More on Detainee Abuse

The New York Times has more in-depth information than the Post on the detainee abuse.  The issue, which the Post also cites, was in a report issued by Human Rights Watch.  Moreover, the officer reporting the abuse, Capt. Ian Fishback, reported the abuse conditions to his superiors for an extended period of time.  Finally, Capt Fishback made his concerns known to Senators Warner and McCain.

 The 30-page [Human Rights Watch] report does not identify the troops, but one is Capt. Ian Fishback, who has presented some of his allegations in letters this month to top aides of two senior Republicans on the Senate Armed Services Committee, John W. Warner of Virginia, the chairman, and John McCain of Arizona. Captain Fishback approached the Senators’ offices only after he tried to report the allegations to his superiors for 17 months, the aides said. The aides also said they found the captain’s accusations credible enough to warrant investigation. [Emphasis added.]

The abuses reportedly took place between September 2003 and April 2004, before and during the investigations into the notorious misconduct at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. Senior Pentagon officials initially sought to characterize the scandal there as the work of a rogue group of military police soldiers on the prison’s night shift. Since then, the Army has opened more than 400 inquiries into detainee abuse in Iraq and Afghanistan, and punished 230 enlisted soldiers and officers. [Emphasis added.]

In one incident, the Human Rights Watch report states, an off-duty cook broke a detainee’s leg with a metal baseball bat. Detainees were also stacked, fully clothed, in human pyramids and forced to hold five-gallon water jugs with arms outstretched or do jumping jacks until they passed out, the report says. "We would give them blows to the head, chest, legs and stomach, and pull them down, kick dirt on them," one sergeant told Human Rights Watch researchers during one of four interviews in July and August. "This happened every day."

[The Sergeant] said he had acted under orders from military intelligence personnel to soften up detainees, whom the unit called persons under control, or PUC’s, to make them more cooperative during formal interviews.

"They wanted intel," said the sergeant, an infantry fire-team leader who served as a guard when no military police soldiers were available. "As long as no PUC’s came up dead, it happened." He added, "We kept it to broken arms and legs."

The Times goes on to say that Capt. Fish expressed frustration with his civilian and military leaders.  Imagine that. 

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