'Torture victims' can sue Rumsfeld

Two American men can go ahead with a civil lawsuit against former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld over allegations they were…

Two American men can go ahead with a civil lawsuit against former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld over allegations they were tortured in Iraq at the hands of the US military, a US appeals court said yesterday.

Donald Vance and Nathan Ertel sued in federal court seeking damages from Mr Rumsfeld and unnamed others over their roles in developing, authorising and using harsh interrogation techniques in Iraq against them, thus violating their rights.

The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, based in Chicago, upheld a decision by a federal judge in Illinois to allow the lawsuit to proceed despite efforts by the former Bush and current Obama administration to get the case dismissed.

The two men worked for a private security company in Iraq in 2006 and said they became concerned the firm was engaging in illegal bribery or other corruption activities. They notified US authorities and began co-operating with them.

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In early 2006, they were taken into custody by US military forces and eventually taken to Camp Cropper near Baghdad's airport. Mr Vance and Mr Ertel claimed they were subjected to harsh interrogations and physical and emotional abuse.

Months later they said they were dropped at the airport and never charged with a crime. They sued, seeking unspecified damages and saying their constitutional rights had been violated and US officials knew they were innocent.

The appeals court ruled that while it may have been unusual for Mr Rumsfeld to be personally responsible for the treatment of detainees, the two men had sufficiently argued that the decisions were made at the highest levels of government.

"We agree with the district court that the plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to show that Secretary Rumsfeld personally established the relevant policies that caused the alleged violations of their constitutional rights during detention," the court ruled in a split decision.

A lawyer representing Mr Rumsfeld said the appeals court decision was a blow to the US military.

"Having judges second guess the decisions made by the armed forces halfway around the world is no way to wage a war," attorney David Rivkin said in a statement. "It saps the effectiveness of the military, puts American soldiers at risk, and shackles federal officials who have a constitutional duty to protect America."

A spokesman for the US Justice Department, which has been representing the former defence secretary, had no immediate comment. The department could appeal to the full appeals court or to the US Supreme Court.

There have been other lawsuits against Mr Rumsfeld and the US government over allegations of abuse and torture overseas, but most involved foreigners, not US citizens, so federal courts have typically dismissed those cases.

A district judge in Washington last week allowed a similar case to proceed involving an American translator who worked in Iraq with the US military and who said he was later detained and subjected to harsh interrogation techniques and abuse.

Reuters