New Prison Abuse Photos Outrage US Lawmakers
| Friday May 14, 2004
Associated Press -- Arab News WASHINGTON, 14 May 2004 — Fresh photos showing American soldiers brutalizing Iraqi prisoners with snarling dogs or forced sex left members of Congress angry and disgusted, but apparently with few new clues about how widespread the abuse was and who ultimately should be held accountable. In separate private screenings on Capitol Hill, House and Senate members saw photos and video Wednesday of Iraqi corpses, military dogs menacing cowering Iraqi prisoners, Iraqi women forced to expose themselves and other sexual abuses. Some lawmakers said the pictures included forced homosexual sex; others said the quality of the photos were too poor to discern what was happening. The 1,600-plus photos, which included scenes of abuse mixed in with travelogue-type snapshots, were in addition to those that already surfaced publicly depicting abuse and sexual humiliation at Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. The photos have created international condemnation and threatened to undermine US military and rebuilding efforts in Iraq. Lawmakers differed over whether the new batch of photos should be released — a decision likely will be left up to the Bush administration. Some said they feared releasing photos would only further inflame international passions; others argued it would demonstrate the openness of American society and limit the damage caused by the gradual leaking of photos to media outlets. En route to Iraq for a surprise visit yesterday, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told reporters traveling with him that administration lawyers oppose releasing the photos on grounds that would violate a Geneva Convention stricture against presenting images of prisoners that could be construed as degrading. Lawmakers also disagreed about whether the photos they saw were much worse than the ones already made public. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said, “It was significantly worse than anything that I had anticipated. Take the worst case and multiply it several times over.” But Sen. Jim Talent, R-Mo., said, “Anything like this is shocking...but it’s generally the same as what’s in the public domain — no huge surprises.” The viewing came a day after Islamic militants, in a video, showed the beheading of an American in Iraq to avenge the prison abuse. President Bush said “there’s no justification” for the killing of Nicholas Berg, 26, and that it would not shake US resolve to bring democracy to Iraq. Meanwhile, it was reported that the CIA has used coercion in interrogating prisoners who were high-level members of Al-Qaeda. The New York Times, quoting unidentified current and former counterterrorism officials, said at least one CIA worker has been disciplined for using a gun to threaten a detainee. Agency interrogators used a tactic known as “water boarding” on terrorism suspect Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, a tactic in which a strapped-down prisoner is pushed under water, making him believe he might drown, according to the Times. Mohammed is believed to have helped plan the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. “We have blunder after blunder after blunder,” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said yesterday on NBC’s “Today” show. “We have to know the climate, the atmosphere, who gave the green light for the violation of the Geneva Conventions” on treatment of prisoners of war, Kennedy said. The private Capitol Hill screening marked the latest turn in a scandal that has prompted Bush to apologize to the victims and Democrats to demand Rumsfeld’s dismissal. The Senate Armed Services Committee has been holding hearings to determine whether prisoner abuses were limited to the Abu Ghraib facility. The committee also wants to see whether responsibility went beyond a small group of enlisted soldiers and their immediate supervisors, who the Army says provided inadequate training and supervision. Among the uncertainties is whether military intelligence officials directly or indirectly encouraged the abuse in order to “soften up” detainees for interrogations. The Defense Department is investigating the abuse, and the courts-martial of three military police guards have been ordered. Lawmakers said the new photos showed small groups of soldiers — fewer than a dozen — abusing the prisoners. Many of the soldiers’ faces were already familiar from photos published worldwide. It wasn’t clear whether all the abuse took place at Abu Ghraib or at other locations, they said. Senators said the photographs were presented as a rapid slide show on a screen in the classified hearing room. Pentagon officials were present, but did not answer questions about the pictures, apparently fearing they might interfere with the any prosecutions. The photos were seized from service members and included many shots unrelated to the investigation, such as pictures of historic sites. Some photos showed what appeared to be soldiers having sex. Because of the vast number of photos — and members coming and going — not all saw the same slides, and impressions varied. “I saw cruel, sadistic torture,” said Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif. She said she saw a man hitting himself against a wall as though to knock himself unconscious. Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., said he did not see acts of violence, but what appeared to be “results of acts of violence.” He said he saw people in body bags and a person with a face “virtually gone.” He saw “people being stitched up above the eyebrow apparently unconscious.” Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., said, “There were people who were forced to have sex with each other.” |
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