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Rumsfeld testifies before both Houses of Congress. Abuse scandal will get worse, Rumsfeld says. One Army captain now charged. Three senior officers received career ending rebukes. More to follow. House Armed Services Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter warned the worst is yet to come. Based on the Article 15-6 Report issued by Maj. Gen. Taguba, Duncan claims that the investigation will ultimately reveal instances of rape and perhaps even murder at Abu Ghraib.
Earlier that week I remarked
that the liberal Democrats in both the House and Senate would seize
the opportunity to turn the prisoner abuse scandal into an election
issue. On Thursday of last week, Congressman Charles Rangel [D-NY]
Several Congressmen and
liberal Senators attempted to paint the picture that the Abu Ghraib
abuses had been covered up by the military and that they became public
only after they were revealed by CBS. In point of fact, the Pentagon
advised Congress and the White House, in January. In March, Gen.
Antonio M. Taguba's Article 15 Report about Although it was, and continues
to be, alleged by liberal Democrats in both the House and Senate, that
there was a coverup by the Pentagon and the Bush Administration
to prevent members Over the weekend, charges were filed against U.S. Army Captain Donald J. Reese, 39, the commander of the 372nd Military Police Company. Reese is charged with failing to properly supervise his soldiers. To date, he is the highest ranking officer to be charged. Many in the military hope that Reese becomes their "Lt. William Calley," but that is not likely.* (Calley, you will recall bore the brunt of alleged rampant atrocities in Vietnam.) A career-ending reprimand was issued to Col. Thomas M. Pappas last week. Pappas, who is now the third senior officer to receive a severe rebuke, is billeted in Germany. He commands the 205th Intelligence Brigade which handles interrogations not only in Abu Ghraib, but in all of the detention centers related to the War on Terrorism. In addition to 16 additional criminal investigations of military personnel, 42 civilian intelligence contractors are also under criminal investigation at this time.. The photos were made public
last Wednesday as CBS used them to promote a segment they were
showing on 60-Minutes II that evening. The photos showed two
of the three female soldiers thus far charged Pfc. Lynndie
England, 21, and Spc. Sabrina D. Harman, 26humiliating
naked prisoners. While Harman was among the six who initially Army Reserve Brig. Gen.
Janis Karpinski, head of the 800th Military Police Brigade, who
commanded all of the troops stationed at Abu Ghraib After she was formally
reprimanded by Gen. Sanchez, Gen. Karpinski appeared on
ABC's Good Morning America with her attorney, Neal
Puckett. Karpinski argued on Good Morning America
that if the military decides that she is "responsible" for
what happened at Abu Ghraibwhich they did when they relieved
her of commandthen, she said, the military should also hold Lt.
Gen. Ricardo Sanchez equally responsible. Since her In her argument to the media Karpinski ignored the fact that in her assignment in Baghdad she was the defacto "warden" of Abu Ghraib and the other 15 penal institutions in Iraq. What happened within the prison's walls was her specific assigned responsibility. The fact that she was also the warden of fifteen other prisons does not lessen her responsibility at Abu Ghraib. And, the fact that she chose to be an absentee manager, or failed to appoint good deputies at Abu Ghraib does not mitigate her culpability. If anything, it actually makes her even more indictable since it was her responsibility to make sure that each prison had capable administration and that the proper code of conduct was observed by the guards of all the prisons under her charge at all times. The buck, in this case, stopped at her desk, not at Sanchez's. When it is your responsibility, you have an obligation to make certain the rules of good military conduct are observed at all times. That is, after all, why she wore the big single silver stars on her collars. Gen. Karpinski told Good Morning America that had she known those types of abuses were going on, she would have acted very quickly to put a stop to them. Of course she would have. But, it can be argued that had Karpinski had a firm control of the prison system she was supposed to be overseeing, she should have known everything that was going on at Abu Ghraib and the other prisons in her care That was, after all, her responsibility.. Karpinski further ducked her responsibility by arguing that the CIA was theoretically in charge of the section of the prison where the abuses took place and, therefore, it was out of her purview. But, as the commander of the prison system, she should have known what was happening on her watch. Spc. Harmon from Lorton, Virginia, claims that the 372nd Military Police Company took their orders directly from Army Intelligencemeaning Pappas' 205th Intelligence Brigade, from CIA operatives and from civilian intelligence personnel at the prison. Harman is specifically charged with taking many of the inflammatory photographs. Specifically the pyramid photo in which she is posed. She also videotaped detainees who were forced to masturbate to the amusement of Harmon, England and Ambuhl. In emails Harmon sent home to her family, she told those receiving her emails that detainees would be handed over to her unit by Army intelligence officers, by CIA operatives or by the civilian contractors, to "soften up" before they were interrogated by the :professionals." The operative who brought the detainees to them, she said, would determine whether or not the 372nd should be 'nice to them" or not. If the prisoner was cooperative, they were allowed to keep their clothingand their mattresses. They would even be allowed cigarettes and hot meals. Those who did not cooperate were treated like animals. Army Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba was independently charged with performing the initial investigation into the sex abuse scandal. His 53-page internal report to Gen. Sanchez was to determine if there were grounds to court martial any of those who were involved. Gen. Taguba said there was "...no clear line of authority at the prison..." Taguba's findings dovetailed with the view of Gen. George Casey, the Army's vice-chief of staff who said that there was a complete breakdown of discipline in the Iraqi prison system under the authority of Karpinski. Taguba, however, specifically blamed Lt. Col. Jerry L. Phillabaum who was in command of the 320th Military Police at Abu Ghraib. Phillabaum was Karpinski's man on the ground at Abu Gharib. Phillabaumlike Karpinskireceived a career-terminating reprimand and was relieved of his command. The report, which appears to have circulated quite freely within the military chain of command, was kept from the civilian authority in the Pentagon and from the oversight committees in Congress until this week. Now construed by the Democrats in the House and Senate Armed Services Committees as a coverup, the Abu Gharib incident will become an election issue with Democrats blaming Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld for the coverup. On Tuesday Senate Democrats accused Rumsfeld of concealing the full scope of the investigation in an effort to make Rumsfeld culpable in order to tie the scandal to the Bush Administration for electioneering purposes. Excerpts from the overview of the Article 15-6 Report (below) paint an alarming picture of the abuses going on at Abu Ghraibeven without reading the entire 53- page report. The words are graphic enough. There is no need to see the photographs to understand the wanton abuses that took place within Tier 1A of Abu Ghraib. There is not a Congressman or Senator on either the House or Senate Armed Services Committees that did not know that substantial abuses took place at Abu Ghraib. Nor is there any doubt that the CBS leak came from the liberal members on one, or both, of those committees. If that can be substantiated, whatever member, or members, of Congress involved in the sharing of classified information needs to be impeached and removed from office since that individual, or individuals, willfully committed an act of sedition against the United States of America. This is not a partisan political issue, this is a matter that concerns the national security of the United States, and those who released this information to the news media need to held accountable for their actions just as those who committed these vile acts need to be held accountable for their actions as well. The overview of the Article 15-6 Report begins with a comment that the "...numerous incidents of sadistic, blatant and wanton criminal abuses were inflicted on several detainees. This systemic and illegal abuse of detainees was intentionally perpetuated by several members of the military police guard force (372nd Military Police Company, 320th Military Police Battalion, 80th MP Brigade). In Tier 1-A of the Abu Ghraib Prison. The allegations of abuse were substantiated by detailed witness statements (ANNEX 26) and the discovery of extremely graphic photographic evidence. Due to the extremely sensitive nature of these photographs and videos, the ongoing CID investigation, and the potential for the criminal prosecution of several suspects, the photographic evidence is not included in the body of my investigation. The pictures and videos are available from the Criminal Investigative Command and the CTJF-7 prosecution team." Gen. Taguba's report continues: "...I find the intention abuse of detainees by military police personnel included the following acts: [a] Punching, slapping, and kicking detainees; jumping on their naked feet; [b] videotaping and photographing naked male and female detainees; [c] forcibly arranging detainees in various sexually explicit positions for photographing; [d] forcing detainees to remove their clothing and keeping them naked for several days at a time; [e] forcing naked male detainees to wear women's underwear; [f] forcing naked male detainees to masturbate themselves while being photographed and videotaped; [g] arranging naked male detainees in a pile and then jumping on them; [h] 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; [i] writing "I am a rapeist" [sic] on the leg of a detainee alleged to have forcibly raped a 15-year old female detainee, and then photographing him naked; [j] placing a dog chain or strap around a naked detainee's neck and having a female soldier pose for a picture; [k] a male MP guard having sex with a female detainee' [l] using military working dogs (without muzzles) to intimidate and frighten detainees; [m] taking photographs of dead Iraqi detainees." Also alleged are the following criminal offenses that violate the international protocols of interrogation: [1] breaking chemical lights and pouring the phosphoric liquid on the detainees; [2] beating detainees with a broom handle and a chair; [3] sodomizing male detainees with a broom handle shoved up their rectum, and threatening to sodomize them with fluorescent tubes: [4] threatening male detainees with rape; [5] and threatening detainees with a loaded 9mm pistol. Several of those charged provided Taguba's investigators with signed confessions. By doing so, they waived their Article 32 rightsthe equivalent to a preliminary hearing. Each of them will stand before a general court martial. Very likely, the defense of the enlisted personnel from the 372nd Military Police Company will be twofold: First, that they were simply obeying orders. Second, the argument of their lawyers will be that none of them were appraised of the international protocols that govern the conduct of prisoners of war and of political detainees. The legal argument for the first defense fails before it begins since none of the members of the 372nd who have been charged were specifically ordered to physically or psychologically sexually abuse any of the detainees. According to the Spc Harman's email records (which were seized in the investigation), the 372nd participants were never specifically ordered to do anything demeaning to any of those within their "care." Because even if the part-time soldiers in the 372nd Military Police Company did not know the protocols of the Geneva Convention, the interrogators from the 205th Intelligence Brigade and the CIA did. They knew plausible deniability existed for them only if they did not have any first hand knowledge of the wrongdoing they hoped the 372nd inflicted would soften up the detainees enough that they would get the Intel they needed to find the remaining leaders of the resistance not only in Iraq but in Afghanistanand perhaps in the United Statesas well. The most immediate result of the sexual abuse was a greatly increased number of detainee escapes and attempted escapes. Scores of detaineessometimes with the assistance of Iraqi guardsescaped or attempted to escape from Abu Ghraib since the spring of last year. In one instance, on June 9, 2003, several detainees jumped an MP, beat him, and then overwhelmed their MP guards. Military police guarding the fence line fired on the detainees as they attempted to climb the fence. Five detainees were wounded. In another escape incident, on June 12, 2003, the 800th Military Police Brigade was told that a mass escape was planned within 24 hours The only precautions taken were announcements, made in Arabic, informing the detainees of camp rulesone of which was that they were not to attempt to escape. When the escape happened, detainee #7166 was shot and killed by a MP guard.. Escapes were so common, Taguba's report states, that investigations simply didn't occur. No effort was made to find out how the detainee escaped. The reports only noted when it was discovered that the detainee was gone. By the time this investigation is complete and Congress defangs the military intelligence community, the CIA and DIA will likely discover they are not going to be allowed to question any detainee without a UN official present. And the much needed Intel that our enemies get from using pretty much the same, if not worse, means of interrogation, will no longer be available. America's intelligence community will then be as blind as this nation's civilian intelligence agencies. When that happens, the antiwar members of Senate: Teddy Kennedy, John Kerry, Carl Levin, Robert Byrd, Hillary Clinton, Diane Feinstein, Barbara Boxer, Barbara Mikulski, Chuck Schumer, Ron Wyden and Mark Pryor, will feel they have done their party a good service. I wonder why it is that so many of those in the US, Senate who hate the US military are on the Senate Armed Services Committee? Is it possibly to make it easier for them to deconstruct the military? The American people need to remember that it was the "enemy within"our own Congressmen, Senators, Hollywood celebrotoes and members of the "unbiased" media that caused America to lose the war in Vietnam. Those same sinister faces are once again painting us as the Ugly Americans.
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Copyright ©
Jon Christian Ryter.
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