Abusing
Our Soldiers
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
There
are many reasons we have the Geneva Convention, and protecting our
own guards from life-long psychological problems is one of them.
What
do you think is going to happen 15 years from now when one of these
present-day guards is asked by his son, "What did you do in
the war, dad?" All the horror of the beating and the killing
is going to come rushing back to these men and with the passage
of time, many will realize the crime they have committed.
I
don’t care how hard you think you are, looking back at the beating
and torture of men and boys who are shackled will be revolting.
Those in Washington don’t have to worry because everything was "out
of sight and out of mind" for them.
From
documents dated August 16, 2003, and obtained by the American Civil
Liberties Union by suing our government, we learn of this order
given to our prison guards in Iraq, "Take the detainee[s] out
back and beat the f__k out of them."
Think
about what that order means to a young American soldier, who has
watched some of his friends get killed or maimed over there.
From
Independent News of the United Kingdom, 27 March, 2005, "Damning
evidence of American soldiers abusing detainees at another prison
in Iraq was made public yesterday. It details how prisoners were
‘systematically and intentionally mistreated’ at a military base
in Mosul, culminating in the death of one. Nobody was court-martialed
over the abuse."
You
will notice that the new evidence of prisoner abuse was made public
on Good Friday and this has become a Bush administration ploy used
to minimize the impact of damning information about Bush’s War on
Terror. Give the public information just before the weekend and
there is a much smaller distribution to the citizenship.
The
ACLU, "charged that the government is attempting to bury the
torture scandal involving the US military by failing to comply with
a court order requiring release of documents to the ACLU. The documents
the government does release are being issued in advance to the media
in ways calculated to minimize coverage and public access."
You
see, if the Bush administration doles out the documents in small
batches, the full impact of the torture is not learned until weeks,
maybe months later. George Bush’s people know how to keep you and
me in the dark about what they are doing in our names. Of course
the rest of the world knows what is going on before we do, because
the reports of torture and killing of prisoners by our troops are
fully reported the world over with testimony from those we torture.
Our media does not even contact those people.
Some
of the documents released Friday tell of a high school student whose
jaw was broken and that "Abuse of detainees in some form or
other was acceptable practice and was demonstrated to inexperienced
infantry guards almost as guidance."
The
report also talks about the death of Abu Malik Kenami while in detention
in Mosul, Iraq. While in a report in the UK’s Independent,
"Last week the US reopened an inquiry into how an Iraqi government
scientist died while in detention. Mohammad Munim al-izmerly, 65
when he died on 31 January 2004, is the only known weapons scientist
to have died in US custody. The family commissioned an Iraqi post
mortem, which found he died of a blow to the head."
The
federal court order for this week’s document release came from a
Freedom of Information Act request filed by the ACLU, the Center
for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans
for Common Sense, and Veterans for Peace.
Veterans
groups want to stop our torture of Iraqi prisoners, because they
know how much our troops will suffer later on in life when they
reflect on what they have done to helpless human beings.
One
of the ways used to get American troops to torture is to use their
hate and fear. Troops whose units had suffered from the enemy were
put in charge of detainees and like the boy who had his jaw broken,
"The detainees had sandbags over their heads that were marked
with different crimes, leading the guards to believe that the particular
detainee committed that particular crime." The bag on the boy’s
head was marked "IED" the acronym for the roadside bombs
that have killed and maimed so many American soldiers. None of the
soldiers, who were in the room when this boy had his jaw broken,
saw who hit him, so none were punished.
That
is how it starts, you get your guards to believe that the people
you have in detention are the people who hurt their fellow troopers,
even if they were just taken in a sweep that took all males of a
certain age. After repeatedly beating prisoners and being rewarded
by your superiors for doing it, it gets easier and easier. We haven’t
been in Iraq long enough to have mass killings yet, but that is
just a matter of time.
The
Pentagon admits to over 100 deaths in our prison camps and even
admits that a couple dozen of those deaths were result of out and
out murder. Those are the numbers the Pentagon will admit to and
if you were ever in the service you have to know those numbers are
very very conservative. The Pentagon would not admit to any of this
unless the proof was irrefutable.
On
August 12th, 1949, we signed the Geneva Convention to
stop the abuse of Prisoners of War, but the Bush administration
has turned a blind eye to the abuses we use in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Soon we will have enough hardened prison guards and torturers to
disallow that Convention completely if that is what we want to do,
but we better think about what this is doing to those carrying out
this horrible job for us.
March
28, 2005
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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