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March 19, 2006

Grim portrait of US abuse

NY Times: Must reading, if you missed this today: In Secret Unit's 'Black Room,' a Grim Portrait of U.S. Abuse. Excerpt:

The story of detainee abuse in Iraq is a familiar one. But the following account of Task Force 6-26, based on documents and interviews with more than a dozen people, offers the first detailed description of how the military's most highly trained counterterrorism unit committed serious abuses.

It adds to the picture of harsh interrogation practices at American military prisons in Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, as well as at secret Central Intelligence Agency detention centers around the world.

The new account reveals the extent to which the unit members mistreated prisoners months before and after the photographs of abuse from Abu Ghraib were made public in April 2004, and it helps belie the original Pentagon assertions that abuse was confined to a small number of rogue reservists at Abu Ghraib.

The abuses at Camp Nama continued despite warnings beginning in August 2003 from an Army investigator and American intelligence and law enforcement officials in Iraq. The C.I.A. was concerned enough to bar its personnel from Camp Nama that August.

If the mistreatment of prisoners was over the top for even the CIA, you know some bad shit was -- or is -- going on there.

March 19, 2006 at 11:11 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink

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