Ex-president admits Poland hosted CIA ‘black sites’

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Poland’s former president publicly acknowledged for the first time on Wednesday that his country hosted a secret CIA prison where a United States (US) Senate report says torture was used against al Qaeda suspects.

Aleksander Kwasniewski said that as president he put pressure on the US to end brutal CIA interrogation at the secret prison on Polish soil in 2003.

“I told (then US president George W) Bush that this cooperation must end and it did end,” Kwasniewski told local media.

He was speaking a day after the scathing Senate report revealed the CIA had used methods amounting to torture to interrogate prisoners after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks.

Kwasniewski, president between 1995 and 2005, said he raised Polish concerns over CIA activities in Poland face-to-face with Bush at the White House in 2003.

He said Bush insisted that the intelligence agency’s methods provided “important benefits in security matters,” a claim disputed by the report.

“The Americans conducted their activities in such secrecy, that it raised our concern. Polish authorities acted to end these activities and they were stopped under pressure from Poland.”

Kwasniewski said Poland had agreed to “beefed-up intelligence cooperation” with the US within the framework of NATO after the September 11 attacks, but insisted he was unaware that the CIA practised torture at its secret facilities.

Poland allowed the CIA to hold terror suspects on its soil on the condition they were “treated as prisoners of war”, he said, adding that the US never signed the memorandum of understanding that included this stipulation.

Those who broke international laws prohibiting torture must be prosecuted, he added.