Winning hearts and minds by torturing innocent civilians
This from the Red Cross report which has caused such a media frenzy:
70 to 90 percent of persons arrested in Iraq were arrested BY MISTAKE. ("Red Cross report describes systematic U.S. abuse in Iraq," 05/10/04, AP/sfgate.com).
Think about that. Much of last year, the Red Cross was trying to call attention to abuses at prisons the US set up for its detainees, and 70 to 90 percent of those people should never have been detained.
There's more:
The agency said arrests allegedly tended to follow a pattern.
"Arresting authorities entered houses usually after dark, breaking down doors, waking up residents roughly, yelling orders, forcing family members into one room under military guard while searching the rest of the house and further breaking doors, cabinets and other property," the report said.
"Sometimes they arrested all adult males present in a house, including elderly, handicapped or sick people," it said. "Treatment often included pushing people around, insulting, taking aim with rifles, punching and kicking and striking with rifles."
It said some coalition military intelligence officers estimated "between 70 percent and 90 percent of the persons deprived of their liberty in Iraq had been arrested by mistake....
This is another article best read in its entirety, so go.
*
Lynndie England, the female soldier grinning in some of the photographs of humiliated Iraqi prisoners which are at the center of international outcry, has stated in interviews that she was 'just following orders.' (BBC, 05/12/04). Perhaps this is why she is smiling so widely in the photographs? She claims that a superior officer may have encouraged the humiliations as part of a psyops operation. The fact that these and other photos were circulating widely among US soldiers for entertainment doesn't entirely support this theory, however.
While 'just following orders' has never excused war crime behavior for nationals of other countries, at least one of my colleagues believes this particular soldier, on the basis that she 'doesn't seem very bright.' (My colleague further notes that 19 year olds don't know anything, which is directly related to why so many of them wind up in the militaries of all nations... Which doesn't make the situation better, certainly.)
Her family has helped catapult Ms. England into the spotlight, by granting interviews in which they insist that
England does represent the values of 'the American soldier,' (video) (BBC, 05/12/04), contrary to President Bush's assertions to the contrary. They also appear to think that 'anything' they daughter was told to do to make the captives cooperate is acceptable.
Read the previous item about how most of the people in captivity should not have been arrested again, please.
*
A
short news item promoted by CBS news suggests that the evil depicted in the photographs (such as Ms. England's) is not the soldiers' fault at all, but merely the natural psychological result of being in 'an evil situation.' To support this theory, they rely upon the
Stanford Prison Experiment (prisonexp.org). However, they appear to oversimplify the experiment.
The experiment's great website provides much more information about this 1971 project and its disturbing results. A small group of volunteers were paid a nominal sum to be screened for 'normalcy' and then randomly assigned the role of a prisoner or prison guard in a prison simulation in a Stanford basement. The two week study had to be cancelled after the 6th day, when several of the guards had become dangerously sadistic and the prisoners were showing signs of deteriorating mental health.
While CBS may conclude that 'everyone' turns evil in an 'evil environment,' the study actually demonstrated that the guards fell into one of three distinct behaviors, and only SOME of them became sadistic when given limitless power over others. That is an important point. Not all of the US military police in Iraq are abusing prisoners, so far as we can tell at the moment. So suggesting that the environment would turn 'everyone' evil doesn't really explain why all the other guards weren't doing the same thing.
If CBS concludes that the US prisons in Iraq are inherently 'evil,' that should also be examined: if war crimes are the natural result of detention centers, detention centers must not be created. If the abuse occurs because it is policy, that policy should end. If it is a failure of leadership, those leaders must be replaced. And if it is a policy of racism and oppression based on the occupation of a foreign nation with different customs and beliefs, the occupation MUST end.
*
P.S. I see that Slate now has an item called
The Stanford Prison Experiment doesn't explain Abu Ghraib, by William Saletan (slate.msn.com, 05/12/04), which raises additional points negating the comparison.
*
The
Executive summary of Article 15-6 investigation of the 800th Military Police Brigade by Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba (msnbc.msn.com) came out on May 4, 2004, but no one has mentioned that female Iraqi detainees were raped in the mass media summaries of the scandal.
It is surely being mentioned overseas.
Read the findings of fact, section 6, which details the abuses, including:
b. (S) Videotaping and photographing naked male and female detainees...
k. (S) A male MP guard having sex with a female detainee;...
See also Annexes 25 & 26, which detail chemical attacks, sodomy, and other abuses.
*
"New abuse photos are 'even worse'" ( BBC 05/12/04) reveals that the Pentagon has photographs depicting more despicable acts by US soldiers than have yet been released. Senators who have viewed them claim they are many times worse than those previously released. (See also
Lawmakers Are Stunned By New Images of Abuse, by Charles Babington (washingtonpost.com, 05/13/04 (tomorrow's paper), in which U.S. lawmakers observe that there are more U.S. troop boots in the photographs than there are persons who have been accused of wrongdoing, and more people must have been involved in these acts).
*
The beheading of Nicholas Berg has been condemned by Bush as showing the true nature of the resistance to US forces, though the photographs of US forces tormenting Iraqi captives are NOT representative of
their nature.
Oh, I see.
*
U.S. media are not broadcasting video of the beheading of Nicholas Berg. (BBC 05/12/04) It has been available in Arab media,
where the images of the US tormenting hundreds of captives is still reverberating, and condemnation for the beheading is mixed with a lack of surprise, considering how much evil has recently been visited upon the people of Iraq in recent times. (same)
Since the Arab world gets completely different & much more graphic coverage of events there than we do, it isn't entirely surprising that the soft-news western expectation that the Arabs equate one beheading with the humiliation of hundreds and deaths of thousands aren't quite being met. It just may not be possible for such an equation to be made. At least, not by anyone who believes that all lives are of equal value, regardless of nationality.