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http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1489115,00.html

Seymour Hersh: The 10 inquiries into prisoner abuse have let Bush and Co
off the hook

Saturday May 21, 2005
The Guardian

It's been over a year since I published a series of articles in the New
Yorker outlining the abuses at Abu Ghraib. There have been at least 10
official military investigations since then - none of which has challenged
the official Bush administration line that there was no high-level policy
condoning or overlooking such abuse. The buck always stops with the
handful of enlisted army reservists from the 372nd Military Police Company
whose images fill the iconic Abu Ghraib photos with their inappropriate
smiles and sadistic posing of the prisoners.

It's a dreary pattern. The reports and the subsequent Senate proceedings
are sometimes criticised on editorial pages. There are calls for a truly
independent investigation by the Senate or House. Then, as months pass
with no official action, the issue withers away, until the next set of
revelations revives it.
There is much more to be learned. What do I know? A few things stand out.
I know of the continuing practice of American operatives seizing suspected
terrorists and taking them, without any meaningful legal review, to
interrogation centres in south-east Asia and elsewhere. I know of the
young special forces officer whose subordinates were confronted with
charges of prisoner abuse and torture at a secret hearing after one of
them emailed explicit photos back home. The officer testified that, yes,
his men had done what the photos depicted, but they - and everybody in the
command - understood such treatment was condoned by higher-ups.

What else do I know? I know that the decision was made inside the Pentagon
in the first weeks of the Afghanistan war - which seemed "won" by December
2001 - to indefinitely detain scores of prisoners who were accumulating
daily at American staging posts throughout the country. At the time,
according to a memo, in my possession, addressed to Donald Rumsfeld, there
were "800-900 Pakistani boys 13-15 years of age in custody". I could not
learn if some or all of them have been released, or if some are still
being held.

A Pentagon spokesman, when asked to comment, said that he had no
information to substantiate the number in the document, and that there
were currently about 100 juveniles being held in Iraq and Afghanistan; he
did not address detainees held elsewhere. He said they received some
special care, but added "age is not a determining factor in detention ...
As with all the detainees, their release is contingent upon the
determination that they are not a threat and that they are of no further
intelligence value. Unfortunately, we have found that ... age does not
necessarily diminish threat potential."

The 10 official inquiries into Abu Ghraib are asking the wrong questions,
at least in terms of apportioning ultimate responsibility for the
treatment of prisoners. The question that never gets adequately answered
is this: what did the president do after being told about Abu Ghraib? It
is here that chronology becomes very important.

The US-led coalition forces swept to seeming immediate success in the
March 2003 invasion of Iraq, and by early April Baghdad had been taken.
Over the next few months, however, the resistance grew in scope,
persistence and skill. In August 2003 it became more aggressive. At this
point there was a decision to get tough with the thousands of prisoners in
Iraq, many of whom had been seized in random raids or at roadside
checkpoints. Major General Geoffrey D Miller, an army artillery officer
who, as commander at Guantánamo, had got tough with the prisoners there,
visited Baghdad to tutor the troops - to "Gitmo-ise" the Iraqi system.

By the beginning of October 2003 the reservists on the night shift at Abu
Ghraib had begun their abuse of prisoners. They were aware that some of
America's elite special forces units were also at work at the prison.
Those highly trained military men had been authorised by the Pentagon's
senior leadership to act far outside the normal rules of engagement. There
was no secret about the interrogation practices used throughout that
autumn and early winter, and few objections. In fact representatives of
one of the Pentagon's private contractors at Abu Ghraib, who were involved
in prisoner interrogation, were told that Condoleezza Rice, then the
president's national security adviser, had praised their efforts. It's not
clear why she would do so - there is still no evidence that the American
intelligence community has accumulated any significant information about
the operations of the resistance, who continue to strike US soldiers and
Iraqis. The night shift's activities at Abu Ghraib came to an end on
January 13 2004, when specialist Joseph M Darby, one of the 372nd
reservists, provided army police authorities with a disk full of explicit
images. By then, these horrors had been taking place for nearly four
months.

Three days later the army began an investigation. But it is what was not
done that is significant. There is no evidence that President Bush, upon
learning of the devastating conduct at Abu Ghraib, asked any hard
questions of Rumsfeld and his own aides in the White House; no evidence
that they took any significant steps, upon learning in mid-January of the
abuses, to review and modify the military's policy toward prisoners. I was
told by a high-level former intelligence official that within days of the
first reports the judicial system was programmed to begin prosecuting the
enlisted men and women in the photos and to go no further up the chain of
command.

In late April, after the CBS and New Yorker reports, a series of news
conferences and press briefings emphasised the White House's dismay over
the conduct of a few misguided soldiers at Abu Ghraib and the president's
repeated opposition to torture. Miller was introduced anew to the American
press corps in Baghdad and it was explained that the general had been
assigned to clean up the prison system and instil respect for the Geneva
conventions.

Despite Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo - not to mention Iraq and the failure of
intelligence - and the various roles they played in what went wrong,
Rumsfeld kept his job; Rice was promoted to secretary of state; Alberto
Gonzales, who commissioned the memos justifying torture, became attorney
general; deputy secretary of defence Paul Wolfowitz was nominated to the
presidency of the World Bank; and Stephen Cambone, under-secretary of
defence for intelligence and one of those most directly involved in the
policies on prisoners, was still one of Rumsfeld's closest confidants.
President Bush, asked about accountability, told the Washington Post
before his second inauguration that the American people had supplied all
the accountability needed - by re-electing him. Only seven enlisted men
and women have been charged or pleaded guilty to offences relating to Abu
Ghraib. No officer is facing criminal proceedings.

Such action, or inaction, has special significance for me. In my years of
reporting, since covering My Lai in 1969, I have come to know the human
costs of such events - and to believe that soldiers who participate can
become victims as well.

Amid my frenetic reporting for the New Yorker on Abu Ghraib, I was
telephoned by a middle-aged woman. She told me that a family member, a
young woman, was among those members of the 320th Military Police
Battalion, to which the 372nd was attached, who had returned to the US in
March. She came back a different person - distraught, angry and wanting
nothing to do with her immediate family. At some point afterward, the
older woman remembered that she had lent the reservist a portable computer
with a DVD player to take to Iraq; on it she discovered an extensive
series of images of a naked Iraqi prisoner flinching in fear before two
snarling dogs. One of the images was published in the New Yorker and then
all over the world.

The war, the older woman told me, was not the war for democracy and
freedom that she thought her young family member had been sent to fight.
Others must know, she said. There was one other thing she wanted to share
with me. Since returning from Iraq, the young woman had been getting large
black tattoos all over her body. She seemed intent on changing her skin.


· Extracted from The Chain of Command, published in paperback by Penguin
Press

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