-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=519435
Image by image, confession by confession, the horror emerges

Until their publication shocked the world, these pictures were dismissed by
the Pentagon as the work of 'six morons who lost the war'. Now the White
House says it is as shocked as anyone about what they reveal, and that a few
bad apples have poisoned the reputation of a nation. But yesterday the first
evidence emerged of systematic abuse of Iraqis. In this special report, we
follow the trail from 9/11, the detention camps of Afghanistan and
Guantanamo Bay to the shame of Abu Ghraib

By Raymond Whitaker and RUpert Cornwell
09 May 2004

As the Abu Ghraib scandal engulfed Washington last week, with the media full
of pictures of grinning US military police next to naked Iraqi detainees,
Jim Miklaszewski of NBC News called a contact in the Pentagon with a query
about the six soldiers facing charges for the abuse. "You mean the six
morons who lost the war?" the official said. From this side of the Atlantic
the official's response might seem a little blinkered. What about all the
questions and doubts that already existed - about the exaggerations and lies
which took us into war, about the bungled aftermath of a supremely
successful military campaign, and about the cost in money and lives of
suppressing a growing insurgency against the supposed liberators of the
country? He spoke, however, for many Americans, almost certainly including
President George Bush and his Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.

The obscene antics of Private Lynndie England and her boyfriend (by whom she
is now pregnant), Specialist Charles Graner, who appear most often in the
photographs, have crystallised half-suppressed doubts in the US about what
is going on in Iraq. After a slow start, the unfolding tale of the abuse of
Iraqi prisoners has swept everything else off the radar screen in
Washington. Gradually the full appalling implications are being grasped by
an administration that hitherto has never been concerned for anyone's
opinion other than its own. A president already facing a tough re-election
fight this autumn now realises he has a potentially career-ending disaster
on his hands.

As late as Wednesday, as his handlers pushed him into belated damage control
by giving interviews to Arab-language TV networks, Mr Bush still didn't get
it. To be sure, he declared his "abhorrence" - but then seemed to lecture
his questioners on their failure to understand the special godliness of
America, which a few individuals had so heinously betrayed. An apology? No
way.

Within 24 hours the White House corrected the blunder. After meeting King
Abdullah of Jordan, the President said sorry, not once but twice. By Friday
Mr Rumsfeld, if anything even more obdurate and sure of his own
infallibility than his President, was expressing contrition in his opening
statement to a senate committee. Aware that nothing could be more harmful
than a constant stream of further revelations, he took care to warn that
there was worse to come, in the form of videos as well as photographs. They
are said to include Iraqi guards raping young boys, and American soldiers
having sex with a female detainee, "acting inappropriately" with a corpse
and beating an Iraqi detainee close to death.

Under questioning, however, the Defence Secretary reverted to his combative
and self-confident self, and by yesterday Mr Bush was repeating the message
he, Mr Rumsfeld and the anonymous Pentagon official are desperate to get
across: what happened at Abu Ghraib, the President said in his weekly radio
address, was "the wrongdoing of a few".

There was fresh evidence yesterday, however, that the abuse was systematic.
One of the accused soldiers, Specialist Sabrina Harman, told The Washington
Post that she was specifically ordered by intelligence interrogators to
break down prisoners for interrogation. "They would bring in one to several
prisoners at a time already hooded and cuffed," she said by email from
Baghdad. "The job of the MP was to keep them awake, make it hell so they
would talk."

Prisoners were stripped, searched and made to stand or kneel for hours.
"Sometimes they were forced to stand on boxes or hold boxes or to exercise
to tire them out," she said. "The person who brought them in would set the
standards on whether or not to 'be nice' ... Sleep, food, clothes,
mattresses, cigarettes were all privileges and were granted with information
received."

Although the relative openness of the US contrasts starkly with British
secretiveness over abuses by soldiers, Mr Rumsfeld's congressional
inquisitors made little headway when it came to establishing how high
responsibility for the events at Abu Ghraib went. Nor did they tease out the
detail of who in the White House knew what about the affair, let alone when
they knew it. The insistence of the Defence Secretary and other senior
figures that the military moved swiftly as soon as a soldier at Abu Ghraib
blew the whistle has gone largely unchallenged.

What is clear, however, is that the US authorities simply did not want to
know. Complaints from dozens, even hundreds of Iraqi detainees about their
treatment were brushed aside. Detailed reports submitted to the American and
British governments by human rights organisations, including the Red Cross
and Amnesty, some dating back as much as a year, were ignored. Even previous
investigations by the military were not followed up, or simply swept under
the carpet.

A copy of the International Red Cross report to the US on prison conditions
in Iraq, made in February, was obtained by The Wall Street Journal last
week. Not only does it detail abuses including keeping prisoners naked in
cells and in total darkness, it says prisoners were beaten, in one case
leading to death, and that soldiers fired on unarmed prisoners from
watchtowers, killing some of them.

The report, which concludes there have been serious violations of the Geneva
Conventions, says that the ill-treatment went beyond exceptional cases and
was "widely tolerated", especially when it came to extracting information
from Iraqis detained in connection with suspected security offences. "We
were dealing here with a broad pattern, not individual acts. There was a
pattern and a system," said the Red Cross director, Pierre Krähenbühl,
directly contradicting Mr Rumsfeld's assertion that the abuses were an
"exceptional situation, not a pattern or practice".

The US authorities did not take action until they received a formal
complaint from a serving soldier, and a senior officer, Major General
Antonio Taguba, was called in to investigate. Last week it emerged that
neither Mr Rumsfeld nor the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General
Richard Myers, had read all of the devastating Taguba report until they
found out that it had been leaked to Seymour Hersh, the legendary
investigative journalist who now writes for The New Yorker. Even then the
first response of General Myers was to seek to persuade the CBS network not
to show the photographs which they had obtained, on the grounds that they
would inflame the situation in Iraq further.

The pictures are out; however, worse is to come, and the moral authority
claimed for the invasion of Iraq by neo- conservatives such as Mr Rumsfeld's
deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, has been utterly dispelled. Far from sowing the
seeds of a democratic revolution in the Middle East, America is reaping a
whirlwind of fury in the region. The blackest week of the Bush presidency
has also destroyed another illusion: that his administration is the quietly
purring Cadillac among national security teams. Its carefully cultivated
aura of harmony has been blown to the four winds. The old "White House in
disarray" headlines which flourished under Bush the elder and his successor,
Bill Clinton, are being dusted off.

First, Colin Powell sent forth his closest aides - his deputy Richard
Armitage and his chief of staff Larry Wilkerson - to inform GQ magazine of
the Secretary of State's frustration with administration policies, and his
exhaustion at the endless battles with the Pentagon and his friend turned
foe, Vice-President Dick Cheney. Within hours of this latest mini-rebellion
by the reluctant warrior Powell, there were orchestrated leaks of Mr Bush's
dressing-down of Mr Rumsfeld, held guilty of omitting to keep a famously
uncurious President abreast of the unfolding scandal at Abu Ghraib. The
vaunted unity of the Bush team is in tatters.

How has it reached this point? The answer is that the trail to Abu Ghraib
runs through the detention camps of Bagram in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay
in Cuba to the attacks of 11 September 2001. As the former head of the CIA's
counter-terrorism centre, Cofer Black, told a congressional committee a year
afterwards, "This is a highly classified area, but I have to say that all
you need to know: there was a before 9/11, and there was an after 9/11.
After 9/11 the gloves came off."

The message, as Mr Black went on to explain, is that there were "no limits"
in an "aggressive, relentless, worldwide pursuit of any terrorist who
threatens us". The notion that those whom America deems its enemies have no
rights has been endlessly reinforced, not least in words by Mr Rumsfeld, and
in deed.

Hundreds of "enemy combatants" have been held in a legal vacuum at
Guantanamo Bay and at Bagram in Afghanistan, among facilities that are
known, for more than two years. Other suspects have been "rendered" to less
fastidious jurisdictions such as Egypt and Morocco, where they can be
tortured by the local security services. America has refused to submit to
any international legal scrutiny or allow its nationals to be tried by the
International Criminal Court.

One fact elicited by Friday's congressional hearings was that of 25 deaths
in US military custody, two - one in Iraq, one in Afghanistan - have been
ruled "criminal homicide". A soldier was dishonourably discharged in the
Iraq case, but no further actions was taken, while the civilian interrogator
held responsible in Afghanistan remains at his post, contributing to an
atmosphere of impunity.

And when the new chief of prisons in Iraq is Major General Geoffrey Miller,
a former Guantanamo Bay commander who has ruled that techniques such as
sleep deprivation and "stress positions" may be used to extract information,
it is hardly surprising that military intelligence officers, CIA agents and
civilian contract interrogators felt they had official approval for
"softening up" methods. Nor that their attitude spread to the military
police who were supposed to keep prisoners from harm.

The most startling feature of General Miller's recent comments was his
pledge that he had put a stop to the hooding of prisoners in Iraq. Few
members of the public who saw the photographs of prisoners hooded and
shackled throughout the flight from Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay realised
the practice was illegal. Judging by the latest pictures, this was news to
the staff at Abu Ghraib.

The harsh light now being shone into the dark corners of the "war on
terrorism" has caught the White House in its beam, but Mr Rumsfeld is
robustly refusing to resign. This being an election year, he may yet get
away with it, by shunting the matter off into in-house investigations and an
independent commission. For Mr Bush to sack the prime architect of the
disastrous occupation of Iraq would be acknowledgement that the abuse was
not an isolated aberration, but evidence of a systemic failure, calling into
question the very wisdom of the invasion of Iraq.

Even when mistakes do not matter, this President does not admit to them. To
concede that the Iraq war was wrong, after the fiascos of the missing WMD
and Saddam Hussein's non-existent ties with al-Qa'ida, would be to tear away
the very reason of his presidency.

So, most likely, he will persevere with Mr Rumsfeld and the various other
hardliners and neo-conservatives who fashioned his Mesopotamian adventure -
braving a new tidal wave of revulsion in the Arab world and hoping that the
next sensation in Washington will consign this one to oblivion.

It will not be easy. Even Karl Rove, ruthless political operator and the
President's most influential election-season adviser at the White House, has
told colleagues that it will be decades before the US recovers from the
damage. The trick now will be to separate enduring disaster from the
short-run requirements of securing a second term for his boss.

Iraq and the recent unflattering 9/11 hearings notwithstanding, Mr Rove
still believes that the President's strongest suit remains his perceived
competence in protecting the US against terrorism, reinforced by the recent
upturn in the economy. If the surge in job creation of the past two months
continues into the summer, Mr Bush's chances of re-election will brighten -
whatever happens in Iraq.













------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Make a clean sweep of pop-up ads. Yahoo! Companion Toolbar.
Now with Pop-Up Blocker. Get it for free!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/L5YrjA/eSIIAA/yQLSAA/TySplB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

-__ ___ _ ___ __ ___ _ _ _ __
/-_|-0-\-V-/-\|-|-__|-|-|-/-_|
\_-\--_/\-/|-\\-|-_||-V-V-\_-\
|__/_|--//-|_|\_|___|\_A_/|__/

 SPY NEWS is OSINT newsletter and discussion list associated to
Mario's Cyberspace Station - The Global Intelligence News Portal
 http://mprofaca.cro.net

######## CAUTION! #########
 Since you are receiving and reading documents, news stories,
comments and opinions not only from so called (or self-proclaimed)
"reliable sources", but also a lot of possible misinformation collected
by Spy News moderator and subscribers and posted to Spy News
for OSINT purposes - it should be a serious reason (particularly to
journalists and web publishers) to think twice before using it for their
story writing, further publishing or forwarding throughout Cyberspace.

To unsubscribe:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

*** FAIR USE NOTICE: This message contains copyrighted material whose use has not been 
specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Spy News is making it available 
without profit to SPY NEWS eGroup members who have expressed a prior interest in 
receiving the included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, techniques, 
human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other intelligence related issues, 
for non-profit research and educational purposes only. We believe that this 
constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of 
the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of 
your own that go beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright 
owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

 -----------------------------------------------

 SPY NEWS home page:
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/spynews

 Mario Profaca
 http://mprofaca.cro.net/
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/spynews/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/



www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substanceâ??not soap-boxingâ??please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'â??with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsâ??is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to