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War, War, War
See other War, War, War Articles

Title: WikiLeaks' Iraq War Logs: US Troops Abused Prisoners For Years After Abu Ghraib
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/ ... -iraq-war-logs-i_n_772658.html
Published: Oct 23, 2010
Author: Marcus Baram
Post Date: 2010-10-23 07:25:11 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 122
Comments: 8

Despite a vigorous attempt by the Pentagon to stop WikiLeaks from releasing 400,000 pages of classified military documents about the Iraq War, the group has gone ahead with its latest document dump.

To search the documents, click here. And if you find something interesting, tell us about it by emailing wikileaks@huffingtonpost.com

Most shockingly, the documents allegedly show that US troops abused prisoners for years even after the Abu Ghraib scandal and that the US ignored systemic abuse, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers, according to several news reports.

In one of the most devastating reports, a US Apache helicopter engaged insurgents involved in a mortar attack upon coalition forces near Baghdad. After firing a series of 30mm rounds, the helicopter's crew (with the callsign "Crazyhorse") radioed to their command, explaining that the insurgents "wanted to surrender." The response was stark: "CRAZYHORSE cleared to engage ... Lawyer stated they cannot surrender to aircraft."

The Apache crew killed the men, according to the report:

February 22 2007

CRAZYHORSE reports AIF [Anti-Iraqi Forces] got into a dumptruck headed north, engaged and then they came out wanting to surrender... CRAZYHORSE cleared to engage dumptruck. 1/227 Lawyer states they can not surrender to aircraft and are still valid targets.

Story continues below

The allegations of prisoner abuse by US troops from 2005 to 2009 occurred despite a crackdown on such behavior that was promised in the wake of the 2004 scandal over abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which reports that "303 allegations of abuse by coalition forces were reported in the military files after 2004."

The reports date from August 2005 until the end of 2009. They began 16 months after the Abu Ghraib scandal. Forty-two of these involve allegations of serious abuses, including the use of electric shocks, beatings, water torture and mock executions. In nearly half of these, the claims are reported to be backed up by medical examinations carried out by US medical personnel.

This video shows every incident of detainee abuse uncovered in the logs:

Detainee Abuse in Iraq from TBIJ on Vimeo.

The New York Times adds:

In a case reminiscent of Abu Ghraib, in which guards photographed themselves with Iraqis whom they had posed in humiliating positions, a soldier was censured for writing a mocking slur with a marker on the forehead of a crying detainee.

The Guardian reports:

• US authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be systematic and normally unpunished.

• A US helicopter gunship involved in a notorious Baghdad incident had previously killed Iraqi insurgents after they tried to surrender.

• More than 15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents. US and UK officials have insisted that no official record of civilian casualties exists but the logs record 66,081 non-combatant deaths out of a total of 109,000 fatalities.

The Guardian includes an incredible Google Map of every death in Iraq.

The documents include accounts of Iraqi forces sodomizing and electrocuting prisoners, according to Al-Jazeera News, which has been collaborating along with The Guardian and Le Monde with WikiLeaks on the latest document dump.

In addition, Al-Jazeera is reporting that the documents include more revelations about prisoner abuse, the first official civilian deathcount, tales of murder at military checkpoints and the role of Blackwater, the controversial contractor.

Among documents uncovered by HuffPost readers is one that captures the sometimes chaotic nature of a conflict in which an army of private security contractors sometimes clashes with the U.S. armed forces. In this report, a U.S. Special Operations soldier reports how soliders were fired on by civilian security contractors, resulting in a wounded U.S. soldier:

AT ___, A SOF ___ REPORTS A POSSIBLE 'BLUE ON BLUE' (Small arms fire) WHILE TRAVELING ON Route ___ IN BAGHDAD (ZONE ___). THE ___ HAD DEPARTED WEST BIAP AND WAS ENGAGED BY Small arms fire AS IT PASSED A CONVOY OF 3X ___ (GOLD ___) WHICH WERE ASSESSED AS PSD OR CIVILIAN SECURITY CONTRACTORS. THE ENGAGEMENT RESULTED IN 1X Coalition Forces (US) Wounded in Action (RTD). -___ INVESTIGATION PENDING.

The New York Times reports that the documents describe at least 6 deaths of prisoners in the custody of Iraqi military and police forces and a "ground-level look at the shadow war between US and Iraqi militias backed by Iran's Revolutionary Guards." In addition to showing how the Iranian paramilitary group and Hezbollah have trained Shiite militia leaders involved in kidnapping and murder in Iraq, the reports demonstrate:

Citing the testimony of detainees, a captured militant's diary and numerous uncovered weapons caches, among other intelligence, the field reports recount Iran's role in providing Iraqi militia fighters with rockets, magnetic bombs that can be attached to the underside of cars, "explosively formed penetrators," or E.F.P.'s, which are the most lethal type of roadside bomb in Iraq, and other weapons. Those include powerful .50-caliber rifles and the Misagh-1, an Iranian replica of a portable Chinese surface-to-air missile, which, according to the reports, was fired at American helicopters and downed one in east Baghdad in July 2007.

A Pentagon spokesman strongly condemned WikiLeaks's upcoming release, noting that the documents "expose secret information that could make our troops even more vulnerable to attack in the future. Just as with the leaked Afghan documents, we know our enemies will mine this information looking for insights into how we operate, cultivate sources, and react in combat situations, even the capability of our equipment. This security breach could very well get our troops and those they are fighting with killed."

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

#3. To: Ada (#0)

the helicopter's crew (with the callsign "Crazyhorse") radioed to their command, explaining that the insurgents "wanted to surrender." The response was stark: "CRAZYHORSE cleared to engage ... Lawyer stated they cannot surrender to aircraft."

The Apache crew killed the men, according to the report:

February 22 2007

CRAZYHORSE reports AIF [Anti-Iraqi Forces] got into a dumptruck headed north, engaged and then they came out wanting to surrender... CRAZYHORSE cleared to engage dumptruck. 1/227 Lawyer states they can not surrender to aircraft and are still valid targets.

And what's the source for that allegation?

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-10-24   3:48:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: GreyLmist (#3)

And what's the source for that allegation?

aren't all of these documents from the US military itself, their internal records of incidents. There was a young American in the military, 23 years old I think, and he had access to these documents. He agonized on whether he should pass them to Wikileaks which eventually he did. and then the US military arrested him, he's in trial I understand and facing a long jail sentence.

www.telegraph.co.uk/news/...hanistan/7918632/Bradley-Manning-suspected-source- of-Wikileaks-documents-raged-on-his-Facebook-page.html

Red Jones  posted on  2010-10-24   8:18:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Red Jones, Ada, All (#5)

This is the message at the engaged insurgents link in paragraph 4 of Marcus Baram's article:

THE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM: IRAQ WAR LOGS

Error 404 - Not Found
Yikes. Something went wrong! Either the page you are looking for doesn't exist or you might have mistyped.

_____

The reports link in Baram's article shows that the men had engaged the helicopter crew in a battle zone before trying to surrender, got back in their truck as if they had changed their mind about surrendering, drove north and ran into a shack without any attempt for 13 minutes to surrender there -- all of which Baram neglects to mention to maximize reader-shock.

What was established as a precedent at the Nuremberg Trials is that the media can be held liable as war criminals for their propaganda-garbage impacts.

These are excerpts from a UK report at The Guardian by David Leigh on 10/23/10 and posted at informationclea ri nghouse.info, which does not stoop to Marcus Baram's level of unethical misdirection:

The account of the February incident recorded in the classified log suggests the Crazyhorse 18 crew were not trigger-happy, but sought immediate advice from their superiors at all stages of the attack.

Under the 1907 Hague regulations, it is forbidden "to kill or wound an enemy who, having laid down his arms, or having no longer means of defence, has surrendered at discretion".

Britain's own official Ministry of Defence publication, the Manual of the Law of Armed Conflict, says there are practical difficulties around surrenders to aircraft, but adds: "With the advent of close-support and ground-attack helicopter units, the surrender of ground troops … has become a more practical proposition."

One of Britain's foremost experts on the subject, Professor Sir Adam Roberts, cast doubt on the legal advice given to the Crazyhorse 18 crew. "Surrender is not always a simple matter," Roberts, emeritus professor of international relations at Oxford University and joint editor of Documents on the Laws of War, told the Guardian. But the reasoning given by the US military lawyer was "dogmatic and wrong".

"The issue is not that ground forces simply cannot surrender to aircraft," he said. "The issue is that ground forces in such circumstances need to surrender in ways that are clear and unequivocal."

However, he added: "If the insurgents did indeed get back into the truck and drove off in the same direction as previously, then they probably acted unwisely, in a way that called into question their act of surrender … The US airmen might legitimately reckon that the truck contained weapons and that the men could be intending to rejoin the fight sooner or later."

The detailed account of events on that February morning begins with a common occurrence: insurgents near the huge Taji airbase start lobbing rockets and mortar shells, in the hope of killing Americans. US troops return the shelling, and Crazyhorse 18 is dispatched on a mission to see whether the retaliation has had any effect. At 11.34am, three minutes after takeoff, the crew spot the insurgents fleeing their launch site with a mortar and tripod on the back of a Bongo – a light truck manufactured by Kia.

The crew confirm a "positive identification" of the enemy. But it is 13 minutes before the pilots are officially "cleared to engage" with automatic cannonfire by their headquarters.

The Apache opens fire, and two Iraqis fling themselves out of the Bongo as the heavy shells blast the truck and cause its stock of mortar ammunition to "cook off".

The enemy gunners try to make their escape in a dumper truck, driving northwards. At 12.33pm, the Apache reports that it has fired on the truck, "and then they came out wanting to surrender".

Two minutes later, "Crazyhorse 18 reports they got back into truck and are heading north". Four minutes after that: "Crazyhorse 18 cleared to engage dumptruck. 1/227 [1st Battalion, 227th Aviation Regiment] lawyer states they cannot surrender to aircraft and are still valid targets."

The two Iraqis try to take refuge in a shack. After a 13-minute delay, another instruction appears to come from a remarkably high level: the office of the commander [IH6] of the Ironhorse brigade at Camp Taji.

The signal reads: "IH6 approves Crazyhorse 18 to engage shack." [end excerpts]

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-10-26   18:27:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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