Navy Documents Detail Iraqi Abuse Claims

NATO AIR

Senior Member
Jun 25, 2004
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Its good we're investigating and going after the people who took things way too far and did bad deeds... in america, rule of law is important, I'd be shocked to see an Arab occupying nation or a European occupying nation go to such lengths to do the right thing and stand up for justice

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6714221/

Navy documents detail abuse claims
More cases unrelated to those at Abu Ghraib prison
The Associated Press
Updated: 6:42 p.m. ET Dec. 14, 2004
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - U.S. Marines forced Iraqi juveniles to kneel while troops discharged a weapon in a mock execution, used electric shock on one prisoner and set fire to a puddle of solvent that burned a prisoner, according to U.S. Navy documents released Tuesday.

The documents portray a series of abuse cases stretching beyond the Abu Ghraib prison, where photographs surfaced this year of U.S. troops forcing prisoners — often naked — to pose in humiliating positions. The files document a crush of abuse allegations, most from the early months of the U.S. occupation of Iraq, that have swamped investigators.

The approximately 10,000 files include investigation reports from the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, or NCIS, and witness interviews.

All names have been blacked out in the documents, which were released under a federal court ruling that ordered the government to comply with a Freedom of Information Act petition filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Center for Constitutional Rights and other organizations.

“This kind of widespread abuse could not have taken place without a leadership failure of the highest order,” said Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the ACLU.

Pentagon says claims being investigated
The Defense Department says cases of abuse are taken seriously and investigated.

“The fact that these cases have been investigated underscores the point that we’ve been making, which is when we have credible allegations of abuse we take them seriously and investigate them,” said Maj. Michael Shavers, a spokesman for the Defense Department.

Some of the documents include the alleged executions of Iraqis. The Navy found the allegations to be “unsubstantiated” and closed the investigation. It remains unclear whether any other military branches are investigating.

In one of the reports, a Marine reported that a fellow officer said he and two others had been ordered to execute three Iraqi “enemy prisoners of war.”

“The executions allegedly took place in early April 2003 while the unit was temporarily based at an abandoned Iraqi pharmaceutical factory south of Baghdad,” according to the NCIS document, dated June 26, 2003.

The Marine said he was threatened with death if he did not carry out the order. The bodies of dead Iraqis were allegedly dumped in a hole, the document said.

The suspect, whose name, along with those of others allegedly involved, was blacked out, was given a polygraph test. “An evaluation of the examination indicated [he] was being truthful in his responses,” the document said.

Troops have said many of them were trained in ways to trick polygraph examiners, although it was unclear whether there was any other reason to close the investigation.

Marines charged in prisoner’s death
At least 19 prisoner deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan have been investigated by the military; eight were determined to be justified killings of an escaping or dangerously violent prisoner.

Several Marines have been charged in connection with the treatment of a member of Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party who strangled after a Marine grabbed him by the neck at a holding facility. Investigators ruled that the death was accidental, but other investigations are pending.

In another of the documents, a Navy corpsman is quoted as saying that “there was a lot of peer pressure to keep one’s mouth shut.”

In yet another, a Navy investigator describes his Iraq caseload as “exploding” with “high visibility cases.”

One case occurred April 13 in al-Mahmudiya, Iraq, where a witness — whose name has been blacked out — saw a Marine “shock an Iraqi detainee with an electric transformer,” holding “wires against the shoulder area of the detainee [who] danced as he was shocked.”

Five suspects were involved in the case, according to the documents. One of them was found guilty of assault, cruelty and maltreatment, among other charges, and was sentenced to a year in the brig. A second suspect was found guilty of cruelty and maltreatment and was sentenced to eight months.

The cases of the three others are pending, according to the documents.

In a case from June 2003, Marines in Adiwaniyah ordered “four juvenile Iraqi looters to kneel beside a shallow fighting hole and a pistol was discharged to conduct a mock execution.”

It was unclear from the redacted documents whether anyone was disciplined.

© 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

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