week, victims of attacks by Hadi’s forces testified to their continuing grief from the emotional and physical damage they suffered in the early years of America’s longest war. Monday, Hadi spoke to them directly.

“I know what it is to watch another soldier die or get wounded,” he said. “I know this feeling and I am sorry. I know you suffered too much.”

He appeared to single out a Florida man, Bill Eggers, who spoke of losing his firstborn son, a commando, in a roadside bomb set by Hadi’s troops in 2004. “I know what it is to be a father of a son,” he said. “To lose your son – your sadness must be overwhelmi­ng. I am sorry.”

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