Rumsfeld ordered torture
http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2005/10/28/4178.shtml
Speaking to 'Democracy Now', Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, former
military police commander at the centre of the Iraqi prisoner
scandal, published a book, "One Woman’s Army: The Commanding General
of Abu Ghraib Tells Her Story", in which she described her
experience at the Iraqi prison.
Karpinski, the highest-ranking officer demoted in connection with
the abuse scandal, has admitted she violated the Geneva Conventions,
however she said that part of the blame "Goes All the Way to The
Top”, stated democracynow.org.
The abuse scandal first broke out in April 2004, when photographs
depicting the sexual abuse and torture of naked Iraqi detainees were
released by the world media, sparking outrage worldwide.
Karpinski said that military intelligence took over part of the Abu
Ghraib jail to "Gitmoize" their interrogations, in other words,
applying methods and tactics used at the U.S. detention center at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Karpinski, who said she was being made a "convenient scapegoat" for
abuse ordered by top-ranking officials, called on holding Donald
Rumsfeld, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, Alberto Gonzalez and Maj. Gen.
Geoffrey Miller accountable for what happened.
AMY GOODMAN: “Today, Janis Karpinski joins us for the hour here on
Democracy Now! And she has just published a book about her
experience. It's called One Woman's Army: The Commanding General of
Abu Ghraib Tells Her Story. Colonel Janis Karpinski, welcome to
Democracy Now!”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “Good morning. Glad to be here. “
AMY GOODMAN: “It’s good to have you with us. How did you end up at
Abu Ghraib?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “Abu Ghraib was one of 17 prison facilities
that we were responsible for in Iraq. The units deployed from
January throughout 2003 up ’til about April of 2003 to conduct a
prisoner of war mission. The units are trained to do prisoner of war
operations, and a prisoner of war camp was established in Iraq, very
close to the Kuwait border. So, the units -- the unit members, the
soldiers, all believed that they were going to come home after
victory was declared on the First of May when the President arrived
on the aircraft carrier. They allowed me to deploy to Iraq to join
my units, to take command of the units, although I was told that the
majority of the units, the soldiers, would be coming back home
because the mission was complete. “
“When I arrived in Kuwait, I was told that the units were going to
be staying for an additional two months, because we were assigned a
new mission for prison restoration and training, assisting the
prison's experts up at Ambassador Bremer's headquarters in Baghdad,
with training Iraqi guards to conduct prison and detention
operations. So we relocated. There was never any discussion about
whether we were properly equipped or prepared to take on this
mission. It was simply assigned to us, and very quickly the
two-month extension became a four-month extension, and then it
became 365 days, boots on the ground, for all of the units that were
deployed. “
“So, soldiers were sent to war with the full expectations that they
would be home in six months or less, as they were repeatedly told at
the mobilization stations in the United States, and once they were
there, they couldn't get out. The extension took them six additional
months, tremendous impact on reserve and National Guard soldiers, in
particular, but nonetheless, this was the mission. They went forward
to different locations in Iraq and took on this new detention
operation -- mission. “
“Abu Ghraib was the largest of our facilities. It was located in the
Sunni Triangle. It was never a good location for any kind of
detention operations, let alone the largest detention operation and
then, subsequently, the interrogation center for Iraq. We were being
mortared every night at that location. We received no combat support
for force protection to prevent any of those attacks from occurring,
and the unit that was out there doing that mission, that particular
mission at Abu Ghraib, was not equipped with any kind of combat
platforms to give adequate protection to prisoners or soldiers.”
AMY GOODMAN: “How many M.P.s, military police, were under your
command? “
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: 3,400 soldiers were under the 800th Military
Police Brigade, and probably 2,400 of them, 2,500 of them were
military police personnel. “
AMY GOODMAN: “And how many prisoners were there? “
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “At Abu Ghraib alone, the prisoner population
did reach over 7,000 by the end of -- nearing the end of 2003, but
we processed over 40,000 prisoners during the course of the time
that the 800th M.P. Brigade was responsible for prisoner operations.
“
AMY GOODMAN: “Talk about General Miller. Who is he?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “General Miller was sent to visit Iraq by
Secretary Rumsfeld and the Undersecretary Cambone. And they came --
General Miller came to visit from Guantanamo Bay. He was the
commander of detention operations at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and he
was sent to assist the military intelligence interrogators with
enhancing their techniques. And he brought with him the techniques
that were tested and in use at Guantanamo Bay. And he brought a team
of about 20 people, 22 people with him to discuss all aspects of
interrogation operations, and actually, he did an in-brief. I was
invited to participate or to attend to listen to his in-brief,
because he was working almost exclusively with the military
intelligence people and the military intelligence interrogators
while he was there.”
“But we owned the locations that he was going to visit, and he
ultimately selected Abu Ghraib to be the focus of his efforts, and
he told me that he was going to make it the interrogation center for
Iraq. He used the term, he was going to “Gitmo-ize” the operation
and use the M.P.s to assist the interrogators to enhance
interrogations and to obtain more actionable intelligence. “
AMY GOODMAN: “What about the dogs? Is that when the dogs were
introduced? “
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: Shortly after his visit, he -- again, he was
spending most of his time with the commander of the Military
Intelligence Brigade, Colonel Pappas. In his in-brief, his
introduction when he first arrived there with his team, he responded
to one of the interrogators, the military interrogator's question,
and he was listening to the comments, the criticisms that they were
doing these interviews and they were not obtaining really valuable
information, so he was there to assist them with different --
implementing different techniques to get more actionable
intelligence.
And one of the interrogators just asked the question about what he
would recommend that they could do immediately, because they thought
that they were doing a pretty good job with identifying the people
who may have additional value or more military intelligence value,
and General Miller said -- his first observation was that they were
not -- they were being too nice to them. They were not being
aggressive enough. And he used the example at Guantanamo Bay that
the prisoners there, when they're brought in, that they're handled
by two military policemen. They're escorted everywhere they go --
belly chains, leg irons, hand irons -- and he said, “You have to
treat them like dogs.”
AMY GOODMAN: “Now, Colonel Pappas ran the prison within the prison,
is that right? He ran something called the “hard site”?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “He ran the interrogation operations within
the prison, that's correct. And it was -- Cell Block 1A and 1B were
the two maximum security wings of the hard site, and during General
Miller's visit, either at his order or at his request, General
Miller told -- instructed Colonel Pappas to get control of Cell
Block 1A. “
AMY GOODMAN: “Treat the prisoners like dogs. That explains the
leashes and making prisoners bark?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “It seems to be consistent with those
photographs, yes, with the dog collar, the dog leash and un-muzzled
dogs. And, in fact, those techniques have appeared in several
memorandums that have been signed by senior people.”
AMY GOODMAN: “When did you start to understand what was happening?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “About the situation at Abu Ghraib, I was
first informed by an email that I received on classified – what they
call “classified traffic.” I opened it up late one night on the 12th
of January of 2004. And it was from the commander of the Criminal
Investigation Division. He sent me an email and said, “Ma'am, I just
want to make you aware, I'm going in to brief the C.G.,” meaning
General Sanchez, “on the progress of the investigation at Abu Ghraib.
This involves the allegations of abuse and the photographs.” That
was the first I heard of it. “
“I did not receive that email or phone call or a message from
General Sanchez himself, who would ultimately attempt to hold me
fully responsible for this, but from the C.I.D. Commander. And I was
alarmed at just that short email. I was not in Baghdad at the time.
I was at another location very close to the Iranian border, so we
made arrangements to leave at the crack of dawn to drive down to Abu
Ghraib to see what we could find out about this ongoing
investigation and went through the battalion over to Cell Block 1A.
The people who would normally be working on any shift were not
working. The sergeant that I spoke to said that their records had
been seized by the investigators, and they started a new log to
account for prisoners, make sure that their meals were on time,
those kind of things, and he pointed out a memo that was posted on a
column just outside of their small administrative office. And the
memorandum was signed by the Secretary of Defense, and –
AMY GOODMAN: “By Donald Rumsfeld.”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “By Donald Rumsfeld. And said – it discussed
interrogation techniques that were authorized. It was one page. It
talked about stress positions, noise and light discipline, the use
of music, disrupting sleep patterns, those kind of techniques. But
there was a handwritten note out to the side. And this was a copy.
It was a photocopy of the original, I would imagine. But it was
unusual that an interrogation memorandum would be posted inside of a
detention cell block, because interrogations were not conducted in
the cell block.”
AMY GOODMAN: “This was the command of Donald Rumsfeld himself?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “Yes. “
AMY GOODMAN: “Talking about the techniques?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “The techniques that were allowed. And there
was a note – handwritten note out to the side of where the list of
tactics, interrogation tactics were. It said, "Make sure this
happens." And it seemed to be in the same handwriting as the
signature. That's what I could say about the memorandum.”
AMY GOODMAN: “People understood it to be from Rumsfeld?”
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “Yes, they certainly did. And I never heard a
word – I did – certainly did see the reference to photographs in the
original email, but when I asked the soldier, when I asked the
sergeant, when I asked the commanders out at Abu Ghraib, what did
they know about, they knew nothing about it. They had heard that
there were some photographs, but they did not know any specifics.”
AMY GOODMAN: The Geneva – the ghost detainees, is this the only time
you believe you broke the Geneva Conventions?
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: Well, I will tell you that all of the prison
facilities were right on the line, not in terms of how the prisoners
were being treated, but the conditions were very austere. We were
keeping prisoners in the outside camps only for as long as we needed
to because the temperatures were 120 degrees, 140 degrees by
noontime, so I would say that we were very close to being in
violation of fair treatment and humane treatment of detainees.
AMY GOODMAN: Did you ever speak directly to Donald Rumsfeld?
COL. JANIS KARPINSKI: “No, I – Yes, he came to visit, and I
expressed my concerns about the conditions in the prisons. I spoke
directly to Ambassador Bremer nearly every week. I spoke to General
Sanchez at least once every week, reported it in the updates and the
night time briefings to General Wojdakowski, who was the deputy at
CJTF-7, about the lack of funding, even the basic supplies: a basin
for washing, a change of clothing, and the funding that was supposed
to come from the prisons department at Ambassador Bremer's
headquarters. We never saw one-tenth of the funds that we were
supposed to receive. “
Agencies
2005-10-28 12:09:27
http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2005/10/28/4178.shtml
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All Politics Is Torture
New Haven Advocate, CT - Oct 13, 2005
... You know that Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez wrote a memo
when he was at the White House that appeared to condone torture in
the prosecution of this war. ...
http://WWW.newhavenadvocate.com/gbase/News/content%3Foid%3Doid%3A129677&cid=0
The Alberto Gonzalez Torture Memo Story
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/ENGLAND3.HTM
... In fact, in an interview with two Washington Post reporters,
"President ... Alberto Gonzalez
(torture memo author) has been nominated to be Attorney General, and
...