Adapted from original posting at FDL/The Seminal
A series of documents released on July 14 in the UK Binyam Mohamed civil case, Al Rawi and Others v Foreign and Commonwealth Office and  Others, have produced a series of explosive revelations, reported in Britain and as yet unknown here in the U.S. The story has been  reported at the UK  Guardian, while the British advocacy group Reprieve  has posted links to all the documents on its site.
 The fate of the "ghost prisoners" in the U.S. rendition torture  program has been the subject of much speculation. It was a central mystery explored in the recently released best-selling thriller by Barry Eisler, Inside Out, which  takes the CIA’s secret black site torture and disappearances as the real-world scandal around which the book’s plot revolves. Eisler’s book implies that there were more killings in the secret prisons than we know.
 Now, one of the most incendiary revelations in the documents concerns instructions given to MI6 Special Intelligence Service (SIS) over  detention operations. According to Chapter 32 of MI6’s general procedural manual, "Detainees and Detention Operations", "the following  sensitivities arise" (PDF  – bold emphasis added):
 a. the geographical destination of the target. Where will she or he be held? Under whose jurisdiction? Is it clear that detention, rather than killing, is the objective of the operation?
 b. what treatment regime(s) for the detainees can be expected?
 c. what is the legal basis for the detention?
 d. what is the role of any liaison partner who might be involved?
 
 The "objective" of "killing" points to the existence of extrajudicial  murders carried out by the intelligence services. It’s not clear if the  killings are by UK or liaison — including United States — forces.  "Liaison partners" refers to instances of operational cooperation with  non-UK intelligence agencies.
 Both the Guardian and Reprieve make it clear, as does a perusal of the documents themselves, that official British policy was to cooperate  with the U.S. rendition program. At more than one point, the UK government, led then by Labor Prime Minister Tony Blair, intervened to facilitate the rendition of prisoners, including UK citizens. At one point, in 2002, British officials discuss  how to spin the leaks about UK cooperation with the rendition program:  "Our line — that we are seeking information and reassurances and that  the US is aware of our opposition to the death penalty — is not strong,  but a stronger line is difficult until policy is clearer."
 From the Reprieve  report:
 In a January 10, 2002, telegram from the  FCO [Foreign Office], officials made clear that the Blair Government wanted British nationals taken to lawless detention in Guantanamo Bay:  “we accept that the transfer of UK nationals held by US forces in Afghanistan to the US base in Guantánamo is the best way to meet out counter-terrorism objective by ensuring that they are securely held"….
 An FCO official recognized in an August 22, 2002, email that “we are  going to be open to charges of concealed extradition” and that as a result of direct interference by Number 10 “we broke our policy” on  consular access by failing to help Martin Mubanga. Mubanga, who was subsequently cleared of any wrongdoing after years in lawless detention without charge, was rendered first to Afghanistan and then to Guantanamo  because Number 10 specifically refused to allow him to come home. 
 
 The Guardian article details a number of other details about "the Labour government’s involvement in the illegal abduction and torture of its own citizens." The UK government says it has identified half a million documents relevant to the Mohamed disclosure requests. The government’s request to stop the release of documents and force  mediation with the plaintiffs was turned down by the British court. 
 Cameron Touts Secrecy for UK Torture Inquiry
 The avalanche of documents has not escaped the notice of the new  Cameron/Clegg coalition government. Just last week they announced the formation of a UK "judge-led investigation" regarding the complicity  of intelligence personnel in the torture and rendition of detainees.  The investigation is being conducted by a panel of three, whose head is  the intelligence-connected Sir Peter Gibson, who is Intelligence  Services Commissioner, responsible for monitoring secret bugging  operations by MI5, MI6 and GCHQ (Britain’s version of the NSA). Many  questions have been raised by the appointment of Gibson, and it is  startling to think that British human rights groups will accede to the  appointment, given Gibson’s likely bias, not to mention his track record in other "judge-led" investigations.
 In any case, the six cases involved in the Mohamed civil proceedings  are among those to be considered by the Gibson inquiry. While the government may not be able to stop the flow of documents in the Mohamed case, the Prime Minister was not going to let this be a precedent for the upcoming torture investigation.
 From the UK  Guardian:
 Cameron also made clear that the sort of  material that has so far been made public with the limited disclosure in the Guantánamo cases would be kept firmly under wraps during the inquiry. "Let’s be frank, it is not possible to have a full public inquiry into something that is meant to be secret," he said. "So any intelligence material provided to the inquiry panel will not be  made public and nor will intelligence officers be asked to give  evidence in public."
 Maybe Cameron will be mollified if he looks at released documents  like this  one (PDF), in which almost 29 of 36 pages are totally redacted.
 Exposing U.S. Torture
 While on the surface this appears to be a story about Britain and  torture, it is really about the United States. Tony Blair bent British rules and policies, including adherence to international treaties, such as the Convention Against Torture, at the behest of and to placate and cooperate with the United States. 
 At many points in the documents, it’s evident that British intelligence agents were witnessing serious abuse of prisoners. While  they were told not to participate (actively) in the torture and cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment, the policies were written such that  cooperation could proceed with ministerial approval.
 Meanwhile, in other countries, news of CIA murders of foreign nationals is surfacing. Vanity Fair reported recently that the CIA sent a Blackwater (now Xe) team to Hamburg to “find, fix and finish” Syrian-born Mamoun Darkazanli. A UN report earlier this year on secret detentions reported on the disappearances of anonymous U.S. rendered prisoners in Syrian and Egyptian prisons. But these and other details rarely even make a stir in the corridors of American government. As this Human Rights Watch report noted, the Bush administration never even briefed the appropriate congressional intelligence oversight committees on the workings of the rendition program. Scandalously, neither the Democratically controlled Congress or Democratic administration has investigated the Bush-era rendition program.
 The silence meeting these latest revelations in the U.S. press, the lack of ongoing interest in the UK torture inquiry, the failure by the so-called "progressive" components of the Democratic Party to strenuously take up the call by the ACLU, Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, and other human rights groups for greater accountability and official investigations over torture is an ominous development. One can only hope at this point that the continuing revelations about great crimes and cover-up will reach a tipping point, and the outrage over other issues — the BP massive oil blowout, Mel  Gibson, etc. — will attach to the torture issue, which goes right to the  heart of what this nation is. And right now, that heart is rotten.
 [See also Andy Worthington's story, UK Sought Rendition of British Nationals to Guantánamo; Tony Blair Directly Involved]