http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-interrogate-abuse12-2008dec12,0,2238629.story
>From the Los Angeles Times

Rumsfeld blamed in detainee abuse scandals
A bipartisan Senate report calls decisions made by the former Defense
secretary a 'direct cause' of inhumane treatment of prisoners of war.
Other Bush officials also are faulted.
By Greg Miller and Julian E. Barnes

December 12, 2008

Reporting from Washington — A bipartisan Senate report released
Thursday concludes that decisions made by former Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld were a "direct cause" of widespread detainee
abuses, and that other Bush administration officials were to blame for
creating a legal and moral climate that contributed to inhumane
treatment.

The report, endorsed by Democrats and Republicans on the Senate Armed
Services Committee, is the most forceful denunciation to date of the
role that Rumsfeld and other top officials played in the prisoner
abuse scandals of the last five years.

The document also challenges assertions by senior Bush administration
officials that the most egregious cases of prisoner mistreatment were
isolated incidents of appalling conduct by U.S. troops.

"The abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib in late 2003 was not simply the
result of a few soldiers acting on their own," the report says.

Instead, the document says, a series of high-level decisions in the
Bush administration "conveyed the message that physical pressures and
degradation were appropriate treatment for detainees in U.S. military
custody."

The document aims its harshest criticism at Rumsfeld's decision in
December 2002 to authorize the use of aggressive interrogation
techniques at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Although the order was rescinded six weeks later, the report describes
it as "a direct cause for detainee abuse" at Guantanamo Bay, and
concludes that it "influenced and contributed to the use of abusive
techniques, including military working dogs, forced nudity and stress
positions, in Afghanistan and Iraq."

The report also criticizes President Bush, although less harshly. In
particular, it cites a presidential memorandum signed Feb. 7, 2002,
that denied detainees captured in Afghanistan the protections of the
Geneva Conventions, which ban abusive treatment of prisoners of war.

Bush's decision to bypass an international law that had been observed
by American troops for decades sent a message that "impacted the
treatment of detainees in U.S. custody," the report says.

That message was bolstered by a series of memos from the Justice
Department, the report says, that "distorted the meaning and intent of
anti-torture laws" and "rationalized the abuse of detainees in U.S.
custody."

The Senate report represents the culmination of an 18-month
investigation by the committee's staff. It is the latest, and in many
respects the most comprehensive, in a series of government
investigations started after photographs surfaced in April 2004 of
prisoners at the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq being stripped of
their clothes, piled in pyramids and strapped to what appeared to be
electrical wires.

Those abuses "cannot be chalked up to the actions of 'a few bad
apples,' " said Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), chairman of the Armed
Services Committee, referring to a line used by former Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz in an attempt to downplay the scandal.

Levin said it was "both unconscionable and false" for Rumsfeld and
others to blame troops and escape accountability. Even so, the report
does not call for further investigation or punishment.

The findings were approved last month by the 17 committee members in
attendance, indicating the report had the support of at least four of
the panel's Republicans. Committee officials did not identify which
senators on the 25- person panel were not present for the vote.

Among the panel's members are several GOP senators who have criticized
the administration's conduct on detainee matters, including John
McCain of Arizona, John W. Warner of Virginia, Susan Collins of Maine
and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

Levin said the committee had reviewed thousands of documents and
conducted interviews with more than 70 people, and received written
responses from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

The investigation did not focus on the CIA's treatment of detainees,
or the agency's operation of a network of secret prisons.

But the inquiry turned up new information showing that the Defense
Department had consulted with the CIA on interrogation matters, and
that White House officials had reviewed CIA methods earlier and in
more detail than previously acknowledged.

Most of the findings had been disclosed in the panel's interim reports
or in other investigations. But the report released Thursday traces
the origins of aggressive interrogation techniques to U.S. military
survival training programs. It follows the use of coercive methods as
they migrated from Guantanamo Bay to Afghanistan, then to Iraq and Abu
Ghraib.

The techniques -- based on practices detailed in military courses on
survival, evasion, resistance and escape, known as SERE -- included
stress positions, the removal of clothing and the exploitation of
phobias, including fear of dogs.

One month after Rumsfeld issued his order approving such methods at
Guantanamo, they were part of a presentation witnessed by Army Capt.
Carolyn Wood at Bagram air base in Afghanistan, the report says. Wood
has been criticized by human rights groups for her role in U.S.
interrogation techniques, and was singled out in one investigation as
failing to properly oversee interrogators.

The committee said the Afghanistan techniques eventually became
standard procedure for all U.S. forces in Iraq. And by summer 2003,
Wood, then serving in Iraq, proposed that the practices become the
interrogation policy at Abu Ghraib.

After Wood proposed extending the use of the techniques and pressure
mounted to acquire intelligence about the insurgency, the top
commander in Iraq, Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, authorized
interrogators on Sept. 14, 2003, to use stress positions, "sleep
management" and dogs when questioning detainees.

A month later, he rescinded permission to use the techniques.

"The new policy, however, contained ambiguities with respect to
certain techniques, such as the use of dogs in interrogations, and led
to confusion about which techniques were permitted," the Senate report
says.

Miller and Barnes are writers in our Washington bureau.

[email protected]

[email protected]

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to