Questions of War: How Far Up Does The Responsibility Go?
Torture At Abu Ghraib: American Soldiers Brutalized Iraqis


A pyramid of naked, hooded Iraqi prisoners, tortured at Abu Ghraib prison by U.S. troops

“In the era of Saddam Hussein, Abu Ghraib, twenty miles west of Baghdad, was one of the world’s most notorious prisons, with torture, weekly executions, and vile living conditions,” writes Seymour Hersh, in the latest edition of The New Yorker.
“As many as fifty thousand men and women — no accurate count is possible — were jammed into Abu Ghraib at one time, in twelve-by-twelve-foot cells that were little more than human holding pits.”
When the United States assumed responsibility for Abu Ghraib prison more than a year ago, conditions for prisoners were to have improved — the mandate of the U.S. troops to hold human rights as paramount — as preparations were made by the Bush administration to turn over responsibility for the prison to Iraqi authorities this June.
Earlier this year, when reports began to leak out that unsavoury practices within the prison had continued under U.S. command, the senior U.S. Army commander in Iraq authorized an investigation into the Iraqi prison system. The 53-page report that resulted, which was written by Major General Antonio M. Taguba and was not meant for public release, was devastating.
Taguba found numerous instances of “sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses” of Iraqis by American soldiers at the Abu Ghraib prison.
This systematic and illegal abuse, Taguba reported, was perpetrated by members of the 320th Military Police Battalion, and also by members of the American intelligence community. There was considerable evidence to support the allegations, Taguba added, including “detailed witness statements and the discovery of extremely graphic photographic evidence”; the photographs, which were taken by American soldiers while the abuse was going on, were not included in the report, Taguba said, because of their “extremely sensitive nature.”
This week, 10 of those photographs made their way into the hands of the American media. Some graphic details have been digitally obscured.
Today, the New York Times published their own investigative update on the “virtual collapse of the command structure in prisons” throughout Iraq.
Over in Britain, at the same time General Taguba’s confidential report was being made public in America, The Daily Mirror published its own graphic report of the gross abuse and torture of Iraqi prisoners — this time by British troops — along with horrific photos of that abuse.
Although a story in The Guardian reports that some quarters within the British Armed Forces have expressed doubts as to the authenticity of the photos, Piers Morgan, editor of The Daily Mirror, said his newspaper stands by the authenticity of the photos.

2 thoughts on “Questions of War: How Far Up Does The Responsibility Go?
Torture At Abu Ghraib: American Soldiers Brutalized Iraqis

  1. thank you raymond for making these shocking, disgusting photos available. I am appalled. US out of Iraq now. I know war is never pretty but really appals is that the Americans came in with an attitude of moral superiority. Now their reputation is in the toilet.

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