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More evidence of US dirty war in Iraq
Torture centre discovered in Baghdad
By James Cogan
18 November 2005
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The exposure of a secret Iraqi government torture centre in
the very heart of Baghdad is damning confirmation that the US-led
occupation is being accompanied by a dirty war of extra-judicial
killings and torture.
On Sunday, a squad of American troops from the Third Infantry
Division and local police entered an Iraqi interior ministry building
and searched its basement. Inside the complex, which was operated
by a US-trained police commando unit, they discovered cells holding
173 men and teenagers. Many of the men were seriously malnourished
or exhibited signs of having been tortured. The majority were
Sunni Muslim Arabs who had been detained during various counter-insurgency
operations aimed at crushing the Iraqi resistance to the occupation.
According to various reports, the Third Division had received
information that an Iraqi teenager, who had been missing since
September, was being held in the complex. A US soldier who took
part in the search told the British BBC: Its not what
we were expecting at all, we were looking for a 15-year-old boy.
Most of the details about the state of the prisoners have come
from Iraqi sources. A local police officer told the British Independent:
These men were in a very bad way. They have obviously been
tortured, some have been there a very long time and they were
very frightened.
Hussein Kamal, the deputy interior minister, told journalists
after visiting the scene: Ive never seen such a situation
like this during the last two years in Baghdad. This is the worst.
I saw signs of physical abuse by brutal beating, one or two detainees
were paralysed and some had their skin peeled off various parts
of their bodies.
Mohammed Duham, the spokesman for a prisoners rights
group in Iraq, told Reuters: This is even worse than what
was happening before (under Saddam Hussein). A lot of torture
implements were found in the bunker, like saws to cut peoples
limbs and also razors to peel the skin off peoples bodies.
The discovery of the torture centre follows persistent accusations,
backed by eyewitness testimony, that the US-created Iraqi state
is conducting a campaign of mass terror against opponents of the
occupation.
The police commandos operating the Baghdad prison were formed,
equipped and trained by US specialists in 2004 for the express
purpose of crushing the anti-occupation resistance. They work
alongside American forces and have been recruited from two main
groups.
Initially, American advisors signed up former members of Saddam
Husseins Republican Guard. Since the formation of the current
Iraqi government, hundreds of members of the Iranian-trained Badr
Organisation militia have also been enlisted. The Badr Organisation
is the armed wing of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI), the Shiite fundamentalist movement that has collaborated
with the US occupation since the 2003 invasion and is a key part
of the Iraqi government. Interior Minister Bayan Jabr is a SCIRI
leader.
Each month in Baghdad, hundreds of corpses are being found,
shot through the head or horribly tortured to death. In numerous
instances, witnesses have alleged the murdered people had been
detained just days or hours before by interior ministry police.
The victims have ranged from clerics and politicians opposed to
the occupation, to academics and professionals, to former state
or military leaders in Husseins regime, to Sunni Arab men
from areas of the country where the resistance has strong support
(see More accusations of US-backed
death squads in Iraq).
Given the extent of the accusations and witness testimony,
there is every reason to suspect that many of the bodies found
in rubbish dumps, rivers and abandoned buildings spent their final
hours in similar facilities to the one that was discovered on
Sunday. An anonymous police officer cited in the Washington
Times stated that another secret interior ministry torture
centre is operating out of the former stables of the police academy,
near the Oil Ministry headquarters in Baghdad.
Any claim that the White House, the CIA and military intelligence
agencies were unaware of the prison in the middle of Baghdad,
or what was happening there, is simply not credible. The Iraqi
government is nothing more than a US puppet. Dozens of US agents
work inside the interior ministry and special forces advisors
are embedded with the police commandos. The US military command
dictates and coordinates counterinsurgency operations, while detainees
and information are exchanged between US-operated and interior
ministry-operated prisons.
Moreover, the dirty war being conducted against the Iraqi resistancedeath
squads, disappearances and tortureis modeled on similar
US-directed and financed operations in El Salvador and other Latin
American countries, and the bloody Operation Phoenix unleashed
in Vietnam. The US government has political and legal responsibility
for all the atrocities carried out by regimes that it is has installed,
financed and propped up.
Sunni Arab politicians responded to the discovery of the prison
with demands for an independent, international inquiry. Omar Hujail
of the Sunni-based Iraqi Islamic Party told Reuters: We
have been telling them for ages that there are people wearing
the uniforms of the interior ministry raiding houses at night
and arresting people, but everyone kept denying it. We urge the
United Nations and human rights organisations to denounce these
violations and we call on them to conduct a fair international
inquiry.
Washington rejected this call immediately. The spokesman for
the US military command in Baghdad, Major General Rick Lynch,
declared full confidence in an internal investigation announced
by the Iraqi government. He declared: Were finding
that the minister of interior is very sensitive to human rights
violations and these allegations of abuse, and hes taking
appropriate action.
The overall US commander in Iraq, General George W. Casey,
issued a gagging order on all officers, including generals, instructing
them to refer all inquiries about the American operation to him.
Brigadier General Karl Horst, who commanded the troops who conducted
the search, would only tell the media that the prisoners were
in need of medical care and refused to give any details
on what his soldiers discovered in the building. A Pentagon spokesman
said only that they had found things that concerned them.
The UN, which has covered for every crime of the Bush administration
in Iraq, from the invasion itself to the slaughter in Fallujah,
predictably fell into line and also voiced its support for the
US-installed regime investigating its own abuses.
It is possible that the troops who searched the torture centre
accidentally stumbled upon it. It would not be the first time.
On June 29, 2004, National Guardsmen from Oregon stormed a detention
centre in Baghdad after a soldier witnessed prisoners being beaten
in the courtyard. They discovered dozens of abused men in the
custody of the interior ministry. To their shock, the Guardsmen
were ordered by their senior commanders to withdraw from the prison
and leave the victims in the hands of their torturers.
The more likely reason for the raid, however, is an attempt
by the US occupation to undermine the position of SCIRI and other
Shiite fundamentalist parties before the elections scheduled for
December 15. SCIRIs Badr Organisation has been accused in
the US and Iraq of operating the prison without the knowledge
of US forces.
In response, the head of the Badr Organisation, Hadi al-Amery,
bluntly told Reuters on Wednesday: This bunker is run by
the interior ministry. The Americans are there every day. If there
was torture, we ask for an explanation. He suggested the
raid was an attempt to improve the badly tarnished image of the
US military in the eyes of world public opinion. Amery declared:
The Americans are accused of violating human rights at Guantánamo
Bay, Abu Ghraib... they want to cover up their crimes.
A campaign to scapegoat SCIRI appears to be underway. The US
embassy in Iraq issued a statement on Thursday, declaring that
we have made clear to the Iraqi government that there must
not be militia or sectarian control or direction of Iraqi security
forces, facilities or ministries. The statement followed
talks on Wednesday between Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari
and John Negroponte, the US Director of National Intelligence
and the man who presided over the formation of the interior ministry
police commandos while he was American ambassador to Iraq last
year.
The embassy announced that Jaafari had agreed with Negroponte
that US intelligence and troops would investigate as many as 1,000
Iraqi interior ministry and police facilities. Revelations of
torture and abuse may be used to further discredit SCIRI and enhance
the political fortunes of those Iraqi factions the Bush administration
views as more amenable to its long-term plans to dominate Iraqs
resources and territory.
Representatives of the Bush administration have made little
secret of the fact they would prefer that the government in Baghdad
was headed by longtime CIA assets such as Iyad Allawi or even
Ahmed Chalabi, who was involved in high-level talks at the White
House during the past week. The Washington Post commented
yesterday: Today he [Chalabi] is a strong contender for
prime minister in next months elections, and highly placed
sources say he has become the choice of many US officials to lead
the country. The article noted: One of his biggest
supporters, Vice President Cheney, is still there, and met with
him this week.
What will not change due to the investigations
or any changes to the Iraqi government is the use of mass terror
and repression by the American military to suppress the Iraqi
resistance. Even as US officials pontificated about their opposition
to torture and human rights violations, reports have been filtering
out of numerous civilian casualties in the towns and villages
in western Iraq currently being attacked by thousands of US marines
in an operation codenamed Steel Curtain.
See Also:
"Steel curtain" in Iraq-another
US war crime
[8 November 2005]
Pentagon dismisses new report
on US military torture in Iraq
[30 September 2005]
Study documents US-inflicted
carnage on Iraqi people
[26 July 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]
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