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BUSH, CHENEY AND RUMSFELD: WAR CRIMINALS AND THEIR TORTUOUS LOGIC
Contributed by
steeleyes
on
Wednesday, 1st June 2005 @ 06:12:30 AM in AEST
Topic:
war
|
With tortuous logic The murderous liars and torturers Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld spoke
O//
They claim to be good Yet their methods are bad With tortuous logic They only look sad
Crazy ideologues With hawk-sized brain Their tortuous logic Takes a path insane
Murdering innocents Tends of thousands have died Due to the illogic of leaders Known to have lied
Bush and Cheney, the liars Rice and Powell too Using tortuous logic The tortuous few
But lets not forget Rumsfeld Who gave us torture-lite Another tortuous brain And none too bright
Using methods of torture However its called Means for certain The world is appalled
A few sad minds cause this mayhem With each days dawn Now by their own tortuous logic It is time they were gone
O//
Shocking reports reveal U.S. torture widespread
Architects of torture policy must be held accountable
New reports of torture of detainees show the U.S. as a global enforcer gone wild.
This week, Human Rights Watch charged that U.S. FBI agents operating in Pakistan repeatedly interrogated and threatened two U.S. citizens of Pakistani origin who were unlawfully detained and tortured by Pakistani security services. The two were abducted from their Karachi home last August, and released this April without being charged. During eight months of interrogation and torture, they were questioned at least six times by FBI agents, who did nothing to stop the torture including beatings with whips and rods or provide consular help. Instead, the two said, the agents threatened to send them to Guantanamo if they did not confess to terrorist involvement.
Last week, The New York Times published a report on torture at a U.S. detention center in Bagram, Afghanistan, based on leaked files of an Army investigation into the 2002 deaths of two Afghan detainees. Among the details:
a prisoner made to pick plastic bottle caps out of a drum mixed with excrement and water to soften him up for questioning.
repeated use of the peroneal strike a potentially disabling blow to the side of the leg, just above the knee. A police officer involved in training told a soldier he would never use such strikes because they would tear up a prisoners legs, Times reporter Tim Golden wrote, but in Afghanistan the usual rules did not seem to apply.
an Army interrogator reported by a detainee to have pulled out his --- during an interrogation at Bagram, held it against the prisoners face and threatened to rape him.
Autopsies showed the two deaths had been caused by blunt force trauma to the legs. Soldiers said the two had been repeatedly beaten while shackled. Nevertheless, investigators initially recommended closing the case without criminal charges.
Eventually, the Army found probable cause to charge 27 officers and enlistees. Over two years later, only seven have been charged, and no one has been convicted. Many Bagram interrogators, and their officer, Capt. Carolyn Wood, were redeployed to Iraqs Abu Ghraib prison in 2003. An Army investigation said Wood implemented remarkably similar techniques there.
New Army documents released under court order last week are filled with additional instances of torture and abuse by U.S. forces. In Ramadi, Iraq, in 2003, an Army captain took an Iraqi welder into the desert, made him dig his own grave, threatened to kill him, and had other soldiers stage a shooting. An Army master sergeant knocked an Iraqi detainee to the ground, repeatedly kicked him in the groin, abdomen and head, and encouraged subordinates to do likewise. A staff sergeant held a detainees legs apart while other soldiers kicked him in the groin, abdomen and head. Two Iraqi men detained in Samarra were driven to a bridge where a platoon leader ordered them pushed into the river. One of the Iraqis could not swim and drowned. One soldier told investigators the chain of command had instructed the soldiers not to cooperate with the investigation, and to deny they pushed the men into the river.
The nearly 2,000 pages of documents were released after a federal court ordered the Defense Department to comply with a Freedom of Information Act request by the American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for Peace.
In March the ACLU and several other groups filed suit against Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on behalf of eight detainees who were subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. One was held at Kandahar and Bagram, Afghanistan, in July and August 2003. His treatment included beatings, placement in restraints and positions calculated to cause pain, verbal abuse of a sexual nature, humiliation by being photographed while naked, denial of water, intentional deprivation of necessary medication exacerbated by physical abuse, intentional and prolonged exposure to dangerous temperature extremes, and sleep deprivation.
Another plaintiff, held by the U.S. military at various locations in Iraq from July 2003 to June 2004, was subjected to severe beatings to the point of unconsciousness, stabbing and mutilation, isolation while naked and hooded in a wooden coffin-like box, prolonged sleep deprivation enforced by beatings, deprivation of adequate food and water, mock execution and death threats. One Iraqi detainee charged that soldiers taunted him by having a military dog pick up the Koran in its mouth.
While the White House blames Newsweek magazine for damaging Americas reputation in the Muslim world, the Armys own investigations show systemic abuse and humiliation of Muslim men by U.S. forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, said ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero. He said high-ranking officials who allow the continuing abuse and torture must be held accountable.
Amnesty International head Irene Khan condemned cynical attempts to redefine and sanitize torture. William Schulz, the groups U.S. executive director, compared the U.S. torture practices to a virus and said the governments response amounts to a whitewash of those who schemed to authorize those actions, sometimes from the comfort of government buildings.
The architects of torture policy must not get off scot-free, he said.
http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/7106/1/271
Copyright ©
steeleyes
... [
2005-06-01 06:12:30] (Date/Time posted on
site)
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Re: BUSH, CHENEY AND RUMSFELD: WAR CRIMINALS AND THEIR TORTUOUS LOGIC
(User Rating: 1 ) by crap_snapper on
Wednesday, 1st June 2005 @ 08:46:46 AM AEST (User
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a Message)
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Nice poem, i'm British and i'm ashamed of my country and my government. |
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Re: BUSH, CHENEY AND RUMSFELD: WAR CRIMINALS AND THEIR TORTUOUS LOGIC
(User Rating: 1 ) by Former_Member on
Wednesday, 1st June 2005 @ 01:44:09 PM AEST (User
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a Message)
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Dang this is a very long poem, sorry haha, I could not bring my mind to finish it but I liked how you were rhyming when you started it out. |
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