Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Angell helps Rehabilitate Terrorists
Susan Matheny
June 15, 2011
Sixth-graders in Margee O'Brien's class at Jefferson County Middle School gained a new appreciation for schoolwork June 8, after hearing how education is being used to rehabilitate terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Guest speaker, Ami Angell, the sister of local resident Clint Prevett, shared her experiences of directing rehabilitation programs for 3 1/2 years at Camp Bucca in Iraq.
"It is the world's largest detention facility with over 20,000 Iraqi detainees. I (directed) 155 Iraqi professionals, including teachers, clerics and psychologists, who implemented the programs," she said.
Since 2009, Angell has been a research fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, part of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
At Camp Bucca, she worked under Maj. Gen. Douglas Stone as a specialist in terrorist rehabilitation.
When she first came to the camp, it did not have any planned activities for the detainees, who often filled in their time with radical religion classes, which converted many others to extremism.
When Maj. Gen. Stone arrived, he had the idea to curb violence among detainees by doing religious discussion programs.
In the religious classes, Islamic clerics met with small groups of 10 detainees to discuss what the Quran really said. Many of the detainees were uneducated and shocked to learn their ideas of Islam were flawed.
"They didn't question what people had told them and didn't even understand the reasons for many things, from washing hands and feet before prayers, to why they pray," Angell said.
After gaining interest from those classes, she said, "We moved on to vocational training in agriculture, sewing and woodworking; educational classes to teach reading and writing; and creative arts for those who were not verbally articulate."
Camp Bucca had all male detainees, but Angell also worked with a small group of women and juveniles at Camp Cropper.
The experience was not without dangers. She lived on a military base, but was spit on, threatened and shot at twice, both on the base and while traveling in Iraq. But she feels the changes she witnessed far outweighed the threats.
"It's all about transforming and empowering the Iraqi detainee population -- where they come up with the answer. (If you help empower them) they will be on your side, because they don't want to hurt the hand that helps them," she said.
Every individual is surrounded by 100 other people that they influence. So, if you make an enemy of one person, you've actually created that many other enemies, she observed.
"But the same applies if you rehabilitate one person -- you create 100 friends. It's very contagious and switches the dynamics of the detention center," Angell said.
"I saw huge changes in the dynamics of people in detention and of those who visited them. Some begged to stay in detention until they could finish their education classes," she said.
"Since implementation of the rehabilitation programs in detention centers, violence was decreased by 50 percent, and intelligence was increased by three times what it was previously," she added.
As of August 2010, Camp Bucca was handed over to Iraqi control, and it is up to that government to continue the rehabilitation programs.
But terrorist rehabilitation programs have been introduced by the U.S. in Afghanistan, and Angell visited this year to check on progress and talk with Vice Adm. Robert Harward, the detention operations commander.
She is now back in Singapore working on developing a model for the rehabilitation of imprisoned criminals in the U.S., and working with various countries on programs to rehabilitate terrorists on a global scale.
"For the model, we're focusing on Folsom Prison because it has a history of being overcrowded and violent. The model uses the same seven elements to transform people: religious/spiritual, psychological, social/family, education, vocational training, creative arts, and recreation," Angell said.
Her experiences in Iraq and details on the programs are outlined in her book, "Terrorist Rehabilitation: The U.S. Experience in Iraq," which will be released July 1, at major book stores and on Amazon.com.
Angell holds a doctorate in international public law, a master of law in human rights law, and a master of arts in the theory and practice of human rights from the American University of London and the University of Essex, as well as a bachelor's degree in philosophy, sociology and theory from Newman College in Kansas.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Defense.gov News Article: Iraq Detention Operations Focus on Education, Rehabilitation
By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10, 2007 – Programs in U.S. detention facilities in Iraq are focused on improving the education and vocational skills of detainees and preparing those who are no longer a threat for release to their families, a U.S. general in charge of detainee operations in Iraq said today. (Video)
Speaking to reporters in Iraq, Marine Maj. Gen. Douglas M. Stone, Multinational Force Iraq’s deputy commanding general for detainee operations, emphasized that all detention operations in Iraq are in accordance with international law and human rights standards, and are always open to inspection by credible agencies.
“Our goals and our activities are absolutely clear and absolutely transparent, and our facilities are open to inspection by any agency that we in the federal government believe is credible,” Stone said, noting that detention facilities often are inspected by the International Committee of the Red Cross, Army and Defense Department agencies, the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights, and the press. “These agencies are welcomed because they are windows for the world … to view our mission and to offer their guidance. There are no secrets that go on in detention.”
Education is an important part of detention operations in Iraq, and detainees themselves are very engaged in schooling, Stone said. About 7,000 detainees have completed up to a fifth-grade level education, and 8,000 have sought out further education. The interest in education has exceeded the coalition’s ability to hire qualified instructors, so 173 detainees who are educated at the appropriate level have started teaching some classes, he said.
Educational programs in detention facilities include literacy programs for juveniles and adults and technical programs, Stone said. Also, the coalition plans to build a brick and textile factory to provide detainees with work, he said. He added that all youth detainees are in an education program that includes instruction in Arabic, English, math, civics and geography.
These programs are designed to prepare detainees for release to their families, Stone said. The coalition constantly works to determine which detainees are no longer a threat and can be released, he said. This is done through interviews with detention staff, and if officials determine a detainee is no longer a risk, the detainee takes a pledge in front of an Iraqi judge to forswear violence.
“I am pleased to tell you that in the more than 1,000 of those who have gone through this program and taken the pledge, not one has returned to threaten Iraqi or coalition forces,” Stone said.
During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the coalition has released an average of more than 50 detainees per day, Stone said.
The detainees who remain in custody have a high quality of life, including top-notch medical and dental care, Stone said. Detainees receive the same medical and dental care as any U.S. servicemember, with care available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. All medical visits, check-ups and medicine are free, he added.
“Our facilities are the highest level possible in the world,” he said. “They provide the exact same care of surgery, extensive treatment and monitoring as any other servicemember would receive in the country.”
Detainees are provided culturally specific meals in accordance with Islamic law, Stone said, and during religious observances, meal schedules are adjusted accordingly. Detainees also have all the water they need to drink, wash for prayer and take showers, he said.
Another thing the coalition has set up to make detainees’ lives more comfortable is visitor centers for family visits, Stone said. For those families who can’t travel to visit their relatives, the coalition has set up video teleconference capabilities for visits.
“It’s important for our detainees to have contact with their families,” he said.
All detainee operations in Iraq are done humanely and in a transparent manner, Stone said. The coalition works with the Iraqi government to ensure detainees are taken care of, and those who no longer pose a threat are released to their families, he said.
“We see this as an important responsibility; in fact, we see it as an obligation to the people of Iraq,” he said.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10, 2007 – Programs in U.S. detention facilities in Iraq are focused on improving the education and vocational skills of detainees and preparing those who are no longer a threat for release to their families, a U.S. general in charge of detainee operations in Iraq said today. (Video)
Speaking to reporters in Iraq, Marine Maj. Gen. Douglas M. Stone, Multinational Force Iraq’s deputy commanding general for detainee operations, emphasized that all detention operations in Iraq are in accordance with international law and human rights standards, and are always open to inspection by credible agencies.
“Our goals and our activities are absolutely clear and absolutely transparent, and our facilities are open to inspection by any agency that we in the federal government believe is credible,” Stone said, noting that detention facilities often are inspected by the International Committee of the Red Cross, Army and Defense Department agencies, the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights, and the press. “These agencies are welcomed because they are windows for the world … to view our mission and to offer their guidance. There are no secrets that go on in detention.”
Education is an important part of detention operations in Iraq, and detainees themselves are very engaged in schooling, Stone said. About 7,000 detainees have completed up to a fifth-grade level education, and 8,000 have sought out further education. The interest in education has exceeded the coalition’s ability to hire qualified instructors, so 173 detainees who are educated at the appropriate level have started teaching some classes, he said.
Educational programs in detention facilities include literacy programs for juveniles and adults and technical programs, Stone said. Also, the coalition plans to build a brick and textile factory to provide detainees with work, he said. He added that all youth detainees are in an education program that includes instruction in Arabic, English, math, civics and geography.
These programs are designed to prepare detainees for release to their families, Stone said. The coalition constantly works to determine which detainees are no longer a threat and can be released, he said. This is done through interviews with detention staff, and if officials determine a detainee is no longer a risk, the detainee takes a pledge in front of an Iraqi judge to forswear violence.
“I am pleased to tell you that in the more than 1,000 of those who have gone through this program and taken the pledge, not one has returned to threaten Iraqi or coalition forces,” Stone said.
During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the coalition has released an average of more than 50 detainees per day, Stone said.
The detainees who remain in custody have a high quality of life, including top-notch medical and dental care, Stone said. Detainees receive the same medical and dental care as any U.S. servicemember, with care available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. All medical visits, check-ups and medicine are free, he added.
“Our facilities are the highest level possible in the world,” he said. “They provide the exact same care of surgery, extensive treatment and monitoring as any other servicemember would receive in the country.”
Detainees are provided culturally specific meals in accordance with Islamic law, Stone said, and during religious observances, meal schedules are adjusted accordingly. Detainees also have all the water they need to drink, wash for prayer and take showers, he said.
Another thing the coalition has set up to make detainees’ lives more comfortable is visitor centers for family visits, Stone said. For those families who can’t travel to visit their relatives, the coalition has set up video teleconference capabilities for visits.
“It’s important for our detainees to have contact with their families,” he said.
All detainee operations in Iraq are done humanely and in a transparent manner, Stone said. The coalition works with the Iraqi government to ensure detainees are taken care of, and those who no longer pose a threat are released to their families, he said.
“We see this as an important responsibility; in fact, we see it as an obligation to the people of Iraq,” he said.
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Detainee Rehabilitation: Adapting the Singapore Experience to Iraq
Detainee Rehabilitation:
Adapting the Singapore Experience to Iraq
Major General Douglas Stone, the Commanding General of Detainee Task force 134 in iraq from april 2007 to May 2008, adapted Singapore’s model to rehabilitate detainees in iraq. The visit to iraq by ustaz Mohammed bin ali and Dr. Rohan Gunaratna as advisors to the iraqi and u.S. authorities in november 2006 enabled the transfer of knowledge of Singapore’s strategic approach to rehabilitating detainees to iraq. ustaz Mohammed, associate Research fellow, RSiS, as well as Secretary of Singapore’s Religious Rehabilitation Group, the body responsible for detainee rehabilitation, and Professor Gunaratna, head of the international Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at RSiS, interviewed the detainees and examined the viability of implementing religious rehabilitation to the detainee population under u.S. control. at the invitation of Task force 134, ustaz Mohammed bin ali wrote a religious course module specific to address the iraqi detainee population. in June 2007, the pilot run of the “Religious Enlightenment Program” was tested.
General Stone realized the importance of the rehabilitation programmes in reducing violence and increasing security. as a visionary, General Stone ultimately pushed at all levels for support and cooperation in the implementation of the rehabilitation programmes, until finally nobody was in a position to question the effectiveness of the programme. after his redeployment to the u.S., General Stone still actively promotes extremist and terrorist rehabilitation as the only viable solution in combating terrorism. General Stone remarked:
“unquestionably i favour detention as long as detention is being used for a constructive rehabilitation programme. if they have a rule of law, respect of human rights, and rehabilitation, then detention works. it works Custodial and community rehabilitation of terrorists and extremists is a new frontier in the fight against terrorism. Rehabilitating terrorists and immunizing the community through engagement are two intertwined strategies of meeting a serious and a sustained threat. By engaging the community, mainstream leaders can raise awareness and immunize the community against extremist ideas and beliefs. Otherwise, those radicalized by terrorist and extremist propaganda will advocate, support and participate in violence. By investing in community engagement upstream terrorist recruitment can be disrupted. Similarly, by investing in terrorist rehabilitation downstream terrorist regeneration can be disrupted. neither of these strategies is perfect but they offer the best hope for community ownership and participation in the fight against extremism and its vicious by-product, terrorism. There are three principal reasons why we must invest in rehabilitating terrorist detainees and inmates.
First, unless terrorists in custody change their views, when released they will continue to pose an enduring threat to public safety and security. Second, the terrorists will contribute to regeneration by contaminating the rest of society with their vicious ideas thus increasing the pool of supporters and sympathizers. Third, the terrorists will form a part of the terrorist iconography earning the status of hero worthy of respect and emulation by the next generation of terrorist recruits.
Adapting the Singapore Experience to Iraq
Major General Douglas Stone, the Commanding General of Detainee Task force 134 in iraq from april 2007 to May 2008, adapted Singapore’s model to rehabilitate detainees in iraq. The visit to iraq by ustaz Mohammed bin ali and Dr. Rohan Gunaratna as advisors to the iraqi and u.S. authorities in november 2006 enabled the transfer of knowledge of Singapore’s strategic approach to rehabilitating detainees to iraq. ustaz Mohammed, associate Research fellow, RSiS, as well as Secretary of Singapore’s Religious Rehabilitation Group, the body responsible for detainee rehabilitation, and Professor Gunaratna, head of the international Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at RSiS, interviewed the detainees and examined the viability of implementing religious rehabilitation to the detainee population under u.S. control. at the invitation of Task force 134, ustaz Mohammed bin ali wrote a religious course module specific to address the iraqi detainee population. in June 2007, the pilot run of the “Religious Enlightenment Program” was tested.
General Stone realized the importance of the rehabilitation programmes in reducing violence and increasing security. as a visionary, General Stone ultimately pushed at all levels for support and cooperation in the implementation of the rehabilitation programmes, until finally nobody was in a position to question the effectiveness of the programme. after his redeployment to the u.S., General Stone still actively promotes extremist and terrorist rehabilitation as the only viable solution in combating terrorism. General Stone remarked:
“unquestionably i favour detention as long as detention is being used for a constructive rehabilitation programme. if they have a rule of law, respect of human rights, and rehabilitation, then detention works. it works Custodial and community rehabilitation of terrorists and extremists is a new frontier in the fight against terrorism. Rehabilitating terrorists and immunizing the community through engagement are two intertwined strategies of meeting a serious and a sustained threat. By engaging the community, mainstream leaders can raise awareness and immunize the community against extremist ideas and beliefs. Otherwise, those radicalized by terrorist and extremist propaganda will advocate, support and participate in violence. By investing in community engagement upstream terrorist recruitment can be disrupted. Similarly, by investing in terrorist rehabilitation downstream terrorist regeneration can be disrupted. neither of these strategies is perfect but they offer the best hope for community ownership and participation in the fight against extremism and its vicious by-product, terrorism. There are three principal reasons why we must invest in rehabilitating terrorist detainees and inmates.
First, unless terrorists in custody change their views, when released they will continue to pose an enduring threat to public safety and security. Second, the terrorists will contribute to regeneration by contaminating the rest of society with their vicious ideas thus increasing the pool of supporters and sympathizers. Third, the terrorists will form a part of the terrorist iconography earning the status of hero worthy of respect and emulation by the next generation of terrorist recruits.
Iraq Detention Operations Focus on Education, Rehabilitation
By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10, 2007 – Programs in U.S. detention facilities in Iraq are focused on improving the education and vocational skills of detainees and preparing those who are no longer a threat for release to their families, a U.S. general in charge of detainee operations in Iraq said today.
Speaking to reporters in Iraq, Marine Maj. Gen. Douglas M. Stone, Multinational Force Iraq’s deputy commanding general for detainee operations, emphasized that all detention operations in Iraq are in accordance with international law and human rights standards, and are always open to inspection by credible agencies.
“Our goals and our activities are absolutely clear and absolutely transparent, and our facilities are open to inspection by any agency that we in the federal government believe is credible,” Stone said, noting that detention facilities often are inspected by the International Committee of the Red Cross, Army and Defense Department agencies, the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights, and the press. “These agencies are welcomed because they are windows for the world … to view our mission and to offer their guidance. There are no secrets that go on in detention.”
Education is an important part of detention operations in Iraq, and detainees themselves are very engaged in schooling, Stone said. About 7,000 detainees have completed up to a fifth-grade level education, and 8,000 have sought out further education. The interest in education has exceeded the coalition’s ability to hire qualified instructors, so 173 detainees who are educated at the appropriate level have started teaching some classes, he said.
Educational programs in detention facilities include literacy programs for juveniles and adults and technical programs, Stone said. Also, the coalition plans to build a brick and textile factory to provide detainees with work, he said. He added that all youth detainees are in an education program that includes instruction in Arabic, English, math, civics and geography.
These programs are designed to prepare detainees for release to their families, Stone said. The coalition constantly works to determine which detainees are no longer a threat and can be released, he said. This is done through interviews with detention staff, and if officials determine a detainee is no longer a risk, the detainee takes a pledge in front of an Iraqi judge to forswear violence.
“I am pleased to tell you that in the more than 1,000 of those who have gone through this program and taken the pledge, not one has returned to threaten Iraqi or coalition forces,” Stone said.
During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the coalition has released an average of more than 50 detainees per day, Stone said.
The detainees who remain in custody have a high quality of life, including top-notch medical and dental care, Stone said. Detainees receive the same medical and dental care as any U.S. servicemember, with care available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. All medical visits, check-ups and medicine are free, he added.
“Our facilities are the highest level possible in the world,” he said. “They provide the exact same care of surgery, extensive treatment and monitoring as any other servicemember would receive in the country.”
Detainees are provided culturally specific meals in accordance with Islamic law, Stone said, and during religious observances, meal schedules are adjusted accordingly. Detainees also have all the water they need to drink, wash for prayer and take showers, he said.
Another thing the coalition has set up to make detainees’ lives more comfortable is visitor centers for family visits, Stone said. For those families who can’t travel to visit their relatives, the coalition has set up video teleconference capabilities for visits.
“It’s important for our detainees to have contact with their families,” he said.
All detainee operations in Iraq are done humanely and in a transparent manner, Stone said. The coalition works with the Iraqi government to ensure detainees are taken care of, and those who no longer pose a threat are released to their families, he said.
“We see this as an important responsibility; in fact, we see it as an obligation to the people of Iraq,” he said.
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10, 2007 – Programs in U.S. detention facilities in Iraq are focused on improving the education and vocational skills of detainees and preparing those who are no longer a threat for release to their families, a U.S. general in charge of detainee operations in Iraq said today.
Speaking to reporters in Iraq, Marine Maj. Gen. Douglas M. Stone, Multinational Force Iraq’s deputy commanding general for detainee operations, emphasized that all detention operations in Iraq are in accordance with international law and human rights standards, and are always open to inspection by credible agencies.
“Our goals and our activities are absolutely clear and absolutely transparent, and our facilities are open to inspection by any agency that we in the federal government believe is credible,” Stone said, noting that detention facilities often are inspected by the International Committee of the Red Cross, Army and Defense Department agencies, the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights, and the press. “These agencies are welcomed because they are windows for the world … to view our mission and to offer their guidance. There are no secrets that go on in detention.”
Education is an important part of detention operations in Iraq, and detainees themselves are very engaged in schooling, Stone said. About 7,000 detainees have completed up to a fifth-grade level education, and 8,000 have sought out further education. The interest in education has exceeded the coalition’s ability to hire qualified instructors, so 173 detainees who are educated at the appropriate level have started teaching some classes, he said.
Educational programs in detention facilities include literacy programs for juveniles and adults and technical programs, Stone said. Also, the coalition plans to build a brick and textile factory to provide detainees with work, he said. He added that all youth detainees are in an education program that includes instruction in Arabic, English, math, civics and geography.
These programs are designed to prepare detainees for release to their families, Stone said. The coalition constantly works to determine which detainees are no longer a threat and can be released, he said. This is done through interviews with detention staff, and if officials determine a detainee is no longer a risk, the detainee takes a pledge in front of an Iraqi judge to forswear violence.
“I am pleased to tell you that in the more than 1,000 of those who have gone through this program and taken the pledge, not one has returned to threaten Iraqi or coalition forces,” Stone said.
During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the coalition has released an average of more than 50 detainees per day, Stone said.
The detainees who remain in custody have a high quality of life, including top-notch medical and dental care, Stone said. Detainees receive the same medical and dental care as any U.S. servicemember, with care available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. All medical visits, check-ups and medicine are free, he added.
“Our facilities are the highest level possible in the world,” he said. “They provide the exact same care of surgery, extensive treatment and monitoring as any other servicemember would receive in the country.”
Detainees are provided culturally specific meals in accordance with Islamic law, Stone said, and during religious observances, meal schedules are adjusted accordingly. Detainees also have all the water they need to drink, wash for prayer and take showers, he said.
Another thing the coalition has set up to make detainees’ lives more comfortable is visitor centers for family visits, Stone said. For those families who can’t travel to visit their relatives, the coalition has set up video teleconference capabilities for visits.
“It’s important for our detainees to have contact with their families,” he said.
All detainee operations in Iraq are done humanely and in a transparent manner, Stone said. The coalition works with the Iraqi government to ensure detainees are taken care of, and those who no longer pose a threat are released to their families, he said.
“We see this as an important responsibility; in fact, we see it as an obligation to the people of Iraq,” he said.
Thursday, May 12, 2011
The art of rehabilitating terrorists
SINGAPORE, Jan 23 — Dr Ami M. Angell is no fan of wearing slinky skirts and heels, but she missed having the option of glamming it up during the almost four years she spent in Iraq.
Working with detainees at Camp Bucca, once Iraq’s largest detention centre for terrorists, she always had to wear drab long-sleeved shirts and khaki pants that covered even her tennis shoes.
When visiting nearby Umm Qasr, a port city in southern Iraq, the tall, tanned 34-year-old American covered herself head-to-toe in a burqa, out of respect for her host country and for her own safety.
For good reason. Some detainees had vowed they would have gouged out her eyes and slit her throat, but for a fence between them. She was even shot at one day while travelling in an Iraqi vehicle. To this day, when she hears thunder, it reminds her of gunshots and mortar fire.
For about 19 months from June 2007, home at Camp Bucca was either a tent she shared with 19 others or a trailer with six people. She was in charge of detainee rehabilitation programmes, and also helped to devise methods to counter terrorism and radicalism. A total of 150 Iraqi professionals worked as her subordinates.
In an interview with The Straits Times last week, Dr Angell, now a visiting research fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research here, was quick to point out that she never supported the war.
The centre is part of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University.
“I went there because of the opportunity to engage with primarily women and children, work with them and really see first-hand the mess that the US had created,” she said. “I felt the need to do what we can to rectify the situation.”
Dr Angell spent 2-1/2 years in Baghdad as a Middle East research analyst and human resource coordinator before being posted in mid-2007 to Camp Bucca, which was officially closed last September.
One key problem she identified was that detainees were left to their own devices after they were given uniforms, socks, a blanket and a Quran. The spare time led some to start radical religious classes so some moderate detainees were converted into extremists.
“When we came up with rehab programmes as a solution, the American military was very against it,” said Dr Angell. “They didn’t understand why we are spending money on rehab when we are going to leave the country eventually.”
The detainees were deemed to be a security threat to the United States, though some seemingly innocent people were also taken in, said Dr Angell.
“When a roadside bomb went off, every able-bodied male within half a mile circumference, regardless of whether he was shopping with his daughter or setting off the bomb, would be thrown into the detention centre,” she explained.
But the rehab programme won the support of US Marine Major-General Douglas Stone. Initial funding was enough for “religious rehabilitation” for only 30 detainees. She brought in well-respected imams to teach them about the Quran.
“We saw a thirst for education as the other detainees all wanted to know what the 30 learnt,” said Dr Angell.
“Because many of them were uneducated, those who went for the classes were shocked to learn that what they had thought of Islam was flawed.
“They didn’t question what people told them and didn’t even understand the reasons for many things, from washing hands and feet before prayers to why they pray.”
The positive response prompted them to start an art therapy programme where, for a month, 18 hours a week, detainees — many of them used to handling guns — wielded brushes and tubes of paints.
They discussed issues such as violence and Iraq’s future, before expressing their feelings in art. They were guided by a psychiatrist and art instructor nicknamed Picasso - once an Al-Qaeda operative and a detainee at Camp Bucca.
The lack of proper art materials did not bother the detainees — they painted on boards and cement barricades. “Art gave them a form of release to express their fear, frustration and anger,” said Dr Angell. “It gave them a voice.”
Some paintings depicted hope, a rebirth of Iraq and cooperation between Iraq and the US. But others showed corpses and people with eyes dug out.
Dr Angell knows the jury is still out on the effectiveness of art therapy. However, she cites compelling evidence: Fewer than 1 per cent who did it were later caught again and thrown back into camp.
“Because we are dealing with the mind, we will never truly know who we have helped. But we have examples like Picasso to show,” she said.
She readily admits she could not crack some extremists. Some called her “whore” and “infidel”, and threatened her with violence.
In Iraq, she worked seven days a week, up to 14 hours a day. To relax, she went running and took up boxing. “You can’t keep thinking about the violence, if not it will get to you,” she said.
There were some periods of relative comfort. For instance, she worked out of one of the late dictator Saddam Hussein’s opulent palaces for a while.
Her family, she quipped, has given up worrying about her safety.
“They understand that I have to do what my heart propels me to,” she said of her mother and three siblings, who live on the US West Coast.
These days, she is co-authoring a book on the successes and challenges of rehabilitating extremists in Iraq, expected to be released in April. She will be heading back the country soon to do more research.
She keeps in touch with Iraqi friends, who tell her how Iraq has changed. Sometimes, the news is grim: Two clerics she worked with were shot dead after being “in the wrong place, at the wrong time”.
Asked whether she will return to Iraq for long, she said: “After 44 months, I decided I needed a break. But I also feel guilty because I have left the people I believe in.”
She added: “The Iraqis — they are still there, they don’t have a choice.” — The Straits Times
http://cms.internalinsider.info/mobile/features/article/The-art-of-rehabilitating-terrorists/
Working with detainees at Camp Bucca, once Iraq’s largest detention centre for terrorists, she always had to wear drab long-sleeved shirts and khaki pants that covered even her tennis shoes.
When visiting nearby Umm Qasr, a port city in southern Iraq, the tall, tanned 34-year-old American covered herself head-to-toe in a burqa, out of respect for her host country and for her own safety.
For good reason. Some detainees had vowed they would have gouged out her eyes and slit her throat, but for a fence between them. She was even shot at one day while travelling in an Iraqi vehicle. To this day, when she hears thunder, it reminds her of gunshots and mortar fire.
For about 19 months from June 2007, home at Camp Bucca was either a tent she shared with 19 others or a trailer with six people. She was in charge of detainee rehabilitation programmes, and also helped to devise methods to counter terrorism and radicalism. A total of 150 Iraqi professionals worked as her subordinates.
In an interview with The Straits Times last week, Dr Angell, now a visiting research fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research here, was quick to point out that she never supported the war.
The centre is part of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University.
“I went there because of the opportunity to engage with primarily women and children, work with them and really see first-hand the mess that the US had created,” she said. “I felt the need to do what we can to rectify the situation.”
Dr Angell spent 2-1/2 years in Baghdad as a Middle East research analyst and human resource coordinator before being posted in mid-2007 to Camp Bucca, which was officially closed last September.
One key problem she identified was that detainees were left to their own devices after they were given uniforms, socks, a blanket and a Quran. The spare time led some to start radical religious classes so some moderate detainees were converted into extremists.
“When we came up with rehab programmes as a solution, the American military was very against it,” said Dr Angell. “They didn’t understand why we are spending money on rehab when we are going to leave the country eventually.”
The detainees were deemed to be a security threat to the United States, though some seemingly innocent people were also taken in, said Dr Angell.
“When a roadside bomb went off, every able-bodied male within half a mile circumference, regardless of whether he was shopping with his daughter or setting off the bomb, would be thrown into the detention centre,” she explained.
But the rehab programme won the support of US Marine Major-General Douglas Stone. Initial funding was enough for “religious rehabilitation” for only 30 detainees. She brought in well-respected imams to teach them about the Quran.
“We saw a thirst for education as the other detainees all wanted to know what the 30 learnt,” said Dr Angell.
“Because many of them were uneducated, those who went for the classes were shocked to learn that what they had thought of Islam was flawed.
“They didn’t question what people told them and didn’t even understand the reasons for many things, from washing hands and feet before prayers to why they pray.”
The positive response prompted them to start an art therapy programme where, for a month, 18 hours a week, detainees — many of them used to handling guns — wielded brushes and tubes of paints.
They discussed issues such as violence and Iraq’s future, before expressing their feelings in art. They were guided by a psychiatrist and art instructor nicknamed Picasso - once an Al-Qaeda operative and a detainee at Camp Bucca.
The lack of proper art materials did not bother the detainees — they painted on boards and cement barricades. “Art gave them a form of release to express their fear, frustration and anger,” said Dr Angell. “It gave them a voice.”
Some paintings depicted hope, a rebirth of Iraq and cooperation between Iraq and the US. But others showed corpses and people with eyes dug out.
Dr Angell knows the jury is still out on the effectiveness of art therapy. However, she cites compelling evidence: Fewer than 1 per cent who did it were later caught again and thrown back into camp.
“Because we are dealing with the mind, we will never truly know who we have helped. But we have examples like Picasso to show,” she said.
She readily admits she could not crack some extremists. Some called her “whore” and “infidel”, and threatened her with violence.
In Iraq, she worked seven days a week, up to 14 hours a day. To relax, she went running and took up boxing. “You can’t keep thinking about the violence, if not it will get to you,” she said.
There were some periods of relative comfort. For instance, she worked out of one of the late dictator Saddam Hussein’s opulent palaces for a while.
Her family, she quipped, has given up worrying about her safety.
“They understand that I have to do what my heart propels me to,” she said of her mother and three siblings, who live on the US West Coast.
These days, she is co-authoring a book on the successes and challenges of rehabilitating extremists in Iraq, expected to be released in April. She will be heading back the country soon to do more research.
She keeps in touch with Iraqi friends, who tell her how Iraq has changed. Sometimes, the news is grim: Two clerics she worked with were shot dead after being “in the wrong place, at the wrong time”.
Asked whether she will return to Iraq for long, she said: “After 44 months, I decided I needed a break. But I also feel guilty because I have left the people I believe in.”
She added: “The Iraqis — they are still there, they don’t have a choice.” — The Straits Times
http://cms.internalinsider.info/mobile/features/article/The-art-of-rehabilitating-terrorists/
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
For Ami Angell, rehabilitating terrorists is not simply possible – it’s necessary
Ami Angell stood less than 2 feet from the self-proclaimed jihadist, listening intently as he vowed he would slit her throat if not for the fence standing between them.
It was not a totally unexpected encounter.
During her 18 months working at a detention center in Iraq, Angell was spit upon, cursed at, and shot at more than once, both on the base and while travelling in an Iraqi vehicle.
Yet in that time Angell also shared friendly meals with detainees, watched them create stuffed fabric bears and elephants as gifts for their children, and shook the hand of a man with tears running down his face as he thanked her for the programs that taught him to read.
For Angell, the moments of fellowship and expressions of gratitude she experienced far outweighed the indignities and threats, and showed that what she believes and worked for in Iraq and elsewhere is true – terrorists can, and must, be rehabilitated.
“Since implementation of the rehabilitation programs in detention centers, violence was decreased by 50 percent, and intelligence was increased by three times what it was previously,” said Angell, a 1999 Kansas Newman College graduate. “So yes, I think our efforts were successful. In fact, so successful that three previous Al Qaeda operatives went through all the programs, were released, and then returned to work the programs as civilians. I firmly believe that in the long term rehabilitation classes will save lives.”
Camp Bucca
Angell should know. Since August 2009 she has been a research fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, part of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. Among her other duties, she has helped develop and implement an international curriculum for detainee rehabilitation.
Her work in the field goes back more than 10 years, however, and is built upon an impressive resume. She holds a doctorate in international public law, a master of law in human rights law and a master of arts in the theory and practice of human rights from the American University of London and the University of Essex, as well as a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, sociology and theology from Newman. She is also a certified United States mediator and facilitator.
Her work in terrorist rehabilitation can be traced to late 2000, when she read an article on human rights violations in the West Bank and decided to go to the area. She arrived just as the second intifada – an uprising among Palestinian Arabs of the Gaza Strip and West Bank to protest Israeli occupation of those territories – had begun.
Angell said her experience there, which included families begging her to bring them water and food, inspired further travel to the region.
She worked two and a half years in the West Bank, first as a volunteer for the Christian Peacemaker Teams organization and later for Defence for Children International. In this position she monitored and wrote about human and children’s rights abuses (including children tortured while detained in prison), conducted research, and met with high political figures including former Palestinian President Yassar Arafat and Israeli President Ariel Sharon to collect information on the welfare of Palestinian children.
She left the West Bank in 2004 and, wanting to do more in the area of human rights, worked as a research analyst on human rights issues and events for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland. Then, drawn by her desire to help the people of war-torn Iraq, she went to Baghdad in January 2005.
Angell spent her first six months there doing pro-bono work and serving as a research analyst for an intelligence and communications firm, then worked as a human resources coordinator for an Army communications contractor. In July 2007, she signed on with Operational Support and Services at Camp Bucca, once Iraq’s largest terrorist detention center with more than 22,000 detainees.
When she arrived, Angell saw that the camp, after initially processing detainees, had no planned activity for them, which resulted in some detainees filling the spare time with radical religion classes where moderate detainees were sometimes converted to extremism. Overall, the situation was out of control with deaths, escapes and mutilations occurring daily.
Fortunately the situation would get a drastic overhaul with the arrival of U.S. Major General Douglas Stone in the summer of 2007. Under his command and with his direct support, Angell worked on introducing and implementing religious discussion classes. Angell brought respected Islamic clerics into camp to meet with small groups of about 10 detainees to discuss Islam, including what the Qur’an really says and the true meaning of takfir, jihad, and other concepts.
The program was an immediate success, with the detainees excited about what they had learned, and others in the camp eager to find out for themselves. Rehabilitation efforts quickly expanded, and eventually Angell oversaw several programs in her role as detainee rehabilitation program lead, supervising more than 150 local Iraqi nationals including schoolteachers, clerics and psychologists who directly taught classes to the detainees.
“The programs included the Islamic Discussion Program, and Education, or courses that would actually earn them an Iraq Ministry of Education approved diploma,” she said. “Also Civics and Democracy, which taught them about the changes in Iraqi society since their lock up, and Vocational Training Classes that included carpentry, brick building, agriculture, H.V.A.C. and refrigeration, and sewing and tailoring.”
Angell said an especially successful activity was the Creative Expressions Program, an art therapy program where detainees met with a psychiatrist to discuss violence, the situation in Iraq and their lives, then did artwork to express themselves and their emotions.
Learning as a lifelong pursuit
While the work Angell did was gratifying, it was also demanding. She worked seven days a week, typically 12 hours a day, in a humid environment where temperatures climbed as high as 140 degrees.
For several months she lived in a tent with 19 other people, and later in a small trailer where she shared a cramped bedroom with one other person. A “port-a-potty” stood about 50 yards away, but to use a flushing toilet or take a shower Angell had to walk 300 yards.
“Mind you, this would even be in the dark, like 3 a.m.,” she said, “and since lights were not allowed, it would be very dark.”
To keep herself physically and mentally healthy, she turned to sports, which have always been a passion in her life. She ran in the mornings before it got hot, and with the help of a semi-professional boxer deployed to Iraq she took up the sport. Since coming to Singapore she has became involved in triathlons and marathons, placing fourth in her age group in two recent international events. She is also a SCUBA rescue diver, and goes diving when she has the opportunity.
It was sports in fact that initially brought Angell to Newman. The youngest of four children, Angell grew up in towns in Washington, Idaho and Oregon, and in her high school years lived in Visalia, Calif., where she excelled at basketball. A friend of her coach who was at Newman at the time recruited Angell, and helped her get a partial scholarship and a local part-time job. Two weeks before Angell was to come to Wichita, however, the coach called to say she had taken a job elsewhere.
Angell came to Newman, and played basketball for one and a half years, although she was disappointed with the program, which was in disarray at the time, and very different than in California. Fortunately, she had also been drawn to Newman by something else.
“The values of the school, combined with the small class sizes, the history of the school and the classes offered were ultimately what sealed the deal,” Angell said. “I could have played basketball for a number of schools I had been offered scholarships to, but it was the school itself in Kansas that determined my course of action.”
Angell said she is glad she made the decision.
“Newman was an enlightening and magical experience,” she said. “I have never before, nor ever since, had classes so small with teachers that actually cared about individual success. It was this caring and commitment to the learning process that encouraged my learning and ultimately inspired me to continue on my path of learning.”
Angell added that the academics, service work and involvement with campus life helped prepare her for work in graduate schools – and ultimately in her career.
“Newman encouraged me to expand my options, to explore them and to test their limits,” she said. “Rehabilitating terrorists is about as close to testing one’s limits I think as one can get. And academically, it gave me the thirst of continued learning. I look at learning as a lifelong pursuit. I never want to stop.”
‘A global imperative’
All total, Angell spent 44 months in Iraq, where a typical day included mortar, rocket and gunfire attacks. She left Camp Bucca in December 2008, and worked as a Senior American Policy Advisor for Gillespie International in Zahle, Lebanon, before accepting her current position at the International Centre in Singapore. Camp Bucca was closed in September 2009.
In January of this year, Angell visited Iraq to see how rehabilitation programs have evolved, and later visited Libya and Afghanistan to see rehabilitation programs there. She recently completed a book, Terrorist Rehabilitation: A Look Inside Detainee Rehabilitation Programs in Iraq, which will be released in March 2011.
Angell said she enjoys her current work and, true to her quest for lifelong learning, enjoys exploring options for various projects or other pursuits. Whatever course she takes in the future, it will likely involve her belief that we can deal effectively with terrorism – in fact our survival depends on it – but only if we’re willing to address the root of the problem.
“It is a global imperative. We have to understand, to want to understand why individuals are willing to kill innocents if we want to change their mindset. So we need to interact with them, learn from them and teach them that there are other possibilities out there than the path they have chosen. Otherwise the violence and death will not only continue, but will get worse, and hatred and intolerance will grow along with it.”
Posted in Alumni Profile, Fall 2010
http://challenge.newmanu.edu/for-ami-angell-rehabilitating-terrorists-is-not-simply-possible-its-necessary/
It was not a totally unexpected encounter.
During her 18 months working at a detention center in Iraq, Angell was spit upon, cursed at, and shot at more than once, both on the base and while travelling in an Iraqi vehicle.
Yet in that time Angell also shared friendly meals with detainees, watched them create stuffed fabric bears and elephants as gifts for their children, and shook the hand of a man with tears running down his face as he thanked her for the programs that taught him to read.
For Angell, the moments of fellowship and expressions of gratitude she experienced far outweighed the indignities and threats, and showed that what she believes and worked for in Iraq and elsewhere is true – terrorists can, and must, be rehabilitated.
“Since implementation of the rehabilitation programs in detention centers, violence was decreased by 50 percent, and intelligence was increased by three times what it was previously,” said Angell, a 1999 Kansas Newman College graduate. “So yes, I think our efforts were successful. In fact, so successful that three previous Al Qaeda operatives went through all the programs, were released, and then returned to work the programs as civilians. I firmly believe that in the long term rehabilitation classes will save lives.”
Camp Bucca
Angell should know. Since August 2009 she has been a research fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, part of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. Among her other duties, she has helped develop and implement an international curriculum for detainee rehabilitation.
Her work in the field goes back more than 10 years, however, and is built upon an impressive resume. She holds a doctorate in international public law, a master of law in human rights law and a master of arts in the theory and practice of human rights from the American University of London and the University of Essex, as well as a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, sociology and theology from Newman. She is also a certified United States mediator and facilitator.
Her work in terrorist rehabilitation can be traced to late 2000, when she read an article on human rights violations in the West Bank and decided to go to the area. She arrived just as the second intifada – an uprising among Palestinian Arabs of the Gaza Strip and West Bank to protest Israeli occupation of those territories – had begun.
Angell said her experience there, which included families begging her to bring them water and food, inspired further travel to the region.
She worked two and a half years in the West Bank, first as a volunteer for the Christian Peacemaker Teams organization and later for Defence for Children International. In this position she monitored and wrote about human and children’s rights abuses (including children tortured while detained in prison), conducted research, and met with high political figures including former Palestinian President Yassar Arafat and Israeli President Ariel Sharon to collect information on the welfare of Palestinian children.
She left the West Bank in 2004 and, wanting to do more in the area of human rights, worked as a research analyst on human rights issues and events for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland. Then, drawn by her desire to help the people of war-torn Iraq, she went to Baghdad in January 2005.
Angell spent her first six months there doing pro-bono work and serving as a research analyst for an intelligence and communications firm, then worked as a human resources coordinator for an Army communications contractor. In July 2007, she signed on with Operational Support and Services at Camp Bucca, once Iraq’s largest terrorist detention center with more than 22,000 detainees.
When she arrived, Angell saw that the camp, after initially processing detainees, had no planned activity for them, which resulted in some detainees filling the spare time with radical religion classes where moderate detainees were sometimes converted to extremism. Overall, the situation was out of control with deaths, escapes and mutilations occurring daily.
Fortunately the situation would get a drastic overhaul with the arrival of U.S. Major General Douglas Stone in the summer of 2007. Under his command and with his direct support, Angell worked on introducing and implementing religious discussion classes. Angell brought respected Islamic clerics into camp to meet with small groups of about 10 detainees to discuss Islam, including what the Qur’an really says and the true meaning of takfir, jihad, and other concepts.
The program was an immediate success, with the detainees excited about what they had learned, and others in the camp eager to find out for themselves. Rehabilitation efforts quickly expanded, and eventually Angell oversaw several programs in her role as detainee rehabilitation program lead, supervising more than 150 local Iraqi nationals including schoolteachers, clerics and psychologists who directly taught classes to the detainees.
“The programs included the Islamic Discussion Program, and Education, or courses that would actually earn them an Iraq Ministry of Education approved diploma,” she said. “Also Civics and Democracy, which taught them about the changes in Iraqi society since their lock up, and Vocational Training Classes that included carpentry, brick building, agriculture, H.V.A.C. and refrigeration, and sewing and tailoring.”
Angell said an especially successful activity was the Creative Expressions Program, an art therapy program where detainees met with a psychiatrist to discuss violence, the situation in Iraq and their lives, then did artwork to express themselves and their emotions.
Learning as a lifelong pursuit
While the work Angell did was gratifying, it was also demanding. She worked seven days a week, typically 12 hours a day, in a humid environment where temperatures climbed as high as 140 degrees.
For several months she lived in a tent with 19 other people, and later in a small trailer where she shared a cramped bedroom with one other person. A “port-a-potty” stood about 50 yards away, but to use a flushing toilet or take a shower Angell had to walk 300 yards.
“Mind you, this would even be in the dark, like 3 a.m.,” she said, “and since lights were not allowed, it would be very dark.”
To keep herself physically and mentally healthy, she turned to sports, which have always been a passion in her life. She ran in the mornings before it got hot, and with the help of a semi-professional boxer deployed to Iraq she took up the sport. Since coming to Singapore she has became involved in triathlons and marathons, placing fourth in her age group in two recent international events. She is also a SCUBA rescue diver, and goes diving when she has the opportunity.
It was sports in fact that initially brought Angell to Newman. The youngest of four children, Angell grew up in towns in Washington, Idaho and Oregon, and in her high school years lived in Visalia, Calif., where she excelled at basketball. A friend of her coach who was at Newman at the time recruited Angell, and helped her get a partial scholarship and a local part-time job. Two weeks before Angell was to come to Wichita, however, the coach called to say she had taken a job elsewhere.
Angell came to Newman, and played basketball for one and a half years, although she was disappointed with the program, which was in disarray at the time, and very different than in California. Fortunately, she had also been drawn to Newman by something else.
“The values of the school, combined with the small class sizes, the history of the school and the classes offered were ultimately what sealed the deal,” Angell said. “I could have played basketball for a number of schools I had been offered scholarships to, but it was the school itself in Kansas that determined my course of action.”
Angell said she is glad she made the decision.
“Newman was an enlightening and magical experience,” she said. “I have never before, nor ever since, had classes so small with teachers that actually cared about individual success. It was this caring and commitment to the learning process that encouraged my learning and ultimately inspired me to continue on my path of learning.”
Angell added that the academics, service work and involvement with campus life helped prepare her for work in graduate schools – and ultimately in her career.
“Newman encouraged me to expand my options, to explore them and to test their limits,” she said. “Rehabilitating terrorists is about as close to testing one’s limits I think as one can get. And academically, it gave me the thirst of continued learning. I look at learning as a lifelong pursuit. I never want to stop.”
‘A global imperative’
All total, Angell spent 44 months in Iraq, where a typical day included mortar, rocket and gunfire attacks. She left Camp Bucca in December 2008, and worked as a Senior American Policy Advisor for Gillespie International in Zahle, Lebanon, before accepting her current position at the International Centre in Singapore. Camp Bucca was closed in September 2009.
In January of this year, Angell visited Iraq to see how rehabilitation programs have evolved, and later visited Libya and Afghanistan to see rehabilitation programs there. She recently completed a book, Terrorist Rehabilitation: A Look Inside Detainee Rehabilitation Programs in Iraq, which will be released in March 2011.
Angell said she enjoys her current work and, true to her quest for lifelong learning, enjoys exploring options for various projects or other pursuits. Whatever course she takes in the future, it will likely involve her belief that we can deal effectively with terrorism – in fact our survival depends on it – but only if we’re willing to address the root of the problem.
“It is a global imperative. We have to understand, to want to understand why individuals are willing to kill innocents if we want to change their mindset. So we need to interact with them, learn from them and teach them that there are other possibilities out there than the path they have chosen. Otherwise the violence and death will not only continue, but will get worse, and hatred and intolerance will grow along with it.”
Posted in Alumni Profile, Fall 2010
http://challenge.newmanu.edu/for-ami-angell-rehabilitating-terrorists-is-not-simply-possible-its-necessary/
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Table of Contents
A Recent History of Iraq
The Extremist Threat
The Case Against Iraq
The Context
Origins and Development of Threat Groups
The Threat Landscape
Ansar al-Islam fi Kurdistan (Ansar al-Islam)
Tanzim Qaedat fi Bilad al-Rafidayn (Al Qaeda in Iraq)
U.S. Impact on Threat Groups in Iraq
State of Affairs of Detainment and Detainees
The Predicament
U.S. Detainee Operations
Process in Detainee Operations
Impact of the Abu Ghraib Abuse
Reaction to Abu Ghraib
Setting the Stage for Terrorist Rehabilitation
Detainees (re)Act
Inside the Wire
Major Theatre Internment Facilities (TIFs) in Iraq
USCENTCOM
General David H. Petraeus
Task Force 134
Detainee Rehabilitation Program Is Put Forth for Consideration
Lt. Gen. Gardner Acts
In(To) the Fire
Major General Douglas M. Stone
Origination of the TIFRIC Concept
Initial Challenges
Rehabilitation Pilot Program
MNFRC Boards
Major General David E. Quantock
Part of the Team
OSS Contractors
Pilot Program
Sustenance
Lodging
Medical and Spiritual Services
Extracurricular Activities
Work Conditions
Employed Local Iraqi Nationals
Sustenance
Lodging
Medical and Spiritual Services
Extracurricular Activities
Work Conditions
Task Force 134 Military Staff Liaisons
Detainee Care and Custody
Classification Criteria
Housing Placement
Caravan
Compound
K-Span
MDHU
SHU
Former Baath Party Regime Members Studios
Sunni and Shiite Division
Medical Access
The Motivation Factor
A Method to the Madness
Rehabilitation Unmasked
Iraq’s Rehabilitation Programs
The Program
Counterinsurgency Operations
Information Operations
Intelligence Gathering
Visitation
The Secret Weapon
Iraqi Ministry of Education (MoE)
Education Placement
Training Program for Local Iraqi Civilian Teachers
Training Program for Detainee Teachers for Intracompound Teaching
Curriculum
Intracompound Schools
Formal Schools
Computer Training
Challenges
Religious Enlightenment
Growing Pains
Four-Day Program
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Social Worker Component
Day Four
Four-Day Graduation
Teach a Person to Fish
Vocational Skill Training
Agriculture
Barbershop
Carpentry
Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning
Masonry
Sewing
Art of War
Creative Expressions Program (CEP)
Week One
Week Two
Week Three
Week Four
Bucca Bears and Cropper Camels
Arts and Crafts
Leaping Forward
Lessons Learned
The Way Forward
Widening the Scope
The Tanweer Concept
Phase I: Initial Tanweer
Phase II: Sustained Tanweer
Phase III: Transition Tanweer
Tanweer Transformed
12-Day Tanweer
10-Day Tanweer
The Future of Extremist Rehabilitation Programs
The Context
The Background
Human Terrain Is Key
The Neglected Battlefield
Modes of Rehabilitation
Religious Rehabilitation
Psychological Rehabilitation
Social and Family Rehabilitation
Education Rehabilitation
Vocational Rehabilitation
Creative Arts Rehabilitation
Recreation Rehabilitation
Working Model
First Fundamental Aspect
Second Fundamental Aspect
Third Fundamental Aspect
Fourth Fundamental Aspect
Fifth Fundamental Aspect
Sixth Fundamental Aspect
Seventh Fundamental Aspect
Eighth Fundamental Aspect
Ninth Fundamental Aspect
Guiding Principles
The Future
Toward a Global Regime
Strategy for an Unconquerable Nation
Passion
The Wrap Up
American Dream
Leap of Faith
Persistence
References
Appendix A
Appendix B
Index
The Extremist Threat
The Case Against Iraq
The Context
Origins and Development of Threat Groups
The Threat Landscape
Ansar al-Islam fi Kurdistan (Ansar al-Islam)
Tanzim Qaedat fi Bilad al-Rafidayn (Al Qaeda in Iraq)
U.S. Impact on Threat Groups in Iraq
State of Affairs of Detainment and Detainees
The Predicament
U.S. Detainee Operations
Process in Detainee Operations
Impact of the Abu Ghraib Abuse
Reaction to Abu Ghraib
Setting the Stage for Terrorist Rehabilitation
Detainees (re)Act
Inside the Wire
Major Theatre Internment Facilities (TIFs) in Iraq
USCENTCOM
General David H. Petraeus
Task Force 134
Detainee Rehabilitation Program Is Put Forth for Consideration
Lt. Gen. Gardner Acts
In(To) the Fire
Major General Douglas M. Stone
Origination of the TIFRIC Concept
Initial Challenges
Rehabilitation Pilot Program
MNFRC Boards
Major General David E. Quantock
Part of the Team
OSS Contractors
Pilot Program
Sustenance
Lodging
Medical and Spiritual Services
Extracurricular Activities
Work Conditions
Employed Local Iraqi Nationals
Sustenance
Lodging
Medical and Spiritual Services
Extracurricular Activities
Work Conditions
Task Force 134 Military Staff Liaisons
Detainee Care and Custody
Classification Criteria
Housing Placement
Caravan
Compound
K-Span
MDHU
SHU
Former Baath Party Regime Members Studios
Sunni and Shiite Division
Medical Access
The Motivation Factor
A Method to the Madness
Rehabilitation Unmasked
Iraq’s Rehabilitation Programs
The Program
Counterinsurgency Operations
Information Operations
Intelligence Gathering
Visitation
The Secret Weapon
Iraqi Ministry of Education (MoE)
Education Placement
Training Program for Local Iraqi Civilian Teachers
Training Program for Detainee Teachers for Intracompound Teaching
Curriculum
Intracompound Schools
Formal Schools
Computer Training
Challenges
Religious Enlightenment
Growing Pains
Four-Day Program
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Social Worker Component
Day Four
Four-Day Graduation
Teach a Person to Fish
Vocational Skill Training
Agriculture
Barbershop
Carpentry
Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning
Masonry
Sewing
Art of War
Creative Expressions Program (CEP)
Week One
Week Two
Week Three
Week Four
Bucca Bears and Cropper Camels
Arts and Crafts
Leaping Forward
Lessons Learned
The Way Forward
Widening the Scope
The Tanweer Concept
Phase I: Initial Tanweer
Phase II: Sustained Tanweer
Phase III: Transition Tanweer
Tanweer Transformed
12-Day Tanweer
10-Day Tanweer
The Future of Extremist Rehabilitation Programs
The Context
The Background
Human Terrain Is Key
The Neglected Battlefield
Modes of Rehabilitation
Religious Rehabilitation
Psychological Rehabilitation
Social and Family Rehabilitation
Education Rehabilitation
Vocational Rehabilitation
Creative Arts Rehabilitation
Recreation Rehabilitation
Working Model
First Fundamental Aspect
Second Fundamental Aspect
Third Fundamental Aspect
Fourth Fundamental Aspect
Fifth Fundamental Aspect
Sixth Fundamental Aspect
Seventh Fundamental Aspect
Eighth Fundamental Aspect
Ninth Fundamental Aspect
Guiding Principles
The Future
Toward a Global Regime
Strategy for an Unconquerable Nation
Passion
The Wrap Up
American Dream
Leap of Faith
Persistence
References
Appendix A
Appendix B
Index
Description About The Book
Features
•Presents the background and origin of threat groups in Iraq
•Examines the treatment of detainees, including the atrocities at Abu Ghraib
•Explores the elements of a successful detainee rehabilitation program
•Recounts the experience of military personnel and OSS contractors and their work with Iraqi nationals functioning as social workers, teachers, and clerics in rehabilitation programs
•Describes the programs and re-education process
Summary
Because terrorists are made, not born, it is critically important to world peace that detainees and inmates influenced by violent ideology are deradicalized and rehabilitated back into society. Exploring the challenges in this formidable endeavor, Terrorist Rehabilitation: The U.S. Experience in Iraq demonstrates through the actual experiences of military personnel, defense contractors, and Iraqi nationals that deradicalization and rehabilitation programs can succeed and have the capability to positively impact thousands of would-be terrorists globally if utilized to their full capacity.
Custodial and community rehabilitation of terrorists and extremists is a new frontier in the fight against terrorism. This forward-thinking volume:
•Highlights the success of a rehabilitation program curriculum in Iraq
•Encourages individuals and governments to embrace rehabilitation as the next most logical step in fighting terrorism
•Examines the recent history of threat groups in Iraq
•Demonstrates where the U.S. went awry in its war effort, and the steps it took to correct the situation
•Describes religious, vocational training, education, creative expression, and Tanweer programs introduced to the detainee population
•Provides insight into future steps based on lessons learned from current rehabilitation programs
It is essential that we shift the focus from solely detainment and imprisonment to addressing the ideological mindset during prolonged incarceration. It is possible to effect an ideological transformation in detainees that qualifies them to be reclassified as no longer posing a security threat. This volume demonstrates that with the proper program and encouragement, a detainee’s misunderstanding or extremist ideology can be replaced with the principles of moderation, toleration, and coexistence.
•Presents the background and origin of threat groups in Iraq
•Examines the treatment of detainees, including the atrocities at Abu Ghraib
•Explores the elements of a successful detainee rehabilitation program
•Recounts the experience of military personnel and OSS contractors and their work with Iraqi nationals functioning as social workers, teachers, and clerics in rehabilitation programs
•Describes the programs and re-education process
Summary
Because terrorists are made, not born, it is critically important to world peace that detainees and inmates influenced by violent ideology are deradicalized and rehabilitated back into society. Exploring the challenges in this formidable endeavor, Terrorist Rehabilitation: The U.S. Experience in Iraq demonstrates through the actual experiences of military personnel, defense contractors, and Iraqi nationals that deradicalization and rehabilitation programs can succeed and have the capability to positively impact thousands of would-be terrorists globally if utilized to their full capacity.
Custodial and community rehabilitation of terrorists and extremists is a new frontier in the fight against terrorism. This forward-thinking volume:
•Highlights the success of a rehabilitation program curriculum in Iraq
•Encourages individuals and governments to embrace rehabilitation as the next most logical step in fighting terrorism
•Examines the recent history of threat groups in Iraq
•Demonstrates where the U.S. went awry in its war effort, and the steps it took to correct the situation
•Describes religious, vocational training, education, creative expression, and Tanweer programs introduced to the detainee population
•Provides insight into future steps based on lessons learned from current rehabilitation programs
It is essential that we shift the focus from solely detainment and imprisonment to addressing the ideological mindset during prolonged incarceration. It is possible to effect an ideological transformation in detainees that qualifies them to be reclassified as no longer posing a security threat. This volume demonstrates that with the proper program and encouragement, a detainee’s misunderstanding or extremist ideology can be replaced with the principles of moderation, toleration, and coexistence.
Rohan Gunaratna's Bio
Rohan Gunaratna is a specialist of the global threat environment, with expertise in threat groups in Asia, the Middle East and Africa. He is Head of Singapore’s International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR), one of the largest specialist counter terrorism research and training centres in the world.
He is also Professor of Security Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore and a Senior Fellow at the International Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism, Oklahoma, USA. Gunaratna serves on the advisory board of International Centre for Counter- Terrorism in The Hague.
He is Member of the International Advisory Board of the International Institute for Counter Terrorism in Israel and a Member of the Steering Committee of George Washington University's Homeland Security Policy Institute. Gunaratna was a Senior Fellow both at Fletcher School for Law and Diplomacy and at the United States Military Academy's Combating Terrorism Centre at West Point.
He holds a Masters in International Peace Studies from Notre Dame, US, and a Doctorate in International Relations from St. Andrews, Scotland. Invited to testify before the 9-11 Commission on the structure of Al Qaeda, Gunaratna led the specialist team that built the UN Database on Al Qaeda, Taliban and their Entities. He debriefed detainees in the U.S., Asia, Middle East including high value Al Qaeda detainees in Iraq. He chaired the inaugural International Conference on Terrorist Rehabilitation in February 2009.
Author and editor of 14 books including “Inside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror” (Columbia University Press), an international bestseller, Gunaratna is also
the lead author of Jane’s Counter Terrorism, a handbook for counter terrorism practitioners. His latest book with Chandler, former Chairman of the UN Monitoring Group into the Mobility, Weapons and Finance is "Countering Terrorism: Can We Meet the Threat of Global Violence?”
A litigation consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice, Gunaratna was United States expert in the Jose Padilla trial.
Ami M. Angell's Bio
Ami M. Angell, PhD, LLM is currently a Research Fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research. She has spent a substantial amount of time working in the Middle East including 44 months in Iraq (2005-2008) and 24 months in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Israel. She has also worked and lived in Lebanon, Jordan, Qatar, Italy, Switzerland, France and England. While in Iraq, Angell’s primary focus was working alongside the U.S. military in detention operations. She resided primarily at Camp Bucca- then considered the largest detainee facility in the world with over 20,000 Iraqi detainees. As Program Lead for Operational Support and Services (OSS) she was responsible for the direct supervision and implementation of detainee rehabilitation programs to include religious discussion, education, vocational training, creative arts and civics. This included daily active interaction with the terrorist detainee population in addition to the hire and oversight of 150 local Iraqi professionals who lived on base and directly administered the programs.
In 2010 she was invited to Libya, Afghanistan, Pakistan and (back to) Iraq to evaluate and advise on the emerging and evolving extremist rehabilitation programs and assess their quality. In addition to detainee rehabilitation, Dr. Angell is passionate about programs in capacity building, the right to education, human trafficking, and protection from torture.
Angell has a PhD in Public International Law from American University of London, an LLM in Human Rights Law from the University of Essex, an MA in the Theory and Practice of Human Rights from the University of Essex, and a BA in Theology, Philosophy and Sociology from Newman University in Wichita, Kansas. She is originally from Oregon, U.S.A.
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