As reported by the New York Times, Attorney General Holder explained that the decision not to bring criminal charges was guided by the conclusion that there was not enough available admissible evidence of torture to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and that this assessment does not mean that the actions taken by CIA officials were lawful. Holder stated that the investigation “was not intended to, and does not resolve, broader questions regarding the propriety of the examined conduct.” The decision was disappointing for many in the human rights community, such as Human Rights First, who have advocated that bringing to justice those responsible for torture is necessary to ensure that torture does not recur.
However, at the same time as the U.S.
is closing the door on the possibility of trial for torture, prosecutors in
another country, Poland ,
may be opening it. A staunch ally of the U.S. in the War on Terror under the
Bush Administration, Poland hosted a CIA black site
used to interrogate and allegedly torture Al-Qaeda suspects in Stare Kiejkuty,
a town 100 miles north of Warsaw. According to the Council of Europe, the site
opened in 2002 and housed “high-value” detainees, possibly including Khalid
Sheikh Mohammad. Documents reveal that Mohammad was waterboarded 183 times in
2003, which may have occurred while he was at Stare Kiejkuty.
The Polish investigation first garnered public attention in
March 2012, when it became known that the Prosecutor General’s office had charged Poland’s former Intelligence Chief
with unlawful detention and corporal punishment. There have also been rumors
that Leszek Miller, Poland’s Prime Minister at the time of the alleged black
site’s operation, may be charged.
While President Obama’s statements in 2009
that he wanted to “look forward as opposed to backwards” foreshadowed his
reluctance to prosecute Bush-era human rights violations, current Polish Prime
Minister Donald Tusk’s attitude is starkly different. In 2012, he stated:
“Poland
is a democracy where national and international law must be observed […] [t]his
issue must be explained. Let there be no doubt about it either in Poland
or on the other side of the ocean.”
In addition to the Polish investigation, accountability for
CIA torture may emerge from a closely related case in the ECHR. The Open Society Institute
is representing Al-Nashiri, the terrorist suspect allegedly responsible for the
USS Cole bombing currently facing trial by military commission at The Polish investigation, if it does result in prosecution, may bring a glimmer of the accountability hoped for by the human rights community. Although the investigation is proceeding very slowly and the U.S. government is refusing all requests of assistance, it could eventually bring to light many of the details of the treatment of detainees such as Al-Nashiri. Although the Polish investigation targets Polish government officials who illegally allowed Stare Kiejkuty to be used as a site for extraordinary rendition and torture, and the actual perpetrators-- U.S. government officials working for the CIA -- will not face trial, the investigation may still be an important step, and Poland should be applauded for being the only country currently pursuing such an investigation. Other countries which hosted black sites should be encouraged to follow