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#11
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![]() That's funny, since DOD released news of the relief of command and that investigations were ongoing back in January. Note that most or all of the information in the media came not for from their investigative reporting, but from the Pentagon investigation. That is, it was the DOD that broke the news. See the Wall Street Journal on "Abuse and the Army" http://www.opinionjournal.com/editor...l?id=110005044 all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com Viva Bush! blog www.vivabush.org |
#12
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gezz emma .... bush jnr wont like your thoughts at brekkie
tomorrow...they are so simple and clear he wouldnt know what your on about... Emmanuel Gustin wrote: "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... Emmanuel, what would *you* have done more rapidly or differently from the above? Well, for a start, there are persistent reports that the Pentagon allows "special techniques" to be used on prisoners as "enablers for interrogation". If true, that is a war crime. Not, of course, at the same level as actual mass murder or genocide; as OJ would say, there is still a difference between beating a wife and murdering her. Nevertheless a crime which, brought to court, would merit at least a few years imprisonment. But also stupid. The psychology of camp and prison guards has been studied extensively. Give people a position of power and the feeling that some rough behaviour to prisoners is not just tolerated, but expected, and you will see no end to what they will fall to, especially under stress. For *most* people that is a very steep slippery slope. It doesn't take a particularly bad character. (The guards who committed the crimes cannot be absolved of guilt, but is also unfair to demonize them.) Allow the line to be crossed, and you are certain to have a disaster. If it is not true, it is still unforgivable that the US government allows its credibility to drop so low that such rumours are widely believed and printed. It is the duty of government officials to make it 100% clear and obvious that such behaviour will not be tolerated, BEFORE it happens. Afterwards is always too late. To blindly trust that it will not happen, in a war situation, is plainly stupid. (Vietnam should at least have served as a warning.) The US government does allow Red Cross inspections of the detention facilities in Iraq. At the very least it has neglected to give the unsatisfactory reports that it has been receiving for over a year, the attention they deserved. And to neglect an issue like this, in a situation where a hollow pumpkin could grasp the importance of showing scrupulous respect to the Iraqi people, is beyond words. -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be Flying Guns Books and Site: http://users.skynet.be/Emmanuel.Gustin/ |
#13
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... Let's see, according to the AP's timeline for this incident: "Jan. 13, 2004: Army Spc. Joseph M. Darby, an MP with the 800th at Abu Ghraib, first reports cases of abuse at the prison. The problem with this AP "timeline" is what it leaves out. The first report of the ICRC notifying the US government about abuse of prisoners by US soldiers was delivered a long time before the US Army finally took this action. The director of operations of the Red Cross, Mr. Kraehenbuehl, is quoted as saying "Our findings were discussed at different moments between March and November 2003, either in direct face-to-face conversations or in written interventions." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3694521.stm) March 2003 to January 2004 is very a long time to do nothing. Red Cross reports are confidential -- the burden of taking action rests on the government. LOL! March 2003 was when we were moving into Iraq--pretty quick reaction time for the ICRC, eh? And the thought of securing a bad guy in an unlit cell...jeepers (at a time when most civilian Iraqis were also without power...that's rich!)! The claims of murder and shootings seem a bit far-fetched--I guess you think we covered those up, but for some odd reason when the first reputable claim of mistreatment at Abu Ghraib was presented to the military chain, they immediately initiated (multiple) investigations and announced that to the press, eh? Now how do you explain that? Again, you are letting your prejudices cloud your better judgement. I thought you were a bit more sensible than what you have been exhibiting of late, Emmanuel. We have already begun criminal proceedings against soldiers involved in this terrible affair. I will bet you that our accused personnel face a bit tougher future than some other nation's troops that were photographed doing some rather disgusting things (to children, no less--ring any bells for you?)...maybe you ought to instead look a bit closer to home, if you feel such outrageous indignation at the idea of such treatement of prisoners? "First published in the United States on the cover of the June 24th issue of the left-wing weekly Village Voice, the photograph depicts two Belgian paladins of the new world order giddily holding a Somali child over an open flame...One Belgian UN soldier testified that it was a regular practice to use metal boxes as prison cells, and that other Somalis probably died similarly gruesome deaths...Belgian military authorities launched an investigation into the atrocities following publication of a front-page story by Belgium's Het Laatste Nieuws. In early July, Privates Claude Baert and Kurt Coelus, the two paratroopers photographed dangling the Somali child over a flame, were acquitted by a military court, which ruled that the incident - described by Baert and Coelus as a punishment for stealing - was "a form of playing without violence," according to prosecutor Luc Walleyn...In September, another military tribunal will be held to investigate the actions of Sergeant Dirk Nassel, the soldier photographed forcing a Somali boy to ingest worms and vomit. However, the Belgian military system - which is deeply entwined with the UN "peacekeeping" apparatus - has yet to inflict substantive penalties for abuses committed in the service of the UN. Several years ago, according to Gould, "Belgian soldiers were also accused of holding mock executions for Somali children and forcing them to dig their own graves; though their officer was given a suspended sentence, the soldiers were acquitted." (www.whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/ POLITICS/UN/peace.html ) [I was not sure about the veracity of this article, given the somewhat whack-o bent of the website, but it appears from scanning AP reports from the period it was accurate] Or: "A fourth member of the 3rd battalion of the Parachute Regiment, based at Tielen in Flanders, is also due to go on trial in September. Sergeant Major Rudy Derkinderen is suspected of having murdered a Somali whom he was photographed urinating on. The circumstances surrounding the death of another child at the paratroopers' base near Kismayo in southern Somalia are also under investigation. According to the testimony of two former paratroopers, the boy, who had been caught trying to steal food, died after being locked in a container for 48 hours." (www.public.iastate.edu/~vwindsor/WTH.html ) Sounds like you have to do a bit of house-cleaning of your own (I notice that your military courts proved either unwilling or unable to do it for you) before you start worrying too much about whether or not the Iraqi PW's had electric lighting in-place IAW with your own expectations--and I guess in Belgian circles "firelight" is acceptable (even if it is used to "heat up" some Somali child?). Brooks Emmanuel Gustin |
#14
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... Emmanuel, what would *you* have done more rapidly or differently from the above? Well, for a start, there are persistent reports that the Pentagon allows "special techniques" to be used on prisoners as "enablers for interrogation". If true, that is a war crime. No, that depends upon what you are specifically referring to. The actions of the guards at Abu Ghraib do appear to be clear-cut criminal acts--which is why prosecutions are underway. More subtle forms of softening up individuals for interrogation are not necessarily criminal acts, though (i.e., sleep deprivation, within reasonable limits; isolation, again within reasonable limits, etc.). Not, of course, at the same level as actual mass murder or genocide; as OJ would say, there is still a difference between beating a wife and murdering her. Nevertheless a crime which, brought to court, would merit at least a few years imprisonment. How much time did the prosecution ask for in the case of those two Belgian paras holding the kid over the fire? One *month*? (They of course did not even get *that*). How much time did SGT Nassel end up receiving--one single year, IIRC (and only then after his original lesser sentence was appealed?)? But also stupid. The psychology of camp and prison guards has been studied extensively. Give people a position of power and the feeling that some rough behaviour to prisoners is not just tolerated, but expected, and you will see no end to what they will fall to, especially under stress. For *most* people that is a very steep slippery slope. It doesn't take a particularly bad character. (The guards who committed the crimes cannot be absolved of guilt, but is also unfair to demonize them.) Allow the line to be crossed, and you are certain to have a disaster. If it is not true, it is still unforgivable that the US government allows its credibility to drop so low that such rumours are widely believed and printed. It is the duty of government officials to make it 100% clear and obvious that such behaviour will not be tolerated, BEFORE it happens. Afterwards is always too late. To blindly trust that it will not happen, in a war situation, is plainly stupid. (Vietnam should at least have served as a warning.) Belgium...Somalia. Look closer to home before you start ranting about a process that is still ongoing regarding our own criminal prosecutions. Brooks The US government does allow Red Cross inspections of the detention facilities in Iraq. At the very least it has neglected to give the unsatisfactory reports that it has been receiving for over a year, the attention they deserved. And to neglect an issue like this, in a situation where a hollow pumpkin could grasp the importance of showing scrupulous respect to the Iraqi people, is beyond words. -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be Flying Guns Books and Site: http://users.skynet.be/Emmanuel.Gustin/ |
#15
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... I guess you think we covered those up, but for some odd reason when the first reputable claim of mistreatment at Abu Ghraib was presented to the military chain, they immediately initiated (multiple) investigations and announced that to the press, eh? Now how do you explain that? I think that are still many decent people in the US Army, untolerant of such barbaric actions, and willing to take action against it even when their superiors are clearly negligent. That is a good thing. In September, another military tribunal will be held to investigate the actions of Sergeant Dirk Nassel, the soldier photographed forcing a Somali boy to ingest worms and vomit. I have found the actual judgments in only this case, because the defendants were also accused of racism and an anti-racist organisation put the full judgment on a site. Basically, the courts ruled that the more lurid claims of forcing the child to eat vomit etc. were a fantasy, not supported by any witness. Dirk N. was convicted of forcing a muslim child to eat a tin of pork out of a C-ration. The court judged that there was insufficient evidence to convict the defendant of causing bodily harm of making criminal threats; he was found guily of a racist act committed as a government official. He was given a sentence of six months, of which three effective immediately, fined, and his civil rights (voting etc.) were taken away for five years. On the whole, considering the facts that were proven, this seems a reasonable enough judgment to me. In the case of Coelus and Baert, the court judged that there was no evidence that the child was harmed, nor evidence that the intent was to harm. It accepted the statement of the defendants that it had started as a 'rough game,' and although it reprimanded them, it saw no reason to convict. Odd, in that the mention of "murder" was included in the case of one of the four defendants (a Sergeant Major, IIRC), and in view of the photo of the kid being suspended over the flames, we see only one rather minor conviction--can't even find reference what happened to the SGM, who's trial, if it ever occured, was scheduled after Nassel's (and IIRC Nassel was (also) actually convicted of forcing a young Somali girl to perform a strip-tease for his soldiers...). Seems to me if you *are* so interested in ridding the world of military criminals, you still have your work cut out for you back home before you embark on any crusade against a US military justice system that is just now beginning proceedings against the MP's. A US military justice system that has, unlike the Belgian version, demonstrated that it will indeed really punish those who violate the law (witness the case of the US Army SSG who was convicted of the rape and murder of a little girl in the Bosnia/Kosovo region, and IIRC was sentenced to death). Brooks Sounds like you have to do a bit of house-cleaning of your own Measures recommended (by the general appointed to investigate) to prevent a repeat included faster disclipinary measures and court procedures, banning the possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages during operations, and improving training with more attention for humanitary law and the laws of warfare. (I notice that your military courts proved either unwilling or unable to do it for you) Belgium meanwhile abolished military courts in peacetime. Not cost-efficient for a small army, and to have a parallel system of justice for and by soldiers seemed a bad idea, creating at least an impression of unequal treatment. Cases against soldiers will now be heard in the normal civilian criminal courts. (That this will result in faster court procedures for suspect soldiers is doubtful indeed.) -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be Flying Guns Books and Site: http://users.skynet.be/Emmanuel.Gustin/ |
#16
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... No, that depends upon what you are specifically referring to. The actions of the guards at Abu Ghraib do appear to be clear-cut criminal acts--which is why prosecutions are underway. More subtle forms of softening up individuals for interrogation are not necessarily criminal acts, though (i.e., sleep deprivation, within reasonable limits; isolation, again within reasonable limits, etc.). You missed some stuff--must have accidently snipped it, eh? To wit: How much time did the prosecution ask for in the case of those two Belgian paras holding the kid over the fire? One *month*? (They of course did not even get *that*). How much time did SGT Nassel end up receiving--one single year, IIRC (and only then after his original lesser sentence was appealed?)? Torture is a criminal act prohibited under the Geneva conventions; and intentionally inflicting physical or mental suffering to make people more "cooperative" is torture. Depends upon the definition of "suffering". You could argue that solitary confinement is "torture" under your wideranging definition--but that is not necessarily the case, is it? How about waking someone in the middle of the night to undergo an interview--is that "torture"? Whether there are limits of 'subtelity' put on the practice is irrelevant. Those limits are what indeed separates the legal from the illegal. One cannot be a little bit a torturer, any more than one can be a little bit pregnant. So by your definition, those Belgian troops were all guilty of "torture", a single crime of all-encompassing limits. What kind of sentences did those four receive, again? Oh, that's right--holding a kid over an open fire for an extended period of time is not "torture", according to your courts, is it? When a government permits 'moderate' abuse of prisoners for some purpose, it has to accept the responsibility when things run out of hand --- because that is to be expected. So Belgium should be sigularly censured for failing to do anything to the culprits involved in the Somali incidents (plural). OK. After we have finished the courts martial proceedings against our own miscreants, you can weigh in as to which of our respective nations took a more hardline approach to controlling aberrant behavior. 'Till then, keep up that hosecleaning in your own military justice system... Brooks -- Emmanuel Gustin |
#17
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... Odd, in that the mention of "murder" was included in the case of one of the four defendants (a Sergeant Major, IIRC), There was a conviction for murder of a Belgian peacekeeper; AFAIK the murder was related to an arms smuggling ring set up by UN peacekeepers (there were big scandals in Canada and Italy after the Somalia mission as well). Nobody claims that the UN mission in Somalia covered itself in glory; it was an all-round disaster. But you seem very willing to believe the most outrageous accusations you can find. Courts, it may surprise you, have to proceed by evidence. If a crime cannot be proven, they have to acquit. Odd, given that you have already made pronouncement of the US in a case where the trials are just starting, then. And unlike the case of Belgium, the US Army began investigating and pursuing criminal cases *before* the press published photos (indeed, also unlike the belgian case, the Army was the party that announced the problem in the first place). home before you embark on any crusade against a US military justice system that is just now beginning proceedings against the MP's. My objection is not against the US military justice system. (That AFAIK has a fairly good reputation internationally.) My objection is against an US government that has been negligent in establishing the line between right and wrong, and perhaps has even intentionally blurred it, but nevertheless eagerly throws the first stone when its servants transgress, without accepting its own responsibility. I don't think you are right in this case. Belgian ministers of defence tend to strictly belong to either of two categories of politicians: Those who still have to prove their ability, and those who have already proven that they haven't any. (The current incumbent firmly belongs to the latter category.) But even they take their responsibility more seriously than Donald Rumsfeld. That appears to be an unfounded accusation, IMO. Brooks -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be |
#18
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... You missed some stuff--must have accidently snipped it, eh? My habit is to snip thoroughly, leaving only in small bits as anchors to allow readers to roughly establish track what parts of a post a reply corresponds. I hate posts of 7,753 quoted lines with "me too!" added to it. If you can't live with that, bad luck. That was not a "me, too!" item you snipped. It goes directly to the question of how the US military handles such cases, a process that you seem upset with (that whole three day lag in kicking off the CID investigation, etc.), versus how your own nation handles it. The US announced the investigation was underway immediately after it began; Belgium, IIRC, only investigated after the press raised the issue. The US immediately relieved officers in the chain of command; I have yet to see where the Belgians did that. But you feel quite comfortable in critiquing our process, while it is still ongoing...? How much time did the prosecution ask for in the case of those two Belgian paras holding the kid over the fire? One *month*? (They of course did not even get *that*). I don't know how much the prosecutor asked. One month. The defence told the court that the soldiers swung the boy above the fire as a kind of rough game to frighten him a bit. Apparently there was no evidence to prove the contrary, and in the end the court accepted that story. With a case like that, no wise prosecutor is going to demand a heavy sentence --- because no judge is going to award it. But according to you, "Whether there are limits of 'subtelity' put on the practice is irrelevant." H'mmm...it seems you find limits unacceptable for the US, but just fine for your folks when it comes to threatening to roast a kid alive?! How much time did SGT Nassel end up receiving--one single year, IIRC (and only then after his original lesser sentence was appealed?)? Actually, he was acquitted in his first trial. Yes, his total sentence was one year; I have found no record of his conviction in the second case. The charges varied from physical violence to organising prostitution, so it is hard to tell what he was found guilty of without the actual record. Too lenient? Perhaps. The court had to judge the cases on basis of the available evidence, not on newspaper reports in the sensationalist press; I am not willing to second-guess it on basis of the latter. But you are quite willing to condemn our entire chain of command, up through the SecDef at least, on the basis of similar "sensationalist press" accounts? Are you beginning to see what i said before, about you letting your prejudices taint your analysis of the current situation? Oh, that's right--holding a kid over an open fire for an extended period of time is not "torture", according to your courts, is it? If you have any evidence that they did so for a "prolonged period of time" and caused actual harm to the boy, please send it to the Belgian judiciary. Your words: "Whether there are limits of 'subtelity' put on the practice is irrelevant." Don't be two-faced about this. So Belgium should be sigularly censured for failing to do anything to the culprits involved in the Somali incidents (plural). OK. After we have finished the courts martial proceedings against our own miscreants, you can weigh in as to which of our respective nations took a more hardline approach to controlling aberrant behavior. You keep missing the point, do you -- must be accidental, eh? The point is NOT whether the actual "miscreants" are punished harshly. Personally, I won't object at all if US military courts give lenient sentences to the "miscreants" of Abu Ghraib. IMHO the major portion of the guilt rests with the people who allowed an environment in which such abuse of prisoners became widely tolerated and ("if done with subtlety") may even have been part of official policy. Nope. And don't twist my words--I have said nothing to support the acts that our own miscreants carried out at Abu Ghraib. I hope they all get severe sentences. I also hope that the battalion and brigade level key personnel who either knew of the acts, or should have known of them, deserve to be punished, be it by Article 15 or by courts martial for dereliction of duty. But trying to link this to the SecDef is a bit ridiculous. Until you can present convincing evidence that he was directly, or even indirectly, *responsible*, then your accusations are groundless and just symptomatic of your anti-Bush/Rumsfeld hysteria (exacerbated by that "sensationailst press, no doubt--or is that a factor only when Belgians are the accused party?). The people who transgressed into brutal abuse of prisoners committed a crime -- but so would, in similar circumstances, a majority of any group of people. That is the sad reality of human nature. The Pentagon has to accept that soldiers are only human, and design its policies and regulations accordingly. The policies and regulations promulgated by the Pentagon are not really subject to attack, AFAIK. Remember, it was also one of those regulations that led a concerned soldier to report the abuse to CENTCOM in the first place. Brooks -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be Flying Guns Books and Site: http://users.skynet.be/Emmanuel.Gustin/ |
#19
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gezz emma .... bush jnr wont like your thoughts at brekkie
tomorrow...they are so simple and clear he wouldnt know what your on about... On Friday last, it was leaked that Bush had "admonished" Rumsfled for not keeping him apprised of these horrendous photographs; yesterday, Bush said Rumsfeld had done a "superb" job. Bush is nothing but a puppet for Cheney and the other neo-cons. And he is a miserable failure. The effect on the Muslim world that Bush's calling Rumsfeld's performance "superb" can be predicted with some certainty. They will hate America more and more American servicemen/women will die because of it. Walt |
#20
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t is in the most important respect. The most determined fighters are on the
other side. The most important difference between Vietnam and Iraq is Oil. The former had no oil whereas the latter has worlds second largest oil reserves. That's a good point. So it's a war for oil after all. Walt |
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