Difference between revisions of "Camp 020"

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Latchmere House was a British interrogation centre which went by the codename of [[Camp 020]].
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The Guardian has reported:
  
 
:One day in the autumn of 1942 [[Kim Philby]], an officer in Britain's secret intelligence service, received a message from a colleague in MI5. The MI5 man, [[Helenus Milmo]], was in a state of near despair about a Spanish prisoner and suspected spy, [[Juan Gomez de Lecube]], who had been under interrogation since his arrest in the Caribbean that summer.
 
:One day in the autumn of 1942 [[Kim Philby]], an officer in Britain's secret intelligence service, received a message from a colleague in MI5. The MI5 man, [[Helenus Milmo]], was in a state of near despair about a Spanish prisoner and suspected spy, [[Juan Gomez de Lecube]], who had been under interrogation since his arrest in the Caribbean that summer.

Revision as of 10:14, 24 September 2009

Latchmere House was a British interrogation centre which went by the codename of Camp 020.

The Guardian has reported:

One day in the autumn of 1942 Kim Philby, an officer in Britain's secret intelligence service, received a message from a colleague in MI5. The MI5 man, Helenus Milmo, was in a state of near despair about a Spanish prisoner and suspected spy, Juan Gomez de Lecube, who had been under interrogation since his arrest in the Caribbean that summer.
Despite Spanish protests, Lecube had been transported across the Atlantic and imprisoned, incommunicado, in Britain's interrogation centre for suspected enemy agents at Camp 020, the codename for Latchmere House in Middlesex.
MI5 and MI6 had high hopes for war-shortening information from Lecube. They believed they had verified beyond doubt that he was a spy. They only needed to make him talk. But after a week, Milmo wrote: "No progress has been made . . . it looks as though he is going to be an extremely obstinate nut to crack." Soon afterwards, Milmo wrote to Philby, seeking approval to apply special measures to the interrogation of the detainee... It has taken more than half a century for Britain's government to put the details of Camp 020 into the public domain.[1]

Notes

  1. 'Nobody is talking' The evidence of two new books demonstrates that 9/11 created the will for new, harsher interrogation techniques of foreign suspects by the US and led to the abuses in Guantánamo, Iraq, Afghanistan and beyond. In a special report, James Meek reveals that it is the British who refined these methods, and who have provided the precedent for legalised torture The Guardian, Friday February 18 2005