[The first defense is to lie. If exposed, the second defense is to
investigate, but not too much; the press will publicize, but they will not
get to the heart of the matter.--Howard Zinn, "Declarations
of Independence: Cross-Examining American Ideology," HarperPerrenial (1991), p. 225]
[Many of the detainees, including women, have been tortured during
interrogation and subjected to abysmal conditions of confinement.--Hanny
Megally, "Israel
Responsible for Abuses in Khiam Prison," Human Rights Watch, October
28, 1999]
[Khiam prison was a detention and interrogation centre during the years of
the Israeli occupation in Southern Lebanon. From 1985 until the Israeli
withdrawal this May, thousands of Lebanese were held in Khiam without trial.
Most of them were brutally tortured - some of them died.--VIDEO: "Israel accused," BBC Correspondent, November
3, 2000]
["Put simply, the School of the Americas has trained some of the most
brutal assassins, some of the cruelest dictators, and some of the worst
abusers of human rights the western hemisphere has ever seen," Moakley
(Rep. Joe Moakley, D-Mass) said in a statement. "If we don't stand for
human rights down in Georgia, how can we possibly expect to promote them
anywhere else in the world?"--Enver Masud, "America at the Crossroads: Might v. Right,
Confrontation v. Dialogue," The Wisdom Fund, September 13, 2001
[Negroponte (the
new U.S. ambassador to Iraq) acquired a reputation, justified or
not, as an old-fashioned imperialist. Sending him to the UN serves
notice that the Bush administration will not be bound by diplomatic niceties
as it conducts its foreign policy. . . .
Florencio Caballero, has given a detailed account of the "horrible things"
he did to dissidents in secret jails; one of the few survivors, Ines
Murillo, has corroborated his account, describing an eighty-day ordeal that
included beatings, electric shocks, and sexual abuse.--Stephen Kinzer, "Our Man in Honduras," The New
York Review of Books, September 20, 2001]
VIDEO: "Afghan Massacre: The
Convoy of Death," ACFTV, February 4, 2003
[The international outcry over the display of American casualties and
prisoners on Iraqi state television is thoroughly justified."Bush's Outrage Rings Hollow,"
Independent, March 25, 2003]
Richard T. Cooper, "General Casts War
in Religious Terms," Los Angeles Times, October 16, 2003
Rahul Mahajan, "Opening the Gates of Hell," The
Wisdom Fund, April 7, 2004
[A US general has been suspended in Iraq over the alleged abuse of prisoners
by US troops in jails she ran. Brigadier General Janice Karpinski is among
seven officers being investigated--"US general
suspended over abuse," BBC News, April 29, 2004]
[The graphic images include . . . naked prisoners being forced to simulate
sex acts. In another, a female soldier, with a cigarette in her mouth,
simulates holding a gun and pointing at a naked Iraqi's genitals.--"Iraqi abuse
photos spark shock," BBC News, April 30, 2004]
Seymour Hersh, "TORTURE AT ABU
GHRAIB," The New Yorker, April 30, 2004
"Iraq:
'Torture' photographs - torture not isolated, full investigations
vital," Amnesty International, April 30, 2004
Raymond Whitaker, Andy McSmith and Andrew Johnson, "Horrific new evidence of soldiers' brutality in Iraq: Secret report from
notorious Baghdad jail reveals beatings, rape and torture of prisoners by US
troops," The Independent, May 2, 2004
Scott Wilson, "
Angry Ex-Detainees Tell of Abuse," The Washington Post, May 3, 2004
James Risen, "Command Errors Aided Iraq Abuse, Army Has Found," The New York Times,
May 3, 2004
"Former human
rights minister told Bremer about Iraq detainee abuse," AFP, May 3, 2004
Tom Regan, "US
general: Abu Ghraib abuse coverup," Christian Science Monitor, May 3,
2004
Angus Howarth, "
Outrage at murder of Iraqi prisoners by US personnel," The Scotsman, May 5,
2004
Julian Borger, "Jailed
Iraqis hidden from Red Cross, says US army," Guardian, May 5, 2004
Ahdaf Soueif, "This
torture started at the very top: A profound racism infects the US and
British establishments," Guardian, May 5, 2004
Douglas Jehl and Eric Schmitt, "Army Discloses Criminal Inquiry on Prison Abuse," New York Times, May
5, 2004
[These pictures are pictures of colonial behavior, the demeaning of occupied
people, the insult to local tradition, the humiliation of the vanquished.
--Philip Kennicott, "A
Wretched New Picture Of America: Photos From Iraq Prison Show We Are Our Own
Worst Enemy," Washington Post, May 5, 2004]
Christian Davenport, "New Prison Images Emerge," Washington Post, May 6, 2004
[Most Americans truly believe--take this to be self-evident--that the
United States is not only the world's greatest country, but it has always
been the last great hope of earth, that Americans have always been willing,
more than any other Western power, to take on the White Man's burden, to
bring life, liberty and happiness to the rest of mankind. This is a
testament to the power of American media: that it can claim to be the
world's freest media and yet control--like no other 'free' media--what an
overwhelming majority of Americans know and believe about their country.
And what they know and believe is America the free, pure and virtuous.--M.
Shahid Alam, "Is the
Game Over?," CounterPunch, May 7, 2004]
[He said British and US military intelligence soldiers were trained in these
techniques, which were taught at the joint services interrogation
centre--David Leigh, "UK forces
taught torture methods," Guardian, May 8, 2004]
Peter Slevin and Robin Wright, "Abuse reports began almost at war's start," San Francisco
Chronicle, May 8, 2004
Dana Priest and Joe Stephens, "Pentagon
Approved Tougher Interrogations," Washington Post, May 9, 2004
[According to a political appointee within the Bush administration and U.S.
intelligence sources, the interrogators at Abu Ghraib included a number of
Arabic-speaking Israelis--Wayne Madsen, "The Israeli Torture
Template," CounterPunch, May 10, 2004]
[US forces in Vietnam routinely threw prisoners from helicopters, burned
them alive with white phosphorus, or wiped out entire villages without a
second thought.--Eric Margolis, " AMERICA'S
SHAME," ericmargolis.com, May 10, 2004]
Philip Webster, Tim Reid and Roland Watson, "Red
Cross warned of abuse again and again," The Times, May 11, 2004
Dana Priest and Joe Stephens, "Secret World of U.S. Interrogation," Washington Post, May 11, 2004
[A Senate hearing into the abuse of Iraqi prisoners was told on Tuesday that
Lt. Gen. William Boykin, an
evangelical Christian under review for saying his God was superior to that
of the Muslims, briefed a top Pentagon civilian official last summer on
recommendations on ways military interrogators could gain more intelligence
from Iraqi prisoners.--Andrea Shalal-Esa, "General Who Made Anti-Islam Remark Tied to POW Case," Reuters, May
11, 2004]
Andrea Shalal-Esa, "Evangelical
"Holy War" General Boykin Tied To Iraq POW Scandal," Indymedia.org, May
11, 2004
[. . . what is taking place in Iraq is child's play compared to what we did in the
Philippines a century ago.--Patrick J. Buchanan, "A Time for Truth,"
Antiwar.com, May 12, 2004]
["He pointed the laser sight directly in the middle of my chest," said
Professor Shaker, a political scientist at Baghdad University. "Then he
pointed to his penis. He told me, 'Come here, bitch, I'm going to fuck
you.'"--Luke Harding, "Focus
shifts to jail abuse of women," Guardian, May 12, 2004]
["He got all the agencies together-the C.I.A. and the N.S.A.-to get
pre-approval in place. Just say the code word and go." The operation had
across-the-board approval from Rumsfeld and from Condoleezza Rice, the
national-security adviser. President Bush was informed of the existence of
the program, the former intelligence official said.
"The rules are 'Grab whom you must. Do what you want.'"--Seymour M.
Hersh, "How a
secret Pentagon program came to Abu Ghraib," The New Yorker, May 15, 2004]
Andrew Buncombe and Kim Sengupta, "Secret
U.S. Jails Hold 10,000," New Zealand Herald, May 15, 2004
[THE THIRD GENEVA CONVENTION forbids subjecting POWs to "cruel treatment and
torture, outrages upon personal dignity and humiliating treatment." U.S. officials
say Iraqi and Taliban captives are covered by the convention but al-Qaeda members
are unlawful combatants and thus not covered. The convention says tribunals must
decide a prisoner's status.
THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE defines torture as any act that inflicts severe pain
or suffering, physical or mental. When the U.S. ratified the convention in 1990, it
defined torture as anything cruel and unusual under the Eighth Amendment. The
convention prohibits countries from handing over captives to another state know to
employ torture.--TIME, May 17, 2004, p.45]
[ . . . part of a policy instituted at US military detention centres from
Guantanamo and Afghanistan to Iraq,--Suzanne Goldenberg, "General's
sacking cleared way for Pentagon to rewrite rules," The Guardian, May 19, 2004]
John Barry, Michael Hirsh and Michael Isikoff, "The Roots of Torture: The road to Abu
Ghraib began after 9/11, when Washington wrote new rules to fight a new kind
of war," Newsweek International, May 24, 2004
[Some said they were pressed to denounce Islam or were force-fed pork and
liquor. Many provided graphic details of how they were sexually humiliated
and assaulted, threatened with rape, and forced to masturbate in front of
female soldiers.--Dana Priest and Joe Stephens, "
New Details of Prison Abuse Emerge: Abu Ghraib Detainees' Statements
Describe Sexual Humiliation And Savage Beatings," Washington Post, May 21,
2004]
Scott Higham and Joe Stephens, "Videos Amplify
Picture of Violence," Washington Post, May 21, 2004
Julian Borger, "US
general linked to Abu Ghraib abuse," Guardian, May 22, 2004
Kamal Ahmed, "Iraqis lose right to sue troops over war crimes: Military win
immunity pledge in deal on UN vote," The Observer, May 23, 2004
"Israeli
Agents Believed Involved in Abu Ghraib," Newsmax.com, May 24, 2004
[The Pentagon and the occupation powers in Iraq insist that only US citizens
have been allowed to question prisoners in Abu Ghraib - but this takes no
account of Americans who may also hold double citizenship. The once secret
torture report by US General Antonio Taguba refers to "third country
nationals" involved in the mistreatment of prisoners in Iraq.--Robert Fisk,
"The
things Bush didn't mention in his speech," Independent, May 26, 2004]
Robert Evans, "UN Says U.S.-Led Forces Violated Rights in
Iraq," Reuters, June 4, 2004
Steven Lee Myers and Eric Schmitt, "Wide Gaps Seen in U.S. Inquiries on Prison Abuse," New York Times, June
6, 2004
[Donald Rumsfeld's Defense Department is doing its best to stop potentially
incriminating information from coming out, that it's deflecting Congress's
inquiries and shielding higher-ups from investigation. Documents obtained by
NEWSWEEK also suggest that Rumsfeld's aides are trying hard to contain the
scandal, even within the Pentagon.--Michael Hirsh and John Barry, "The Abu Ghraib
Scandal Cover-Up?," Newsweek, June 7, 2004]
Chris Shumway, "Pattern Emerges of Sexual Assault Against Women Held by U.S.
Forces," The NewStandard, June 6, 2004
Jess Bravin, "Pentagon Report Set
Framework For Use of Torture," The Wall Street Journal, June 7, 2004
[A separate independent investigation is needed to probe how the Bush
administration altered standard Army interrogation policies after 2001 . . .
Since the administration is unwilling to undertake such a review, Congress
must act.--Editorial: "
Remedies for Prisoner Abuse," Washington Post, June 7, 2004]
[. . . most of the administration's top lawyers, with the exception of those
at the State Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, approved of the
Justice Department's position that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to
the war in Afghanistan. In addition, that memorandum, dated Feb. 2, 2002,
noted that lawyers for the Central Intelligence Agency had asked for an
explicit understanding that the administration's public pledge to abide by
the spirit of the conventions did not apply to its operatives. . . .
The March memorandum also contains a curious section in which the lawyers
argued that any torture committed at Guantanamo would not be a violation of
the anti-torture statute because the base was under American legal
jurisdiction and the statute concerns only torture committed overseas. That
view is in direct conflict with the position the administration has taken in
the Supreme Court, where it has argued that prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are
not entitled to constitutional protections because the base is outside
American jurisdiction.--Neil A. Lewis and Eric Schmitt, "Lawyers
Decided Bans on Torture Didn't Bind Bush," New York Times, June 8, 2004
[But that the United States has been complicit with torture in Vietnam and
Latin America, there can be no doubt.--Stephen Kinzer, "Feels Like the Third Time," The American Prospect, June
11, 2004]
Dana Priest, "Justice
Dept. Memo Says Torture 'May Be Justified'," Washington Post, June 13, 2004
[Americans are prepared to go to extraordinary lengths to capture suspects
and to ensure that they are taken to an environment where information can be
extracted as speedily as possible.--Jason Burke, "Secret World of US Jails," Observer, June 13, 2004]
"Letter sent to the United States Congress
regarding recent human rights issues in Iraq," June 16, 2004
["The U.S. government is holding prisoners in a secret system of off-shore
prisons beyond the reach of adequate supervision, accountability of law,"
said the report.--Sue Pleming, "Report Says U.S.
Has 'Secret' Detention Centers," Reuters, June 17, 2004]
["I accept the legal conclusion of the attorney general and the department
of justice that I have the authority to suspend Geneva [conventions] as
between the US and Afghanistan," Mr Bush writes. "I reserve the right to
exercise this authority in this or future conflicts."--Suzanne Goldenberg,
"Bush
memos show stance on torture," Guardian, June 24, 2004]
Rupert Cornwell, "US
backs down over immunity for soldiers," Independent, June 24, 2004
Robin Wright, "U.S. Immunity
In Iraq Will Go Beyond June 30," Washington Post, June 24, 2004
"More
Than 100 Children Imprisoned: Report Of Abuse By U.S. Soldiers," Der
Spiegel, July 4, 2004
"U.S. News
obtains all classified annexes to the Taguba report on Abu Ghraib," U.S.
News, July 9, 2004
Charles Arthur, "'Secret film shows Iraq prisoners sodomised'," Independent, July 16, 2004
Editorial: "An Army Whitewash," Washington Post, July 24, 2004
Richard A. Serrano, "Pentagon Cites Widespread Involvement
in Prison Abuses," Los Angeles Times, August 26, 2004
[The causal chain is all there: from Bush's February 2002 decision to
Rumsfeld's December 2002 authorization of nudity, stress positions and dogs;
to the adoption of those methods in Afghanistan and their sanction in Iraq
by a commander looking back to Bush's decision; and finally, to their use on
detainees by soldiers who reasonably believed they were executing official
policy.--Jackson Diehl, "How Torture Came Down From the
Top," Washington Post, July 27, 2004]
Seymour M. Hersh, "Chain
of Command : The Road from 9/11 to Abu Ghraib," HarperCollins (September 13, 2004)
Carol D. Leonnig, "U.S.
Stymies Detainee Access Despite Ruling, Lawyers Say," Washington Post,
October 14, 2004
Inigo Gilmore, "Jordan 'ghost' jail 'is
holding senior al-Qa'eda leaders'," The Telegraph, October 14, 2004
Dana Priest, "Memo Lets
CIA Take Detainees Out of Iraq: Practice Is Called Serious Breach of Geneva
Conventions," Washington Post, October 24, 2004
James Hidge and Linda Cooper, "The CIA and Abu
Ghraib: 50 Years of Teaching and Training Torturers," CounterPunch,
November 3, 2004
Stephen Grey, "US accused of 'torture flights'," Times, November 14, 2004
R. Jeffrey Smith and Dan Eggen, "New
Papers Suggest Detainee Abuse Was Widespread," Washington Post, December 21, 2004
Josh White, "Systematic
Concealment Of Detainees Is Found," Washington Post, March 24, 2005
Nick Meo, "UN
investigator who exposed US army abuse forced out of his job,"
Independent, April 25, 2005
[. . . members of Congress were allowed to see a slide show of 1,800 Abu
Ghraib photographs.--Matt Welch, "The Pentagon's Secret
Stash: Why we'll never see the second round of Abu Ghraib photos,"
Reason, April 2005]
Eugene Robinson, "Torture Whitewash," Washington Post, May 3, 2005
Greg Mitchell, "Pentagon Blocks Release of Abu Ghraib Images: Here's Why,"
Editor & Publisher, July 23, 2005
Jennifer Harbury, "Truth,
Torture, and the American Way: The History and Consequences of
U.S. Involvement in Torture," Beacon Press (September 15, 2005)
Editorial: "Vice President for Torture," Washington Post,
October 26, 2005
[It is illegal for the government to hold prisoners in such isolation in
secret prisons in the United States, which is why the CIA placed them
overseas--Dana Priest, "CIA Holds Terror Suspects in Secret Prisons,"
Washington Post, November 2, 2005]
PHOTOS: IRAQI PRISONER ABUSE
VIDEO: "The Torture Question," Frontline,
October 18, 2005
VIDEO: Robert Fisk, "We Have
Become the Criminals...We Have No Further Moral Cause to Fight For,"
Democracy Now!, November 9, 2005
VIDEO: Olivia Rousset, "Lifting the Hood: The Prisoners of Abu Ghraib," Dateline
(Australia), November 9, 2005
VIDEO:
Alfred W. McCoy, "A
Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on
Terror," Metropolitan Books (January 10, 2006)
VIDEO:
"Photos reignite Middle East anger,"
Reuters, February 16, 2006
[American authorities continue to insist that the abuse of Iraqi prisoners
at Abu Ghraib was an isolated incident in an otherwise well-run detention
system. That insistence, however, stands in sharp contrast to my own
experiences as an interrogator in Iraq.--Eric Fair, "An Iraq Interrogator's Nightmare,"
Washington Post, February 9, 2007]
VIDEO:
In 1971, psychology professor Philip Zimbardo created the
Stanford Prison Experiment in which 24 college students were randomly
assigned the roles of prison guards and prisoners at a makeshift jail on
campus. The experiment was scheduled to run for two weeks. By Day Two, the
guards were going far beyond just keeping the prisoners behind bars. In
scenes eerily similar to Abu Ghraib, prisoners were stripped naked, bags put
on their heads and sexually humiliated. The two-week experiment had to be
canceled after just six days.--Philip Zimbardo, "The Lucifer
Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil," Random House (March 27, 2007)
Jan Crawford Greenburg et al, "Sources: Top Bush Advisors
Approved 'Enhanced Interrogation'", ABC News, April 9, 2008
Iraq Veterans Against the War, "Winter
Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupations,"
Haymarket Books (September 1, 2008)
Aaron Glantz, "How the U.S. Military Turned Me into a Terrorist,"
AlterNet, October 13, 2008
["The classified memos, which have not been previously disclosed, were
requested by then-CIA Director George J. Tenet more than a year after the
start of the secret interrogations, according to four administration and
intelligence officials familiar with the documents."--Dan Froomkin, "Torture's Smoking Guns," Washington Post,
October 15, 2008]
A.J. Langguth, "U.S. Has a 45-year History of
Torture," Los Angeles Times, May 3, 2009
Duncan Gardham and Paul Cruickshank, "Abu Ghraib Abuse Photos 'Show
Rape'," Telegraph, May 28, 2009
Scott Horton"The Bogus Torture Coverup," Daily Beast,
May 30, 2009