Pentagon Details Abuse of Iraq Detainees
By LOLITA C. BALDOR
Associated Press Writer
06/17/06 -- - WASHINGTON (AP)
- U.S. special operations forces
fed some Iraqi detainees only bread and water for up to 17 days,
used unapproved interrogation practices such as sleep
deprivation and loud music and stripped at least one prisoner,
according to a Pentagon report on incidents dating to 2003 and
2004.
The report, with many portions blacked out, concludes that the
detainees' treatment was wrong but not illegal and reflected
inadequate resources and lack of oversight and proper guidance
more than deliberate abuse. No military personnel were punished
as a result of the investigation.
Released to the American Civil Liberties Union on Friday, the
details of the report were was part of more than 1,000 pages of
documents, including two major reports - one by Army Brig. Gen.
Richard Formica on specials operations forces in Iraq and one by
Brig. Gen. Charles Jacoby, on Afghanistan detainees.
While some of the incidents have been reported previously and
reviewed by members of Congress, this was the first time the
documents were released publicly. Specific names and locations,
including the identities of the military units, were blacked
out.
The report comes as the military is grappling with new
allegations of war crimes in an increasingly unpopular conflict
in Iraq. And they could hamper the Bush administration's
election-year effort to turn public opinion around with upbeat
reports about the progress of the new government in Baghdad.
``Both the Formica and the Jacoby report demonstrate that the
government is really not taking the investigation of detainee
abuse seriously,'' said Amrit Sing, an ACLU attorney.
Sing questioned why the two reports only focused on a limited
number of incidents. In particular, she said there have been
numerous documents showing that special operations forces abused
detainees, and yet Formica only reviewed a few cases.
Ordered more than two years ago, the Formica review recommended
changes including better training, new standards for detention
centers and updated policies for detainee operations. His final
report is dated November 2004 but was just released to the ACLU
in its unclassified, censored form on Friday.
According to a senior defense official, all eight of Formica's
recommendations for changes and improvements in detention
policies were implemented shortly after he completed the report.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to speak publicly about it.
Formica reviewed allegations of abuse by special operations
forces who held detainees in temporary facilities, often hastily
set up near where they were captured.
Formica found that overall conditions ``did not comport with the
spirit of the principles set forth in the Geneva Conventions,''
which require humane treatment of prisoners.
Formica said, for example, that the forces used five
interrogation techniques that were allowed at one point but had
been rescinded by then: sleep or food deprivation, yelling and
loud music, forcing detainees to remain in stressful physical
positions and changing environmental conditions - which could
include making their locations too hot or too cold.
Formica also found that the nakedness ``was unnecessary and
inconsistent with the principles of dignity and respect'' in the
Geneva Conventions. And he said that while one of the prisoners
fed just bread and water appeared to be in good condition, 17
days of that diet ``is too long.''
In his recommendations he said detainees should receive adequate
bedding, food, water and holding areas, get systematic medical
screenings and a clear record of their detention at every level.
He dismissed other specific allegations of more serious abuse in
several earlier cases. He said that the allegations of rape,
sodomy and beatings were not substantiated by medical
examinations and that the accusers' stories changed over time
and were not credible.
The reports' release comes less than a week after three
detainees committed suicide at the Guantanamo Bay detention
facility in Cuba, highlighting anew accusations of abuse. A
little more than two years ago, the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse
scandal in Iraq came to light, with its graphic photographs of
detainees being sexually humiliated and threatened with dogs.
Another review was conducted by Jacoby, who was dispatched in
May 2004 to examine the treatment of detainees at facilities in
Afghanistan. His report found no evidence of abuse but
identified a number of problems, including inadequate
enforcement of proper interrogation practices.
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
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