A 2013
Institute on Medicine as a Profession (IMAP) report concluded that health professionals working with the military and intelligence services "designed and participated in cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment and torture of detainees." Medical professionals were ordered to ignore
ethical standards during involvement in abusive interrogation, including monitoring of
vital signs under stress-inducing procedures. They used medical information for interrogation purposes and participated in
force-feeding of
hunger strikers, in violation of
World Medical Association and
American Medical Association prohibitions. Supporters of controversial techniques have declared that certain protections of the
Third Geneva Convention do not apply to Al-Qaeda or
Taliban fighters, claiming that the Convention applies to only
military personnel and
guerrillas who are part of a
chain of command, wear distinctive insignia, bear arms openly, and abide by the rules of war. Jim Phillips of
The Heritage Foundation said that "some of these terrorists who are not recognized as soldiers don't deserve to be treated as soldiers." Critics of U.S. policy, such as
George Monbiot, claimed the government had violated the Conventions in attempting to create a distinction between "
prisoners of war" and "illegal combatants".
Amnesty International called the situation "a human rights scandal" in a series of reports. One of the allegations of abuse at the camp is the abuse of the religion of the detainees. Prisoners released from the camp have alleged incidents of abuse of religion including
flushing the Quran down the toilet, defacing the
Quran, writing comments and remarks on the Quran, tearing pages out of the Quran, and denying detainees a copy of the Quran. One of the justifications offered for the continued detention of
Mesut Sen, during his
Administrative Review Board hearing, was:
Red Cross inspectors and released detainees have alleged acts of torture, including
sleep deprivation, beatings and locking in confined and cold cells. The use of Guantánamo Bay as a military prison has been the subject of significant criticism, particularly from human rights organizations, which cite reports of torture and poor treatment of detainees. Supporters of the facility argue that enemy combatants can be lawfully detained until hostilities cease and that providing trial review for such detentions has not been a historical practice for prisoners of war.
Testimonies of treatment by
Laura Poitras in 2010 Three British Muslim prisoners, known in the media at the time as the "
Tipton Three", were
repatriated to the
United Kingdom in March 2004, where officials immediately released them without charge. The three alleged ongoing torture,
sexual degradation, forced drugging, and
religious persecution being committed by U.S. forces at Guantánamo Bay. The former Guantanamo detainee
Mehdi Ghezali was freed without charge on 9 July 2004, after two and a half years
internment. Ghezali claimed that he was the victim of repeated torture.
Omar Deghayes alleged he was blinded after his right eye was gouged by an officer.
Juma Al Dossary claimed he was interrogated hundreds of times, beaten, tortured with broken glass,
barbed wire, burning cigarettes, and suffered
sexual assaults.
David Hicks also made allegations of torture and mistreatment in Guantanamo Bay, including
sensory deprivation,
stress positions, having his head slammed into concrete, repeated anal penetration, routine
sleep deprivation An Associated Press report claimed that some detainees were turned over to the U.S. by
Afghan tribesmen in return for cash
bounties. The
first Denbeaux study, published by
Seton Hall University Law School, reproduced copies of several leaflets, flyers, and posters the U.S. government distributed to advertise the bounty program; some of which offered bounties of "millions of dollars".
Hunger-striking detainees claimed that guards were force feeding them in the fall of 2005: "Detainees said large feeding tubes were forcibly shoved up their noses and down into their stomachs, with guards using the same tubes from one patient to another. The detainees say no
sedatives were provided during these procedures, which they allege took place in front of U.S. physicians, including the head of the prison hospital. "A hunger striking detainee at Guantánamo Bay wants a judge to order the removal of his feeding tube so he can be allowed to die", one of his lawyers has said. Within a few weeks, the Department of Defense "extended an invitation to
United Nations Special Rapporteurs to visit detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station." This was rejected by the U.N. because of DoD restrictions, stating that "[the] three human rights officials invited to Guantánamo Bay wouldn't be allowed to conduct private interviews" with prisoners. Simultaneously, media reports began related to the question of prisoner treatment. District Court Judge
Gladys Kessler also ordered the U.S. government to release medical records going back a week before such feedings took place. In early November 2005, the U.S. suddenly accelerated, for unknown reasons, the rate of prisoner release, but this was not sustained. Detainee
Mansur Ahmad Saad al-Dayfi has alleged that
Ron DeSantis oversaw force-feedings of detainees during his time as a
JAG officer in Guantanamo. In May 2013, detainees undertook a widespread hunger strike; they were subsequently being force fed until the U.S. Government stopped releasing hunger strike information, due to it having "no operational purpose". During the month of
Ramadan that year, the US military claimed that the amount of detainees on hunger strike had dropped from 106 to 81. However, according to defense attorney
Clive Stafford Smith, "The military are cheating on the numbers as usual. Some detainees are taking a token amount of food as part of the traditional breaking of the fast at the end of each day in Ramadan, so that is now conveniently allowing them to be counted as not striking." In 2014, the Obama administration undertook a "rebranding effort" by referring to the hunger strikes as "long term non-religious fasting". Attorney
Alka Pradhan petitioned a
military judge to order the release of art made in her client,
Ammar al-Baluchi's cell. She complained that painting and drawing was made difficult, and he was not permitted to give artwork to his counsel. It has been reported that prisoners cooperating with interrogations have been rewarded with
Happy Meals from the
McDonald's on base.
Reported suicides By May 2011, there had been at least six reported suicides in Guantánamo. During August 2003, there were 23 suicide attempts. The U.S. officials did not say why they had not previously reported the incident. After this event, the
Pentagon reclassified alleged suicide attempts as "manipulative self-injurious behaviors". Camp physicians alleged that detainees do not genuinely wish to end their lives, rather, the prisoners supposedly feel that they may be able to get better treatment or release with suicide attempts.
Daryl Matthews, a professor of
forensic psychiatry at the
University of Hawaii who examined the prisoners, stated that given the cultural differences between interrogators and prisoners, "intent" was difficult if not impossible to ascertain.
Clinical depression is common in Guantánamo, with 1/5 of all prisoners being prescribed
antidepressants such as
Prozac. Guantanamo Bay officials have reported 41 suicide attempts by 25 detainees since the U.S. began taking prisoners to the base in January 2002. Prison commander Rear Admiral
Harry Harris claimed this was not an act of desperation, despite prisoners' pleas to the contrary, but rather "an act of
asymmetric warfare committed against us." The three detainees were said to have hanged themselves with
nooses made of sheets and clothes. According to military officials, the suicides were coordinated acts of protests. Human rights activists and defense attorneys said the deaths signaled the desperation of many of the detainees.
Barbara Olshansky of the
Center for Constitutional Rights, which represented about 300 Guantánamo detainees, said that detainees "have this incredible level of despair that they will never get justice." At the time, human rights groups called for an independent public inquiry into the deaths. Amnesty International said the apparent suicides "are the tragic results of years of arbitrary and indefinite detention" and called the prison "an indictment" of the
George W. Bush administration's human rights record. The
Center for Policy and Research published
Death in Camp Delta (2009), its analysis of the NCIS report, noting many inconsistencies in the government account and said the conclusion of suicide by hanging in their cells was not supported. It suggested that camp administration officials had either been grossly negligent or were participating in a cover-up of the deaths. In January 2010 Scott Horton published an article in ''
Harper's Magazine'' disputing the government's findings and suggesting the three died of
accidental manslaughter following torture. His account was based on the testimony of four members of the Military Intelligence unit assigned to guard Camp Delta, including a decorated non-commissioned Army officer who was on duty as sergeant of the guard the night of 9–10 June 2006. Their account contradicts the report published by the
Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS). Horton said the deaths had occurred at a black site, known as "Camp No", outside the perimeter of the camp. According to its spokeswoman Laura Sweeney, the Department of Justice has disputed certain facts contained in the article about the soldiers' account. On 30 November 2004, the
New York Times published excerpts from an
internal memo leaked from the U.S. administration, and the ICRC reacted to the article when the report was leaked in May. on 29 July 2004, an FBI agent was quoted as saying, "On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a
fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water. Most times, they had
urinated or
defecated on themselves and had been left there for 18, 24 hours or more."
Air Force Lt. Gen.
Randall Schmidt, who headed the probe into FBI accounts of abuse of Guantánamo prisoners by Defense Department personnel, concluded the man (Mohammed al-Qahtani, a Saudi, described as the "
20th hijacker") was subjected to "abusive and degrading treatment" by "the cumulative effect of creative, persistent and lengthy interrogations." Many of the released prisoners have complained of enduring beatings, sleep deprivation, prolonged constraint in uncomfortable positions, prolonged
hooding, cultural and sexual humiliation,
enemas as well as other forced injections, and other physical and psychological mistreatment during their detention in Camp Delta. In 2004, Army Specialist
Sean Baker, a soldier posing as a prisoner during training exercises at the camp, was beaten so severely that he suffered a
brain injury and
seizures. In June 2004,
The New York Times reported that of the nearly 600 detainees, not more than two dozen were closely linked to al-Qaeda and that only very limited information could have been received from questionings. In 2006, the only top terrorist was reportedly
Mohammed al Qahtani from Saudi Arabia, who is believed to have planned to participate in the
September 11 attacks in 2001.
Mohammed al-Qahtani was refused entry at
Orlando International Airport, which stopped him from his plan to take part in the 9/11 attacks. During his Guantánamo interrogations, he was given bags of
intravenous fluid, and then forbidden to use the toilet, forcing him to soil himself. Accounts of the type of treatment he received include: having water poured over him, interrogations starting at midnight and lasting 12 hours,
psychological torture methods such as sleep deprivation via repeatedly being woken up by loud, raucous music whenever he would fall asleep, and
military dogs being used to intimidate him. Soldiers would play the
American national anthem and force him to salute, he had images of victims of the September 11 attacks affixed to his body, he was forced to bark like a dog, and his beard and hair were shaved, an insult to
Muslim men. He would be humiliated and upset by female personnel, was forced to wear a bra, and was stripped nude and had fake menstrual blood smeared on him, while being made to believe it was real. Some of the abuses were documented in 2005, when the Interrogation Log of al-Qathani "Detainee 063" was partially published. The
Washington Post, in an 8 May 2004 article, described a set of interrogation techniques approved for use in interrogating alleged terrorists at Guantánamo Bay.
Kenneth Roth, executive director of
Human Rights Watch, characterized them as cruel and inhumane treatment illegal under the
U.S. Constitution. On 15 June,
Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, commander at
Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq during the
prisoner abuse scandal, said she was told from the top to treat detainees like dogs "as it is done in Guantánamo [Camp Delta]." The former commander of
Camp X-Ray,
Geoffrey Miller, had led the inquiry into the alleged abuses at Abu Ghraib during the Allied occupation. Ex-detainees of the Guantanamo Camp have made serious allegations, including alleging Geoffrey Miller's complicity in abuse at Camp X-Ray. In "Whose God Rules?" David McColgin, a defense attorney for Guantanamo detainees, recounts how a female government interrogator told Muslim detainees she was menstruating, "slipped her hand into her pants and pulled it out with a red liquid smeared on it meant to look like menstrual blood. The detainee screamed at the top of his lungs, began shaking, sobbing, and yanked his arms against his handcuffs. The interrogator explained to [the detainee] that he would now feel too dirty to pray and that she would have the guards turn off the water in his cell so he would not be able to wash the red substance off. 'What do you think your brothers will think of you in the morning when they see an American woman's menstrual blood on your face?' she said as she left the cell." These acts, as well as interrogators desecrating the Quran, led the detainees to riots and mass suicide attempts. The
BBC published a leaked FBI email from December 2003, which said that the Defense Department interrogators at Guantánamo had impersonated FBI agents while using "torture techniques" on a detainee. In an interview with
CNN's
Wolf Blitzer in June 2005, Vice President
Dick Cheney defended the treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo: There isn't any other nation in the world that would treat people who were determined to kill Americans the way we're treating these people. They're living in the tropics. They're well fed. They've got everything they could possibly want. The United States government, through the State Department, makes Periodic Reports to the
United Nations Committee Against Torture as part of its treaty obligations under the
U.N. Convention Against Torture. In October 2005, the U.S. report covered
pretrial detention of suspects in the "
war on terrorism", including those held in Guantánamo Bay. This Periodic Report is significant as the first official response of the U.S. government to allegations that prisoners are mistreated in Guantánamo Bay. While the 2005 report denies allegations of "serious abuse", it does detail 10 "substantiated incidents of misconduct", and the training and punishments given to the perpetrators. Writing in the
New York Times on 24 June 2012, former President
Jimmy Carter criticized the methods used to obtain confessions:"Some of the few being tried (only in military courts) have been tortured by
waterboarding more than 100 times or intimidated with
semiautomatic weapons, power drills or threats to sexually assault their mothers. These facts cannot be used as a defense by the accused, because the government claims they occurred under the cover of 'national security'".
Sexual abuse In 2005, it was reported that sexual methods were allegedly used by interrogators to break Muslim prisoners. In a 2015 article from
The Guardian, it was claimed that the CIA used sexual abuse along with a wider array of other forms of torture. Detainee
Majid Khan testified that interrogators "poured ice water on his genitals, twice videotaped him naked and repeatedly touched his private parts", according to the same article. ==Operating procedures==