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The Court-Martial Of Willie Brand
Scott Pelley, CBS News
March 5, 2006
You
wouldn't figure Willie Brand for a killer. He's a quiet young soldier
from Cincinnati who volunteered to be a guard at a U.S. military prison
in Bagram, Afghanistan. But when 60 Minutes met him, Brand was facing a
court-martial in the deaths of two prisoners. The prisoners were found
hanging from chains in their isolation cells. They had been beaten; one
of them was "pulpified," according to the medical examiner.
Brand told correspondent Scott Pelley what he did wasn’t torture,
it was his training, authorized and supervised by his superiors. So how
is it he was charged with assault, maiming and manslaughter?
"I didn’t understand how they could do this after they had
trained you to do this stuff and they turn around and say you’ve
been bad you shouldn’t have done this stuff now they’re
going to charge you with assault, maiming and 'unvoluntary'
manslaughter, how can this be when they trained you to do it and they
condoned it while you were doing it," says Brand.
"[The] Army says you are a violent man," Pelley said.
"They do say that, but I’m not a violent person," Brand replied.
But there was violence in the prison. A man named Habibullah and a cab
driver called Dilawar died only days after they had been brought in on
suspicion of being Taliban fighters.
"They brought death upon themselves as far as I'm concerned," says
Capt. Christopher Beiring, who was Brand's commanding officer as head
of the prison guards. Beiring was charged with dereliction of duty, but
the charge was later dropped.
Asked whether compared to other detainees Habibullah was more or less
aggressive, Beiring says, "Yes, absolutely more. He was probably the
worst we had."
What kind of prisoner was Dilawar?
"I wouldn’t categorize him as the worst but he, but he
definitely, several of my soldiers would say that he would test them,
fight with them kick, trip, try to bite, spit. That’s typically
what a fighter does," Beiring recalls.
Dilawar was picked up outside a U.S. base that had been hit by a
rocket. Habibullah was brought in by the CIA, rumored to be a
high-ranking Taliban. Both of them were locked in isolation cells with
hoods over their heads and their arms shackled to the ceiling.
Their shackled hands, according to Brand, were at about eye level. The
point of chaining them to the ceiling, Brand says, was to keep the
detainees awake by not letting them lie down and sleep.
Interrogators wanted the prisoners softened up.
Asked what the longest period of time Brand saw a detainee chained like that, Brand says, "Probably about two days."
"Two days? Without a break?" Pelley asked.
"Without a break," Brand replied.
Capt. Beiring says he doesn’t know of prisoners chained that long. But in general, he had no problem with the procedure.
"They weren’t in pain. They weren’t, as far as I’m
concerned they weren’t being abused. It seemed OK to me. If I was
a prisoner, I would think that would probably be acceptable," says
Beiring.
Brand says something else was thought to be acceptable in the prison: a
brutal way of controlling prisoners – a knee to the common
peroneal nerve in the leg, a strike with so much force behind it that
the prisoner would lose muscle control and collapse in pain.
Brand says he vaguely remembers giving knee strikes to Habibullah.
How did the detainee react to that?
"The same way everybody else did. I mean he would scream out 'Allah,
Allah, Allah'; sometimes his legs would buckle and sometimes it
wouldn’t," Brand explained.
It wasn't only Willie Brand. A confidential report by the Army’s
criminal investigation division accuses dozens of soldiers of abuse,
including "slamming [a prisoner] into walls [and a] table," "forcing
water into his mouth until he could not breathe," giving "kicks to the
groin" and once, according to the report, a soldier "threatened to rape
a male detainee." Soldiers even earned nicknames including "King of
Torture" and "Knee of Death."
Habibullah and Dilawar were found dead in their cells, hanging from
their chains. The military medical examiner says Dilawar’s legs
were pulpified. Both autopsy reports were marked "homicide." But the
Army spokesman in Afghanistan told the media that both men had died of
natural causes. With two deaths in a week, the Army decided to
investigate. But the facts only began to become public months later in
an article in The New York Times.
"I could smell that I was looking at what I thought was a cover-up," says retired Army Col. Lawrence Wilkerson.
Back in Washington, Wilkerson smelled trouble, and so did his boss.
Wilkerson was chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. In
2004, during the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal in Iraq, Powell asked
Wilkerson to investigate how Americans had come to torture.
"I was developing the picture as to how this all got started in the
first place, and that alarmed me as much as the abuse itself because it
looked like authorization for this abuse went to the very top of the
United States government," says Wilkerson.
In 2002, the "top of the government" was divided over whether the
Geneva Convention applied to prisoners in Afghanistan. The resulting
presidential directive tried to have it both ways ordering that the
"…armed forces shall continue to treat detainees humanely" but
Geneva would apply only "to the extent appropriate and consistent with
military necessity...."
It’s Wilkerson’s opinion that the Army chose to ignore
Geneva when it issued new rules for interrogations in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
"That essentially says to the troops at the bottom of the rung that you
have a new game," Wilkerson says. "You can use the methods that
aren’t in accordance with Geneva. You can use methods that are
other than when you’ve been taught, trained and told you could
use. That, that is an invitation, a license to go beyond that,
especially when you’re also putting on them tremendous pressure
to produce intelligence."
Capt. Beiring acknowledges that there was some confusion. "Because a
lot of people didn’t really know, what are their status? Who are
these people? Did they sign the Geneva Convention? Who are they and
what do we do with them? So there was some confusion," he says.
"Can you tell me whether anyone up the chain of command above you was
aware that the prisoners were being shackled with their hands up about
shoulder high?" Pelley asked.
"Absolutely," Beiring said.
"Who knew?" Pelley asked.
"Several of my leaders knew because we had them like that, you know,
there was probably one or two like that any given day. And we
didn’t change the procedure if someone came through whether they
were a colonel or a general, we left them the same. They seen (sic)
what was going on there," Beiring answered.
Pelley asked Brand if other leaders knew what was going on.
Gen. Daniel McNeill, the top officer in Afghanistan, said “we are not chaining people to the ceilings.”
Brand disagreed. "Well, he’s lying obviously. I mean because we were doing it on a daily basis," he says.
"Gen. Theodore Nicholas, he was the top military intelligence officer
in Afghanistan said that he did not recall prisoners being shackled
with their arms overhead. Is that reasonable?" Pelley asked.
"No," Brand replied.
"Lt. Col. Ronald Stallings told investigators, quote, 'he had no idea,'
end quote, that prisoners were being chained overhead for 24 hours and
more. What you seem to be saying is that it was common knowledge,"
Pelley said.
"Yes," Brand said.
"It wasn’t being kept a secret from the chain of command?" Pelley asked.
"No," Brand replied.
We don’t know whether Gen. McNeill toured the prison, Brand
doesn’t specifically remember him there. But Gen. Nicholas and
Lt. Col. Stallings were there. 60 Minutes wanted to speak with all
three, but they declined.
There were inspection tours at the prison, run by the Red Cross. But
the Red Cross didn’t see everything. For example, it didn’t
see the instructions written on a dry erase board that told the guards
how long prisoners were to be chained.
"We didn’t want them to know — we didn’t think they
had an operational reason to know," says Capt. Beiring. "It also had
other things on there like if a detainee was fighting or being punished
for doing stuff wrong or if he didn’t eat his food or he
wasn’t drinking, but yes, we erased that board so the ICRC we
didn’t think they had the need to know."
There was a lot the Red Cross didn’t know. Medical experts say
that Dilawar’s injuries were so severe that, if he had lived,
both his legs would have required amputation. Even worse, one soldier
testified that most of the interrogators thought Dilawar had been
arrested only because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. They
had come to believe he was just a cab driver.
"And so we killed an innocent man, and that’s something else that
got me as I went though this, got me very concerned as to not just what
we are doing to perhaps al Qaeda or al Qaeda-like terrorists or even
insurgents when we come to Iraq, but what were doing to innocents,"
says Wilkerson.
Wilkerson says the Secretary of State, who devoted much of his life to
the Army, was enraged. As the Abu Ghraib torture scandal was breaking,
Wilkerson says his boss snapped up the phone and called Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
"And he essentially said, 'Don, don’t you know what you’re
doing to our credibility around the world don’t you know what
you’re doing to our image?' And for Secretary Powell to raise his
voice that way was quite extraordinary. I’ve only heard him do it
maybe five times in 16 years," says Wilkerson.
"What do you mean he raised his voice?" Pelley asked.
"I’m sure Secretary Rumsfeld was probably holding the phone away from his ear," Wilkerson replied.
In August, Willie Brand faced court-martial. Prosecutors said he and
other guards had struck the prisoners dozens and dozens of times.
"People watching this interview are thinking, 'Look, this guy came into
this facility, he was there five days and he was dead. He died in five
days' time,' How did that happen?" Pelley asked.
"I don’t really know how that happened," Brand replied.
"You hit him, you hit him numerous times. Did you think it was you?" Pelley asked.
"No," Brand replied.
"The Army would have us believe that you were operating outside the rules," Pelley said.
"This is what we were trained to do, and this is what we did. And not
only that I was not the only one, there were many other people hitting
them — and this was going on on a daily basis and nothing was
said about it," Brand said.
But Capt. Beiring says those were not his orders. He says those knee strikes were to be used only for self-defense.
"You’ve read the Army investigation, and in it some of the
witnesses say one of the soldiers was nicknamed the 'King of Torture'
another one had quote the 'Knee of Death.' You were there; were you not
seeing this?" Pelley asked Beiring.
"No, I was not," Beiring replied. "Some nicknames, as a commander you
are fairly removed from the junior soldiers, so nicknames could have
occurred that I did not know about."
"It’s not the nicknames, it’s how they got the nicknames that matters," Pelley said.
"I can’t say for sure, I can only say I never witnessed any of my
soldiers do anything that was out of line," Beiring said.
Still, a letter of reprimand has been written that blisters Beiring. It
says his "command failures enabled an environment of abuse." But the
charges that could have brought court-martial against him were dropped.
An investigating officer said that Beiring "may not have done his duty
perfectly, but he did it well." Beiring is appealing the reprimand.
Asked if he, in retrospect, has any sympathy for Habibullah and
Dilawar, Beiring says, "Sure, I have some sympathy. I wish they were
born Americans."
At his court-martial, Willie Brand was convicted of assault and
maiming. He faced 16 years. But the jury of soldiers had it both ways.
They convicted him and let him go with a reduction in rank, nothing
more. So far, 15 soldiers have been charged in the Bagram abuse. The
sentences range from letters of reprimand to five months in jail. No
one above the rank of captain has been charged.
Retired Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, after serving 31 years in the Army,
has drawn his own conclusions about how interrogation procedures were
changed in Afghanistan and later in Iraq.
How did it go wrong?
"It went wrong because we had a secretary of defense who had never
served on the ground a day in his life, who was arrogant and thought
that he could release those twin pressures on the backs of his armed
forces, the twin pressures being a wink and a nod, you can do a lot of
things that you know don’t correspond to Geneva, don’t
correspond to your code of conduct, don’t correspond to the Army
field manual, and at the same time I want intelligence, I want
intelligence, I want it now," says Wilkerson.
While Secretary Rumsfeld never served in combat, he was a Navy aviator
and retired from the reserves as a captain. 60 Minutes wanted to talk
with Secretary Rumsfeld, but the Pentagon declined our requests. Since
the deaths at Bagram, chaining from the ceiling has been banned. The
number of prisoners there has increased fivefold, to roughly 500. The
prisoners don't get lawyers, and they can't appeal their detentions.
But, the military tells 60 Minutes, it reviews each prisoner's file for
release at least once a year.
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