The
Article that Disappeared
Army,
CIA, Congress Want Torture Truths Exposed
Dear
friends,
The
below article came out on the UPI news wire on May 18th. I didn't read it
until today as the couple times I saw it, the title didn't grab me.
When a friend forwarded it to me today, I finally read it and was
amazed! The Senate's Republican leadership, the CIA, and the Army all want
the truth exposed on the torture cover-ups and are willing to push to make
this happen!
Amazingly,
when I clicked on the link my friend sent to confirm that this
article was indeed from UPI, it had disappeared from the UPI
website. This is highly unusual. So I did a Google search on the title.
The first item on the list was the UPI website, but when I clicked there, the
article was gone. When I clicked on the "Cached" link on the lower
right hand of the entry, however, the article still shows up as from the UPI
website. Looking through the Google results, I saw that the only major US
paper to pick up this article was the Washington Times (fourth
Google entry). I clicked on the link only to find it had disappeared
from their website as well!
I
do a lot of research, but have never seen recently reported articles
disappear like this. Both articles show up still in the Google cache (an
earlier recording of the article made by Google). You can confirm this for
yourself by going to Google and
typing "Army, CIA want torture truths exposed" (use quotation
marks). First click on the articles, and then on the
"Cached" link at the lower right hand of the selection. I suspect
someone doesn't want this article widely read!
Below
is the URL of the original UPI article, though it is no longer posted there.
The second link below is to the excellent alternative news website, Common
Dreams, which still has the article posted. In spite of the fact that
this article appears to have been suppressed, the truth continues to come out
big time. As you likely know, George Tenet, the director of the CIA announced
his resignation on Thursday. Then yesterday (Friday, June 5th) the CIA's
deputy director of operations announced his resignation (see http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3775423.stm).
The dominoes have begun to fall. Let us do our best to develop positive,
supportive energy as the power structure falls, so that we can build a much
healthier, more open democracy. Take care and have a wonderful day and
weekend!
With
very best wishes,
Fred
http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040518-064124-9605r
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0519-08.htm
Army, CIA want torture truths exposed
By
Martin Sieff
UPI Senior News Analyst
Published 5/18/2004
7:16 AM
WASHINGTON,
May 18 (UPI) -- Efforts at the top level of the Bush administration and the
civilian echelon of the Department of Defense to contain the Iraq prison
torture scandal and limit the blame to a handful of enlisted soldiers and
immediate senior officers have already failed: The scandal continues to
metastasize by the day.
Over
the past weekend and into this week, devastating new allegations have emerged
putting Stephen Cambone, the first Undersecretary of Defense for
Intelligence, firmly in the crosshairs and bringing a new wave of allegations
cascading down on the head of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, when he
scarcely had time to catch his breath from the previous ones.
Even
worse for Rumsfeld and his coterie of neo-conservative true believers who
have run the Pentagon for the past 3˝ years, three major institutions in the
Washington power structure have decided that after almost a full presidential
term of being treated with contempt and abuse by them, it's payback time.
Those
three institutions are: The United States Army, the Central Intelligence
Agency and the old, relatively moderate but highly experienced Republican
leadership in the United States Senate.
None
of those groups is chopped liver: Taken together they comprise a devastating
Grand Slam.
The
spearhead for the new wave of revelations and allegations - but by no means
the only source of them - is veteran investigative journalist Seymour Hersh.
In a major article published in the New Yorker this week and posted on to its
Web-site Saturday, Hersh revealed that a high-level Pentagon operation
code-named Copper Green "encouraged physical coercion and sexual
humiliation" of Iraqi prisoners. He also cited Pentagon sources and
consultants as saying that photographing the victims of such abuse was an
explicit part of the program meant to force the victims into becoming
blackmailed reliable informants.
Hersh
further claimed in his article that Rumsfeld himself approved the program and
that one of his four or five top aides, Cambone, set it up in Baghdad and ran
it.
These
allegations of course are anathema to the White House, Rumsfeld and their
media allies. In a highly unusual step for any newspaper, the editorially
neo-conservative tabloid New York Post ran an editorial Monday seeking to
ridicule and discredit Hersh. However, it presented absolutely no evidence to
query, let alone discredit the substance of his article and allegations.
Instead,
the New York Post editorial inadvertently pointed out one, but by no means
all, of the major sources for Hersh's information. The editorial alleged that
Hersh had received much of his material from the CIA.
Based
on the material Hersh quoted, his legendary intelligence community contacts
were probably sources for some of his information. However, Hersh has also
enjoyed close personal relations with many now high-ranking officers in the
United States Army, going all the way back to his prize-winning coverage and
scoops in Vietnam more than 30 years ago.
Indeed,
intelligence and regular Army sources have told UPI that senior officers and
officials in both communities are sickened and outraged by the revelations of
mass torture and abuse, and also by the incompetence involved, in the Abu
Ghraib prison revelations. These sources also said that officials all the way
up to the highest level in both the Army and the Agency are determined not to
be scapegoated, or allow very junior soldiers or officials to take the full
blame for the excesses.
President
George W. Bush in his weekly radio address Saturday claimed that the Abu
Ghraib abuses were only "the actions of a few" and that they did
not "reflect the true character of the Untied States armed forces."
But
what enrages many serving senior Army generals and U.S. top-level
intelligence community professionals is that the "few" in this case
were not primarily the serving soldiers who were actually encouraged to carry
out the abuses and even then take photos of the victims, but that they were
encouraged to do so, with the Army's well-established safeguards against such
abuses deliberately removed by high-level Pentagon civilian officials.
Abuse
and even torture of prisoners happens in almost every war on every side. But well-run
professional armies, and the U.S. Army has always been one, take great pains
to guard against it and limit it as much as possible. Even in cases where
torture excesses are regarded as essential to extract tactical information
and save lives, commanders in most modern armies have taken care to limit
such "dirty work" to very small units, usually from special forces,
and to keep it as secret as possible.
For
senior Army professionals know that allowing patterns of abuse and torture to
metastasize in any army is annihilating to its morale and tactical
effectiveness. Torturers usually make lousy combat soldiers, which is why
combat soldiers in every major army hold them in contempt.
Therefore,
several U.S. military officers told UPI, the idea of using regular Army
soldiers, including some even just from the Army Reserve or National Guard,
and encouraging them to inflict such abuses ran contrary to received military
wisdom and to the ingrained standards and traditions of the U.S. Army.
The
widespread taking of photographs of the victims of such abuses, they said,
clearly revealed that civilian "amateurs" and not regular Army or
intelligence community professionals were the driving force in shaping and
running the programs under which these abuses occurred.
Hersh
has spearheaded the waves of revelations of shocking abuse. But other major
U.S. media organizations are now charging in behind him to confirm and extend
his reports. They are able to do so because many senior veteran professionals
in both the CIA and the Army were disgusted by the revelations of the torture
excesses. Now they are being listened to with suddenly receptive ears on
Capitol Hill.
Republican
members in the House of Representatives have kept discipline and silence on
the revelations. But with the exception of the increasingly isolated and
embarrassed Senate Republican Leader, Bill Frist of Tennessee, other senior
mainstream figures in the GOP Senate majority have refused to go along with
any cover-up.
Sens.
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Orrin Hatch of Utah, Richard Lugar of
Indiana, Pat Roberts of Kansas and John Warner of Virginia have all been
outspoken in their condemnation of the torture excesses. And they did so even
before the latest, most far-reaching and worst of the allegations and reports
surfaced. Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, lost no
time in hauling Rumsfeld before it to testify.
The
pattern of the latest wave of revelations is clear: They are coming from
significant numbers of senior figures in both the U.S. military and
intelligence services. They reflect the disgust and contempt widely felt in
both communities at the excesses; and at long last, they are being listened
to seriously by senior Republican, as well as Democratic, senators on Capitol
Hill.
Rumsfeld
and his team of top lieutenants have therefore now lost the confidence, trust
and respect of both the Army and intelligence establishments. Key elements of
the political establishment even of the ruling GOP now recognize this.
Yet
Rumsfeld and his lieutenants remain determined to hang on to power, and so
far President Bush has shown every sign of wanting to keep them there. The
scandal, therefore, is far from over. The revelations will continue. The cost
of the abuses to the American people and the U.S. national interest is
already incalculable: And there is no end in sight.
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