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A few days old, but no one has posted or mentioned it:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4278734.stm
McCain has responded:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-abuse26sep26,0,1380053.story?coll=la-story-footer&track=morenews
Human Rights Watch has published a report giving fresh details of alleged torture and abuse of detainees by US forces in Iraq.
The report quotes three US soldiers who described routine, severe beatings of prisoners, including a detainee's leg being broken with a baseball bat.
Other allegations included applying burning chemicals to detainees' eyes and skin, making them glow in the dark.
A US defence spokesman said the report contained errors and distortions.
The Human Rights Watch (HRW) report is based on interviews with a captain and two sergeants who served in a battalion of the 82nd Airborne Division.
They said abuse, at a military base called Mercury near Falluja, was not only overlooked, but was sometimes ordered.
The punishments handed out included sleep deprivation, withholding food and water, "human pyramids" like those seen in photos from Abu Ghraib prison, and blows to the face, the report claimed.
'Agenda'
One of the soldiers told HRW the abuse was ordered by intelligence officers in an attempt to gain information.
Another said it was seen as "sport".
"Everyone in camp knew if you wanted to work out your frustration you show up at the [interrogation] tent," he reportedly said.
"As long as no PUCs [prisoners under control] came up dead, it happened," he said.
"We kept it to broken arms and legs."
HRW said the reports "suggest that the mistreatment of prisoners by the US military is even more widespread than has been acknowledged to date".
Lt Col Skinner of the US Department of Defense said the dossier was trying to "advance an agenda through the use of distortions and errors in fact".
He said 400 investigations had been launched into prisoner abuse allegations and "looked at all aspects of detention operations under a microscope".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4278734.stm
McCain has responded:
WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain, decrying new allegations of prisoner abuse in Iraq by U.S. soldiers, on Sunday backed an amendment to force the American military to live up to its international obligations under the Geneva Convention and "not engage in torture" of detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan.......
Fishback and the sergeants said prisoners taken during the siege of Fallouja were kicked and beaten, their bones broken and skin and eyes doused with chemical irritants. In addition, some prisoners were forced to form human pyramids, while others were made to hold heavy water jugs with their arms outstretched.......
In a lengthy chronology set down on his computer after he left Iraq in April 2004, Fishback said he tried unsuccessfully to get the Army to recognize it was skirting the Geneva Convention, which prohibits torture. He further complained that officers were not being properly trained how to handle prisoners.
But he said he was rebuffed by his chain of command, and after 17 months approached Human Rights Watch, which helped put him in touch with the Senate Armed Services Committee. In a Sept. 16 letter to McCain, Fishback outlined his concerns........
He added, "I would rather die fighting than give up even the smallest part of the idea that is 'America.' "
McCain, himself a victim of torture while a prisoner during the Vietnam War, made it clear Sunday that he did not believe that the military, including Pentagon leaders, had gotten the message that the United States must obey the Geneva Convention and abstain from torture.
He said he and Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, along with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), another committee member, were proposing an amendment to a defense bill requiring the military to abide by the Geneva dictates.
McCain noted too that he wanted prohibitions against torture underscored in the Army Field Manual, which he said "is the document that the Army goes by and the military goes by when in the process of interrogation and treatment of prisoners."
Told that the White House was opposed to such an amendment and that the president might veto the bill if the amendment were included, McCain said he was unsure whether there were enough votes in the Senate to override it.
"I hope," he said of the Bush administration, "that they will understand why we're trying to do this and why it's so important to America's image in the world."
The senator also suggested that continued allegations of abuse only turned more Americans against the war in Iraq. On Saturday, more than 100,000 protesters marched in Washington against the war.
"They're unhappy about a number of aspects of the war, and with some justification," McCain said. "Some serious mistakes were made."
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-abuse26sep26,0,1380053.story?coll=la-story-footer&track=morenews