Clive Stafford Smith
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A Hollywood production that confronts a difficult political issue is rare. Gavin Hood (whose film Tsotsi won the Best Foreign-Language Oscar in 2005) has delivered such a movie in Rendition.
The term “rendition” means taking a suspect prisoner and transferring him to another country, often to face harsh interrogation methods, without legal process. There was really no need for a new word because the old one – kidnapping – described the operation accurately, but “rendition” has joined other euphemisms in the Bush War on Terror such as “enhanced interrogation techniques” (or torture).
The film Rendition is a courageous public innoculation against this creeping criminality. Anwar El-Ibrahimi (played by Omar Metwally) is an Egyptian citizen who has lived in the US all his adult life, and his American wife Isabella (Reese Witherspoon) is pregnant with their second child. Anwar has been to South Africa for a conference, and is flying home to be at the birth. Isabella waits at Dulles airport in Chicago, but Anwar does not arrive.
Meanwhile, there has been an al-Qaeda explosion in a North African town. Missing its target – Abasi Fawal (Igor Naor), the head of the country’s security service – the bomb spatters the blood of a CIA field agent over the shirt of his young colleague, Douglas Freeman (Jake Gyllenhaal). Rashid Silime, the head of a Hezbollah splinter cell, claims responsibility, and there are calls for retribution.
Intercepts have linked calls from Silime’s phone to Anwar’s. But nobody, from the Europeans to the Israelis, has Anwar on their list of potential terrorists. Enter Meryl Streep, playing Corinne Whitman, the CIA’s head of counter-terrorism. She has long since resolved that sometimes one person may need to be inconvenienced if she is to save lives and allow millions to sleep safely in their beds. Anwar does not make it as far as the immigration hall at Dulles.
For the most part, the film is very well researched. Perhaps this is because Robert Baer, a whistleblowing former CIA agent, was technical adviser. The CIA plane that flies Anwar to his torture rendezvous has the call number 379 – the same as the Gulf Stream 5 “Rendition Express” that in real life took my client, the British resident Binyam Mohamed, to a torture chamber in Morocco in July, 2002.
One of my unlikely hobbies is correlating the methods of the CIA with the Spanish Inquisition, and there are some illustrations of this in the film. Like the CIA, the Spanish stripped their victims naked to humiliate them, beat them and left them dangling by the wrists (the Inquisition called that one the Strappado). However, modern technology has supplemented the torturer’s handbook, and Anwar also endures electric shock abuse.
If any critic suggests that the film overstates the horror of rendition, then consider what happened to Binyam Mohamed. During the 18 months he spent in Morocco the torture escalated from beating to a razor blade to the penis – all performed for the Americans, as in the film, by North African proxies. He was then shipped to the Dark Prison in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, for five more months of abuse.
As for the rendering itself, the fictional Anwar is bundled up for the trip in the same way as Binyam – stripped of his own clothes, shackled and hooded. The real victims of rendition generally have a nappy too, so that the kidnappers do not have to bother with lavatories.
Sadly, the high-handedness with which Whitman ignores basic due process is reminiscent of George W. Bush’s Washington. According to Baer, Streep’s character is based loosely on a real CIA operative (Ms X) who precipitated a similar nightmare for a German citizen, Khalid Masri, who was rendered to Afghanistan in 2002. He was on holiday in Macedonia when Ms X received information that seemed to link him to terrorism. She authorised his rendition.
Many months later the same plane that picked up Binyam from Morocco flew on to dump Masri in Albania. Without money or an apology he was left to make his own way home. Even though the CIA had figured out he was probably innocent, they had not known what to do about it. He is scarred forever by his experience, and was recently admitted to a German mental hospital.
In addition, while Baer knows Ms X’s name, she has kept her job at the CIA, and it would be illegal for him to disclose her identity.
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Al, so what you're saying is that Hollywood should only create movies that put the government in a good light? Here's the problem: the current administration has done very little to improve the lives of ordinary Americans and has done much to hide their abuses. For instance: Abu Ghraib, the disintegration of civil liberties with the Patriot Act, the the enormous budget deficit, the disastrous campaign in Iraq, the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan years after the military campaign has ended, and the lack of health services available to those under the poverty line. Movies like Rendition and Syriana reflect the times in which we live, and there's nothing disgraceful about that. Even though the films themselves often portrays the subject matter as overly simplified, it doesn't mean they are to be dismissed. On the contrary, it provokes the discussion that is sorely needed - instead of attacking along party lines.
Kiley, Los Angeles, USA
So Hollywood is releasing a movie critical of the governments policies. Like Claude Rains in the movie Casablanca Im shocked, shocked. No one on this side of the pond is surprised. Of course Hollywood would make a movie like this. When its not churning out movies portraying corporations as evil out to do in the little guy and Christians as crazed lunatics its targeting government officials as corrupt and criminal. Of course theyre always conservative and Republican. As government is made up of individuals there will be mistakes and yes abuses. But to condemn the whole CIA and its actions and base it on one individual is in itself a disgrace. When 2 American troops were kidnapped in Iraq, their tortured and mutilated bodies dumped on the street I heard no outrage from the left. If people are basing their opinions about this governments behavior solely on what the loony left running Hollywood puts on the screen these days then shame on u.
Al, Cburg,
Dulles is not in Chicago. It is in Washington, D.C. Otherwise good article...
Rob E. Kraus, Charlotte, USA