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Ex-FBI agent who interrogated Qaeda members speaks out!

Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2011 10:44 am
by GodsDaughter1
September 9, 2011 2:31 PM PrintText Ex-FBI agent who interrogated Qaeda members speaks out!

(CBS News) Ali Soufan, the Lebanese-American FBI agent whose questioning of Qaeda members after 9/11 gleaned valuable intelligence - including confirmation that Khalid Sheik Mohammed was the mastermind of the attacks - reveals his face for the first time in a "60 Minutes" interview with Lara Logan to be broadcast Sunday, September 11 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on the CBS Television Network.


Soufan used his fluency in Arabic and his understanding of Middle Eastern culture and religious ideology to learn information from captured al Qaeda members, including America's first high-value detainee after 9/11, Abu Zubaydah. Using a combination of "knowledge and empathy," says Soufan, he was able to build a rapport with Zubaydah, and Zubaydah accidently identified Khalid Sheik Mohammed as the 9/11 mastermind. "You need to connect with people on a human level - regardless, if they don't like you, want to kill you," Soufan tells Logan.


He said most of his interrogation subjects don't expect to be treated respectfully, engaged in conversation and offered food and drink. "And that scares them, that shakes them, because they were trained that we are so evil and we torture and we kill and that is the reason of the rage against us," says Soufan. "I try to deprive them from [the rage]."


According to several intelligence sources contacted by "60 Minutes," so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques" such as water boarding and sleep deprivation, were effective and they told us that in the case of Zubaydah, who was water boarded 83 times, the techniques did lead to additional information. Soufan criticizes the methods, though, as unreliable and not as effective on someone trained to withstand much worse. "If you look at [enhanced interrogation] from an American perspective, you will say 'Wow, that's torture.' But really, that's like saying hello in some jail in the Middle East," Soufan tells Logan. That's why, he says, Zubaydah had to be water boarded so many times. "The detainee calls your bluff. You cannot go back and say, 'I'm going to build a rapport.'"


Soufan left the FBI six years ago and now runs his own security consulting company. He says he hasn't been to Ground Zero since the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. "Maybe I'm one of these people who didn't get over it," he tells Logan. During 9/11, he was investigating the Qaeda attack of the U.S.S. Cole, trying to find those responsible so they might not be able to attack again. "If you want to be truthful...[it's] very difficult...not to...feel that...maybe I could have done something."

Re: Ex-FBI agent who interrogated Qaeda members speaks out!

Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2011 11:21 am
by Tomas
Donna blogs again!

Re: Ex-FBI agent who interrogated Qaeda members speaks out!

Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2011 12:30 pm
by GodsDaughter1
Nope that's not a blog Tomas, that's a copy and paste!

I understand a blog to be someone's personal story or opinion.

Re: Ex-FBI agent who interrogated Qaeda members speaks out!

Posted: Mon Sep 12, 2011 12:56 pm
by Blair
GodsDaughter1 wrote:his understanding of Middle Eastern culture and religious ideology
What's there to understand?

"My Gods better than your God, na-na-nanaaa-naa"

The Witch Trials - North Berwick Witch Trials Scotland, 1590

Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 12:12 am
by 1456200423
In all, about seventy people were accused of witchcraft, although it is not known exactly how many were executed. Many confessed under torture to having met with the Devil in the North Berwick churchyard at night, and to devoting themselves to doing evil, including attempts to poison the King and other members of his household, and to sink the King's ship. Specific confessions claimed that, on Halloween of 1590, the Devil had the witches dig up corpses and cut off different joints or organs which were then attached to a dead cat and thrown into the sea in order to call up the storm which had nearly shipwrecked the King’s ship. Some attested that the Devil had incited them to these acts because he considered King James his greatest enemy (an admission that James found particularly flattering). The confessions were all suspiciously similar, and were all extracted by torture.

One particularly gruesome account was that of Agnes Sampson, who was examined by King James himself at his palace of Holyrood House. She was fastened to the wall of her cell by a “witch's bridle”, an iron instrument with four sharp prongs forced into the mouth, so that two prongs pressed against the tongue, and the two others against the cheeks. She was kept without sleep, thrown with a rope around her head, and only after these ordeals did Agnes Sampson confess to the fifty-three indictments against her. She was finally strangled and burned as a witch.

Dr. Fian, a schoolmaster at Tranent and a pretender at magic, was also tortured extensively, with the rack and “the boot”, as well as having his fingernails pulled out with pincers and having needles inserted into his fingernails. Crippled and bloodied from torture, he nevertheless only signed a confession due to trickery.

This was the first major witchcraft persecution in Scotland. It is estimated that between 3,000 and 4,000 accused witches may have been killed in Scotland over the years from 1560 to 1707.