Ghost Plane: The Untold Story of the CIA's Secret Rendition Programme

Ghost Plane: The Untold Story of the CIA's Secret Rendition Programme

by StephenGrey (Author)

Synopsis

In December 2005, Condoleezza Rice, the US Secretary of State, assured the world that the flights of CIA private jets that have criss-crossed Europe since 9/11 had no role in the sending of prisoners to be tortured. 'The United States has not transported anyone, and will not transport anyone, to a country when we believe he will be tortured,' she said. Tony Blair assured Parliament: 'I have absolutely no evidence to suggest that anything illegal has been happening here at all.' But as Stephen Grey reveals in "Ghost Plane", Rice's claims were a falsehood - and Britain's government has also turned a blind eye to a CIA operation that systematically out-sourced the harsh interrogation of its captives. Interviewing sources from the most senior levels of the current and former US administration, from the CIA's department of operations, Grey reveals how the agency's program, known by the euphemism 'extraordinary rendition', has transported hundreds of prisoners to foreign jails and its own secret facilities in the full knowledge they will face harsh torture. 'Of course we do torture', one former senior CIA operative told Grey. 'Imagine putting President Bush's head under water and telling him to raise his hand when he thinks he's being tortured. Give him the water-board treatment, and he'd be raising his hand straightaway.' From the dark cells of Syria's 'Palestine Branch' interrogation center - where inmates are detained for months on end in cells the size of coffins - to secret CIA jails in Afghanistan that bombard prisoners with 24-hour rock music, Grey uses the prisoners' accounts and thousands of CIA jet flight logs to weave a vivid tale of life inside this hidden 'extra-legal' netherworld that is America's international prison network. Including interviews with pilots that flew the CIA's jets and packed with exclusive revelations, "Ghost Plane" reveals the extraordinary detective work that tracked down the Agency's covert aviation network. Grey shows how it emerged from the former Air America that flew in Vietnam and Laos. Tracing the history of rendition back to the mid-1990s, he then shows how after 9/11 rendition expanded beyond recognition into what amounted to a systematic torture program - a terrifying world of endless interrogations, frequent transfers round the world, and detention without charge And all was authorised by the White House.

$3.47

Save:$30.00 (90%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Published: 25 Oct 2006

ISBN 10: 1850658501
ISBN 13: 9781850658504

Media Reviews
A pioneering study. * London Review of Books *
Powerful and damning . . . [Grey] is a prodigious digger and more than a single-minded muckraker. His attention to detail can be chilling. * The Washington Post *
An explosive new book provides a rare glimpse into the full extent of the Agency's controversial terror renditions. * Time *
Stephen Grey has broken many of the first and best news stories about the CIA's secret program of terrorist renditions. He got the flight plans of the CIA's fleet that everyone else wanted to see. -- Jane Mayer * The New Yorker *
It's not often an author gets an unsolicited pre-publication stamp of legitimacy from the U.S. president, much less one who reports on human-rights issues . . . disturbing in the depth and detail of its evidence. * Kirkus starred review *
A compelling and fast-paced read. Grey's account compares with Woodward and Brenstein's 'All Presidents' Men' as a prodigious piece of detective work. * Courier Mail, Brisbane *
Author Bio
A freelance investigative journalist and broadcaster, Stephen Grey, 38, is former editor of the Sunday Times' Insight investigative team and has been the paper's home affairs correspondent and a foreign correspondent in South Asia and Europe. He has contributed regularly to the New York Times, the Guardian, the Times, and the New Statesman. Grey won Amnesty International's 2005 media award for 'Magazine Story of the Year'.