THE HANDSTAND | OCTOBER 2005 |
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Washington Post June 14th 2004 The senior US military officer in Iraq, Lieutenant-General Ricardo Sanchez, approved senior officials at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib jail using military dogs, temperature extremes, reversed sleep patterns, sensory deprivation and diets of bread and water on detainees whenever they wished, newly obtained documents show. The US policy was approved early last September, shortly after an army general from Washington inspected the jail and briefed Pentagon officials on the use of military police there to help implement the new high-pressure methods. The documents spell out in greater detail than previously known the interrogation tactics General Sanchez authorised, and for the first time show that, before last October, they could be imposed without first seeking the approval of anyone outside the prison. That gave officers at Abu Ghraib wide latitude in handling detainees. Unnamed officials at US Central Command, which has overall military responsibility for Iraq, objected to some of the most severe of the 32 interrogation tactics approved by General Sanchez. As a result some of them were removed. |
A Washington Post editorial from July 29 notes that the testimony directly contradicts previous statements from Miller. In statements to investigators and in sworn testimony to Congress last year, the Post writes, Gen. Miller denied that he recommended the use of dogs for interrogation, or that they had been used at Guantánamo. No methods contrary to the Geneva Convention were presented at any time by the assistance team that I took to [Iraq], he said under oath on May 19, 2004. Yet Army investigators reported to Congress this month that, under Gen. Millers supervision at Guantánamo, an al Qaeda suspect named Mohamed Qahtani was threatened with snarling dogs, forced to wear womens underwear on his head and led by a leash attached to his chainsthe very abuse documented in the Abu Ghraib photographs.
Many abusive techniquesincluding the use of dogswere approved by Rumsfeld for use in Guantánamo Bay in December 2002. After opposition from military lawyers, Rumsfeld withdrew the list of approved techniques and appointed a working group to recommend a new one.
While Rumsfeld eventually issued a slightly more restrictive version of the list, the working group report based itself almost entirely on arguments coming from Justice Department and White House lawyers that gave a very broad sanction to military interrogators to torture prisoners. Beginning shortly after the attacks of September 11, administration lawyers, including the current attorney general and then White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales, sought to create a legal rationale for denying any rights to prisoners captured by the United States.
On September 14, 2003, Ricardo Sanchez,(see note-table above)then the top military commander in Iraq, issued a memo authorizing a number of techniques for use in Iraq, including the presence of military working dogs on the grounds that this technique exploits Arab fear of dogs while maintaining security during interrogations.
The fact that these low-level guards were using military dogs to intimidate Iraqi prisoners and soften them up for interrogation is therefore entirely in line with official Defense Department policy approved by Rumsfeld and Sanchez.
Underscoring the administrations determination to continue abusing prisoners, the White House has moved to block legislation in the Senate that would ban the military from using cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment on any of its detainees held anywhere in the world. The legislation is sponsored by several Republican senators, including John McCain and Lindsey Graham, who are concerned that the militarys policy of abuse will undermine morale and endanger US soldiers captured by other countries.
The measure was to be included as an amendment to a defense operations bill. Other amendments proposed by the senators included one that would prohibit the hiding of detainees from the International Red Cross and prevent the military from using any methods not authorized in the Army Field Manuel. These actions are already illegal under international law, but have been routinely violated by the administration. Army investigations have reported that hundreds of prisoners, known as ghost detainees, have been held without access to the Red Cross.
The amendments would not have affected the actions of the CIA, which currently operates a network of secret detention facilities in different parts of the world.
According to a Washington Post article of July 23, Vice President Dick Cheney met with the Republican senators on July 21 to press the administrations case that legislation on these matters would usurp the presidents authority andin the words of a White House officialinterfere with his ability to protect Americans effectively from terrorist attack.
The article continued by stating that the White House bluntly warned in a statement sent to Capital Hill on [July 21] that President Bushs advisers would urge him to veto the $442 billion defense bill if legislation is presented that would restrict the Presidents authority to protect Americans effectively from terrorist attack and bring terrorists to justice.
In other words, the White House continues to maintain that the abuse of prisoners and their illegal detention under international law is part of the presidents constitutional authority. Having failed to remove the amendments, the Republican leadership, aligned with the Bush administration, shelved the operations bill for the time being.
In a related development, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) have denounced the administration for blocking the release of all photos and videos depicting torture at Abu Ghraib. The two organizations, together with several other rights groups, filed a lawsuit in June 2004 demanding that the Defense Department release all evidence.
According to a July 22, 2005 statement by the CCR, Since then, the organizations have been repeatedly rebuffed in their efforts to investigate what happened at the prison. In June, the government requested and received an extension from the judge stating that they needed time in order to redact the faces of the men, women and children believed to be shown in the photographs and videos. They were given until today to produce the images, but at the eleventh hour filed a motion to oppose the release of the photos and videos, based on an entirely new argument: they are now requesting a 7(F) exemption from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act to withhold law enforcement-related information in order to protect the physical safety of individuals.
The unending stream of revelations regarding abuse carried out by US forces indicates once again that torture of prisoners has become government policy and is the product of decisions made at the highest levels of the Bush administration.
See Also:
Amidst new torture
reports, US military defends architect of abuse at
Guantánamo
[16 July 2005]
Bush administration
defends Guantánamo prison camp
[20 June 2005]
New documents confirm
widespread US abuse of Iraqi prisoners, implicate top
general
[30 March 2005]