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Rumsfeld Gave Go-Ahead for Abu Ghraib
Tactics, says General In Charge
by
Julian Coman
The former head
of the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad has for the
first time accused the American Secretary of Defense,
Donald Rumsfeld, of directly authorizing Guantanamo
Bay-style interrogation tactics.
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Brig Gen
Karpinski [left] with Donald Rumsfeld, after
Guantanamo
chief jailer Maj Gen Miller's visit to
Iraq (The Telegraph)
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Brig-Gen Janis
Karpinski, who commanded the 800th Military Police
Brigade, which is at the center of the Abu Ghraib
prisoner-abuse scandal, said that documents yet to
be released by the Pentagon would show that Mr
Rumsfeld personally approved the introduction of
harsher conditions of detention in Iraq.
In an interview with The Signal newspaper of Santa
Clarita, California, which was also broadcast on a
local television channel yesterday, Gen Karpinski
was asked if she knew of documents showing that Mr
Rumsfeld approved "particular interrogation
techniques" for Abu Ghraib.
Gen Karpinski was interviewed for four hours by Maj-
Gen Antonio Taguba, who was ordered to investigate
abuse at Abu Ghraib and produced a damning report,
which heavily criticized Gen Karpinski for a lack of
leadership at the prison.
During inquiries into the scandal, she has
repeatedly maintained that the treatment of Iraqi
detainees was taken out of her hands by higher-ranking
officials, acting on orders from Washington.
"Since all this came out," she replied, "I've not
only seen, but I've been asked about some of those
documents, that he [Mr Rumsfeld] signed and agreed
to."
Asked whether the documents have been made public,
Gen Karpinski replied "No" and went on to describe
the methods approved in them as involving "dogs,
food deprivation and sleep deprivation".
The Pentagon has consistently denied that Mr
Rumsfeld authorized the transfer of harsher
techniques of interrogation and detention from
Guantanamo Bay to Abu Ghraib, where all prisoners
are supposed to be protected by the Geneva
Conventions.
Replying to Gen Karpinski's allegations, a spokesman
for the Pentagon told The Telegraph: "Mr Rumsfeld
did not approve any interrogation procedures in Iraq.
The Secretary of Defense was not in the approval
chain for interrogation procedures, which would have
remained within the purview of Central Command,
headed by Gen John Abizaid."
The Bush administration has been dogged by
suspicions that harsh interrogation methods employed
at Guantanamo were transferred to Abu Ghraib, as
Iraqi insurgents began to score significant hits
against coalition forces last year. In May, before
the Senate armed services committee, Stephen Cambone,
the under-secretary of Defense for intelligence,
publicly denied charges that Mr Rumsfeld had
approved Guantanamo-style interrogations in Iraq.
Last month, the White House took the unusual step of
releasing hundreds of internal documents and debates
concerning interrogation procedures at Guantanamo.
Extreme interrogation techniques at the camp, it was
revealed, now require the explicit approval of Mr
Rumsfeld. The Bush administration insists, however,
that the notorious abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib
was an aberration on the part of a handful of rogue
soldiers. A Pentagon spokesman said that all
relevant documents on interrogation techniques in
Iraq would be made public but could not say when.
Gen Karpinski has been suspended from duty pending
ongoing investigations into abuse of prisoners at
the Baghdad prison. In a recent interview with the
BBC, she complained of being turned into a scapegoat
for the scandal, arguing that the running of the
prison was taken out of her hands.
In a separate embarrassment for the Department of
Defense last week, six recent studies, leaked to the
Los Angeles Times, heavily criticized the military
for failing to screen adequately potential recruits
with violent and even criminal backgrounds.
The reports were written by a senior Pentagon
consultant. One was delivered in September 2003,
weeks before the worst abuses of Iraqi prisoners
took place. The title of the report was Reducing the
Threat of Destructive Behavior by Military Personnel.
In it the author, Eli Flyer, a former senior analyst
at the Department of Defense, stated: "There are
military personnel with pre-service and in-service
records that clearly establish a pattern of sub-standard
Behavior These individuals constitute a high-risk
group for destructive Behavior and need to be
identified."
According to a 1998 report by Mr Flyer, one third of
military recruits had arrest records. A 1995 report
found that a quarter of serving army personnel had
committed one or more criminal offences while on
active duty. In his 2003 study, Mr Flyer said that
military personnel officers had been reluctant to
toughen up screening procedures, fearing that the
result would be a failure to meet recruitment goals.
Curtis Gilroy, who oversees military recruiting
policy for the Pentagon, told the Los Angeles Times:
"It's hard to pick out all the bad apples, but we
are striving to improve the system and are doing
so."
Taken from:
The Telegraph |