Liberal-oriented columns, commentary and archived articles on national and international news and political events--with emphasis on China--by Joseph Bosco, author and veteran journalist who is currently a Visiting Professor of Media & Foreign Policy at the China Foreign Affairs University, Beijing, P.R. China.  

Friday, May 28, 2004

Gone To New York...

It is almost dawn and I am writing this in a hotel near the Tokyo airport, where we spent a sleepless night on the first leg of a quick trip from Beijing to Manhattan. My blogging has been at a minimum this past week or so due to a deadline on a chapter of a book that I had to get to my publisher before leaving for the trip. While it took two all-nighters, the chapter was finished an zipped off to my editor only a few hours ago.

Unfortunately, my blogging will remain spotty due to the trip to New York. It is a short trip; we will return next Thursday, June 3rd. Thank you all for your patience and support.
 


5:15 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Several Choice Words From the Man Who Should Be President

Ms. Dowd and Al Gore do quite a linguistic number on a president who most likely will not know of it--he doesn't read, which is only one reason he has such difficulty talking above the junior high school level. Not wanting to slight so many bright young Americans, I should clarify the analogy by mentioning that I meant only Texas junior high schools, where the required reading includes the wacky creation myth of the Bible.
An outraged president called yesterday for the immediate resignations of Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, George Tenet, Condoleezza Rice, Douglas Feith and Stephen Cambone.

Unfortunately, it wasn't the president in the White House. It was the shadow president, the one who won the popular vote.

Thundering at New York University about the man the Supreme Court chose over him, Al Gore said, "He has created more anger and righteous indignation against us as Americans than any leader of our country in the 228 years of our existence as a nation." Holy Nixon!

The former vice president accused the commander in chief of being responsible for "an American gulag" in Abu Ghraib, as depraved as anything devised by the Marquis de Sade. It was hard to tell whether President Bush would be more offended by the sadomasochism or by the fact that the marquis was French.

Mr. Gore blasted the administration's "twisted values" and dominatrix attitude toward the world: "Dominance is as dominance does."

"George W. Bush promised us a foreign policy with humility," he said, in one of the most virulent attacks on a sitting president ever made by such a high-ranking former official. "Instead, he has brought us humiliation in the eyes of the world."
There is more of Ms. Dowd at The New York Times

 


4:44 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




The President of Fear

This man who likes to be called the "warrior President" has yet again demonstrated that he is the same one-trick pony who went from an "asterisk" president, a disrespected usurper without a mandate, a vision, or any popularity on September 10, 2001, to the "War on Terror" chest-thumper on September 12--after coming out of his shameful "hiding and flying" on 9/11.

Now, with the country more polarized than at any time since the Vietnam War era, with much of the world openly wishing for our continued comeuppance--and that's from our friends, everyone else is wishing for our demise--and his poll numbers worse than "Poppy's" in his re-election debacle, what does Dubya do? He tries to again turn us into a nation of cowards, so afraid of "seven shadows" that we must have our "Mission Accomplished" stud around for another 4 years of humiliation as he protects us from the "evil-doers"!

How is it that even forty-something percent of Americans can't see through this scam and affront upon the nation and people that beat Hitler and Tojo at the same time without all of this whimpering and cowering and changing of who we are? Are we even remotely similar Americans to that "Greatest Generation"? Or are we hide-and-fly Bushies, ghostly zombies who answer only to the call of a fear-monger?
WASHINGTON, May 26 - The Bush administration said on Wednesday that it had credible intelligence suggesting that Al Qaeda is planning to attack the United States in the next several months, a period in which events like an international summit meeting and the two political conventions could offer tempting targets.

Attorney General John Ashcroft said at a news conference that intelligence reports and public statements by people associated with Al Qaeda suggested that the terrorist group was "almost ready to attack the United States" and harbored a "specific intention to hit the United States hard."

But some intelligence officials, terrorism experts - and to some extent even Mr. Ashcroft's own F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III - offered a more tempered assessment, saying, "For the next few weeks we have reason to believe there is a heightened threat to the U.S. interests around the world.'' And some opponents of President Bush, including police and firefighter union leaders aligned with Senator John Kerry, the expected Democratic presidential candidate, said the timing of the announcement appeared intended in part to distract attention from Mr. Bush's sagging poll numbers and problems in Iraq.

The administration did not raise the terrorist threat advisory from its current level of elevated, or yellow, and the White House said Mr. Bush would not alter his schedule because of security concerns.

"There's no real new intelligence, and a lot of this has been out there already," said one administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "There really is no significant change that would require us to change the alert level of the country." ...

Mr. Ashcroft called for greater public vigilance, especially in looking out for seven people sought by the F.B.I. who are suspected of being Qaeda members or sympathizers.

The names of six of the seven were publicly circulated by the authorities months ago, and officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said that they had no reason to believe any of the seven suspects were in the United States.

Asked about the timing of his new warnings about the suspects, Mr. Ashcroft said, "We believe the public, like all of us, needs a reminder."

Some intelligence officials said they were uncertain that the link between the fresh intelligence and the likelihood of another attack was as apparent as Mr. Ashcroft made it out to be. Officials at the Department of Homeland Security said just a day before Mr. Ashcroft's announcement that they had no new intelligence pointing to the threat of an attack.

Senator Richard J. Durbin, an Illinois Democrat who is a member of the intelligence committee, said in an interview that the committee had received no word of any new information of the type Mr. Ashcroft described. Mr. Durbin said that if there were credible new information about a possible strike, he believed the intelligence committee should have been told about it.
There is a whole lot more in The New York Times
 


3:52 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Gephardt Is On The McCain For Vice President Train

I know it is improbable that John McCain will in fact be John Kerry's running-mate in the presidential election campaign. However, I can't give up on the idea primarily because more and more influential political figures seem to share my enthusiasm for the idea. It probably won't happen for the very reason that it should: It makes too much sense, and we all know that common sense and the good of the whole are not common denominators in the bellies of politicos. But these precarious days call for healthy doses of both from all whom hold themselves out to be "leaders."
Representative Richard A. Gephardt, the Missouri Democrat who has often been mentioned as a running mate for Senator John Kerry, is talking kindly about another choice: Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona.

Asked after a speech in California on Monday what he thought of Mr. McCain's potential for the Democratic presidential ticket, Mr. Gephardt described him as a "very attractive figure in American politics" who "would be accepted by the Democratic Party," according to CNN.

Mr. McCain is "someone a lot of Democrats could get interested in," Mr. Gephardt said at the Leon Panetta Center in Monterrey.
The New York Times
 


12:14 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



Thursday, May 27, 2004

The New York Times Is Still The Best Newspaper In The World

The proof of the title to this post is in the "FROM THE EDITORS" editorial review excerpted below. Would that more people, organizations and particularly governments had the courage and integrity to own up to mistakes. In many ways, the Times' responsible self-reproach is actually a glaring condemnation of the Bush administration which lacks neither the courage nor the integrity to admit making the very same mistakes the Times did with far more institutional resources and expertise in the area of foreign intelligence than the "old Grey Lady."
Over the last year this newspaper has shone the bright light of hindsight on decisions that led the United States into Iraq. We have examined the failings of American and allied intelligence, especially on the issue of Iraq's weapons and possible Iraqi connections to international terrorists. We have studied the allegations of official gullibility and hype. It is past time we turned the same light on ourselves.

But we have found a number of instances of coverage that was not as rigorous as it should have been. In some cases, information that was controversial then, and seems questionable now, was insufficiently qualified or allowed to stand unchallenged. Looking back, we wish we had been more aggressive in re-examining the claims as new evidence emerged — or failed to emerge.

The problematic articles varied in authorship and subject matter, but many shared a common feature. They depended at least in part on information from a circle of Iraqi informants, defectors and exiles bent on "regime change" in Iraq, people whose credibility has come under increasing public debate in recent weeks. (The most prominent of the anti-Saddam campaigners, Ahmad Chalabi, has been named as an occasional source in Times articles since at least 1991, and has introduced reporters to other exiles. He became a favorite of hard-liners within the Bush administration and a paid broker of information from Iraqi exiles, until his payments were cut off last week.) Complicating matters for journalists, the accounts of these exiles were often eagerly confirmed by United States officials convinced of the need to intervene in Iraq. Administration officials now acknowledge that they sometimes fell for misinformation from these exile sources. So did many news organizations — in particular, this one.

Some critics of our coverage during that time have focused blame on individual reporters. Our examination, however, indicates that the problem was more complicated. Editors at several levels who should have been challenging reporters and pressing for more skepticism were perhaps too intent on rushing scoops into the paper. Accounts of Iraqi defectors were not always weighed against their strong desire to have Saddam Hussein ousted. Articles based on dire claims about Iraq tended to get prominent display, while follow-up articles that called the original ones into question were sometimes buried. In some cases, there was no follow-up at all.
The New York Times
 


11:55 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




It Just Keeps Getting Worse and Worse...

So now it's murder by strangulation and blunt force trauma; the dogs were approved all the way up the command; a female intelligence officer is in on the kills and torture from Afghanistan to Iraq. Damn! Is this the new American way?
WASHINGTON, May 25 - An Army summary of deaths and mistreatment involving prisoners in American custody in Iraq and Afghanistan shows a widespread pattern of abuse involving more military units than previously known.

The cases from Iraq date back to April 15, 2003, a few days after Saddam Hussein's statue was toppled in a Baghdad square, and they extend up to last month, when a prisoner detained by Navy commandos died in a suspected case of homicide blamed on "blunt force trauma to the torso and positional asphyxia."
Among previously unknown incidents are the abuse of detainees by Army interrogators from a National Guard unit attached to the Third Infantry Division, who are described in a document obtained by The New York Times as having "forced into asphyxiation numerous detainees in an attempt to obtain information" during a 10-week period last spring.

The document, dated May 5, is a synopsis prepared by the Criminal Investigation Command at the request of Army officials grappling with intense scrutiny prompted by the circulation the preceding week of photographs of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib. It lists the status of investigations into three dozen cases, including the continuing investigation into the notorious abuses at Abu Ghraib.

The Army summary is consistent with recent public statements by senior military officials, who have said the Army is actively investigating nine suspected homicides of prisoners held by Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan in late 2002.

But the details paint a broad picture of misconduct, and show that in many cases among the 37 prisoners who have died in American custody in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army did not conduct autopsies and says it cannot determine the causes of the deaths.
The New York Times
 


6:13 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    4 comments



Wednesday, May 26, 2004

Fact: Nicholas Berg Was Not Alive When His Head Was Cut Off

After a typical knee-jerk reaction to the video of Nicholas Berg's murder, I had a nagging sense that something just wasn't right. So, I went back and reviewed the video over and over again. Actually, with some emotional distance, it didn't take very long for me to realize how stupid my anger had rendered me. Since then, I have been leaving the story alone even as it bubbled and boiled with controversy in blogdom--indeed, it was particularly for that reason that I removed an earlier post and kept my silence. Why? Because it is a no-win situation for anyone to state the obvious: he will be vilified from every viewpoint. However, for various reasons, I have decided to state it here in brief and see the tenor of the discussion it brings.

As a journalist who has specialized in murder, and the forensics of murder, let me simply say this: Nick Berg's heart was not pumping when his head was cut off. If it had been, the arterial gushing would have been massive, very much like an old-fashioned oil-well coming in. Blood loss would have been so forceful and plentiful that it would have dominated the video. But, it did not.

There are several other reasons to believe that Nick Berg was already dead when his head was cut off, but the absence of arterial gushing is all one needs to note to prove it. It in no way lessens the brutality of the crime; and I am offering no opinions on what else a careful study of the video tells me--which is plenty. I will sit this out in further silence until some rationality will be possible in the discourse.

For those who wish to confirm the obvious, the video can be viewed HERE.
 


1:02 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    1 comments



Monday, May 24, 2004

Is General Sanchez Involved in Abu Ghraib "Up to his Ears"?

The Abu Ghraib scandal is spreading faster than a Southern California brush fire. According to The Washington Post, in a hearing back in April, well before the photos went public on CBS, an army attorney, as an officer of the court, stated for the record, that an officer he was assigned to defend in the abuse case, if granted immunity from prosecution, would testify that General Sanchez himself was present at Abu Ghraib during incidents of abuse.

Disgraced General Janis Karpinski also places General Sanchez at the prison at precisely the time when the abuse began, on at least three occasions.
A military lawyer for a soldier charged in the Abu Ghraib abuse case stated that a captain at the prison said the highest-ranking U.S. military officer in Iraq was present during some "interrogations and/or allegations of the prisoner abuse," according to a recording of a military hearing obtained by The Washington Post. ...

During an April 2 hearing that was open to the public, Shuck said the company commander, Capt. Donald J. Reese, was prepared to testify in exchange for immunity. The military prosecutor questioned Shuck about what Reese would say under oath.

"Are you saying that Captain Reese is going to testify that General Sanchez was there and saw this going on?" asked Capt. John McCabe, the military prosecutor.

"That's what he told me," Shuck said. "I am an officer of the court, sir, and I would not lie. I have got two children at home. I'm not going to risk my career." ...

Sanchez visited the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade's operation, which encompassed Tier 1A at Abu Ghraib, at least three times in October, according to Brig. Gen. Janis L. Karpinski, who was in charge of U.S. detention facilities in Iraq as commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade. That month, the serious abuses documented in published photographs -- naked detainees shackled together, a guard posing with a prisoner on a dog leash -- began.

In an interview yesterday, Karpinski said the number of visits by a commanding general struck her as "unusual," especially because Sanchez had not visited several of the 15 other U.S. detention facilities in Iraq. ...

The general, a reservist from South Carolina, said she was not present during Sanchez's visits because her brigade had surrendered authority over that part of the prison to intelligence officers. She said she was alerted as a courtesy while the three-star general was planning to travel to the prison. Karpinski added that Sanchez might have visited without her knowledge after the intelligence officers were given formal authority over the entire prison on Nov. 19.

"He has divisions all over Iraq, and he has time to visit Abu Ghraib three times in a month?" Karpinski asked yesterday. "Why was he going out there so often? Did he know that something was going on?" ...

"I think General Miller's visit gave them ideas, inspired them, gave them plans, told them what they were succeeding with in Gitmo," Karpinski said. She added that intelligence officers were "under great pressure to get more actionable intelligence from those interrogations."

Karpinski said she believes that intelligence officers were central to the abuses because the MPs arrived in mid-October at the prison, just weeks before serious abuses began. The general also said she believes officers in the military intelligence chain of command knew what was going on, and that Sanchez later tried to shift the blame to her unit, in January, after an MP reported the abuse and provided photos to military investigators.

"I didn't know then what [Sanchez] probably knew, which was that this was something clearly in the MI, maybe that he endorsed, and he was already starting a campaign to stay out of the fray and blame the 800th," Karpinski said. "I think the MI people were in this all the way. I think they were up to their ears in it. . . . I don't believe that the MPs, two weeks onto the job, would have been such willing participants, even with instructions, unless someone had told them it was all okay."
The Washington Post
 


12:44 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    2 comments



Sunday, May 23, 2004

Bay of Goats...?

Having traveled halfway across China and back by train--hard sleeper--for a visit to Xi'an, traveling back in time first to the Tang Dynasty, via the Shaanxi History Museum, then to the Qin Dynasty, via the Terra-cotta Warriors and environs, without a peep of news of any kind--the TV didn't work in the hotel, and I didn't bring the laptop--for almost four days, it is comforting to find Ms. Dowd at her finest. I, on the other hand, am far less than even my worst: I need a rest from the "vacation"--12-hour, over-night train rides in China are great for mixing with the populace, but hell on fleshly wear and tear. Therefore my first post upon the resumption of the LongBow Papers will be:
So let me get this straight:

We ransacked the house of the con man whom we paid millions to feed us fake intelligence on W.M.D. that would make the case for ransacking the country that the con man assured us would be a cinch to take over because he wanted to run it.

And now we're shocked, shocked and awed to discover that a crook is a crook and we have nobody to turn over Iraq to, and the Jordanian embezzler-turned-American puppet-turned-accused Iranian spy is trying to foment even more anger against us and the U.N. officials we've crawled back to for help, anger that may lead to civil war.

The party line that Paul Bremer was notified about the raid on Ahmad Chalabi's house after the fact is absurd. The Iraqi police, who can't seem to do anything without us, were just proxies. We were going after the very guy who persuaded us to go after Saddam, the con man the naïve neo-cons cast as de Gaulle; the swindler who sold himself to Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz as Spartacus.

One diplomat from the region grimly cited an old Punjabi saying: "It's very bad when grandma marries a crook, but it is even worse when she divorces the crook."

Mr. Chalabi's wealthy family was swept out of Iraq in a coup in 1958 and he spent much of his life plotting a coup to take back his homeland, a far-fetched scheme that took on life when he hooked up with Mr. Wolfowitz, Richard Perle and Doug Feith, who had their own dream of staging a coup of American foreign policy to do an extreme Middle East makeover.

The hawks dismissed warnings from their own people — such as the Bush Middle East envoy Gen. Anthony Zinni — that the Iraqi National Congress was full of "silk-suited, Rolex-wearing guys in London." As General Zinni told The Times in 2000: "They are pie in the sky. They're going to lead us to a Bay of Goats, or something like that."

The C.I.A. and State Department, too, grew disgusted with Mr. Chalabi, even though State paid his organization $33 million from 2000 to 2003.

Cheney & Company swooned over Mr. Chalabi because he was telling them what they wanted to hear, that it would be simple to go back and rewrite the Persian Gulf war ending so that it was not bellum interruptus.

The president and his hawks insisted that only a "relatively small number" of "thugs," as Mr. Perle told George Stephanopoulos last month, were keeping the country from peace. Mr. Perle said the solution was "to repose a little bit of confidence in people who share our values and our objectives . . . people like Ahmad Chalabi." The neo-cons still think he can be Churchill.

On Thursday, an Iraqi judge, Hussain Muathin, also lamented the actions of "a small number of thugs." But he was announcing warrants for the arrest of thugs around Mr. Perle's own George Washington, Chalabi henchmen suspected of kidnapping, torture and theft. Didn't we sack Saddam to stop that stuff?

Now we're using Saddam's old generals to restore order — reversing the de-Baathification approach that Mr. Chalabi championed — while Mr. Chalabi snakes around like a bus-and-truck Tony Soprano, garnering less trust than Saddam in polls of Iraqis.

A half-dozen dunderheads who thought they knew everything assumed they could control Mr. Chalabi and use him as the instrument of their utopian fantasies. But one week after getting cut off from the $335,000-a-month Pentagon allowance arranged by his neo-con buddies, he glibly accepts the street cred that goes with bashing America. And he still won't give us all of Saddam's secret files, which he confiscated and is using to discredit his enemies.

Going from Spartacus to Moses, he proclaims to America, "Let my people go" — even as he plays footsie with the country that once denounced the U.S. as the Great Satan.

On Friday at Louisiana State University, President Bush told graduates: "On the job and elsewhere in life, choose your friends carefully. The company you keep has a way of rubbing off on you — and that can be a good thing, or a bad thing. In my job, I got to pick just about everybody I work with. I've been happy with my choices — although I wish someone had warned me about all of Dick Cheney's wild partying."

Mr. Bush thought he was kidding, but too bad he didn't get that warning before Dick Cheney took the world on such a wild ride.
The New York Times
 


11:41 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



Thursday, May 20, 2004

Gone To Xi'an...

Folks, we're outa here...for a few days, anyway. The university has gifted us with a weekend trip to Xi'an. We'll be back Sunday evening. I need the rest--badly!  

3:39 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



Wednesday, May 19, 2004

The Army Brought Down McCarthy, Will It Bring Down Bush?

The infamous Senator Joe McCarthy rode roughshod over every American institution during his "Red Witch Hunt" until, in his ignorant arrogance, he went after the U. S. Army. In very short order, with the help of the legendary broadcast journalist, Edward R. Murrow, the Army ended McCarthy's reign of intellectual terror that had gripped the entire nation in the early 50's.

It appears that George W. Bush has made the same ignorant, arrogant mistake. He has compounded his problems, however, by also making powerful enemies within the C.I.A and his own Republican Party. Fellow blogger, and dear friend, Richard, author of the Peking Duck, has already posted in full the UPI article below. I do not wish to steal his thunder, however, I want a record of it in these pages. It is below; it is a devastating blow to the Dynastic Restoration of the House of Bush.
Army, CIA want torture truths exposed

WASHINGTON, May 18 (UPI) -- Efforts at the top level of the Bush administration and the civilian echelon of the Department of Defense to contain the Iraq prison torture scandal and limit the blame to a handful of enlisted soldiers and immediate senior officers have already failed: The scandal continues to metastasize by the day.

Over the past weekend and into this week, devastating new allegations have emerged putting Stephen Cambone, the first Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, firmly in the crosshairs and bringing a new wave of allegations cascading down on the head of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, when he scarcely had time to catch his breath from the previous ones.

Even worse for Rumsfeld and his coterie of neo-conservative true believers who have run the Pentagon for the past 3 1/2 years, three major institutions in the Washington power structure have decided that after almost a full presidential term of being treated with contempt and abuse by them, it's payback time.

Those three institutions are: The United States Army, the Central Intelligence Agency and the old, relatively moderate but highly experienced Republican leadership in the United States Senate.

None of those groups is chopped liver: Taken together they comprise a devastating Grand Slam.

The spearhead for the new wave of revelations and allegations - but by no means the only source of them - is veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. In a major article published in the New Yorker this week and posted on to its Web-site Saturday, Hersh revealed that a high-level Pentagon operation code-named Copper Green "encouraged physical coercion and sexual humiliation" of Iraqi prisoners. He also cited Pentagon sources and consultants as saying that photographing the victims of such abuse was an explicit part of the program meant to force the victims into becoming blackmailed reliable informants.

Hersh further claimed in his article that Rumsfeld himself approved the program and that one of his four or five top aides, Cambone, set it up in Baghdad and ran it.

These allegations of course are anathema to the White House, Rumsfeld and their media allies. In a highly unusual step for any newspaper, the editorially neo-conservative tabloid New York Post ran an editorial Monday seeking to ridicule and discredit Hersh. However, it presented absolutely no evidence to query, let alone discredit the substance of his article and allegations.

Instead, the New York Post editorial inadvertently pointed out one, but by no means all, of the major sources for Hersh's information. The editorial alleged that Hersh had received much of his material from the CIA.

Based on the material Hersh quoted, his legendary intelligence community contacts were probably sources for some of his information. However, Hersh has also enjoyed close personal relations with many now high-ranking officers in the United States Army, going all the way back to his prize-winning coverage and scoops in Vietnam more than 30 years ago.

Indeed, intelligence and regular Army sources have told UPI that senior officers and officials in both communities are sickened and outraged by the revelations of mass torture and abuse, and also by the incompetence involved, in the Abu Ghraib prison revelations. These sources also said that officials all the way up to the highest level in both the Army and the Agency are determined not to be scapegoated, or allow very junior soldiers or officials to take the full blame for the excesses.

President George W. Bush in his weekly radio address Saturday claimed that the Abu Ghraib abuses were only "the actions of a few" and that they did not "reflect the true character of the Untied States armed forces."

But what enrages many serving senior Army generals and U.S. top-level intelligence community professionals is that the "few" in this case were not primarily the serving soldiers who were actually encouraged to carry out the abuses and even then take photos of the victims, but that they were encouraged to do so, with the Army's well-established safeguards against such abuses deliberately removed by high-level Pentagon civilian officials.

Abuse and even torture of prisoners happens in almost every war on every side. But well-run professional armies, and the U.S. Army has always been one, take great pains to guard against it and limit it as much as possible. Even in cases where torture excesses are regarded as essential to extract tactical information and save lives, commanders in most modern armies have taken care to limit such "dirty work" to very small units, usually from special forces, and to keep it as secret as possible.

For senior Army professionals know that allowing patterns of abuse and torture to metastasize in any army is annihilating to its morale and tactical effectiveness. Torturers usually make lousy combat soldiers, which is why combat soldiers in every major army hold them in contempt.

Therefore, several U.S. military officers told UPI, the idea of using regular Army soldiers, including some even just from the Army Reserve or National Guard, and encouraging them to inflict such abuses ran contrary to received military wisdom and to the ingrained standards and traditions of the U.S. Army.

The widespread taking of photographs of the victims of such abuses, they said, clearly revealed that civilian "amateurs" and not regular Army or intelligence community professionals were the driving force in shaping and running the programs under which these abuses occurred.

Hersh has spearheaded the waves of revelations of shocking abuse. But other major U.S. media organizations are now charging in behind him to confirm and extend his reports. They are able to do so because many senior veteran professionals in both the CIA and the Army were disgusted by the revelations of the torture excesses. Now they are being listened to with suddenly receptive ears on Capitol Hill.

Republican members in the House of Representatives have kept discipline and silence on the revelations. But with the exception of the increasingly isolated and embarrassed Senate Republican Leader, Bill Frist of Tennessee, other senior mainstream figures in the GOP Senate majority have refused to go along with any cover-up.

Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Orrin Hatch of Utah, Richard Lugar of Indiana, Pat Roberts of Kansas and John Warner of Virginia have all been outspoken in their condemnation of the torture excesses. And they did so even before the latest, most far-reaching and worst of the allegations and reports surfaced. Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, lost no time in hauling Rumsfeld before it to testify.

The pattern of the latest wave of revelations is clear: They are coming from significant numbers of senior figures in both the U.S. military and intelligence services. They reflect the disgust and contempt widely felt in both communities at the excesses; and at long last, they are being listened to seriously by senior Republican, as well as Democratic, senators on Capitol Hill.

Rumsfeld and his team of top lieutenants have therefore now lost the confidence, trust and respect of both the Army and intelligence establishments. Key elements of the political establishment even of the ruling GOP now recognize this.

Yet Rumsfeld and his lieutenants remain determined to hang on to power, and so far President Bush has shown every sign of wanting to keep them there. The scandal, therefore, is far from over. The revelations will continue. The cost of the abuses to the American people and the U.S. national interest is already incalculable: And there is no end in sight.
United Press International

 


12:20 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Dubya, Is It Time To Sing "Turn Out The Lights, The Party's Over"?

I do not know how many of my readers will remember the Dallas Cowboy's Quarterback, Dandy Don Meredith, who with Howard Cosell helped make Monday Night Football the great success it is when his playing days were over. But once a ballgame was no longer in doubt, Don would loosen up his vocal chords and sing a refrain from a great old country song, "Turn out the lights, the party's over...". Well, I think Mr. Bush might just be reflexively humming a few bars to himself in jelly-leg dread. Why? My dear friend Richard, the author of The Peking Duck, has just posted an...
UPDATE: "It's a cover-up." This is big. Out goes the "bad apples" theory. This was policy. Who initiated it?
As always, Richard's instincts are on target. Here is just the headline and the first graph of the ABC News report:
"Definitely a Cover-Up"

Former Abu Ghraib Intel Staffer Says Army Concealed Involvement in Abuse Scandal

May 18, 2004 — Dozens of soldiers — other than the seven military police reservists who have been charged — were involved in the abuse at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, and there is an effort under way in the Army to hide it, a key witness in the investigation told ABCNEWS.
Get the whole story at The Peking Duck and ABC News
 


10:52 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Dubya, The Wastrel Son

I could not pass up blogging Paul Krugman's column in today's The New York Times if for no other reason than its title, "The Wastrel Son." You get three guesses as to which wastrel son he's writing about, and the first two don't count. Of course, it's Bush the Second (and Last, I'll wager). I cannot tell you how much fun it is just typing the words--the wastrel son. See, I did for a third time. It's just too much fun. It's addictive.
He was a stock character in 19th-century fiction: the wastrel son who runs up gambling debts in the belief that his wealthy family, concerned for its prestige, will have no choice but to pay off his creditors. In the novels such characters always come to a bad end. Either they bring ruin to their families, or they eventually find themselves disowned.

George Bush reminds me of those characters — and not just because of his early career, in which friends of the family repeatedly bailed out his failing business ventures. Now that he sits in the White House, he's still counting on other people to settle his debts — not to protect the reputation of his family, but to protect the reputation of the country.

One by one, our erstwhile allies are disowning us; they don't want an unstable, anti-Western Iraq any more than we do, but they have concluded that President Bush is incorrigible. Spain has washed its hands of our problems, Italy is edging toward the door, and Britain will join the rush for the exit soon enough, with or without Tony Blair.
Read the rest of the story in The New York Times


 


1:17 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Do You Think Dubya Has The Smarts To Know It's Endgame?

George W. Bush is so beyond the pale of rational cognition that he probably doesn't see it coming. Or, in the language of the game he allegedly loves so much, baseball--although it is very hard for me to swallow that; I've never known another baseball man I couldn't like in some fashion or another--he's looking fastball all the way, but a wicked yacker is suddenly enroute and he's frozen solid as it darts from the direction of his quivering mid-section and breaks down and away painting black and it's a called strike three.

He's in a whale of hurt, and even though a Lt. Colonel is now falling on his sword for the team over Abu Ghraib, it will not stop there:
WASHINGTON, May 17 -- The American officer who was in charge of interrogations at the Abu Ghraib prison has told a senior Army investigator that intelligence officers sometimes instructed the military police to force Iraqi detainees to strip naked and to shackle them before questioning them. But he said those measures were not imposed "unless there is some good reason."

The officer, Col. Thomas M. Pappas, commander of the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, also told the investigator, Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba, that his unit had "no formal system in place" to monitor instructions they had given to military guards, who worked closely with interrogators to prepare detainees for interviews. Colonel Pappas said he "should have asked more questions, admittedly" about abuses committed or encouraged by his subordinates.

The statements by Colonel Pappas, contained in the transcript of a Feb. 11 interview that is part of General Taguba's 6,000-page classified report, offer the highest-level confirmation so far that military intelligence soldiers directed military guards in preparing for interrogations. They also provide the first insights by the senior intelligence officer at the prison into the relationship between his troops and the military police. Portions of Colonel Pappas's sworn statements were read to The New York Times by a government official who had read the transcript. ...

Colonel Pappas confirmed in his statements that his unit had enacted several changes recommended by Maj. Gen. Geoffrey D. Miller, the head of detention operations at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, whom the Pentagon sent to Iraq in August and September to review detention operations.

A major finding of General Miller's visit, Colonel Pappas said, was "to provide dedicated M.P.'s in support of interrogations."

Several military police officers and their commanders at Abu Ghraib have said that military intelligence officers directed them to "set the conditions" to enhance the questioning. When General Taguba asked what safeguards existed to ensure that guards "understand the instructions or limits of instructions, or whether the instructions were legal," Colonel Pappas acknowledged that there were no assurances.

"There would be no way for us to actually monitor whether that happened," Colonel Pappas told General Taguba. "We had no formal system in place to do that."
The New York Times

No, this is a White House-seeking missile of a scandal that, frankly, is not another Iran-Contra or even Watergate. I believe Iraqgate is worse, all of it. To this reporter's thinking, the accumulation of sins of commission and sins of omission in the entire Iraq misadventure, not just the ever-worsening prisoner-abuse scandal, will send Dubya back to sandlot ignominity come November. He will leave a legacy of such willful infamy behind him that historians will have to revisit the latter part of the 19th Century to find a worse president that George W. Bush.

Hyperbole, you say? Just another media liberal whistling past a graveyard, you think? Just Bosco being melodramatic? Nope. Read just how much trouble Shrub & Twigs are in. I have already blogged Seymour Hersh's latest tale of prisoner woe in this week's The New Yorker. And by now you know that the White House has already sicced the attack dogs on Seymour. But what are they going to do with Newsweek, which is also out with a parallel story that is independent of Seymour's work?

Now, I wish to give a tip of the keyboard to Richard at The Peking Duck for alerting us to another damaging article--actually three in one--on this story that is getting uglier by the day--where you will also find links to both the latest New Yorker article, but also the Newsweek trilogy.

I strongly urge you to visit Fred Kaplan's column at Slate; you will quickly realize just how big this scandal is and how far up the leadership chain it goes--suffice it to say, while there is no sign of it in the Oval Office, that is where this "buck" is going to stop.

The prison scandal keeps getting worse for the Bush administration.
By Fred Kaplan

Locked in Abu Ghraib
The prison scandal keeps getting worse for the Bush administration.

If today's investigative shockers—Seymour Hersh's latest article in The New Yorker and a three-part piece in Newsweek—are true, it's hard to avoid concluding that responsibility for the Abu Ghraib atrocities goes straight to the top, both in the Pentagon and the White House, and that varying degrees of blame can be ascribed to officials up and down the chain of command.

Slate
 


12:43 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



Tuesday, May 18, 2004

Fickle or Feckless?

It's been a long day, a hectic weekend, and before that a monstrous marathon week, so please allow me to chortle a little bit. Over what? And at whom (we mostly chortle over other human's follies)? And I take such great pleasure in snorting gleefully at the comeuppance of my enemies: The Neo-Cons. Below is a round up of defeatist bleating by some of that ilk's worst and dullest from The Week In Review feature in The New York Times.
WASHINGTON -- Not long ago, the word "triumphalist" was being applied to the neoconservatives and other intellectuals who championed the war in Iraq. Now the buzzwords are "depressed," "angst-ridden" and "going wobbly."

After the setbacks in Falluja and Najaf, followed by the prisoner abuse scandal, hawks are glumly trying to reconcile the reality in Iraq with the predictions they made before the war. A few have already given up on the idea of a stable democracy in Iraq, and many are predicting failure unless there's a dramatic change in policy - a new date for elections, a new secretary of defense, a new exit strategy.

Most blame the administration for botching the mission, and some are also questioning their own judgment. How, they wonder, did so many conservatives, who normally don't trust their government to run a public school down the street, come to believe that federal bureaucrats could transform an entire nation in the alien culture of the Middle East? To these self-doubting hawks, the conservatives now blaming American officials for Iraq's problems are reminiscent of the leftists who kept blaming incompetents in the Kremlin for the failure of Communism.

* The National Review has dismissed the Wilsonian ideal of implanting democracy in Iraq, and has recommended settling for an orderly society with a non-dictatorial government. David Brooks, a New York Times columnist, wrote that America entered Iraq with a "childish fantasy" and is now "a shellshocked hegemon."

* Andrew Sullivan, the conservative blogger, has questioned whether it was foolish to trust the Bush administration to wage the war competently. After the Abu Ghraib scandal broke, Mr. Sullivan posted such pained thoughts questioning the moral justification for the war that he was inundated with e-mail messages telling him to buck up.

"Now I'm being bashed for going wobbly," Mr. Sullivan said. "I'm still in favor of this war and still desperately want it to succeed, but when the case we made for war is undermined by events, we have to acknowledge that and explain why the case for war still stands. Sometimes politicians have to stick to scripts regardless of the facts, but a writer has an obligation to be more honest."

* The columnist George Will suggested the administration get a dose of conservatism without the "neo" prefix...

* [A]nd Tucker Carlson, of CNN's "Crossfire," said he, too, had gained respect for old-fashioned conservatism. "I supported the war and now I feel foolish," Mr. Carlson said. "I'm just struck by how many people like me who were instinctively distrustful of government forgot to be humble in our expectations. The idea that the federal government can quickly transform the Middle East seems odd to me for a conservative. A basic tenet of conservatism is that it's much easier to destroy things than to create them - much easier, and more fun, too."

The New York Times
 


11:38 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    1 comments



Monday, May 17, 2004

"Freedoms First, Democracy Later" A Recipe For China's Future?

I recently had a long and stimulating conversation with a young Chinese lady; she is highly educated, professionally successful in a competitive industry which is highly regulated by the Central Government, and she longs for more freedoms in the nation she loves. I will not identify her here for obvious reasons. However, in the course of our long chat about many things political, here in China, and abroad in places where representative democracy is getting roughed up a bit, the Middle East, she said something that struck me profoundly, and I have been mulling it over for days.

Now that I finally have the "comments" feature of the New Blogger working on the site, I thought I would hang it out for some "fresh air" and discourse. Actually, what she said seems almost too simplistic at first blush to be seriously discussed. Obviously, I disagree.

There has been much written in Chinese Blogdom lately about the popular jingoist saw that basically says that China isn't ready for universal suffrage. We were discussing exactly that when, with a delightful toss of her head and a little laugh, she said: "Give us personal freedoms first; democracy can come later."

I knew the laugh did not mean she wasn't quite serious; indeed, I knew it meant just the opposite. "Such as?" I asked.

"Give us free speech and a free press, now. A multi-party system and voting will come in time. Some people need to leave the scene before the Party can make realistic moves in that direction."

After a slight pause, she added, "And we need the verdict on Tiananmen Square reversed."

"For that to happen, you need at least one 'actor' to leave the scene for sure," I said.

"Yes," was her answer.

In a moment, she said, "But free speech and a free press can happen without threatening the one party system. We almost have it now."

"That's a big 'almost,'" was my reply.

"Yes," she agreed. "But it is happening. The periodic suppression makes the government, the Party, look foolish, and the people find a way to watch 'Sex In The City' anyway."

With that, we both laughed. And soon moved on to other world affairs. But we did return to it once more and she repeated her belief that free speech and a free press was more important to her, and her generation, than a voting booth. For now. And I have been intrigued with the concept and her expression of it ever since.

There is one major conundrum that jumps out immediately, however. If the government allows free speech and a free press, won't people use those freedoms to advocate a multi-party system which the Party will not allow under the present circumstances?

She had an answer for that, too: "Let a responsible press censor itself, much like your press used to."

Ah, I had forgotten that I had previously talked extensively about the good old days when a free press in America chose on their own volition not to report that Franklin Delano Roosevelt was crippled from polio. That almost no one in America at the time knew that their president, the president who steered the nation through the Great Depression and then the Second World War, was virtually wheel-chair bound throughout. And that they did not know because a responsible press corps, who watched how hard he struggled, with great pain, to pull himself erect, prop himself against a podium, and deliver a speech to a frightened nation who needed a strong president, chose not to. It did not effect his ability to lead, so it was not a story.

That same press corps also did not report that F.D.R. and the First Lady had not slept together in years; they did not report that a young, devoted secretary took care of that part of the president's life. Again, it was not reported because a responsible press corps knew it had nothing to do with his ability to lead and govern.

A free and responsible press. I lecture much on those old days before every young journalist wanted to be a Woodward and Bernstein without the same gravity of story those two young men had to report--a story that changed a nation, and journalism forever.

What does that have to do with the young Chinese lady's perhaps simplistic idea about having some individual freedoms first, responsibly used, before universal suffrage?

You think about it. Then let me know what you think. Click on "Comments." Please.
 


11:57 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    10 comments




A Brief History Of The Atrocities Of War

Below are excerpts from an excellent article in the current The Village Voice by an eminent military historian. It should be must reading for anyone who wishes to engage in informed debate on the relativity of who has the moral highground in matters of war atrocities
"Kill one man, terrorize a thousand," reads a sign on the wall of the U.S. Marines' sniper school at Camp Pendleton in California. While the marines work their mayhem with M-40A3 bolt-action sniper rifles, most recently in Fallujah, a different kind of terror has been doled out in Iraq by the U.S. Army at Abu Ghraib prison, where, according to an army probe first reported by Seymour Hersh of The New Yorker, 'sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses' were the order of the day between October and December of 2003. One of the many questions arising from the Abu Ghraib scandal is how widespread is the brutality and inhumane treatment of Iraqis.

Just last month, the Toledo Blade won a Pulitzer Prize for exposing a series of brutal war crimes committed by American troops during the Vietnam War. It took more than 35 years for the horrors committed by a "Tiger Force" unit to be fully exposed, but the Blade got more ink in the national press and TV for winning the Pulitzer than the stories themselves got when they were published last fall. The paper detailed the army's four-and-a-half-year investigation, starting in 1971, of a seven-month string of atrocities by an elite, volunteer, 45-man Tiger Force unit of the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division that included the alleged torture of prisoners, rapes of civilian women, mutilations of bodies, and the killing of anywhere from nine to well over 100 unarmed civilians. The army's inquiry concluded that 18 U.S. soldiers committed crimes including murder and assault. However, not one of the soldiers, even those still on active duty at the time of the investigation, was ever court-martialed. Moreover, as the paper noted, six soldiers were allowed to resign from military service during the criminal investigations specifically to avoid prosecution. The secretary of defense at the time that decision was made, in the mid '70s, was Donald Rumsfeld.

But even the Blade's powerful stories didn't put the Tiger Force atrocities in context; the paper portrayed them largely as an isolated killing spree carried out by rogue troops. The Tiger Force atrocities were not the mere result of rogue G.I.'s but instead stem from what historian Christian Appy has termed a "doctrine of atrocity"Â?an institutionalized brutality built upon official U.S. dicta relating to body counts, free-fire zones, search-and-destroy tactics, and strategies of attrition, as well as unofficial tenets such as "shoot anything that moves," intoned during the Tiger Force atrocities and in countless other tales of brutality. ...

The Toledo Blade articles, some of the best reporting on a Vietnam War crime during or since that war, tell only a small part of the story. As a historian writing a dissertation at Columbia University on U.S. war crimes and atrocities during the Vietnam War, I have been immersed in just the sort of archival materials the Blade used to flesh out one series of incidents. My research into U.S. military records has revealed that there were hundreds, if not thousands, of analogous violations of the laws of war. ...

As the case of the 172nd MI unit demonstrates, U.S. troops in Vietnam not only beat enemy prisoners and civilian detainees but also used a wide variety of brutal methods, including a particular torture in which water was forced down a person's throat until he or she passed out or drowned--what U.S. troops had called the "water cure" during their battle against Filipinos in the early 20th century. One particularly heinous method was known among U.S. soldiers in Vietnam as "The Bell Telephone Hour," in which a hand-cranked military field telephone was used to generate electrical shocks through wires to hands, feet, nipples, and genitals. ...

Underlying attitudes apparently haven't changed either. Captain Todd Brown, a company commander with the Fourth Infantry Division, told the Times late last year, "You have to understand the Arab mind. The only thing they understand is force. . . . " Nearly 40 years earlier, in Vietnam, another U.S. captain told The New Yorker's Jonathan Schell, "Only the fear of force gets results. It's the Asian mind." That thinking has long been evident in U.S. campaigns against racial and ethnic "others," from the Indian Wars to the Philippine-American War and occupation; the terrorizing of people in the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, and Haiti; on to more conventional wars against the Japanese and Koreans; and perhaps most spectacularly in Vietnam. And now in IraqÂ?and not only at Abu Ghraib. Late last year, at another detention center, it was reported that Lieutenant Colonel Allen B. West allowed his soldiers to beat an Iraqi prisoner as a method of interrogation. When the illegal thrashing failed to induce the prisoner to talk, West threatened the man with death, forced his head into a sandbox, and conducted a mock execution, firing a shot next to the Iraqi's head. West confessed to the abuse, but he was not court-martialed; instead, he was simply allowed to retire.

Nicholas Turse is a doctoral candidate at the Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and a regular contributor to the Nation Institute's tomdispatch.com.

The Village Voice
 


10:43 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




There Are No Oopsies In Preventative War

Unfortunately, there are no do-overs in war. Invading a nation is an extreme example of the concept of not being able to un-ring the bell. If we invaded Iraq to prevent Saddam Hussein from attacking the United States, or territories vital to our national interests, then Secretary Powell has just announced to the world, and more importantly to the America people, that it was a mistake--a very costly one, in lives, money, diplomatic capital, and credibility.

It will be said, however, that WMD wasn't the real reason, only an excuse, that a stable democracy in the center of the Middle East was the noble motivation for invading a sovereign nation. That is an increasingly tough sell also, since the situation in Iraq is rapidly moving towards a state of longterm chaos and civil war. Nation building should be a forever tainted notion if and when we are able to get out of this godawful mess. I can only imagine how I would feel today if my son had given his "last full measure of devotion" in Bush's misadventure in Biblical tit-for-tat with the "evil-doers."
WASHINGTON, May 16 -- Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said for the first time on Sunday that he now believes that the Central Intelligence Agency was deliberately misled about evidence that Saddam Hussein was developing unconventional weapons.

He also said, in his comments on the NBC News program "Meet the Press," that he regrets citing evidence that Iraq had mobile biological laboratories in his presentation to the United Nations on Feb. 5, 2003.

The assertion about the mobile labs was one of the most dramatic pieces of the presentation, which was intended to make public the Bush administration's best case for invading Iraq. For days before his speech, Mr. Powell sat in a conference room at the C.I.A., examining the sources for each charge he planned to make. ...

On Sunday, Mr. Powell hinted at widespread reports of fabrications by an engineer who provided much of the most critical information about the labs. Intelligence officials have since found that the engineer was linked to the Iraqi National Congress, an exile group that was pressing President Bush to unseat Mr. Hussein.

"It turned out that the sourcing was inaccurate and wrong and in some cases, deliberately misleading," Mr. Powell said in the interview, broadcast from Jordan. "And for that, I am disappointed and I regret it."

That was a sharp contrast to comments four months ago by Vice President Dick Cheney, who said the administration still believed that the trailers were part of a program of unconventional weapons, and added that he "would deem that conclusive evidence" that Mr. Hussein in fact had such programs. ...

Taken with past admissions of error by the administration or its intelligence agencies, Mr. Powell's statement on Sunday leaves little room for the administration to argue that Mr. Hussein's stockpiles of unconventional weapons posed any real and imminent threat.

"Basically, Powell now believes that the Iraqis had chemical weapons, and that was it," said an official close to him. "And he is out there publicly saying this now because he doesn't want a legacy as the man who made up stories to provide the president with cover to go to war."
The New York Times
 


10:25 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Biden Wants McCain On Democratic Ticket

Senator McCain keeps saying "no," but more and more influential pols are pushing him to step up and accept the role of "unifier." They believe he can marginalize the extreme wings of both parties. With his unquestioned integrity on issues both domestic and foreign he can silence the nutcases who appear intent upon thrusting American democracy towards a rabid level of ideological partisanship that threatens to spin the nation into a political "civil war," wherein destroying ideas takes precedence over rational governance. Let us hope Senator McCain will seriously consider putting national interests over loyalty to a party that has certainly done him no favors outside of Arizona, in fact far to the contrary.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sen. Joseph Biden, a senior Democrat, on Sunday urged Republican Sen. John McCain to run for vice president with the Democratic hopeful, Sen. John Kerry, in order to heal the "vicious rift" dividing America.

McCain, of Arizona, "categorically" ruled out standing with Kerry, but Biden, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he had no second choice.

"I'm sticking with McCain," Biden said.

"I think John McCain would be a great candidate for vice president," Biden, from Delaware, said on NBC's "Meet the Press," where the two senators appeared together to take questions on Iraq and other subjects.

"Do I think it's going to happen? No," he said. "But I think it is a reflection of the desire of this country and the desire of people in both parties to want to see this God-awful, vicious rift that exists in the nation healed, and John and John could go a long way to heal in that rift."

McCain, chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee and in line to take over the Senate Armed Services panel in two years, endorsed Biden's call for bridging the political gap between Democrats and Republicans.

"There's too much partisanship in America, and there's too much partisanship in the Senate," he said. "And we're not doing our job as our constituents expect us to do."

"I will always take anyone's phone calls," McCain said of any call he might get from Kerry, a fellow decorated Vietnam War veteran. "But I will not, I categorically will not do it."

Kerry said on Wednesday that McCain would be his first choice to replace Donald Rumsfeld, President Bush's secretary of defense now wrestling with the Iraqi prisoner abuse scandal.
Reuters
 


10:07 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



Sunday, May 16, 2004

"Black Ops" Back In The Glaring Light Of Public Scrutiny

Seymour Hersh’s third prisoner abuse article in this week’s New Yorker was no surprise to me. I had, in fact, predicted it, and had predicted that this scandal would almost surely go as high up as Rumsfeld and the Pentagon, and perhaps even the White House. Why? I know how good of an investigative journalist Seymour is, as I have already posted.

Another reason is a bit more complicated, and not as well known to many of the readers of these pages: I have a journalistic and research background in the various intelligence services’ “Special Ops” (Special Operations), “SAPs” (Special Access Program), and most particularly “Black Ops,” as these programs and operations are more commonly spoken of by insiders and practitioners.

Some of this background comes from my work as the biographer of Leonid Shebarshin, the last Chairman of the KGB. However, on its application to the issue directly at hand, my expertise comes from my work with the archives and private papers of the legendary Air Force Colonel, L. Fletcher Prouty, who passed away in 2001. From 1955 until his abrupt retirement in 1964—not long after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, but that is another story for another time—Col. Prouty served as “the first ‘Focal Point’ officer between the CIA and the Air Force for Clandestine Operations per National Security Council Directive 5412. He was [also] Briefing Officer for the Secretary of Defense (1960-1961), and for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.”

At another time I might further explain the circumstances of my work with Colonel Prouty’s private and public papers; for this post, it is sufficient only to say how much I admired him personally and how much I learned from him about the “secret” history of America’s intelligence services from World War II to the end of the 20th Century.

Everything I have learned due to the work mentioned above, and from other sources on other stories, assures me of the accuracy of Seymour Hersh’s reporting of the who, how and why of the prisoner abuse scandal. Frankly, for me much of it reads like old history--because, operationally, it is, only the names of the operatives and the countries have changed. I have excerpted a fairly large amount of the article, however, there is a great deal more; Seymour is given the luxury of writing long with the New Yorker (a tip of the keyboard to Richard, at The Peking Duck, who also posted on this article):
The roots of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal lie not in the criminal inclinations of a few Army reservists but in a decision, approved last year by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, to expand a highly secret operation, which had been focussed on the hunt for Al Qaeda, to the interrogation of prisoners in Iraq. Rumsfeld's decision embittered the American intelligence community, damaged the effectiveness of elite combat units, and hurt America's prospects in the war on terror.

According to interviews with several past and present American intelligence officials, the Pentagon’s operation, known inside the intelligence community by several code words, including Copper Green, encouraged physical coercion and sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners in an effort to generate more intelligence about the growing insurgency in Iraq. A senior C.I.A. official, in confirming the details of this account last week, said that the operation stemmed from Rumsfeld’s long-standing desire to wrest control of America’s clandestine and paramilitary operations from the C.I.A.

The Abu Ghraib story began, in a sense, just weeks after the September 11, 2001, attacks, with the American bombing of Afghanistan. Almost from the start, the Administration’s search for Al Qaeda members in the war zone, and its worldwide search for terrorists, came up against major command-and-control problems. For example, combat forces that had Al Qaeda targets in sight had to obtain legal clearance before firing on them. On October 7th, the night the bombing began, an unmanned Predator aircraft tracked an automobile convoy that, American intelligence believed, contained Mullah Muhammad Omar, the Taliban leader. A lawyer on duty at the United States Central Command headquarters, in Tampa, Florida, refused to authorize a strike. By the time an attack was approved, the target was out of reach. Rumsfeld was apoplectic over what he saw as a self-defeating hesitation to attack that was due to political correctness. One officer described him to me that fall as "kicking a lot of glass and breaking doors." ...

Rumsfeld reacted in his usual direct fashion: he authorized the establishment of a highly secret program that was given blanket advance approval to kill or capture and, if possible, interrogate “high value” targets in the Bush Administration’s war on terror. A special-access program, or sap—subject to the Defense Department’s most stringent level of security—was set up, with an office in a secure area of the Pentagon. ...

"Rumsfeld’s goal was to get a capability in place to take on a high-value target—a standup group to hit quickly," a former high-level intelligence official told me. "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 people assigned to the program worked by the book, the former intelligence official told me. They created code words, and recruited, after careful screening, highly trained commandos and operatives from America’s élite forces—Navy seals, the Army’s Delta Force, and the C.I.A.’s paramilitary experts. They also asked some basic questions: "Do the people working the problem have to use aliases? Yes. Do we need dead drops for the mail? Yes. No traceability and no budget. And some special-access programs are never fully briefed to Congress."

In theory, the operation enabled the Bush Administration to respond immediately to time-sensitive intelligence: commandos crossed borders without visas and could interrogate terrorism suspects deemed too important for transfer to the military’s facilities at Guantánamo, Cuba. They carried out instant interrogations—using force if necessary—at secret C.I.A. detention centers scattered around the world. The intelligence would be relayed to the sap command center in the Pentagon in real time, and sifted for those pieces of information critical to the “white,” or overt, world.

Fewer than two hundred operatives and officials, including Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were “completely read into the program,” the former intelligence official said. The goal was to keep the operation protected. “We’re not going to read more people than necessary into our heart of darkness,” he said. “The rules are ‘Grab whom you must. Do what you want.’”

One Pentagon official who was deeply involved in the program was Stephen Cambone, who was named Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence in March, 2003. The office was new; it was created as part of Rumsfeld’s reorganization of the Pentagon. Cambone was unpopular among military and civilian intelligence bureaucrats in the Pentagon, essentially because he had little experience in running intelligence programs, though in 1998 he had served as staff director for a committee, headed by Rumsfeld, that warned of an emerging ballistic-missile threat to the United States. He was known instead for his closeness to Rumsfeld. “Remember Henry II—‘Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest?’” the senior C.I.A. official said to me, with a laugh, last week. “Whatever Rumsfeld whimsically says, Cambone will do ten times that much.”

Cambone was a strong advocate for war against Iraq. He shared Rumsfeld’s disdain for the analysis and assessments proffered by the C.I.A., viewing them as too cautious, and chafed, as did Rumsfeld, at the C.I.A.’s inability, before the Iraq war, to state conclusively that Saddam Hussein harbored weapons of mass destruction. Cambone’s military assistant, Army Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin, was also controversial. Last fall, he generated unwanted headlines after it was reported that, in a speech at an Oregon church, he equated the Muslim world with Satan.

Early in his tenure, Cambone provoked a bureaucratic battle within the Pentagon by insisting that he be given control of all special-access programs that were relevant to the war on terror. Those programs, which had been viewed by many in the Pentagon as sacrosanct, were monitored by Kenneth deGraffenreid, who had experience in counter-intelligence programs. Cambone got control, and deGraffenreid subsequently left the Pentagon. ...

By then, the war in Iraq had begun. The sap was involved in some assignments in Iraq, the former official said. C.I.A. and other American Special Forces operatives secretly teamed up to hunt for Saddam Hussein and—without success—for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. But they weren’t able to stop the evolving insurgency.

The solution, endorsed by Rumsfeld and carried out by Stephen Cambone, was to get tough with those Iraqis in the Army prison system who were suspected of being insurgents. A key player was Major General Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the detention and interrogation center at Guantánamo, who had been summoned to Baghdad in late August to review prison interrogation procedures. The internal Army report on the abuse charges, written by Major General Antonio Taguba in February, revealed that Miller urged that the commanders in Baghdad change policy and place military intelligence in charge of the prison. The report quoted Miller as recommending that “detention operations must act as an enabler for interrogation.”

Miller’s concept, as it emerged in recent Senate hearings, was to “Gitmoize” the prison system in Iraq—to make it more focussed on interrogation. He also briefed military commanders in Iraq on the interrogation methods used in Cuba—methods that could, with special approval, include sleep deprivation, exposure to extremes of cold and heat, and placing prisoners in “stress positions” for agonizing lengths of time. (The Bush Administration had unilaterally declared Al Qaeda and other captured members of international terrorist networks to be illegal combatants, and not eligible for the protection of the Geneva Conventions.)

Rumsfeld and Cambone went a step further, however: they expanded the scope of the sap, bringing its unconventional methods to Abu Ghraib. The commandos were to operate in Iraq as they had in Afghanistan. The male prisoners could be treated roughly, and exposed to sexual humiliation.

“They weren’t getting anything substantive from the detainees in Iraq,” the former intelligence official told me. “No names. Nothing that they could hang their hat on. Cambone says, I’ve got to crack this thing and I’m tired of working through the normal chain of command. I’ve got this apparatus set up—the black special-access program—and I’m going in hot. So he pulls the switch, and the electricity begins flowing last summer. And it’s working. We’re getting a picture of the insurgency in Iraq and the intelligence is flowing into the white world. We’re getting good stuff. But we’ve got more targets”—prisoners in Iraqi jails—“than people who can handle them.”

Cambone then made another crucial decision, the former intelligence official told me: not only would he bring the sap’s rules into the prisons; he would bring some of the Army military-intelligence officers working inside the Iraqi prisons under the sap’s auspices. “So here are fundamentally good soldiers—military-intelligence guys—being told that no rules apply,” the former official, who has extensive knowledge of the special-access programs, added. “And, as far as they’re concerned, this is a covert operation, and it’s to be kept within Defense Department channels.”

The military-police prison guards, the former official said, included “recycled hillbillies from Cumberland, Maryland.” He was referring to members of the 372nd Military Police Company. Seven members of the company are now facing charges for their role in the abuse at Abu Ghraib. “How are these guys from Cumberland going to know anything? The Army Reserve doesn’t know what it’s doing.”

Who was in charge of Abu Ghraib—whether military police or military intelligence—was no longer the only question that mattered. Hard-core special operatives, some of them with aliases, were working in the prison. The military police assigned to guard the prisoners wore uniforms, but many others—military intelligence officers, contract interpreters, C.I.A. officers, and the men from the special-access program—wore civilian clothes. It was not clear who was who, even to Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, then the commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade, and the officer ostensibly in charge. “I thought most of the civilians there were interpreters, but there were some civilians that I didn’t know,” Karpinski told me. “I called them the disappearing ghosts. I’d seen them once in a while at Abu Ghraib and then I’d see them months later. They were nice—they’d always call out to me and say, ‘Hey, remember me? How are you doing?’” The mysterious civilians, she said, were “always bringing in somebody for interrogation or waiting to collect somebody going out.” Karpinski added that she had no idea who was operating in her prison system. (General Taguba found that Karpinski’s leadership failures contributed to the abuses.)

By fall, according to the former intelligence official, the senior leadership of the C.I.A. had had enough. “They said, ‘No way. We signed up for the core program in Afghanistan—pre-approved for operations against high-value terrorist targets—and now you want to use it for cabdrivers, brothers-in-law, and people pulled off the streets’”—the sort of prisoners who populate the Iraqi jails. “The C.I.A.’s legal people objected,” and the agency ended its sap involvement in Abu Ghraib, the former official said.

The C.I.A.’s complaints were echoed throughout the intelligence community. There was fear that the situation at Abu Ghraib would lead to the exposure of the secret sap, and thereby bring an end to what had been, before Iraq, a valuable cover operation. “This was stupidity,” a government consultant told me. “You’re taking a program that was operating in the chaos of Afghanistan against Al Qaeda, a stateless terror group, and bringing it into a structured, traditional war zone. Sooner or later, the commandos would bump into the legal and moral procedures of a conventional war with an Army of a hundred and thirty-five thousand soldiers.”

The former senior intelligence official blamed hubris for the Abu Ghraib disaster. “There’s nothing more exhilarating for a pissant Pentagon civilian than dealing with an important national security issue without dealing with military planners, who are always worried about risk,” he told me. “What could be more boring than needing the coöperation of logistical planners?” The only difficulty, the former official added, is that, “as soon as you enlarge the secret program beyond the oversight capability of experienced people, you lose control. We’ve never had a case where a special-access program went sour—and this goes back to the Cold War.”

In a separate interview, a Pentagon consultant, who spent much of his career directly involved with special-access programs, spread the blame. “The White House subcontracted this to the Pentagon, and the Pentagon subcontracted it to Cambone,” he said. “This is Cambone’s deal, but Rumsfeld and Myers approved the program.” When it came to the interrogation operation at Abu Ghraib, he said, Rumsfeld left the details to Cambone. Rumsfeld may not be personally culpable, the consultant added, “but he’s responsible for the checks and balances. The issue is that, since 9/11, we’ve changed the rules on how we deal with terrorism, and created conditions where the ends justify the means.”

The notion that Arabs are particularly vulnerable to sexual humiliation became a talking point among pro-war Washington conservatives in the months before the March, 2003, invasion of Iraq. One book that was frequently cited was “The Arab Mind,” a study of Arab culture and psychology, first published in 1973, by Raphael Patai, a cultural anthropologist who taught at, among other universities, Columbia and Princeton, and who died in 1996. The book includes a twenty-five-page chapter on Arabs and sex, depicting sex as a taboo vested with shame and repression. “The segregation of the sexes, the veiling of the women . . . and all the other minute rules that govern and restrict contact between men and women, have the effect of making sex a prime mental preoccupation in the Arab world,” Patai wrote. Homosexual activity, “or any indication of homosexual leanings, as with all other expressions of sexuality, is never given any publicity. These are private affairs and remain in private.” The Patai book, an academic told me, was “the bible of the neocons on Arab behavior.” In their discussions, he said, two themes emerged—“one, that Arabs only understand force and, two, that the biggest weakness of Arabs is shame and humiliation.”

The government consultant said that there may have been a serious goal, in the beginning, behind the sexual humiliation and the posed photographs. It was thought that some prisoners would do anything—including spying on their associates—to avoid dissemination of the shameful photos to family and friends. The government consultant said, “I was told that the purpose of the photographs was to create an army of informants, people you could insert back in the population.” The idea was that they would be motivated by fear of exposure, and gather information about pending insurgency action, the consultant said. If so, it wasn’t effective; the insurgency continued to grow.

“This shit has been brewing for months,” the Pentagon consultant who has dealt with saps told me. “You don’t keep prisoners naked in their cell and then let them get bitten by dogs. This is sick.” The consultant explained that he and his colleagues, all of whom had served for years on active duty in the military, had been appalled by the misuse of Army guard dogs inside Abu Ghraib. “We don’t raise kids to do things like that. When you go after Mullah Omar, that’s one thing. But when you give the authority to kids who don’t know the rules, that’s another.”

In 2003, Rumsfeld’s apparent disregard for the requirements of the Geneva Conventions while carrying out the war on terror had led a group of senior military legal officers from the Judge Advocate General’s (jag) Corps to pay two surprise visits within five months to Scott Horton, who was then chairman of the New York City Bar Association’s Committee on International Human Rights. “They wanted us to challenge the Bush Administration about its standards for detentions and interrogation,” Horton told me. “They were urging us to get involved and speak in a very loud voice. It came pretty much out of the blue. The message was that conditions are ripe for abuse, and it’s going to occur.” The military officials were most alarmed about the growing use of civilian contractors in the interrogation process, Horton recalled. “They said there was an atmosphere of legal ambiguity being created as a result of a policy decision at the highest levels in the Pentagon. The jag officers were being cut out of the policy formulation process.” They told him that, with the war on terror, a fifty-year history of exemplary application of the Geneva Conventions had come to an end.

The abuses at Abu Ghraib were exposed on January 13th, when Joseph Darby, a young military policeman assigned to Abu Ghraib, reported the wrongdoing to the Army’s Criminal Investigations Division. He also turned over a CD full of photographs. Within three days, a report made its way to Donald Rumsfeld, who informed President Bush.

The inquiry presented a dilemma for the Pentagon. The C.I.D. had to be allowed to continue, the former intelligence official said. "You can’t cover it up. You have to prosecute these guys for being off the reservation. But how do you prosecute them when they were covered by the special-access program? So you hope that maybe it’ll go away." The Pentagon’s attitude last January, he said, was "Somebody got caught with some photos. What’s the big deal? Take care of it." Rumsfeld’s explanation to the White House, the official added, was reassuring: "'We’ve got a glitch in the program. We’ll prosecute it.' The cover story was that some kids got out of control." ...

This official went on, “The black guys”—those in the Pentagon’s secret program—“say we’ve got to accept the prosecution. They’re vaccinated from the reality.” The sap is still active, and “the United States is picking up guys for interrogation. The question is, how do they protect the quick-reaction force without blowing its cover?” The program was protected by the fact that no one on the outside was allowed to know of its existence. “If you even give a hint that you’re aware of a black program that you’re not read into, you lose your clearances,” the former official said. “Nobody will talk. So the only people left to prosecute are those who are undefended—the poor kids at the end of the food chain.”

The most vulnerable senior official is Cambone. “The Pentagon is trying now to protect Cambone, and doesn’t know how to do it,” the former intelligence official said.

Last week, the government consultant, who has close ties to many conservatives, defended the Administration’s continued secrecy about the special-access program in Abu Ghraib. “Why keep it black?” the consultant asked. “Because the process is unpleasant. It’s like making sausage—you like the result but you don’t want to know how it was made. Also, you don’t want the Iraqi public, and the Arab world, to know. Remember, we went to Iraq to democratize the Middle East. The last thing you want to do is let the Arab world know how you treat Arab males in prison.”

The former intelligence official told me he feared that one of the disastrous effects of the prison-abuse scandal would be the undermining of legitimate operations in the war on terror, which had already suffered from the draining of resources into Iraq. He portrayed Abu Ghraib as “a tumor” on the war on terror. He said, “As long as it’s benign and contained, the Pentagon can deal with the photo crisis without jeopardizing the secret program. As soon as it begins to grow, with nobody to diagnose it—it becomes a malignant tumor.”

The Pentagon consultant made a similar point. Cambone and his superiors, the consultant said, “created the conditions that allowed transgressions to take place. And now we’re going to end up with another Church Commission”—the 1975 Senate committee on intelligence, headed by Senator Frank Church, of Idaho, which investigated C.I.A. abuses during the previous two decades. Abu Ghraib had sent the message that the Pentagon leadership was unable to handle its discretionary power. “When the shit hits the fan, as it did on 9/11, how do you push the pedal?” the consultant asked. “You do it selectively and with intelligence.”

“Congress is going to get to the bottom of this,” the Pentagon consultant said. “You have to demonstrate that there are checks and balances in the system.” He added, “When you live in a world of gray zones, you have to have very clear red lines.”

Senator John McCain, of Arizona, said, “If this is true, it certainly increases the dimension of this issue and deserves significant scrutiny. I will do all possible to get to the bottom of this, and all other allegations.”

“In an odd way,” Kenneth Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch, said, “the sexual abuses at Abu Ghraib have become a diversion for the prisoner abuse and the violation of the Geneva Conventions that is authorized.” Since September 11th, Roth added, the military has systematically used third-degree techniques around the world on detainees. “Some jags hate this and are horrified that the tolerance of mistreatment will come back and haunt us in the next war,” Roth told me. “We’re giving the world a ready-made excuse to ignore the Geneva Conventions. Rumsfeld has lowered the bar.”
The New Yorker
 


12:54 PM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




Abuse Not As Isolated As The Administration Wants Us To Believe (Updated Post)

Those who are disposed to equate, or even to rationally mitigate, the almost unimaginable brutality of cutting off the head of Nicholas Berg with the also almost unimaginable abuse of Iraqi detainees by Americans, are missing the only truly relevant point politically, if not metaphysically. And that is that America, to be America, must always hold America and Americans to an enormously higher standard than all other people or nations.

You might logically ask why? After all, we are as human and fallible as any other people on Earth. We feel anger, hatred, vengefulness, ethnocentricism and indignation when wronged every bit as much as citizens of other countries. But, while as people we are no different from any other humans on Earth, our ideals are vastly greater than and different from any other nation on Earth.

America is more a state of mind, than a state: And that is our greatness. We are made up of people from every nation-state in the world; but the documents of our principles are singularly, utterly unique. Our Constitution, its Bill of Rights, and all of the protections of the ideals of liberty that through judicial interpretation have further enhanced those two masterpieces of governance literature, demand not that we be above the codes and cultures of other peoples and nations, but that when we behave otherwise, we will be held accountable to their sublime standards. I offer that to be as much the price of freedom as all of the loved ones fallen on all of the battlefields where those principles have been defended over two centuries.

To be an American means that we swear an internal oath to live up to the written ideals of our sacred liberty, or surely, deliberately, with all due process of law, suffer the punishment so mandated when we do not.

Such is what these months ahead of us will determine: Are we still capable of being America, or have we with time and the weariness of strife fallen back and joined the pack of all lesser principled nation-states? The choice is ours to make, jointly, and individually. And we make that choice at the voting booth.

The article excerpted below is further evidence of how difficult it will be to stay true to the state of mind that is America, rather than the fallible humans who make up its populace. (NOTE: Two added articles further detail abuse and widens its scope dramatically.)
WASHINGTON, May 14 -- An American-run detention center outside Baghdad known as Camp Cropper was reportedly the site of numerous abuses of Iraqi prisoners several months before the mistreatment of prisoners unfolded last fall at Abu Ghraib prison, according to documents and interviews.

The detention facility, on the outskirts of Baghdad International Airport, appears to have served as an incubator for the acts of humiliation that were inflicted months later on Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. At both sites, the mistreatment has been linked to interrogations overseen by the 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, based in Wiesbaden, Germany.

The alleged abuses at Camp Cropper last May and June were severe enough to have prompted formal complaints to American commanders from visiting officials of the International Committee for the Red Cross. After several visits to Camp Cropper, where they interviewed Iraqi prisoners, officials of the I.C.R.C. in early July 2003 cited at least 50 incidents of abuse reported to have taken place in a part of the prison under the control of military interrogators.

In one example cited to American officers in Baghdad that month by the committee officials, a prisoner said he had been beaten during interrogation, as part of an ordeal in which he was hooded, cuffed, threatened with being tortured and killed, urinated on, kicked in the head, lower back and groin, "force-fed a baseball which was tied into the mouth using a scarf and deprived of sleep for four consecutive days."

A medical examination of the prisoner by the committee's doctors "revealed hematoma in the lower back, blood in urine, sensory loss in the right hand due to tight handcuffing with flexi-cuffs, and a broken rib," said a final report by the Red Cross panel, which was presented to American officials in February 2004.

"Sometimes they treated them good, and sometimes they didn't treat them so good," Staff Sgt. Floyd Boone, a military policeman, said of the military intelligence interrogators from the 205th Brigade at Camp Cropper.

He and other members of the military police were not permitted to watch the interrogations, he says, but he remembers "all the noise, yelling and screaming" from trailers where interrogators from the 205th Brigade took Iraqi prisoners for questioning before returning them to the custody of the military police.

After the I.C.R.C. complaints, the military interrogation site at Camp Cropper where the abuses took place was closed down, senior military officials said, though they declined to discuss the committee's report or to say whether it had prompted that move. "A decision was made to close the camp and consolidate at Abu Ghraib," a senior military officer said. ...

The brigade commander, Col. Thomas M. Pappas, who took command at the end of June 2003, was later put in charge of interrogations at Abu Ghraib and was implicated by the Army's investigation of abuses as being "either directly or indirectly responsible" for the actions of those who mistreated and humiliated Iraqi prisoners there. ...

The 205th Military Intelligence Brigade is now the principal focus of an internal Army inquiry that is expected to shed new light on the abuses, according to senior military officers.

In November, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the top American commander in Iraq, elevated the brigade to an even more prominent role, assigning it to overall responsibility for Abu Ghraib, over the 800th Military Police Brigade, an Army Reserve unit headed Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski.

At Camp Cropper, as at most American-run prisons in Iraq, the military intelligence brigade, which was responsible for interrogations, operated in a structure parallel to the military police, who were in charge of the prison and its prisoners. ...

[B]y July 2003, alleged abuses of Iraqi prisoners at Camp Cropper were among problems that had prompted loud and repeated warnings, not just from the I.C.R.C. officials, but from others focused on human rights, including Amnesty International, and a top deputy to the United Nations high commissioner for human rights.

In May of 2003, according to the I.C.R.C. report, officials from that organization hand-delivered to officers of the United States Central Command in Doha, Qatar, a memorandum "based on over 200 allegations of ill-treatment of prisoners of war during capture and interrogation" during the period of major combat that followed the American invasion in March.

But it remains unclear how seriously those complaints were taken by American officials, and to what extent they were even addressed by American commanders in Iraq, by the American civilian authorities there, or by their superiors at the Central Command, the Pentagon and the State Department.
There is more in The New York Times

More details of abuse come to light through statements released by a lawyer defending one of the accused:
The Whistle-Blower: Accused Soldier Paints Scene of Eager Mayhem at Iraqi Prison

When a fresh crop of detainees arrived at Abu Ghraib prison one night in late October, their jailers set upon them.

The soldiers pulled seven Iraqi detainees from their cells, "tossed them in the middle of the floor" and then one soldier ran across the room and lunged into the pile of detainees, according to sworn statements given to investigators by one of the soldiers now charged with abuse. He did it again, jumping into the group like it was a pile of autumn leaves, and another soldier called for others to join in. The detainees were ordered to strip and masturbate, their heads covered with plastic sandbags. One soldier stomped on their fingers and toes.

"Graner put the detainee's head into a cradle position with Graner's arm, and Graner punched the detainee with a lot of force, in the temple," Specialist Jeremy C. Sivits said in his statements to investigators, referring to another soldier charged, Specialist Charles A. Graner Jr. "Graner punched the detainee with a closed fist so hard in the temple that it knocked the detainee unconscious."

"He was joking, laughing," Specialist Sivits said. "Like he was enjoying it."

"He went over to the pile of detainees that were still clothed and he put his knees on them and had his picture taken," Specialist Sivits said. "I took this photo." ...

Specialist Graner, meanwhile, was having the other detainees make a tower, all of them in a kneeling position like a formation of cheerleaders.

"Frederick and Graner then tried to get several of the inmates to masturbate themselves," Specialist Sivits recounted.

"Staff Sergeant Frederick would take the hand of the detainee and put it on the detainee's penis, and make the detainee's hand go back and forth, as if masturbating. He did this to about three of the detainees before one of them did it right."

After five minutes, they told him to stop. Specialist Graner then had them pose against the wall, and made one kneel in front of the other, Specialist Sivits said, "So that from behind the detainee that was kneeling, it would look like the detainee kneeling had the penis of the detainee standing in his mouth, but he did not.
The New York Times

Further allegations of abuse feature the C.I.A. and high-profile Al Qaeda captives, which somwhat complicates the issue emotionally if not legally and morally considering American ideals.
Harsh C.I.A. Methods Cited in Top Qaeda Interrogations

WASHINGTON, May 12 -- The Central Intelligence Agency has used coercive interrogation methods against a select group of high-level leaders and operatives of Al Qaeda that have produced growing concerns inside the agency about abuses, according to current and former counterterrorism officials.

At least one agency employee has been disciplined for threatening a detainee with a gun during questioning, they said.

In the case of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, a high-level detainee who is believed to have helped plan the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, C.I.A. interrogators used graduated levels of force, including a technique known as "water boarding," in which a prisoner is strapped down, forcibly pushed under water and made to believe he might drown.

These techniques were authorized by a set of secret rules for the interrogation of high-level Qaeda prisoners, none known to be housed in Iraq, that were endorsed by the Justice Department and the C.I.A. The rules were among the first adopted by the Bush administration after the Sept. 11 attacks for handling detainees and may have helped establish a new understanding throughout the government that officials would have greater freedom to deal harshly with detainees.

Defenders of the operation said the methods stopped short of torture, did not violate American anti-torture statutes, and were necessary to fight a war against a nebulous enemy whose strength and intentions could only be gleaned by extracting information from often uncooperative detainees. Interrogators were trying to find out whether there might be another attack planned against the United States.

The methods employed by the C.I.A. are so severe that senior officials of the Federal Bureau of Investigation have directed its agents to stay out of many of the interviews of the high-level detainees, counterterrorism officials said. The F.B.I. officials have advised the bureau's director, Robert S. Mueller III, that the interrogation techniques, which would be prohibited in criminal cases, could compromise their agents in future criminal cases, the counterterrorism officials said. ...

The C.I.A. detention program for Qaeda leaders is the most secretive component of an extensive regime of detention and interrogation put into place by the United States government after the Sept. 11 attacks and the war in Afghanistan that includes the detention facilities run by the military in Iraq and Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

There is now concern at the agency that the Congressional and criminal inquiries into abuses at Pentagon-run prisons and other detention centers in Iraq and Afghanistan may lead to examinations of the C.I.A's handling of the Qaeda detainees. That, in turn, could expose agency officers and operations to the same kind of public exposure as the military now faces because of the Iraq prison abuses.

So far, the agency has refused to grant any independent observer or human rights group access to the high-level detainees, who have been held in strict secrecy. Their whereabouts are such closely guarded secrets that one official said he had been told that Mr. Bush had informed the C.I.A. that he did not want to know where they were.

The authorized tactics are primarily those methods used in the training of American Special Operations soldiers to prepare them for the possibility of being captured and taken prisoners of war. The tactics simulate torture, but officials say they are supposed to stop short of serious injury.

Counterrorism officials say detainees have also been sent to third countries, where they are convinced that they might be executed, or tricked into believing they were being sent to such places. Some have been hooded, roughed up, soaked with water and deprived of food, light and medications.

Many authorities contend that torture and coercive treatment is as likely to provide information that is unreliable as information that is helpful.

Concerns are mounting among C.I.A. officers about the potential consequences of their actions. "Some people involved in this have been concerned for quite a while that eventually there would be a new president, or the mood in the country would change, and they would be held accountable," one intelligence source said. "Now that's happening faster than anybody expected."

In the interrogation of Mr. Mohammed, C.I.A. officials became convinced that he was not being fully cooperative about his knowledge of the whereabouts of Mr. bin Laden. Mr. Mohammed was carrying a letter written by Mr. bin Laden to a family member when he was captured in Pakistan early in 2003. The C.I.A. officials then authorized even harsher techniques, according to officials familiar with the interrogation.

The C.I.A. has been operating its Qaeda detention system under a series of secret legal opinions by the agency's and Justice Department lawyers. Those rules have provided a legal basis for the use of harsh interrogation techniques, including the water-boarding tactic used against Mr. Mohammed.

One set of legal memorandums, the officials said, advises government officials that if they are contemplating procedures that may put them in violation of American statutes that prohibit torture, degrading treatment or the Geneva Conventions, they will not be responsible if it can be argued that the detainees are formally in the custody of another country.

The Geneva Conventions prohibit "violence to life and person, in particular . . . cruel treatment and torture" and "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment."

Regarding American anti-torture laws, one administration figure involved in discussions about the memorandums said: "The criminal statutes only apply to American officials. The question is how involved are the American officials."

The official said the legal opinions say restrictions on procedures would not apply if the detainee could be deemed to be in the custody of a different country, even though American officials were getting the benefit of the interrogation. "It would be the responsibility of the other country," the official said. "It depends on the level of involvement."

Like the more numerous detainees at Guantánamo Bay, the high-level Qaeda prisoners have also been defined as unlawful combatants, not as prisoners of war. Those prisoners have no standing in American civilian or military courts.

The Bush administration began the program when intelligence agencies realized that a few detainees captured in Afghanistan had such a high intelligence value that they should be separated from the lower-level figures who had been sent to a military installation at Guantánamo Bay, which officials felt was not suitable.

There was little long-term planning. The agency initially had few interrogators and no facilities to house the top detainees. After the Sept. 11 attacks, the agency began to search for remote sites in friendly countries around the world where Qaeda operatives could be kept quietly and securely.

"There was a debate after 9/11 about how to make people disappear," a former intelligence official said.

The result was a series of secret agreements allowing the C.I.A. to use sites overseas without outside scrutiny.

So far, the Bush administration has not said what it intends to do over the long term with any of the high-level detainees, leaving them subject to being imprisoned indefinitely without any access to lawyers, courts or any form of due process.

Some officials have suggested that some of the high-level detainees may be tried in military tribunals or officially turned over to other countries, but counterterrorism officials have complained about the Bush administration's failure to have an "endgame" for these detainees. One official said they could also be imprisoned indefinitely at a new long-term prison being built at Guantánamo.
The New York Times
 


3:58 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    1 comments




Talk About Shutting The Barn Door After The "Animals" Are Charged...

Better late than never is a cliche that does not do justice to this announcement, as the title of this post also does not. A year or two late and 200 Billion Dollars short, a modified cliche, however, fits nicely, even if it is far too flippant:
WASHINGTON, May 14 -- Under a barrage of international and domestic criticism, the top American commander in Iraq has barred virtually all coercive interrogation practices, like forcing prisoners to crouch for long periods or depriving them of sleep, the Pentagon said Friday.

The commander, Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, will still consider requests to hold prisoners in isolation for more than 30 days, according to a senior Central Command official who briefed reporters on Friday. The general has approved 25 such requests since October, the official said. But the official said that General Sanchez would deny requests to use other harsh methods.

"Simply, we will not even entertain a request, so don't even send it up for a review," the Central Command official said.

Previously, certain interrogation techniques, including sensory deprivation were supposed to be used only with the general's explicit approval. General Sanchez issued the new guidelines on Thursday, the same day that Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld made a surprise visit to Baghdad and to Abu Ghraib prison, where the worst abuses occurred, in an effort to quiet the furor over the abuse scandal.

Mr. Rumsfeld has said that the American military in Iraq was abiding by the Geneva Conventions, and that the mistreatment was the work of a terrible few. But at a Senate hearing on Thursday, Mr. Rumsfeld's deputy, Paul D. Wolfowitz, acknowledged that hooding prisoners or forcing them to crouch naked for 45 minutes — tactics available to interrogators with General Sanchez's approval under the old policy — was inhumane. The International Red Cross had warned American officials for months that Iraqi prisoners were being abused in American-run prisons.

The senior Central Command official said the coercive practices were dropped because General Sanchez was not receiving requests to use most of them. But the Pentagon's chief spokesman, Lawrence Di Rita, acknowledged that it was "likely that the heightened scrutiny of the last couple weeks" had prompted General Sanchez to revise the interrogation rules. He said Mr. Rumsfeld did not order General Sanchez to change the policy.

The changes appear to affect only operations in Iraq, and would not change interrogation methods at the American base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, or in Afghanistan. The rules also apply to any civilian contractors.

The Army's top intelligence officer, Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander, had presented to senators this week a list of techniques, some of which were approved for use on all prisoners and others that required General Sanchez's approval. The chart also listed safeguards, including a warning that "approaches must always be humane and lawful." Senators said at the hearing on Tuesday that General Alexander had characterized the one-page chart as a product of the American military high command in Baghdad. But the Central Command official disclosed Friday that the document was actually produced sometime in October by the Army's 205th Military Intelligence Brigade, which oversaw interrogations at Abu Ghraib. The Central Command official also said that until last fall, commanders did not have an interrogation policy specific to Iraq.

That changed, however, after Maj. Gen. Geoffrey D. Miller, the head of detention operations at Guantanamo Bay, visited Iraqi prisons last September and recommended several changes, including the creation of a specific interrogation policy for prisons in Iraq. ...

On Capitol Hill, Senate Democrats who had accused the Pentagon this week of employing practices that violated the Conventions applauded the policy changes. "Pressure works," said Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee.

Senator Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat who clashed with Mr. Wolfowitz at Thursday's hearing, said in a telephone interview, "I'm glad they're changing them, but it's like closing the barn door after the herd is out. Why were these regulations promulgated in the first place?"
The New York Times
 


3:55 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments




The Biggest Story of the Month--and Year--Was Not Prisoner Abuse Or the Murder of Nick Berg

I have been patiently waiting for a big headline announcing the biggest story since the invasion of Iraq. Apparently, I should not hold my breath. I know it has been a a news cycle of almost unprecedented horror stories for weeks now, replete with photos and videos, making such news all the more compelling to editors. But still I thought some sharp young editor, or even more likely, a sharp senior editor closer to 50 than 30, would look at the words that General Myers, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on Capitol Hill this past Thursday, jerk his head in amazement and order up a front page, above the fold Screamer: "General Myers Said We Can't Win In Iraq."

Of course, it did not happen. Oh, he said it, and it was reported. According to Google, America's highest ranking military officer's startling admission was reported in a total of 10 English language news outlets, and 7 of those were syndications of Maureen Dowd's column "Clash of Civilizations" in last Wednesday's The New York Times, which also appears in these pages. Other than Ms. Dowd's excellent column, the item was independently published in The Straits Times as one short paragraph in a lengthy analysis piece on the war in Iraq:
As the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, put it with despairing frankness in his testimony to Congress yesterday: "There is no way to militarily lose in Iraq. There is also no way to militarily win in Iraq."
It also appeared on Yahoo News in an overview Op/Ed column by Richard Reeves:
Or maybe it is Vietnam on amphetamines. There was an astounding flashback, last Wednesday, when the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Richard Myers, told a Senate hearing: "There is no way to militarily lose in Iraq. There is also no way to militarily win in Iraq."

Been there, heard that. We did not lose militarily in Vietnam. We lost politically and morally. And by that I do not mean that we were less moral than the communists or the North Vietnamese. I mean we were less moral than we claimed to be.
It also appeared as a small part of another analysis overview in the Sydney Morning Herald:
But the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, was also wringing his hands before the same committee, telling senators: "There is no way to militarily lose in Iraq ... [but] ... there is also no way to militarily win in Iraq."
And that is all. Frankly, I'm astonished by the lack of attention to what General Myers told a Senate panel. After all of the swagger and macho gung ho'ism of "Shock and Awe," "Mission Accomplished," and the expenditure of almost 200 Billion dollars and almost 800 American soldiers' lives, and all of the patriotic bluster and name-calling when the "Q word" or the "V word" (quagmire and Vietnam) was even mentioned, the admission that we are as stalemated in a quagmire in Iraq as we were in Vietnam, one would think that the administration would have been excoriated by journalists far and wide. But, no.

Such is the power of a scandal that includes sexual perversity, and the power of a ghoulish video-taped human butchering. As a media professional I understand it. As a social historian and lifelong student of all things political, I am absolutely flabbergasted that it didn't even merit a headline anywhere, much less the front page.

One of the articles briefly quoted above, from the Sydney Morning Herald, deserves a fuller offering, and so it follows below:
The roots of revenge
May 15, 2004

The US now confronts a possible civil war of its own making

The speed is breakneck. Cycles of violence in Palestine and Northern Ireland loop from one to the next at a pace that reflects decades or centuries of occupation, but in Iraq they unfold with the power and speed of a jack-hammer on concrete.

This week's grotesque beheading of a Jewish-American in Iraq came after the appalling scandal of the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by their US captors, which followed the debacle of the American attack on Falluja, which was retribution for the butchery of four American security contractors in the same city, which Arab observers claim bore the hallmarks of a revenge attack for an unspecified American act at some point in the past 13 months.

It's hardly surprising, then, that since the fall of Baghdad there's been virtually no oxygen for the serious business of crafting the uncertain future of Iraq.

The Americans would have us believe that they want to be out of there by June 30, when they say they will return control of the country to Iraqis. But the reality is that the occupation will continue, and so will the war.

The US is hard at work building the camps that it wants to become permanent American bases and this week the Deputy Defence Secretary, Paul Wolfowitz, flagged to the US Senate that next year the occupation will soak up billions more dollars than presently acknowledged and possibly even greater troop numbers than the current 138,000.

But the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers, was also wringing his hands before the same committee, telling senators: "There is no way to militarily lose in Iraq ... [but] ... there is also no way to militarily win in Iraq."

Catch-22 - the Americans came to Iraq as the answer, but now they are the problem.

Myers very sensibly hit upon the need to "internationalise" the crisis, embracing a solution spurned so often by Washington: "The United Nations has to play the governance role. That's how we're, in my view, eventually going to win."

The UN has made a tentative return to Iraq. It is assessing the possibility of holding elections before the end of January which it says could happen if there is a significant improvement in security. And with only six weeks to the June 30 handover, the UN special envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi, is trying to do what Washington could not do - cobble together an interim government.

But such is the mess that the US has made of an occupation it insisted would bring democracy to the Middle East, that the chances of a full UN return to Iraq are slim. NATO says it wants nothing to do with it; France and Germany have reaffirmed they'll not send troops; and an attempt by the chief of the US Central Command, General John Abizaid, to publicly browbeat Pakistan, Morocco and Tunisia into providing troops to give the occupation a Muslim face was met with stony silence.

All of which leaves the US President, George Bush, in about the same state as a seasoned US security contractor who, when asked how he was faring at the height of the April hostage crisis in Baghdad, snapped, "Up to my ass in alligators."

The fear now is that the real American success in Iraq has been the creation of the perfect environment for a protracted guerilla war which, at any time, could become a civil war. Resistance is so entrenched that stage-managed events like this week's distribution of sweets to village children near Falluja will have little impact.

Events in recent days have graphically demonstrated the increasingly asymmetric nature of the conflict - a high-tech, digital, self-inflicted wound by the US in the prisoner abuse scandal has overarched a brutal decapitation rooted in the ancient Arab culture of revenge but transmitted globally on the internet. Both sides are reeling without having directly engaged each other.

Some Iraqis will be offended by the manner of the death of Nick Berg, but few will speak against his beheading. Arab conspiracy theorists will be well pleased with the unfolding abuse scandal - their media space is filled with allegations of American wrongdoing and all of it is helped along by the strengths of Western democracy. As a Baghdad cafe-goer told CNN in a prisoner-abuse vox pop this week: "Arabs do it, too, but we're not allowed to talk about it." However, we slice and dice the story in the West: we test it against history, we psychoanalyse it, we leave the accused defend themselves.

It fills our media space and pours selectively into the Arab media in a way that sustains the worst elements of the original allegations which, in many Arab minds, are not against individual soldiers but against the US and the Bush Administration.

It's easy for Washington's defenders and apologists to dismiss the abuse as aberrant behaviour or even as the means to justify an end. But it all looks very different to Arabs who wonder about the democracy roadshow the US is running in the Middle East.

Should they believe in the due process promised in the aftermath of the prisoner abuse - or in the allegation by the International Committee of the Red Cross that as many as 90 per cent of the Iraqis in US detention have committed no wrongdoing? Should they put aside all the lies and half-truths on the way to war: the WMD that didn't exist, the terror links that weren't there, the war to reduce terrorism that brought terrorism to their doorstep?

Those who manipulate the mythic Arab Street don't give lectures on the wonders of the Westminster system or the rich philosophical underpinning of democracy in the US. They are too busy repackaging the latest news in much the same way that Bush and Blair and Howard packaged the worst of the case - true and untrue - against Saddam Hussein before last year's war.

If Americans want a glimpse of the future of their occupation of Iraq, they should look to the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. In the same way that Israeli settlers on Arab land have been targets, so too will US troops be in Iraq. And if they want a sense of what "June 30 return of sovereignty" means, they should look at US plans for an embassy in "independent" Iraq - there will be no fewer than three ambassadors, two of whom are military men. The existing US occupation staff and the presidential bunker they commandeered last year as an American HQ in Baghdad will simply become the embassy and they'll be able to tic-tac with the Iraqi proxies they have already locked into key positions across the bureaucracy ahead of the formation of an Iraqi government.

Presiding over it all will be Ambassador John Negroponte, whose 1980s ambassadorship in Honduras has been much questioned because of allegations of US complicity in the disappearance of people who disagreed with the regime.
Sydney Morning Herald
 


12:25 AM / Joseph Bosco / permalink    0 comments



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