Witnessing the Meltdown 13469 Curiosities served |
2004-05-07 12:52 PM "Highlights" from TPM Previous Entry :: Next Entry Read/Post Comments (0) Josh Marshall has this on Iraqi prisoner abuse: I feel knocked on my heels by this stuff. U.S. soldiers who detained an elderly Iraqi woman last year placed a harness on her, made her crawl on all fours and rode her like a donkey, Prime Minister Tony Blair’s personal human rights envoy to Iraq said Wednesday. The envoy, legislator Ann Clwyd, said she had investigated the claims of the woman in her 70s and believed they were true.” ... “She was held for about six weeks without charge,” the envoy told Wednesday’s Evening Standard newspaper. “During that time she was insulted and told she was a donkey. A harness was put on her, and an American rode on her back.” Clwyd said the woman has recovered physically but remains traumatized. “I am satisfied the case has now been resolved satisfactorily,” the envoy told British Broadcasting Corp. radio Wednesday. “She got a visit last week from the authorities, and she is about to have her papers and jewelry returned to her.” I can’t think of anything to say.
And this: Sy Hersh from last night on O’Reilly ... First of all, it’s going to get much worse. This kind of stuff was much more widespread. I can tell you just from the phone calls I’ve had in the last 24 hours, even more, there are other photos out there. There are many more photos even inside that unit. There are videotapes of stuff that you wouldn’t want to mention on national television that was done. There was a lot of problems. There was a special women’s section. There were young boys in there. There were things done to young boys that were videotaped. It’s much worse. And the Maj. Gen. Taguba was very tough about it. He said this place was riddled with violent, awful actions against prisoners. Worse and worse.
And this: And then there are passages like this that are at once entirely predictable and yet leave you wondering what things have come to ... “A unit goes out on a raid and they have a target and the target is not available; they just grab anybody because that was their job,” Mr Nelson said, referring to counter-insurgency operations in Iraq. “The troops are under a lot of stress and they don’t know one guy from the next. They’re not cultural experts. All they want is to count down the days and hopefully go home. “I’ve read reports from capturing units where the capturing unit wrote, ‘the target was not at home. The neighbour came out to see what was going on and we grabbed him’,” he said. According to Mr Nelson’s account, the victims’ very innocence made them more likely to be abused, because the interrogators refused to believe they could have been picked up on such arbitrary grounds. Interrogators “weren’t interested in going through the less glamorous work of sifting through the chaff to get to the kernels of truth from the willing detainees; they were interested in ‘breaking’ tough targets”, he said Then there’s the matter, , that one contractor working in Iraq was employing Apartheid-era paramilitaries, some of whom had had to seek amnesty from the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission for war crimes, terrorism and murders they’d committed under the old regime. It gets deeper and darker.
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