Iraq: Whistleblowers Describe Routine, Severe Abuse
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
As
a military jury in Texas considers the fate of Lynndie England,
the low-ranking reservist pictured in the notorious photos of the
abuse of Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in late 2003, two
sergeants and a captain in one of the U.S. Army's most decorated
combat units have come forward with accounts of routine, systematic
and often severe beatings committed against detainees at a base
near Fallujah from 2003 through 2004.
According
to their testimony, featured in a new report by Human Rights Watch
(HRW), beatings and other forms of torture were often either ordered
or approved by superior officers and took place on virtually a daily
basis. The soldiers, all of whom had also been deployed to Afghanistan
before coming to Iraq, testified that the same techniques were used
in both countries.
The
beatings were so severe that they resulted in broken bones "every
other week" at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Mercury, where detainees
would ordinarily be held for three or four days before being transferred
to Abu Ghraib. In one case, an Army cook broke the leg of a detainee
with a metal baseball bat, according to one of the sergeants quoted
in the report, entitled "Leadership Failure."
Residents
of Fallujah, an insurgent stronghold since the 2003 invasion, referred
to the unit as "The Murderous Maniacs," because of their treatment
of detainees, according to the report.
Although
none of the three soldiers has been deployed to Iraq this year,
they all said they believed that practices they witnessed at FOB
Mercury continue, according to the report.
The
three – all active-duty members of the 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute
Infantry Regiment of the Army 82nd Airborne Division – said that
they had repeatedly sought guidance up the chain of command on the
applicability of the Geneva Conventions or other rules to regarding
the appropriate treatment of detainees in Iraq, but to no avail.
The
captain, referred to as "Officer C" in the report, said he had made
persistent efforts over 17 months to raise concerns about the abuses
and obtain clearer rules about the treatment of detainees but was
consistently told by higher-ups to ignore abuses and to "consider
your career."
"In
many cases, he was encouraged to keep his concerns quiet; his brigade
commander, for example, rebuffed him when he asked for an investigation
into these allegations of abuse," according to the report. Only
when he began taking his concerns to members of Congress, according
to the report, did the Army agree to investigate his complaints.
However,
"just days before the publication of this report he was told that
he would not be granted a pass to meet on his day off with staff
members of U.S. Senators John McCain and John Warner," who, along
with two other Republican senators, have sponsored legislation that
would require the Pentagon to abide by the Geneva Conventions and
the Army Field Manual in its treatment of all detainees.
Their
effort has so far been frustrated by opposition from the George
W. Bush administration, notably Vice President Dick Cheney, who
has personally lobbied against the provision, and the Republican
leadership in Congress.
When
the Abu Ghraib scandal broke nearly 18 months ago, the Bush administration
claimed that only a handful of poorly trained reservists were responsible.
But in the intervening months, hundreds of other cases of abuse
in both Iraq and Afghanistan have come to light through the release
of U.S. government documents, reports by the International Committee
of the Red Cross, media reports, and detainee accounts.
While
the Pentagon has initiated investigations, administrative hearings
and, in a few cases, courts-martial, they have been confined mostly
to low-ranking personnel, permitting the administration to claim
that whatever abuses have taken place were isolated or spontaneous.
But
the firsthand accounts by the three soldiers, according to HRW,
"suggest that the mistreatment of prisoners by the U.S. military
is even more widespread than has been acknowledged to date, including
among troops belonging to some of the best trained, most decorated
and highly respected units in the U.S. Army."
Suspected
insurgents, according to the testimonies, were called PUCs, for
"Persons Under Control," to distinguish them from prisoners of war,
or POWs, a practice that first began in Afghanistan after the Pentagon
announced that it did not consider detainees captured there subject
to the protections afforded by the Geneva Conventions for POWs.
PUCs
were held in tents at FOB Mercury that were surrounded by concertina
wire and were routinely subjected to abusive techniques that included
"smoking," which was normally ordered by Military Intelligence before
interrogations and involved 12 to 24 hours of stress positions,
sleep or liquid deprivation, and physical exercises sometimes to
the point of unconsciousness, and "f**king," which referred to beating
or torturing detainees severely.
Frontline
and other soldiers were invited to take part in both practices,
according to the report, while, if the detainees were injured as
a result of the abuse, a physicians' assistant would administer
an analgesic and sign off on a report stating that the injury took
place during capture.
The
beatings and other abuses served mainly to relieve stress, according
to the three soldiers. "On their day off people would show up all
the time," said one sergeant. "Everyone in camp knew if you wanted
to work out your frustration you show up at the PUC tent. In a way
it was sport."
The
soldiers blamed the abuses in large part on the failure of civilian
and military leaders to clarify what was and was not permitted,
particularly in light of the administration's position that the
Geneva Convention, in which the unit had been trained, did not apply
to detainees captured in Afghanistan.
"We
knew where the Geneva Conventions drew the line, but then you get
that confusion when the (Secretary of Defense) and the president
make that statement," said the captain. After the invasion of Iraq,
"none of the unit policies changed. Iraq was cast as part of the
war on terror, not a separate entity in and of itself but a part
of a larger war."
"Leadership
failed to provide clear guidance so we just developed it," said
one of the sergeants. "They wanted intel (intelligence). As long
as no PUCs came up dead it happened. We heard rumours of PUCs dying
so we were careful. We kept it to broken arms and legs and s__t
(like that)."
The
administration has strongly resisted calls by HRW and other rights
groups, as well as Democrats and some Republicans, for the appointment
of independent bipartisan commission to carry out a comprehensive
investigation of detainee abuses, including the responsibility,
if any, of senior military officers and government officials.
Civilians
believed to have been Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officers
had their own interrogation facilities at the base and at another
known as FOB Tiger close to the Syrian border. They sometimes removed
prisoners – and all their records – from the bases, apparently to
eliminate evidence of their having been held there.
September
26, 2005
Jim
Lobe [send him mail]
is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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