“The parallel with Nazi Germany's descent into immorality is impossible to escape. This may well be the most important book to emerge since 9/11.” ―Robert Harris, bestselling author of Conclave
On December 2, 2002 the US Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, signed his name at the bottom of a document that listed eighteen techniques of interrogation—techniques that defied international definitions of torture. The Rumsfeld Memo authorized the controversial interrogation practices that later migrated to Guantanamo, Afghanistan, Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, as part of the policy of extraordinary rendition.
From a behind-the-scenes vantage point, Phillipe Sands investigates how the Rumsfeld Memo set the stage for a divergence from the Geneva Convention and the Torture Convention and holds the individual gatekeepers in the Bush administration accountable for their failure to safeguard international law.
The Torture Team delves deep into the Bush administration to reveal:
How the policy of abuse originated with Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and George W. Bush, and was promoted by their most senior lawyersPersonal accounts, through interviews, of those most closely involved in the decisionsHow the Joint Chiefs and normal military decision-making processes were circumventedHow Fox TV's 24 contributed to torture planningHow interrogation techniques were approved for useHow the new techniques were used on Mohammed Al Qahtani, alleged to be “the 20th highjacker”How the senior lawyers who crafted the policy of abuse exposed themselves to the risk of war crimes charges
“A page-turning investigation into one of the darkest mysteries in American history: how a country that has led the world on human rights came to embrace a policy of barbaric abuse.” ―Jane Mayer, staff writer, The New Yorker