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Troops Reprimanded For Abuse |
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The American officer
who oversaw the prison said many more troops might have been involved. The soldiers were
reprimanded on the orders of Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of In The six served in
supervisory positions in the prison. "There may well be
additional decisions" about disciplinary action against others as a
result of the investigation," Di Rita added. The official said he
believed the seven officers would not face further action or court martial,
but the reprimands could mean the end of their careers. Another six President Bush called
Rumsfeld before a campaign trip Monday and urged him to make sure the U.S.
soldiers are punished, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said. "The president
wanted to make sure appropriate action is being taken against those
responsible for these shameful and appalling acts," he said. The U.S.-appointed
Iraqi Governing Council joined the chorus of international criticism of the
alleged abuse, terming it a violation of international law and the Geneva
Conventions. The council demanded that At a news conference in
Brig. Gen. Janis
Karpinski, who oversaw the prison, said that she did not know about the
prisoner abuse while it was happening. "They were
despicable acts," Karpinski said Monday on ABC's "Good Morning
America." "Had I known anything about it, I certainly would have
reacted very quickly." Karpinski, commander of
the 800th Military Police Brigade, said one photograph from the prison
appeared to show more Americans involved in the alleged abuse than the six MPs
who have been charged. "One photograph
showed - it didn't show faces completely, but the photograph showed 32
boots," Karpinski told ABC. "I'm saying other people than the
military police." It wasn't clear if that
would include the seven soldiers reprimanded. Brig. Gen. Mark
Kimmitt, chief Last week, CBS'
"60 Minutes II" broadcast images allegedly showing Iraqis stripped
naked, hooded and being tormented by their An internal U.S. Army
report found that Iraqi detainees were subjected to "sadistic, blatant
and wanton criminal abuses," according to The New Yorker magazine. A British newspaper
also published photos purporting to show members of a British Army regiment
abusing prisoners, but a former commander of the unit said Monday that the
photos had "too many inconsistencies" to be genuine. The Daily Mirror
newspaper stood by the photos, which allegedly show a hooded Iraqi being
pushed, threatened and urinated on by a soldier from
the Queen's Lancashire Regiment. Col. David Black, who
led the regiment in the 1980s, told British Broadcasting Corp. television
that equipment and a truck pictured in the photos had not been used by the
regiment in "The evidence we
have seen so far looking at the photographs, there are too many
inconsistencies," he said. British military police
are conducting an investigation in The Daily Mirror said
the photos were supplied by two serving members of the regiment. On Monday it
quoted one of the unidentified soldiers as saying he had seen "literally
hundreds" of similar pictures. Prime Minister Tony
Blair has condemned the alleged abuse by British soldiers, but said the vast
majority of troops "are doing a fantastic job for the Iraqi
people." The Arab language
television station Al-Jazeera broadcast an interview Monday with two Iraqis
who said they were abused at Abu Ghraib. One, identified only as Hashim, said
guards "covered our heads with bags, they beat us with the butts of
their guns without any fear that we would die of the blows." "They made us take
our clothes off and they pushed us against the wall," he said.
"They did things to us that I am unable to talk about." The other Iraqi, Haider
Sabar, said an American intelligence officer, along with an Iraqi and an
Egyptian translator, showed him "immoral photos of the acts that took
place" - apparently to frighten him. |