From Human Rights Watch 
Abusive Techniques Were Authorized, Soldiers' Complaints Ignored
(New York, July 23, 2006) – Torture and other abuses against detainees in 
U.S. custody in Iraq were authorized and routine, even after the 2004 Abu 
Ghraib scandal, according to new accounts from soldiers in a Human 
Rights Watch report released today. The new report, containing first-hand 
accounts by U.S. military personnel interviewed by Human Rights Watch, 
details detainee abuses at an off-limits facility at Baghdad airport and at 
other detention centers throughout Iraq.
In the 53-page report, "No Blood, No Foul: Soldiers' Accounts of 
Detainee Abuse in Iraq," soldiers describe how detainees were routinely 
subjected to severe beatings, painful stress positions, severe sleep 
deprivation, and exposure to extreme cold and hot temperatures. The 
accounts come from interviews conducted by Human Rights Watch, 
supplemented by memoranda and sworn statements contained in 
declassified documents.   
  
"Soldiers were told that the Geneva Conventions did not apply, and that 
interrogators could use abusive techniques to get detainees to talk," said 
John Sifton, the author of the report and the senior researcher on terrorism 
and counterterrorism at Human Rights Watch. "These accounts rebut U.S. 
government claims that torture and abuse in Iraq was unauthorized and 
exceptional – on the contrary, it was condoned and commonly used."   
  
The accounts reveal that detainee abuse was an established and apparently 
authorized part of the detention and interrogation processes in Iraq for 
much of 2003-2005. They also suggest that soldiers who sought to report 
abuse were rebuffed or ignored.   
  
The Human Rights Watch report comes at a time when Bush 
administration officials and congressional leaders are hotly debating the 
applicability of the Geneva Conventions to detainee treatment. The report 
provides vivid demonstration of the abuses that result when these basic 
international standards are ignored.   
 U.S.: Soldiers Tell of Detainee Abuse in Iraq
 
  
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