The Church report on detainee interrogation and incarceration (officially Review of Department of Defense Detention Operations and Detainee Interrogation Techniques) is a report completed under the direction of Vice Admiral Albert T. Church, an officer in the United States Navy. Church was then the Naval Inspector General.

Church's mandate was to investigate the interrogation and incarceration of detainees in the United States "war on terror", in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay. The inquiry was initiated on May 25, 2004.[1] A version of its report was finished on March 2, 2005 and published on March 11.

An unclassified 21-page executive summary has been circulated. The full 368-page report is classified.

Church and his staff interviewed 800 individuals, Washington policy-makers, Armed Services members, and allies of the United States. Human Rights Watch reports that the Church inquiry didn't interview any detainees.

Highlights

edit
  • The inquiry concluded that 26 deaths in custody merited homicide charges.
  • Senior officers ignored warning signs, like the reports submitted to them by the Red Cross.

Unredacted version published

edit

On February 11, 2009, the American Civil Liberties Union received an unredacted copy of the report.[2] They published an excerpt allegedly proving illegal abuses of power had resulted in the death of several individuals.[3]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Executive Summary Archived March 13, 2005, at the Wayback Machine, Church Report
  2. ^ "Unredacted Church Report Documents (Previously Classified) (2/11/2009)". American Civil Liberties Union. 2009-02-11. Archived from the original on 2009-02-14.
  3. ^ "Newly Unredacted Torture Documents Reveal Deaths, Abuse". Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
edit