Detainees at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp say they
were subjected to unknown drugs experimentations intended
to coerce confessions.
Adel al-Nusairi, a former Saudi policeman captured by US
forces in Afghanistan in 2002, describes his confessions after
the shot as 'made-up' adding that he was unable to learn what
drugs were injected before interrogations.
"I was completely gone," said Nusairi, now free
in Saudi Arabia. "I said, 'Let me go. I want to go to
sleep. If it takes saying I'm a member of al-Qaeda, I will'."
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According to court documents, at least two dozen other former
and current detainees at Guantanamo maintain they were given
drugs or witnessed other inmates being drugged.
The Defense Department and the CIA, responsible for detaining
terrorism suspects, however, denied using drugs as an enhancement
for interrogations, and described such claims as either 'fabrications'
or 'mistaken interpretations of routine medical treatment'.
This is while a memo by the then-Justice Department explicitly
condoned the use of 'mind-altering substances' on prisoners
as long as they did not inflict "profound" psychological
damage.