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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Three trials, three whitewashes: US military ratifies murder
of Iraq prisoners
By Patrick Martin
31 May 2005
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Three trials conducted last week, ending in dropped charges
or not guilty verdicts, demonstrate that the US military justice
system will whitewash even the most brazen acts of murder against
Iraqis.
At Ft. Hood, Texas, Army Staff Sgt. Shane Werst was court-martialed
for the murder of an unarmed Iraqi during the search of his home
in January 2004. Werst, 32, faced charges of premeditated murder
and obstruction of justice in the death of Naser Ismail. According
to the military prosecutor, Werst was angry about the death of
an Army captain in a mortar attack the previous day, and took
his revenge on Ismail, whom he thought was lying about his identity.
Werst freely admitted shooting the unarmed man to death. He
claimed that the Iraqi man had lunged at another soldier, Pfc.
Nathan Stewart, trying to take his weapon, and that he killed
him because Stewarts life was in danger.
Stewart testified that Werst was enraged after he received
radio confirmation that Ismail was on a list of suspected Iraqi
insurgents. Werst told him, Come on, Stewartwere
going to kill this [expletive]. Jason Pizer, the soldier
who radioed the identification of Ismail to Werst, testified that
he then heard Werst say, Expecting contact, followed
by the sound of gunfire.
The obstruction of justice charge arose from Stewarts
testimony that after shooting Ismail, Werst took an Iraqi pistolreportedly
seized from Ismails home during an earlier raidfired
it into a wall, and placed it next to the body. He told Stewart
to get the Iraqi victims fingerprints on the weapon to provide
evidence that the killing was in self-defense. (This
is a technique commonly used by American policemen when they shoot
someone. The planted weapons even have a generic name: throw-down
guns).
Werst also told Pizer and Stewart to make false statements
about the incident to cover up the killing. They complied, and
Ismails death was initially classified as self-defense.
Nine months later, Stewart sought psychiatric treatment, declaring
that he had been part of an execution. He said that
Ismail had been cooperative, that he and Werst had begun to beat
the man, and that Werst ordered him to stand the Iraqi man upright,
at which point he shot Ismail at least eight times.
Werst admitted supplying the planted weapon and telling Stewart
to make sure Ismails fingerprints were on it. He said he
was scared because he had never killed anyone before. It
was wrong, he said. I have no idea why I did that.
But he strongly defended the actual shooting, maintaining, I
would still to this day fire on that man.
In his closing argument, prosecutor Capt. Evan Seamone pointed
out the contradiction in Wersts account. If this is
a legitimate kill, if this follows the rules of engagement,
he asked, why in the world would he have to create a lie?
But even before the case went to the jury, the high command
had weighed in on the side of Werst. Col. Theodore Dixon, the
presiding judge, found Werst innocent on the obstruction of justice
charge, despite his own admission and the testimony of Stewart.
This amounted to an instruction to the jury to ignore the evidence.
After less than three hours deliberation, the four soldiers and
two officers found Werst not guilty of premeditated murder.
Dixon also intervened to protect the military brass. Witnesses
testified that one of Wersts superiors had given an illegal
order for troops to hunt down a list of suspected insurgents,
but the judge would not allow testimony that the company commander
said that none of those Iraqis would come back alive.
Wersts defense attorney David Sheldon declared afterwards,
Soldiers have to be able to know that theyre not being
second-guessed in the battlefield and in close-quarters combat.
This was not combat, however, nor did it take place
on the battlefield. It was the killing of an unarmed man after
he had been taken prisoner by US soldiers inside his own home.
In the second case, the Marine Corps dropped murder charges
May 26 against 2nd Lt. Ilario Pantano, who riddled two unarmed
Iraqis with bullets and then hung a warning sign on their corpses
to make an example of them to other Iraqis. Pantano has been much
celebrated in the New York City media as a former trader for Goldman
Sachs investment bank who joined the Marines after the September
11 terrorist attacks.
On April 15, 2004, Pantanos unit raided a home in Mahmudiyah,
a center of insurgent activity south of Baghdad, finding automatic
rifles, ammunition and bomb-making materials. Two men, Hamaady
Kareem and Tahah Ahmead Hanjil, were detained as they attempted
to drive away. The Marines searched their car, but found nothing.
At this point Pantano ordered the plastic handcuffs on the
two prisoners removed and told them to search their car themselves.
At the same time, he told the two Marines with him to move away
from the scene, leaving him alone with the detainees. Shortly
thereafter Pantano opened fire on both men, emptying two full
magazines of his M-16A4 into their bodies, about 60 bullets. He
claimed the two men had pivoted their bodies and that
he was going to be attacked by both of these men.
In a statement to investigators, Pantano said, I had
made the decision that when I was firing, I was going to send
a message to these Iraqis and others that when we say, No
better friend, no worse enemy, we mean it. He then
wrote this phrase, a Marine Corps slogan, on a placard and hung
it over the bodies.
At least two witnesses gave testimony that Pantano had opened
fire on the two victims while they were kneeling down with their
backs to him. One was a corporal who worked as an interpreter,
the other a sergeant who had previously clashed with Pantano and
had been demoted by him.
Earlier this month, a hearing officer, Lt. Col. Mark Winn,
recommended that the murder charges be dropped, calling the eyewitness
testimony contradictory, and citing autopsies conducted of the
two victims. Winn criticized Pantanos judgment in the number
of rounds fired and in posting the sign, saying that Pantano should
receive nonjudicial discipline for that offense.
Maj. Gen. Richard A. Huck, commander of the 2nd Marine Division,
decided instead to drop all charges. The Marine Corps issued a
statement declaring, The best interests of 2nd Lt. Pantano
and the government have been served by this process. No
doubt true: both are implicated in the murders, both are now officially
cleared. Meanwhile, Pantano continues serving at Camp Lejeune,
training other Marines.
The third case involved the murder of Manadel al-Jamadi, a
middle-aged Iraqi man captured in a raid near Baghdad in November
2003 by an elite unit of Navy SEALs. Jamadi was savagely beaten
while in the custody of the SEALs and the CIA, then delivered
to the Abu Ghraib prison, where he died within hours. His is the
corpse, wrapped in plastic and packed with ice, among the photographs
of prisoner abuse in Iraq that touched off worldwide outrage last
year.
Lt. Andrew K. Ledford, leader of the SEAL platoon which captured
Jamadi, was tried last week in San Diego on charges of assaultnot
murderand desecration (for another photograph, in which
he and other SEALs posed next to the prisoner while he was still
alive, Ledford holding a can of the power drink Red Bull). He
was acquitted of all charges, despite the photograph and Ledfords
own testimony to interrogators last year, in which he admitted
striking Jamadi.
In this case, unlike the other two, the soldier on trial seems
not to be directly responsible for the prisoners death.
Soldiers in Ledfords platoon testified that they severely
beat Jamadi, but they claimed Ledford was not present at the time.
Jamadi was hit and kicked repeatedly and poked with rifles, then
turned over to CIA interrogators. He died in a shower stall at
Abu Ghraib several hours after the CIA delivered him to the prison.
Ledford was charged with striking Jamadi, allowing his men
to beat Jamadi and other prisoners, and conduct unbecoming to
an officer. He faced 12 years in prison if convicted. The main
evidence against him was his own confession, made to investigators
last year.
The SEAL officer took the stand in his own defense Thursday
and gave an explanation of the confession which was farcically
unbelievable. He blamed excessive pressure from Navy investigators
in the course of his eight-hour questioning, which he compared
to the interrogation of a terrorist like those he
had experiencedfrom the opposite sidein Iraq. He claimed
he was confused when he signed the confession. When a prosecutor
asked, in cross-examination, how a combat-hardened SEAL could
be coerced into signing a false confession, Ledford said, I
was told I could not leave otherwise, and that he was anxious
to get home for a dinner party.
After three hours deliberation, a jury of six fellow officers
from the Navy Special Warfare Command found Ledford not guilty
on all charges. The rigged character of the whole proceeding was
demonstrated in Ledfords own comments after the acquittal.
Im going to Disney World, he joked, as he left
the courtroom. The Los Angeles Times reported, Ledford
shook hands with prosecutors and told them, with no hint of irony
or bitterness, You did a good job.
Ledford had no reason for bitterness since the whole purpose
of the trial was to cover up the crime, and especially the role
of the CIA. Much of the four-day trial was held in closed sessions
where testimony concerned the role of the CIA or other classified
matters. CIA witnesses testified behind curtains and their names
were kept secret. Reporters were told they would be arrested if
they touched the curtain.
Because of the censorship, it was not clear whether there was
any testimony about a direct CIA role in the murder of Jamadi.
However, one SEAL, Dan Cerillo, described a previous mission in
which he followed instructions from a CIA interrogator to hit
a prisoner 10 to 15 times and shove his face into the ground to
assist in making him talk. He said, I was told
by security personnel not to strike him in the face because it
would be hard to turn him in. Cerillo also testified that
the unit was briefed by military lawyers that prisoners it captured
in Iraq did not fall under the Geneva Convention.
See Also:
One year since the torture revelations
at Abu Ghraib
Mistrial in reservist's court martial
[6 May 2005]
US rights group calls for
criminal probe of Rumsfeld
[27 April 2005]
New evidence of US torture
in Iraq and Afghanistan
[23 February 2005]
Washingtons
hypocrisy over Iraq torture
[5 May 2004]
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