30.3.06

An "Alliance" of Violence

An "Alliance" of Violence
By Dahr Jamail http://dahrjamailiraq.com
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Wednesday 29 March 2006

A disturbing trend noticeable in Iraq for quite some time now is that
each aggressive Israeli military operation in the occupied territories
results in a corresponding increase in the number of attacks on US
forces in Iraq. One of the first instances of this was the assassination
of Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin in March 2004 and the reaction it
set off across Shia and Sunni, ultimately spiraling into the siege and
devastation of Fallujah. Fallujah is but one example one may use to
demonstrate how the ongoing use of heavy handed tactics by the US-Israel
alliance is proving to be as suicidal as it is homicidal. US troops in
Iraq and Israeli civilians in their homes can bear testimony to this, as
they are the ones who bear the brunt. Not to mention the collateral
damage in Iraq.

May 17, 2004, Washington

Cofer Black, at the time Coordinator for Counterterrorism for the US
State Department, in a talk at the 2004 Policy Conference
<http://canberra.usembassy.gov/hyper/2004/0518/epf204.htm> for the
American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), said that of all the
nations cooperating with the US in the global war on terror, "none [is]
more stalwart than the state of Israel." He told the audience of the
powerful lobby group that "Our two great nations will stand together to
fight terror" and deemed the US-Israel Joint Counterterrorism Group
(JCG) "an important part of our counterterrorism partnership."

May 10, 2004, Fallujah, Iraq

The first US siege of Fallujah ended in early May, 2004, and on May 10th
US forces abandoned all control of the city, handing it back over to the
Iraqis.

April 4, 2004, Fallujah, Iraq

US military directed to launch the first, and eventually failed, revenge
assault in retaliation for the four Blackwater USA mercenaries killed on
March 31st. The siege caused severe casualties among the people of
Fallujah, killing 736 people, over 60% of whom were women, children and
the elderly, according to the director of Fallujah General Hospital.

April 2, 2004, Iraq

Speaking on al-Manar TV, Muqtada al-Sadr pledged, "From here I announce
my solidarity with the genuine unity announced by Hezbollah general
secretary Hassan Nasrallah with the mujahideen movement Hamas. Let them
consider me their striking hand in Iraq whenever the need arises. As the
martyr Sheikh Ahmed Yassin said, Iraq and Palestine have the same destiny."

March 31, 2004, Fallujah, Iraq

Four Blackwater USA mercenaries killed in Fallujah in an attack avenging
the assassination of Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin. Nine days after
the assassination, the bodies of four mercenaries from Blackwater USA
were burned, chopped into pieces, dragged behind vehicles bearing
posters of Sheikh Yassin, and finally put on display by being hung from
a bridge. Pamphlets were distributed at the scene which declared the
attack against the four men as having been carried out in the name of
Yassin. It was also reported by several Arab media outlets at the time
that a group known as the "Phalange of Sheikh Yassin" claimed
responsibility for the attack, and that the deaths of the four men were
meant as a "gift to the Palestinian people."

March 28, 2004, Baghdad, Iraq

The head of the CPA, Paul Bremer, ordered the closing of the al-Hawza
newspaper, the mouthpiece of Muqtada al-Sadr. One of Sadr's
spokespeople, Sheikh Mahmud Sudani, told reporters at the time that
al-Hawza had attracted censure because of its strong critique of the
killing of Sheikh Yassin by Israeli forces. The closing of this paper
was a primary factor that led to the first violent uprising called by
Sadr against the occupiers.

March 26, 2004, Iraq

Four days after the assassination of Yassin, thousands of followers of
the Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, carrying portraits both of Yassin and
Sadr, demonstrated after Friday prayers in protest of Israel's action by
burning Israeli flags, chanting "No, no to Israel" and "No, no to
occupation." In Najaf, an Imam with the extremely powerful political
party the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) called
for demonstrations outside the revered Imam Ali mosque. Similar
demonstrations were also held as far north as the city of Mosul.

The demonstration began promptly after it was ordered, with protesters
shouting, "Death to Israel, death to America." Other demonstrations
continued across Iraq daily for weeks after the assassination,
denouncing Israel's actions. Even US-appointed puppets in Iraq's Interim
Governing Council expressed grave concerns that the killing of Yassin,
who was highly respected throughout the Arab world, would escalate
violence in Iraq. This concern materialized within hours, as blood began
to flow throughout central and southern Iraq.

On the same day Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who commands more
followers than any leader in Iraq, political or spiritual, released an
unusually staunch statement of criticism, referring to the assassination
of Yassin as "an ugly crime against the Palestinian people" with an
injunction, "We call upon the core of the Arab and Islamic nations to
close ranks, unite and work hard for the liberation of the usurped land."

March 22, 2004, Gaza

While he was being wheeled out of his morning prayer session in his
wheelchair on March 22, 2004, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin was assassinated by
US-built Hellfire missiles fired by a US-built helicopter piloted by
members of the Israeli military. The quadriplegic elder die along with
two of his bodyguards and six bystanders. The half-blind Hamas leader
was replaced by his son Rantissi, who was also murdered shortly after
his father, on April 17th.

There was a clear connection between events in Gaza and what these
generated in Iraq.

This act of state-sponsored terrorism by the Israeli government was
opposed even by British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who said, "It
[Israel] is not entitled to go in for this kind of unlawful killing and
we condemn it. It is unacceptable, it is unjustified and it is very
unlikely to achieve its objectives."

Reaction from the United States? The usual feeble inauthentic mumblings
of "We condemn this attack." Once again actions spoke far louder than
words when the US vetoed a UN resolution condemning Yassin's assassination.

Cofer Black later became Vice President of Blackwater USA, the erstwhile
employer of the four mercenaries killed in Fallujah.

The ongoing alliance of unbridled and unbalanced military aid flowing
into Israel from the US has gone unchallenged for years. "Since 1976,
Israel has been the largest annual recipient of US foreign assistance,
and is the largest cumulative recipient since World War II," according
to an Issue Brief <http://www.adc.org/IB85066.pdf> for Congress from
2002. This US military support to Israel has caused, especially in Iraq,
an incredible backlash against US troops and contractors. This is not
helped by the fact that much of this aid comes in the form of weapons.
Israel is one of the largest importers of weapons from the US, and in
the last decade alone, Israel purchased
<http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/reports/israel050602.html>
$7.2 billion in weapons and other military equipment. As a result,
Israel is now the proud owner of the largest fleet of F-16 fighter jets
outside of the United States.

I found it to be common knowledge in Iraq that, during the last six
years of the Clinton presidency, the US gave Israel free weapons and
ammunition, such as M-16 rifles, grenade launchers, .50 caliber machine
guns and the ammunition for all of them.

The reputation of the US in the region has been further demolished both
by the failed occupation of Iraq and by its perpetual support for
Israeli policies, generally viewed with contempt throughout the Arab and
Muslim world. The ongoing violations of international law by both
countries don't exactly assist matters either.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who had given the "green light" for the
Yassin operation, monitored its progress in real-time video transmitted
from the Israeli military helicopters. His ecstasy was accompanied by
complete dismissal of all international criticism.

Ask any US military commanders how they feel about the deaths of US
soldiers in Iraq generated by revenge attacks in reaction to Israeli
military policy against Palestinians. The consensus is an overwhelming
thumbs down regarding the effectiveness of the strategy.

One could ask the families of the four Blackwater USA mercenaries who
were killed in Fallujah on March 31, 2004, as well. The four men were
killed in a revenge attack that had twofold causes - reports had been
coming out of Fallujah for months about assassinations, rape and thefts
carried out by "plain clothed" men working for the US military. But more
pertinent to this particular attack is the date on which it occurred.

I remember seeing photos of Sheikh Yassin in several areas of Baghdad
and Abu Ghraib while both entering and exiting Fallujah on April 9 and
10, during the US attack on the city. The photos of the slain Hamas
leader were pasted on the sides of cars, trucks, roadside food stalls
and even some houses.

It would appear that Cofer Black had left Israeli Prime Minister Sharon
out of the cooperation loop of his counterterrorism strategy, as the
Israeli military was being instructed by Sharon to carry out operations
that engendered severe repercussions in Iraq and took the form, and
continue to take the form, of dead American soldiers.

Not so coincidentally, less than a year after the first siege of
Fallujah, on February 4, 2005, Cofer Black was named Vice-Chairman of
Blackwater USA. The press release proudly announced his arrival in the
company's leadership, asserting that during his time in the State
Department Black's responsibilities included "coordinating US Government
efforts to improve counterterrorism cooperation with foreign
governments, including the policy and planning of the Department's
Antiterrorism Training Assistance Program."

Is it perhaps possible that despite a 28-year career in the Directorate
of Operations at the CIA, Black was unaware of Sharon's plans to murder
Yassin, or was unable to stop it, or most likely, approved of this
methodology?

The latter possibility seems most likely when we consider the instances
of direct Israeli involvement with US policy on the ground in Iraq that
have long since come to light.

"One step the Pentagon took was to seek active and secret help in the
war against the Iraqi insurgency from Israel, America's closest ally in
the Middle East," wrote Seymor Hersh in the New Yorker
<http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?031215fa_fact> in December,
2003, "According to American and Israeli military and intelligence
officials, Israeli commandos and intelligence units have been working
closely with their American counterparts at the Special Forces training
base at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and in Israel to help them prepare
for operations in Iraq." Israeli commandos are expected to serve as
ad-hoc advisers - again, in secret - when full-field operations begin.
Neither the Pentagon nor Israeli diplomats would comment. "No one wants
to talk about this," an Israeli official told me. "It's incendiary. Both
governments have decided at the highest level that it is in their
interests to keep a low profile on US-Israeli cooperation" on Iraq.)"
Hersh also told the BBC that his sources had confirmed the presence of
Israeli intelligence personnel operating inside Iraq.

During that same month, it was reported that Israeli counter-insurgency
specialists were sent to Fort Bragg to teach American special forces how
to control an unruly Iraqi population. Also during December 2003, it was
reported that
<http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2003/12/10/2003079052>
"Israeli advisers are helping train US special forces in aggressive
counter-insurgency operations in Iraq, including the use of
assassination squads against guerrilla leaders, US intelligence and
military sources said on Monday," and "The Israeli Defense Force (IDF)
has sent urban warfare specialists to Fort Bragg in North Carolina, the
home of US special forces, and according to two sources, Israeli
military "consultants" have also visited Iraq. US forces in Iraq's Sunni
triangle have already begun to use tactics that echo Israeli operations
in the occupied territories, sealing off centers of resistance with
razor wire and razing buildings from where attacks have been launched
against US troops."

Iraqis are all too aware of this, and I even saw this played out on the
ground in Samarra as far back as December 2003. I interviewed a family
whose home was demolished
<http://209.97.202.24/gallery/view_photo.php?set_albumName=Provoking-Samarra&id=100_1464>
by military bulldozers after a roadside bomb detonated near it hit a
passing US patrol. This, coupled with collective punishment of the city
by cuts in electricity, water and medical aid, had everyone infuriated,
and continues to do so today as these policies gain in scale, frequency
and intensity.

These collective punishment tactics have been imposed, to one degree or
another, in other cities in Iraq, such as Fallujah, Abu Hishma, Siniyah,
Ramadi, areas of Baghdad, Balad and Baquba, to name just a few. Iraqis
see the collective punishment meted out by Israeli military forces in
Palestinian neighborhoods in the occupied territories via Arab satellite
television networks, and are horrified to witness the very same tactics
being applied on their soil.

Another destructive link highlighting the intertwined policies of the
two countries is Abu Ghraib. In July 2004, after the torture scandal
broke, Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, the US officer at the heart of the
Abu Ghraib scandal, told BBC
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3863235.stm> she had evidence
that Israelis helped interrogate Iraqis at another detention facility in
Iraq. Karpinski told the BBC she'd met a man who told her he was from
Israel while she was visiting an intelligence center with a senior US
general. "I saw an individual there that I hadn't had the opportunity to
meet before, and I asked him what did he do there, was he an interpreter
- he was clearly from the Middle East," she said. "He said, 'Well, I do
some of the interrogation here. I speak Arabic but I'm not an Arab; I'm
from Israel.'"

I've spoken with several Iraqis who had been tortured in various
military detention facilities throughout Iraq. Several of them testified
to being interrogated by Israeli Mossad (an Israeli intelligence agency).

Another event that sent shock-waves throughout Iraq was the news from
December 2004 that detainees in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were tortured and,
according to FBI agents
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14936-2004Dec20.html>,
one detainee was wrapped in an Israeli flag and subjected to extremely
loud music in order to shake his resistance to his interrogation.

It is clear that the longer the two countries continue with the use of
their brute military power as the prime strategy in their war on
terrorism, the greater grows the threat to the civilians they claim to
protect.

This article originally posted on Truthout
<http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/032906J.shtml>.

29.3.06

Events leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq: US/UK propaganda campaigns

Events leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq: US/UK propaganda campaigns

Rumsfeld Singled Out as Crisis Deepens in Iraq

Rumsfeld Singled Out as Crisis Deepens in Iraq

Defence chief attacked on war's third anniversary
· Ex-PM Allawi says conflict is tantamount to civil war
by Julian Borger and Jonathan Steele

A former US army general yesterday called for Donald Rumsfeld to resign on grounds of incompetence in Iraq, hours after Ayad Allawi, the former US-backed Iraqi prime minister, declared the country to be in the thick of a civil war that could soon "reach the point of no return".

Three years after Iraq was invaded, statistics published yesterday show that the frequency of insurgent bombings and group killings is growing, but both Mr Rumsfeld, the defence secretary, and George Bush have vowed to fight on.

"Turning our backs on postwar Iraq today would be the modern equivalent of handing postwar Germany back to the Nazis," the defence secretary wrote in a Washington Post commentary, as the administration tried to quell growing concern that the conflict was unravelling beyond Washington's control.

President Bush made a brief appearance on the White House lawn to say he was "encouraged" by progress on forming a unity government in Iraq. But he had no other good news to mark three years of a war in which more than 2,300 Americans have died, and which has so far cost $500bn (nearly £290bn).

The US commander in Iraq, General George Casey, said that the troop withdrawals he had forecast for this spring or summer might have to wait until the end of the year or even 2007. And Paul Eaton, a former American army general in charge of training Iraqi forces until 2004, marked the anniversary with a furious attack on Mr Rumsfeld, saying he was "not competent to lead our armed forces".

In London, Mr Allawi told BBC 2's Sunday AM programme: "We are losing each day, as an average, 50 to 60 people throughout the country, if not more. If this is not civil war, then God knows what civil war is."

Britain's defence secretary, John Reid, rejected that assessment. In Baghdad's green zone, he said that most of Iraq was under control: "There is not civil war now, nor is it inevitable, nor is it imminent".

In Washington, the US vice-president, Dick Cheney, also appeared on television to play down ideas of civil war. He told the CBS programme Face the Nation that the surge in attacks aimed at fomenting sectarian conflict simply reflected the insurgents' "state of desperation".

The remark echoed a similarly optimistic phrase used by Mr Cheney in March last year, when he claimed the insurgency was in its "last throes". Yesterday, he maintained that that description was still "basically accurate".

There were signs yesterday that the Bush administration was losing its ability to shape perception of the conflict, even among partisan Republicans. George Will, an influential conservative commentator, yesterday compared Iraq's war to that of the 1930s Spanish civil war.

Mr Allawi now heads a list of secular parties that had hoped to broker a compromise between the Shia and Sunni parties. He warned that if Iraq reached the point of no return it would "not only fall apart, but sectarianism would spread through the region". He said even Europe and the US would "not be spared all the violence" linked to sectarian problems.

There were no public gatherings in Baghdad yesterday. People continued to race to work and back home, fearing explosions, kidnapping or murder.

Iraqi police reported that US troops had killed eight people, after a patrol was ambushed in the Sunni town of Duluiya, north of Baghdad, early yesterday. The victims included a 13-year-old boy and his parents, who were shot dead.

According to figures compiled by the Brookings Institution, in Washington, there were 75 attacks a day last month, compared with 54 on average a year earlier. The number of Iraqi civilians being killed in the conflict rose to 1,000 in February, from 750 in February 2005. There are now 232,000 Iraqi security personnel, up 90,000 over the past 12 months, but their ability to control the situation is a matter of dispute. Oil production, the mainstay of the economy, is in decline.

The Islamist parties have failed to agree on a national unity government and sectarian violence has markedly increased.

Last July Gen Casey predicted that if the political process went well there could be "fairly substantial reductions" in US troops in Iraq this spring or summer.

Yesterday, calling on the US to keep its nerve, Mr Rumsfeld pointed to the swelling ranks of Iraqi government forces. But Mr Eaton, a former major general, said the defence secretary had "shown himself incompetent strategically, operationally and tactically", and was "far more than anyone else, responsible for what has happened to our important mission in Iraq". Mr Rumsfeld had to step down, he said.

Backstory

Since the invasion of Iraq three years ago, the US military has lost more than 2,300 troops in combat, roadside explosions, insurgent attacks and friendly fire. But that figure is dwarfed by estimates for the number of Iraqis killed, which range from a conservative 30,000 to 100,000, according to a Lancet report in November 2004. As many as 50 people are killed every day. Britain has lost 103 soldiers in Iraq, while other nations together have lost 94 troops. But the cost of war has not just been measured in human terms. There is the financial cost. The US is still spending $6bn (£3.5bn) a month in Iraq, primarily on the 130,000 troops it still maintains in the country.

27.3.06

Iraqis Killed by US Troops 'On Rampage'

Iraqis Killed by US Troops 'On Rampage'
Claims of Atrocities by Soldiers Mount
by Hala Jaber and Tony Allen-Mills, New York

These rampages are unacceptable.

THE villagers of Abu Sifa near the Iraqi town of Balad had become used to the sound of explosions at night as American forces searched the area for suspected insurgents. But one night two weeks ago Issa Harat Khalaf heard a different sound that chilled him to the bone.


An Iraqi looks at the bodies of three girls among a total of 11 civilians allegedly killed during a US raid near the city of Balad, north of Baghdad, on March 15. The US military has ordered a probe into the killings last week, the latest in a series of allegations of abuse and indiscriminate shootings that has mired its three-year occupation of Iraq. The US military said four civilians were killed, two women, a child and a man. Irai police say 11 died including five women and four children. (Agence France Presse Photo/Dia Hamid)
Khalaf, a 33-year-old security officer guarding oil pipelines, saw a US helicopter land near his home. American soldiers stormed out of the Chinook and advanced on a house owned by Khalaf’s brother Fayez, firing as they went.

Khalaf ran from his own house and hid in a nearby grove of trees. He saw the soldiers enter his brother’s home and then heard the sound of women and children screaming.

“Then there was a lot of machinegun fire,” he said last week. After that there was the most frightening sound of all — silence, followed by explosions as the soldiers left the house.

Once the troops were gone, Khalaf and his fellow villagers began a frantic search through the ruins of his brother’s home. Abu Sifa was about to join a lengthening list of Iraqi communities claiming to have suffered from American atrocities.

According to Iraqi police, 11 bodies were pulled from the wreckage of the house, among them four women and five children aged between six months and five years. An official police report obtained by a US reporter for Knight Ridder newspapers said: “The American forces gathered the family members in one room and executed 11 people.”

The Abu Sifa deaths on March 15 were first reported last weekend on the day that Time magazine published the results of a 10-week investigation into an incident last November when US marines killed 15 civilians in their homes in the western Iraqi town of Haditha.

The two incidents are being investigated by US authorities, but persistent eyewitness accounts of rampaging attacks by American troops are fuelling human rights activists’ concerns that Pentagon commanders are failing to curb military excesses in Iraq.

The Pentagon claims to have investigated at least 600 cases of alleged abuse by American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, and to have disciplined or punished 230 soldiers for improper behaviour. But a study by three New York-based human rights groups, due to be published next month, will claim that most soldiers found guilty of abuse received only “administrative” discipline such as loss of rank or pay, confinement to base or periods of extra duty.

Of the 76 courts martial that the Pentagon is believed to have initiated, only a handful are known to have resulted in jail sentences of more than a year — notably including the architects of detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib prison.

Most other cases ended with sentences of two, three or four months. “That’s not punishment, and that’s the problem,” said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch, which is compiling the study with two other groups.

“Our concern is that abuses in the field are not being robustly investigated and prosecuted, and that they are not setting an example with people who cross the line,” said Sifton. “There is a clear preference by the military for discipline with administrative and non-judicial punishments instead of courts martial. That sends the message that you can commit abuse and get away with it.”

Yet the evidence from Haditha and Abu Sifa last week suggested that the Pentagon is finding it increasingly difficult to dismiss allegations of violent excesses as propaganda by terrorist sympathisers.

It was on November 19 last year that a US marine armoured vehicle struck a roadside bomb that killed a 20-year-old lance-corporal. According to a marine communiqué issued the next day, the blast also killed 15 Iraqi civilians and was followed by an attack on the US convoy in which eight insurgents were killed.

An investigation by Time established that the civilians had not been killed by the roadside bomb, but were shot in their homes after the marines rampaged through Haditha. Among the dead were seven women and three children.

23.3.06

RebuildingAmericasDefenses.pdf (application/pdf Object)

RebuildingAmericasDefenses.pdf (application/pdf Object)

On January 28, 1998, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Jeb Bush, Steve Forbes, and Dan Quayle 19 other high ranking Officials signed a plan calling for the US to fake a "New Pearl Harbor" (page 63) as an excuse to invade Iraq to establish military bases.

Massacre at Fallujah

US War Crimes in Fallujah

Children maimed by White Phosphorus - Worse than Outlawed Napalm


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©2004, 2005 Dahr Jamail.

This album contains photos taken by the military of dead men in Fallujah.

They were taken on November 19th, 2004, to identify the dead.
The IRC estimates that at least 60% of those killed in the assault of Fallujah are women, children and elderly.

Warning:These are extremely graphic images posted simply to show the true face of war. Weblog

21.3.06

Images From The War in Iraq :: Lawless Iraq :: 1

Images From The War in Iraq :: Lawless Iraq :: 1:

1, 2 & 3 of 27 Next Photo Last Photo







Victims of US air-strike, Balad, March 2006

Gallery: Images From The War in Iraq navigate UP Album: Lawless Iraq


Images From The War in Iraq :: February 16, 2006 Salon.com publishes more images from Abu Ghraib

Images From The War in Iraq :: February 16, 2006 Salon.com publishes more images from Abu Ghraib

Deal with it America: This is the War we are fighting???
Don't you think its time to STOP?



"A soldier identified as Sgt. Evans writes on a wall next to a "unknown" hooded, naked detainee. Photo taken shortly before 10 p.m. on the night of Dec 5, 2003"
Viewed: 2462 times.
From Salon.com - "The CID report does not identify this photo of a bloody cell. A document in the file suggests the possibility this scene may be related to a shootout incident. According to the CID investigation, a shootout occurred Nov. 24, 2003, after a detainee 'obtained weapons and fired several rounds' at military police. The detainee 'was wounded in the leg and extracted from his cell.' "
Viewed: 1361 times.
From Salon.com - "The CID report does not identify this photo of a bloody cell. A document in the file suggests the possibility this scene may be related to a shootout incident. According to the CID investigation, a shootout occurred Nov. 24, 2003, after a detainee 'obtained weapons and fired several rounds' at military police. The detainee 'was wounded in the leg and extracted from his cell.' "
Viewed: 1005 times.






From Salon.com - "Manadel al-Jamadi, dead and packed in ice. According to news reports, al-Jamadi died in CIA custody inside the prison; there was no official military record of his imprisonment. Photo taken at approximately 1:20 a.m. on Nov 5, 2003"
Viewed: 1145 times.
From Salon.com - "A document detailing an interrogation conducted by personnel from an 'OGA' or 'other government agency' --parlance for a nonmillitary agency, typically the CIA."
Viewed: 1079 times.
From Salon.com - "Staff Sgt. Ivan 'Chip' Frederick clips his fingernails as a detainee nicknamed 'Gilligan' stands hooded on a box. Photo taken shortly after 11 p.m. on Nov 4, 2003. Testimony of Spc. Sabrina Harman to millitary investigators on Jan. 15, 2004: 'I put wires on his hand. I do not recall how. I was joking with him and told him if he fell off, he would get electrocuted.' "
Viewed: 1131 times.






From Salon.com - "The back oif a naked detainee kneeling on the floor. Photo taken shortly after 11:15 p.m. on Nov. 7, 2003."
Viewed: 937 times.
From Salon.com - "Two bound and hooded detainees lying on the floor. Photo taken at approximately 11:30 p.m. on Nov 7, 2003. According to the CID report, this is one of a set of photos and movies 'depicting approximately 1 hour and 9 minutes of abuse, assault and humiliation of 7 detainees.' "
Viewed: 1064 times.
From Salon.com - "An 'unknown man handcuffed naked to cell door,' according to the CID report. Photo taken shortly after 1 a.m. on Oct 18, 2003. "
Viewed: 1121 times.

From Salon.com - "An unknown detainee lying naked on his stomach. Photo taken shortly after 9 p.m. on Oct. 18, 2003."
Viewed: 953 times.
From Salon.com - "An unknown detainee with women's underwear on his head, strapped to a bed frame. Photo taken at approximately 1:53 a.m. on Oct 20, 2003."
Viewed: 1136 times.