Abu Ghraib general says she is being made a scapegoat

moghrabi

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May 25, 2004
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Abu Ghraib general says she is being made a scapegoat

FOREIGN STAFF


THE United States general who was in charge of Iraq’s notorious Abu Ghraib prison yesterday claimed she was being made a scapegoat for the abuse of inmates and said her successor at the jail once told her prisoners should be treated "like dogs".

In an interview aired by the BBC yesterday, Brigadier- General Janis Karpinski said Major-General Geoffrey Miller, who was in charge of the Guantánamo Bay camp and now oversees US prisons in Iraq, told her in the autumn that prisoners "are like dogs, and if you allow them to believe at any point that they are more than a dog then you’ve lost control of them".

Brig-Gen Karpinski’s comments were rejected out of hand yesterday by the US military, which accused her of lying.

Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson, a spokesman for US detention operations in Iraq, said Maj-Gen Miller "made no such comment to Brigadier-General Karpinski or to anybody else".

"This allegation flies in the face of the philosophy of humane treatment for all detainees, under all circumstances, that Major-General Miller adopted first at Guantánamo, and now at his position in Iraq," he said.

"Karpinski’s statement to the media is categorically false."

Brig-Gen Karpinski was suspended last month from command of the 800th Military Police Brigade after she and other officers were blamed by army investigators for paying too little attention to the Baghdad prison’s day-to-day operations and not acting strongly enough to discipline soldiers for violating standard procedures.

Several soldiers are facing courts-martial over abuse allegations at the jail, which flared when pictures of troops abusing and humiliating naked Iraqi detainees were published in April.

In her defence, Brig-Gen Karpinski has said that interrogations at the prison were not under her command but were run by a military intelligence unit that was "under increasing pressure to get more, as they call it, actionable intelligence".

She said that during a visit to Iraq in September, Maj-Gen Miller, then head of the Guantánamo Bay camp for Taleban and al-Qaeda suspects, spoke of wanting to "Gitmo-ise" Abu Ghraib by applying the Cuban facility’s regimented detention and interrogation techniques. "Gitmo" is army slang for Guantánamo Bay.

"He talked about Gitmo-ising in terms of what the [military police] were going to do, he was going to select the MPs, they were going to receive special training," she said.

"That training was going to come from the military intelligence command," Brig-Gen Karpinski added, noting that the troops under her command had no training in such interrogation techniques.

She said she was being made "a convenient scapegoat" in the abuse scandal. "The interrogation operation was directed, it was under a separate command and there was no reason for me to go out to look at Abu Ghraib at cell block 1A or 1B or visit the interrogation facilities."

She said she was unaware until November that the International Committee of the Red Cross had visited the jail and expressed concerns about detainees’ treatment to US officials.

She said she did not see the abuse photos - believed to have been taken late last year - until late January.

"I didn’t know in September, I didn’t know in October, I didn’t know ever" about any abuse, she said.

"Those pictures which I saw on the 23rd of January were more shocking to me than probably the rest of the world ... I was absolutely sickened by those images and I couldn’t even fathom a guess as to what happened to these people to make them go in such an opposite direction of how they were trained."

But Brig-Gen Karpinski, who has been suspended from her command for alleged failings at Abu Ghraib but not charged with any crime, said military police would not have taken Iraqis out of cells to pose them for photographs without being told to do so.


This article:

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=683772004
 

Cosmo

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Jul 10, 2004
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I don't get it. I just plain do not understand how the US military can get away with what it does. I try to stay away from topics like this, but ran across the subject today at another forum. I made the mistake of looking at the photos. No, I'm not providing a link here ... they are so disturbing I can't bring myself to do it. Instead I'll put a link to Wikipedia who has an article that is far less graphic. But equally horrifying.

Not being all that politically inclined, I've kept my low opinion of Bush to myself, for the most part. I've always thought the guy was a moron. Seeing what his troops have done, I now realize he's also earned the distinction of being a serial killer. And torturer. It was his "shock and awe" that released the troops on Iraq. Are the Iraq people all that much better off than when the Saddams had control?

Yi ... I'm going over to the joke thread to clear my palate.