Issue 378
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By Andrew Gray
WASHINGTON, Apr 24, 2009 (Reuters) - The Pentagon said on Friday it would release
hundreds of photographs from investigations into prisoner abuse but
insisted they did not reveal a policy of mistreatment.
The Obama administration's commitment to release the pictures by May 28
could fan the flames of a political firestorm over the treatment of
terrorism suspects and other detainees during George W. Bush's
presidency.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates voiced concern this week that publicizing
details of U.S. interrogation practices and photographs of prisoner
treatment could trigger a backlash against U.S. troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
The American Civil Liberties Union has spent years suing the government
for the release of the pictures, which came from military
investigations. The group said they showed prisoner abuse went far
beyond well-known cases in Iraq and elsewhere.
"These photographs provide visual proof that prisoner abuse by U.S.
personnel was not aberrational but widespread," said Amrit Singh, an
ACLU lawyer. No details have yet been released of what the pictures
show.
The Pentagon said its policy had always been to treat detainees humanely
and the investigations that yielded the photographs showed the U.S.
military did not tolerate abuse.
"What this demonstrates is that we have always been serious about
investigating credible allegations of abuse," Pentagon spokesman Bryan
Whitman said.
He said more than 400 military personnel had been disciplined for
failing to follow detainee policies. Their punishments included prison
sentences, bad conduct discharges and demotions, he said.
Whitman said the Pentagon decided to release the pictures after courts
twice ruled in the ACLU's favor. "We felt this case had pretty much run
its course," he said. "Legal options at this point had become pretty
limited."
PENTAGON DEFENDS POLICIES
The Pentagon has long argued that abuse at Abu Ghraib jail outside
Baghdad following the 2003 U.S. invasion, which came to public attention
when shocking photographs were released in 2004, and other high profile
cases were isolated incidents.
Rights groups and congressional investigators say the abuse was linked
directly to policies approved by Bush administration officials including
former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and that low-level soldiers
were made scapegoats.
Whitman said the Pentagon would release 44 photos already identified in
the court battle with the ACLU, along with a substantial number of
others. A U.S. defense official said the number of pictures released
would be in the hundreds.
Some pictures would be redacted to protect the identity of those
involved, Whitman said. Several U.S. courts had already ordered the
release of some of the pictures.
The decision to release the images comes amid a fierce debate over the
Obama administration's release last week of Bush-era memos sanctioning
harsh interrogation methods on terrorism suspects.
The methods include waterboarding, a form of simulated drowning, sleep
deprivation and forced nudity.
Human rights groups and many Democratic lawmakers say the memos amounted
to approval of torture. But Republicans insist the methods were legal
and yielded valuable information and saved American lives.
Pentagon chief Gates said on Thursday there was a risk that al Qaeda
could exploit disclosures such as the interrogation memos. But he said
it was inevitable that much of the material would end up in the public
domain.
"I think pretending that we could hold all of this and keep it all a
secret even if we wanted to... was probably unrealistic," he told
reporters at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina. "So
we'll just have to deal with it.
(Editing by David Storey)
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