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documented abuses.
Taguba's report cited numerous examples of inmate abuse, including:
Punching, slapping, and kicking
detainees; jumping on their naked feet.
Videotaping and photographing
naked male and female detainees.
Forcibly arranging detainees in
various sexually explicit positions for
photographing.
Forcing detainees to remove their
clothing and keeping them naked for
several days at a time.
Forcing naked male detainees to
wear women's underwear.
Forcing groups of male detainees
to masturbate while being photographed
and videotaped.
Arranging naked male detainees in
a pile and then jumping on them.
Positioning a naked detainee on a
MRE Box, with a sandbag on his head,
and attaching wires to his fingers, toes, and penis to simulate
electric torture.
A detainee forced to stand on
boxes
Writing "I am a Rapeist" [sic] on
the leg of a detainee alleged to have
raped a 15-year old fellow detainee, and then photographing him naked.
Placing a dog chain or strap
around a naked detainee's neck and having
a female soldier pose for a picture.
A male MP guard raping a female
detainee.
Taking photographs of dead Iraqi
detainees and MPs posing with cheerful
looks.
Breaking chemical lights and
pouring the phosphoric liquid on
detainees.
Threatening detainees with a
loaded 9mm pistol.
Pouring cold water on naked
detainees.
Beating detainees with a broom
handle and a chair.
Threatening male detainees with
rape.
Allowing a military police guard
to stitch the wound of a detainee who
was injured after being slammed against the wall in his cell.
Sodomizing a detainee with a
chemical light and perhaps a broom stick.
Using military working dogs
(without muzzles) to frighten and
intimidate detainees with threats of attack, and in one instance
actually biting and severely injuring a detainee.
By the time
Taguba's report was completed, 17 soldiers and officers,
including Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, were removed from duty,
and six soldiers faced courts martial and possible prison time on
charges of dereliction of duty, maltreatment, aggravated assault and
battery, as a result of their roles in the events.
Taguba said,
"'Specifically I suspect that Col. Thomas M. Pappas, Lt. Col. Steve L.
Jordan, Mr. Steven Stephanowicz and Mr. John Israel were either
directly or indirectly responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib and
strongly recommend immediate disciplinary actions , however, the online
diary of another CACI interrogator at Abu Ghraib,
Joe Ryan, reveals that a "Steve Stevanowicz" was still working at the
prison on April 26, 2004, suggesting that Taguba's conclusions were
ignored until the prison abuse scandal broke in the media.
An internal Army report by Maj. Gen. Ryder stated that some Iraqis were
held for long periods simply because they had expressed "displeasure or
ill will" toward U.S. forces.
Private Lynndie England signals a "thumbs up" sign and points at a
hooded, naked Iraqi prisoner.
In late April 2004, U.S.
television news-magazine 60 Minutes II broke a
story involving abuse and humiliation of Iraqi inmates by a group of
U.S. soldiers. The story included photographs depicting the abuse of
prisoners.
The news segment had been delayed by two weeks at the request of the
Department of Defense and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen.
Richard Myers, because of heavy fighting in Iraq. In the report, Dan
Rather interviewed Brig. Gen Mark Kimmitt, then-deputy director of
Coalition operations in Iraq.
Kimmitt stated, "The first thing I’d say
is we’re appalled as well. These are our
fellow soldiers. These are the people we work with every day, and they
represent us. They wear the same uniform as us, and they let their
fellow soldiers down... and if we can't hold ourselves up as an example
of how to treat people with dignity and respect … We can't ask that
other nations to that to our soldiers as well...So what would I tell
the people of Iraq? This is wrong. This is reprehensible. But this is
not representative of the 150,000 soldiers that are over here. I'd say
the same thing to the American people... Don't judge your army based on
the actions of a few."
At the same time, Kimmitt said: "I'd like to sit here and say that
these are the only prisoner abuse cases that we're aware of, but we
know that there have been some other ones since we've been here in
Iraq."
Former Marine Lt. Col. Bill Cowan was also interviewed, stating: "We
went into Iraq to stop things like this from happening, and indeed,
here they are happening under our tutelage."
Rather
interviewed Army Reserve Staff Sgt.
Chip Frederick (right) , a
participant in the abuse, whose civilian job was as a corrections
officer at a Virginia prison.
Frederick stated, "We had no support, no
training whatsoever. And I kept asking my chain of command for certain
things...like rules and regulations,” says Frederick. “And it just
wasn't happening." Frederick's video diary, sent home from Iraq,
provided some of the images used in the story. In the diary are
listed detailed, dated entries that chronicle abuse
and names, for example,
They
stressed him out so bad that the man passed away. The next day the
medics came in and put his body on a stretcher, placed a fake I.V. in
his arm [to
suggest he died under medical care] and took him away. This
OGA (other governmental agency) [prisoner] was never processed and
therefore never had a number.
and, "MI has been
present and
witnessed such activity. MI has
encouraged and told us great job [and] that they were now getting
positive results and information."
An April, 2004 article by Seymour M. Hersh in The New Yorker magazine
explored the abuses in detail, and used as its source a copy of the
Taguba report.
The New Yorker, under the direction of editor David Remnick, posted a
report on its website by Hersh, along with a number of graphic and
disturbing images of the torture taken by U.S. military prison guards
with digital cameras. The article, entitled "Torture at Abu Ghraib,"
was published was followed in the next two weeks by two more articles
on the same subject, "Chain of Command” and "The Gray Zone,” also by
Mr. Hersh.
"It was only after [CBS] learned that The New Yorker planned to publish
the pictures in its next issue that they went ahead with their report
on April 28."
Hersh's undercover sources claimed that an interrogation program called
"Copper Green" was an official and systemic misuse of coercive methods
which, although deemed "successful" during the 2001 invasion of
Afghanistan, would be heavily criticized in intelligence circles as an
improper application to the context of fighting citizen-"insurgents" in
Iraq. This theory, and the existence of "Copper Green" itself, has been
denied by The Pentagon.
More evidence of torture
According to Donald Rumsfeld, many more pictures and videotapes of the
abuse at Abu Ghraib exist. Photos and videos revealed by the Pentagon
to lawmakers in a private viewing on the 12th of May, 2004, showed
attack dogs snarling at cowering prisoners, Iraqi women forced to
expose their breasts, and naked prisoners forced to have sex with each
other, the lawmakers revealed.
Members of the Senate reviewed
photographs supplied by the Defense Department which have not been
released to the public. They note that in addition to the abuses
mentioned, some of the U.S. military guards had sex in front of the
prisoners.
Hersh has made other claims about the abuses at Abu Ghraib, in his
speaking appearances, where he has admitted he will change facts and
events for audience consumption, although no admission by Hersh can be
cited by his critics. At the July 2004 conference of the ACLU, he
stated there are are tapes of American soldiers sodomizing Iraqi boys,
and that these tapes are being held by the Bush administration: "The
boys were sodomized with the cameras rolling, and the worst part is the
soundtrack, of the boys shrieking," Notably, Hersh would revise this
claim in his book Chain of Command, stating, "An attorney involved in
the case told me in July 2004 that one of the witness statements he had
read described the rape of a boy by a foreign contract employee who
served as an interpreter at Abu Ghraib,” Hersh wrote. “In the
statement, which had not been made public, the lawyer told me, a
prisoner stated that he was a witness to the rape, and that a woman was
taking pictures."
The New York Times, in a report on January 12, 2005, reported testimony
suggesting that the following events had taken place at Abu Ghraib: