British Government To Release CIA
FOIA Documents
February 10. 2010
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
An astute British judge has ordered the release of U.K.
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) documents the Labour Party sought to
hide to protect the C.I.A., who broke international law. It is in
relation to requests for government documents on the rendition and
torture of a
Muslim Ethiopian, who resides in Britain.
The Bush administration had threaten to sever all
intelligence ties with Britain, its top ally, if the documents were
disclosed. It's this type of small minded thinking, with emphasis on small
minded, that got the Bush administration into so much trouble
around the world. Threatening and bullying people into submitting to
Bush's will in blatant wrongdoing was ungodly and evil.
The world already knows Bush renditioned people and had
them severely tortured in his madness that violated the Geneva
Conventions. The Labour Party should not have gone along with it. Ditto
for the other world governments that facilitated it in their nations.
Mr. Bush and all involved should hope one day someone
doesn't do the same to their adult children, as they did to other
people's grown children, who were not even terrorists. People were
snatched off the streets of the world, smuggled from the nations they
live in and tortured for information they did not have, only to be
released later scarred and emotionally destroyed. That's just as bad as
terrorism.
Side Bar: Severing ties with Britain would only
serve to hurt America. While the CIA. is competent, albeit inhumane,
America's first line of defense against terrorism is the FBI and
while there are intelligent agents in the organization, the Bureau's
director is as dumb as rocks and
sorely lacking common sense. MI5 and MI6 has pertinent
information on
Londonistan and their operatives in the
Middle East, who seek to harm Britain and America.
STORY SOURCE
Government forced to
publish U.S. torture allegations
The government lost a legal
battle on Wednesday to prevent the disclosure of secret U.S.
intelligence material relating to allegations of "cruel and inhuman"
treatment involving the CIA. London's Court of Appeal
rejected a request by British Foreign Secretary David Miliband to
prevent senior judges from disclosing claims that former Guantanamo Bay
detainee Binyam Mohamed had been shackled and subjected to sleep
deprivation and threats while in U.S. custody.
The office of Dennis Blair,
U.S. director of national intelligence, issued a statement saying the
British court's decision "to release classified information provided by
the United States is not helpful, and we deeply regret it." "The protection of
confidential information is essential to strong, effective security and
intelligence cooperation among allies," the statement said. It indicated
the ruling would create "challenges" but the two countries would "remain
united in our efforts to fight against violent extremist groups."
Miliband had argued that full
disclosure of the redacted claims might make the United States less
willing to share intelligence and thus prejudice Britain's national
security. Recent events showed the
importance of sharing intelligence, and the U.S. authorities were
concerned about the release of such material, he told parliament, adding
that he was working with U.S. officials to ensure bilateral ties were
not damaged.
Mohamed, an Ethiopian national
and British resident, was arrested in Pakistan in April 2002. He says he
was flown to Morocco on a CIA plane and held for 18 months, during which
he says he was repeatedly tortured, including having his penis cut with
a knife. Morocco has denied holding him.
He was transferred to
Afghanistan in 2004 and later moved to Guantanamo Bay, U.S. authorities
have said. He was never charged and returned to Britain in February
2009... But last October, two High
Court judges ruled there was "an overwhelming public interest" in
releasing the details, a decision the Appeal Court upheld Wednesday...
http://uk.news.yahoo.com