Monday, October 31, 2005

Whistleblowing by US soldiers increasing?

A Human Rights Watch spokesman, in an article by Newsweek, claimed that there have more soldiers coming forward in recent months to denounce abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan. Following the example of Westpoint graduate Captain Ian Fishback, of the 82nd airborne division based in Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, more soldiers are coming forward with evidence that abuses are systematic.

Fishback's courage in taking a lonely stand may be paying off. Inspired by his example, "a growing critical mass of soldiers is coming forward with allegations of abuse," says Marc Garlasco of Human Rights Watch, the New York-based activist group that first revealed Fishback's story. One of them is Anthony Lagouranis, a Chicago-based Army specialist who recently left the military. He supports Fishback's contention that abuses in Iraq were systematic—and were authorized by officers in an effort to pressure detainees into talking. "I think our policies required abuse," says Lagouranis. "There were freaking horrible things people were doing. I saw [detainees] who had feet smashed with hammers. One detainee told me he had been forced by Marines to sit on an exhaust pipe, and he had a softball-sized blister to prove it. The stuff I did was mainly torture lite: sleep deprivation, isolation, stress positions, hypothermia. We used dogs."


Another issue raised by Fishback and others is that virtually no high-ranking officers have been held responsible for abuses. So far, those tried for abuses have been low-ranking soldiers and reservists.

But Defense officials rarely point out that no senior officers or civilian officials have been charged since Abu Ghraib. Other officers say they too are seething over the lack of accountability at senior levels. Colonel Zupan, the West Point philosophy teacher, says he himself should have acted when he was deployed in Afghanistan and heard of similar abuses. "I didn't raise my eyebrows about it," he said. "I think it was wrong of me. And if I didn't, as a field officer, then how are we going to be too harsh on an enlisted soldier?"

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home