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Imperial Shame for America at Abu Ghraib
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
May 3, 2004
The sex-abuse, rape, and torture scandal at the Abu
Ghraib prison in Iraq might explain why U.S. officials
have steadfastly opposed joining other nations in the
formation of an international war-crimes tribunal. When
government officials are actively involved in war crimes,
the last thing they want is to be subjected to external
scrutiny, investigation, and punishment. Better to keep
the wrongdoing in-house, where fallout from disclosures
can be minimized and swept under the carpet.
It is impossible to overstate the irreparable damage from
the sex-abuse, rape, and torture scandal at Abu Ghraib
prison.
First, the sex-abuse, rape, and torture scandal at Abu
Ghraib has made it virtually certain that U.S. soldiers
taken captive all over the world will be gravely
mistreated by their captors, and U.S. government pronouncements opposing such mistreatment will ring hollow not only to the captors but also to the people of the world.
Second, the sex abuse, rape, and torture of Iraqi
prisoners has put the American people at greater risk
from terrorism than ever before. Why? Because with the
possible exception of raping women in front of their
families, it is difficult to imagine anything that would
inflame anger and hatred more than humiliating Arab men
with forced nudity, sex abuse, rape, and torture,
especially by U.S. military female personnel.
Even before the 9/11 attacks, The Future of
Freedom Foundation was ardently stating that it is
imperative for the American people to reexamine and
reevaluate Americas foreign policy. We have
repeatedly maintained that, contrary to what U.S.
officials have steadfastly claimed since the September 11
attacks, the anger and hatred that has driven Arab men to
commit acts of terrorism against our country is not
rooted in Americas freedom and values
but instead in anger and hatred for horribly wrongful
acts that have been committed by the U.S. government over
a long period of time. The sex abuse, rape, and torture
of Iraqi detainees at the Abu Ghraib detention center are
just part of this long-established pattern of wrongful
conduct.
Third, if Iraqi insurgents needed any better reason than to fight and die to oust a foreign occupier from
their land, U.S. officials have provided it to them with
the sexual humiliation and torture of Iraqi men. In fact,
that might have even been the real reason the knowledge that the release of those sex abuse photographs all over the Middle East would inflame Iraqi insurgents that U.S.
officials prudently withdrew from Fallujah after
relinquishing control of the city to one of Saddams
old Republican Guard military henchmen.
In fact, I wouldn't even be surprised if the Abu Ghraib nudity, sex-abuse, rape, and torture scandal and the anger and hatred it produces not only among the insurgents and terrorists in Iraq but also among the ordinary people in that country spells the beginning of the end of the U.S. occupation of Iraq. As Juan Cole, professor of modern Middle Eastern history at the University of Michigan, put it in today's (May 3) Washington Post, The public relations damage is profound and permanent. The release of these pictures may be the point at which the United States lost Iraq.
Indeed, it would be difficult to
imagine a better recruiting tool for Osama bin Laden and
al-Qaeda.
For more than a year, The Future of Freedom Foundation
has been publishing articles about growing evidence that
U.S. military officials were committing war crimes
through the torture of prisoners of war. On April 26,
2003, I wrote,
With all the evidence surfacing regarding Saddam
Husseins torture chambers, wouldnt this be a
good time to revisit the issue of whether our government
should be involved in
the same sort of misconduct?
Or is such conduct evil only when Saddam Hussein does it
but good when U.S. officials do it?
The link went to a list of articles that we had posted on
our website in April 2003; on that list were news stories
appearing in CBS News, New York Times,
Washington Post, The Nation,
The Guardian, New Yorker, and many other
sources providing strong circumstantial evidence of U.S.
war crimes involving torture of prisoners.
Also published in April 2003 was my series of articles
entitled Obedience to Orders, which produced
the biggest firestorm of controversy in FFFs
history. The article made the simple point that officers
who graduated from Virginia Military Institute were
generally of higher caliber than officers who graduated
from the professional military academies. (In the
interests of full disclosure, I am a 1972 VMI graduate.)
The reason? The graduates of the academies (generally, and
obviously with exceptions) are taught to maintain an
unswerving obedience to orders, and they know that their
rise through the ranks of the military depends on such a
mindset. VMI officers, on the other hand, being trained
as citizen-soldiers, develop a sense of
conscience and independent thinking that (again generally,
and with exceptions) trumps blind obedience to orders.
Thus, in my Obedience to Orders series, I
pointed out that if it is ever established that U.S.
military personnel have been involved in the torture of
prisoners, it would not surprise me to learn that
graduates of the military academies were in the chain of
command or, faced with knowledge of what was occurring,
remained silent in the face of such war crimes; but that
it would surprise me to learn that VMI officers had done
so.
Immediately, I was inundated with a barrage of critical emails from West Point
cadets questioning my premise that VMI produced better
officers than West Point, but generally failing to focus
on the main point I was making. Thus, I responded with a
blunt challenge:
So lets put the central and important issue in
clear and stark terms, so that there will be no
misunderstanding or side issues to distract us: It is
wrong, immoral, and illegal to torture or mistreat
prisoners of war and criminal suspects. It is a crime or
a war crime to do so, whether its done by an enemy
soldier or cop, or by a U.S. soldier or cop. A military
officer has a moral and legal duty to refuse to obey an
order to that effect, whether it is issued by the
president or simply his immediate superior officer.
Black and white. No hemming and hawing. No fuzziness. No
side issues.
Now there are those who say, But I dont have
proof that my government is engaged in such wrongdoing.
Its all just hearsay. Im hoping that it
really isnt happening.
Well that just doesnt cut it, now does it? After
all, we can all sit here and say that the reports of
rapes at the Air Force Academy are just based on hearsay
and we can just hope that the Academy administration
didnt condemn the women and didnt protect the
rapists, but how can that ostrich strategy be reconciled
with principles of morality and law? After all, its
not possible, is it, that the ostrich strategy that has
covered up rapes and protected rapists at the Air Force
Academy might be related to the ostrich strategy on U.S.
torture and mistreatment of POWs and criminal
suspects?...
Moreover, every officer worth his salt should know that
torture and mistreatment of enemy prisoners of war is the
worst possible military strategy ones side could
employ. If the enemy knows that he is going to be treated
well, he is much more likely to surrender. Why else were
German soldiers desperately fighting (and dying) near the
end of World War II to surrender to U.S. forces rather
than to Soviet forces? Therefore, any officer who gives a
hoot for the welfare of his men will do his best to
ensure that such a wrongful policy is abandoned
posthaste. Moreover, while there is no guarantee that
enemy forces will honor the same rules of right conduct,
its much easier to call on them to do so when you
are on the moral high ground.
Pentagon brass weighed in on the controversy, with a
Pentagon colonel (and West Point graduate) stating in an
email message,
Take my word for it, West Pointers are taught from Day 1
that they are duty bound to disobey illegal or immoral
orders. Furthermore, you chose to discuss sexual
harassment, which I dont find to be relevant, and
ignores the less than stellar record of VMI in the
integration of women, several years after the public
academies.... Your timing is particularly poor given that
alumni of our two institutions are currently putting
their lives on the line side by side in Iraq.
I responded to that Pentagon colonel:
With all due respect, the issue of treatment of POWs and
disobeying immoral and illegal orders is never more
timely than during war. And this includes both the
situation at Guantanamo, where the Pentagon is now
threatening to send Iraqi POWs, and the two homicides of
Afghan POWs in Afghanistan. The only way that wrongdoing
of this nature is going to stop is when one officer says
No, followed by a second, and a third.... One
way is make it stop from the top, such as at the
Pentagon, and another way is to make it stop from the
bottom up. I didnt discuss sexual harassment in my
article. I discussed rape. Theres a difference.
The executive vice-president of the VMI Alumni
Association, one Paul Maini, then weighed in on the
controversy, to one Col. Hudgins at
West Point suggesting that matters stated in my article
were insulting, ridiculous, reprehensible, and
bizarre.
I responded to Mainis message in part 3 of my series, explaining to him why our Founding
Fathers opposed standing armies and favored citizen
soldiers for our country, and asking him, quite bluntly,
Now, Mr. Maini, are you saying that its
insulting, ridiculous, reprehensible, and
bizarre to suggest that the U.S. government is
engaged in the torture and mistreatment of POWs and
criminal suspects? Or are you saying that my contention
that VMI officers are less likely to obey unlawful or
immoral orders than officers from the professional
academies is insulting, ridiculous, reprehensible,
and bizarre? Or are you saying that any
opposition to the U.S. governments torture and
mistreatment of POWs and criminal suspects is
insulting, ridiculous, reprehensible, and
bizarre?
Maini never responded. I wonder what hes thinking
now, in light of the following reactions to the
reprehensible and bizarre sex-abuse, rape, and torture
scandal at Abu Ghraib prison:
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I shared a deep disgust that those prisoners were
treated the way they were treated. Their treatment does
not reflect the nature of the American people.
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President (and commander in chief of
U.S. military forces) George W. Bush |
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Were appalled ... these are our fellow
soldiers, these are the people we work with every day,
they represent us, they wear the same uniform as us, and
they let their fellow soldiers down. We expect our
soldiers to be treated well by the adversary, by the
enemy ... and if we cant hold ourselves up as an
example of how to treat people with dignity and respect,
we cant ask that other nations do that to our
soldiers.
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Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmet, chief U.S.
military
spokesman in Iraq |
Of course, its still impossible to know exactly
which officers were involved in the wrongdoing at the Abu
Ghraib prison because the Pentagon is being cautious and
circumspect about revealing their names. What we do know
is that military officials have so far decided to
court-martial only six soldiers and surprise, surprise
all of them are enlisted personnel (that is, no officers), and again, surprise, surprise
all of them are Reserve, rather than regular Army, troops!
The brigadier
general in charge of the prison, Janis Karpinski,
hasnt been court-martialed. Instead, U.S. military officials have simply "admonished" Karpinski and suspended her from commanding the prison. Karpinski is saying that shes innocent anyway because
the real people in charge of the sex abuse, rape, and
torture in that part of the prison were personnel from
U.S. Military Intelligence, who, she says, wouldnt
permit either Karpinski or the Red Cross to visit
that section of the prison; theres also evidence of
CIA involvement in the wrongdoing as well as participation by paid mercenaries. As previously noted, there is no evidence so far that the government is proceeding criminally against these individuals, much less releasing their identities.
Its hard to see how Karpinski gets off the hook,
though, given that she was the military commander in
overall charge of the prison, with the power and
responsibility to command and control all parts of the prison.
Its easy to understand, however, why the Pentagon
wouldnt want to get her upset with a court-martial,
especially given that she can name names and give
details, which she did anyway over the weekend in an interview with the New York Times.
In fact, while Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of U.S.
forces in Iraq, ordered a study into the scandal a few
months ago, he nonetheless has to be somewhat concerned
over the possibility that the U.S. governments Yamashita doctrine will be applied to him. Youll
recall that Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita was the Japanese
general in charge of the Philippines during World War II
and was executed after a U.S. military tribunal found him
guilty of war crimes. What were his war crimes? None,
except for the fact that the men under his command
committed war crimes after allied bombing prevented
Yamashita from stopping them from committing such war
crimes. In the other words, the Yamashita doctrine, as
set forth by the U.S. military, is that a military
commander is criminally responsible for the war crimes
committed by his men, even if he hasnt ordered,
authorized, or condoned such acts. Sanchez is obviously
in a much worse position than Yamashita, given that he
had total control over Iraq and his men and the Abu
Ghraib prison at the time the sex crimes and torture were
being committed.
Regardless of which people are ultimately punished, it is
impossible for the Pentagon to escape moral
responsibility for the war crimes committed at Abu Ghraib
prison. If Pentagon officers had sent clear and
unmistakable orders down the chain of command from the
very beginning, stating that sex abuse, rape, and torture
of prisoners would not be countenanced and that officers
who permitted such wrongful conduct would be severely
punished, it is unlikely that the war crimes at Abu
Ghraib prison would have been committed. There can be no
doubt that the Pentagons failure to take a clear
and unequivocal stand against such misconduct has
produced the climate under which U.S. military personnel
have thought that it is okay to engage in the
mistreatment of prisoners in Iraq and, for that matter,
in Afghanistan and Cuba as well.
The temptation of the Pentagon might well be to protect itself from the consequences of this scandal, especially if knowledge of what was occurring leads upward to the Pentagon itself. Already, there appear to be attempts to punish lower-ranking individuals with court-martials while
protecting officers and personnel in U.S. Military Intelligence with administrative sanctions and possibly letting CIA officials and private mercenaries off the criminal-prosecution hook entirely, perhaps under the
standard guise of national security. We
shouldnt be surprised if we are treated to a
cavalcade of FOX News-like platitudes from the Pentagon about the need
to support the troops and how this is
just a small minority of bad apples and how
its time to just move on.
Nothing could be worse, both for our country and for our
troops. A full and complete investigation and criminal
prosecution of every single person involved in these war crimes, perhaps even by a nonmilitary independent prosecutor operating within the federal court system, and even if the prosecution reaches the highest reaches of the Pentagon, is necessary, not only for our own sakes,
not only for the sake of Americas integrity, but
also for the sake of our troops. A full and complete
examination and reevaluation of U.S. foreign policy would
be even better.
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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