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SAN FRANCISCO, Apr 30 (IPS) - Saturday marked the third anniversary
of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. On Apr. 28, 2004 CBS broadcast
the first graphic photos of torture inside of the U.S.-run
prison in Iraq on its 60 Minutes II programme.
"Americans did this to an Iraqi prisoner," news
anchor Dan Rather said as a slideshow of disturbing torture
photos flashed across the screen. "The man was told to
stand on a box with his head covered, with wires attached
to his hands. He was told if he fell off the box, he would
be electrocuted."
More photos followed. U.S. soldiers posed with naked Iraqi
prisoners, including one with detainees stacked in a pyramid.
In most of the photos, the soldiers were smiling. At the time,
the Pentagon, represented by Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt,
said only a few "bad apples" engaged in torture.
"What would I tell the people of Iraq?" he said.
"This is wrong. This is reprehensible, but this is not
representative of the 150,000 soldiers that are over here.
I would say the same thing to the American people. Don't judge
your Army based on the actions of a few."
The soldiers in the photos were prosecuted and many received
prison sentences, but no high-ranking officers or George W.
Bush administration officials were put on trial. That didn't
sit well with U.S. Army interrogator Tony Lagouranis. He came
forward to say that torture was common practice in Iraq and
that he had himself tortured prisoners while stationed in
Mosul in 2004.
"We would bring in dogs," he told IPS. "They
would be muzzled dogs, but the prisoner would be blindfolded
so he wouldn't realise the dog was muzzled. We would try to
terrify them and induce pain, put them in stress positions,
sleep deprivation, all of these together to break down the
prisoner."
Subsequent reports indicated that each of those interrogation
policies was approved by then Secretary of Defence Donald
Rumsfeld.
Lagouranis says his immediate superiors orchestrated the
torture he meted out.
"My superiors organised the dogs," he said. "They
had organised the shipping container that we would use to
maintain these prisoners in this state and they just told
us, 'This is what we're going to do for this guy' or 'We've
targeted this person for this and that's what you're going
to do' and we followed orders."
After the photos were published, however, the military command
structure changed its tactics. Joshua Casteel is a former
U.S. Army interrogator at Abu Ghraib. He arrived at the prison
in June 2004, a few months after the scandal broke.
"By the time I arrived at Abu Ghraib, every camera in
the world was pointed at us," he said. "So things
had changed radically. We were not allowed to touch people
except in acts of reassurance -- like if we wanted to calm
someone down, we might be able to touch their hand. We were
also being watched by cameras and audio recording equipment
and by visiting dignitaries on occasion. So (interrogations)
were more structured around just talking in a room."
The main problem, Casteel says, was that over 90 percent
of the people he interrogated were innocent -- simply caught
up in large-scale military raids. Because the U.S. military
rarely releases detainees, Casteel says he was forced to interrogate
innocent prisoners again and again.
"I was constantly being asked, 'Why am I being held
here? I want answers!'" Casteel said. "But that
was my job. We were supposed to be finding answers to our
questions, but we kept being put into situations that were
incredibly puzzling because talking to people was like trying
to get blood from a turnip. They were the ones that had a
greater justification for the need to have answers."
The Washington Post reported this month that the U.S. military
now holds 18,000 security detainees in Iraq -- almost double
the number of Iraqis incarcerated when the Abu Ghraib scandal
broke three years ago. The newspaper reports that this number
will soon pass 20,000, with more and more Iraqis apprehended
in sweeps as part of Bush's "surge". Most of those
detainees will be held indefinitely, will never be charged
with any crime, and will not be allowed to see a lawyer.
Meantime, Joshua Casteel left the military in 2005 after
requesting and receiving a discharge as a conscientious objector.
He's now a graduate student at the University of Iowa studying
playwriting and non-fiction writing.
Ironically, he said, it was an interrogation of a self-described
jihadist that caused him to leave the service.
"I had an interrogation with a 22-year-old Saudi Arabian
who was very straightforward that he had come to Iraq to conduct
jihad," Casteel said. "We started having a conversation
about religion and ethics and he told me that I was a very
strange man who was a Christian but didn't follow the teachings
of Jesus to love my enemy and pray for the persecuted. My
nickname in my unit was 'priest' because I spent a lot of
time in the chapel."
"So I had this moment with a man who was a jihadi and
he was giving me a lesson on the sermon on the mount,"
Casteel said. "That was about five months into my time
in Iraq and I had already had about 100 interrogations and
I was so weary of the whole process. I told him that I thought
he was right and that there was a massive contradiction involved
with me doing my job and being a Christian."
"I wanted to have a conversation with him about ethics
and the cycle of vengeance and how idiotic it was that his
people said it was okay for him to come and kill me and my
people told me it was okay to kill him," Casteel said.
"Why is it that we can't find a different path together?"
(Inter Press Service: 4/30/07)
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