Israelis at Abu Ghraib?

TrustMe.com Editorial –
February 28, 2007 via uruknet.info
Odd, isn't it? Sometimes, a truly startling piece of news will grab the world's
attention for a day or so – and then the story vanishes down the memory hole,
never to be seen again.
One such "disappeared" news item concerns the tortures conducted at the
notorious Abu Ghraib prison, now the subject of an important new documentary
called
The Ghosts of Abu Ghraib. For a while, the Rush
Limbaughs of the world tried to pretend that the prisoner abuses amounted to
nothing much worse than fraternity pranksterism. Administration apologists
claimed that all of the persons detained in that facility were terrorists, even
though they were actually locked up for a variety of reasons -- some had been
nabbed for vehicle registration violations. Today, most Americans agree that the
name Abu Ghraib will adorn one of the more shameful pages in our history books.
Shortly after the tales of prisoner abuse gained widespread public notice, an
unlikely news source, the right-wing NewsMax, broke
a remarkable angle: Israeli agents appear to have
participated in -- and may even have directed -- the Abu Ghraib abuses.
What the hell were Israelis doing in that place?
It was explained that the Israelis involved have been assigned as "civilian
contractors" to work with Coalition forces in interrogating Iraqi POWs.
The "contractors" are said to be veterans of Israel's domestic intelligence
unit, Shin Bet, as well as the more famous international intelligence agency,
the Mossad.
"Who has better experience in dealing with the Arabs than Israel?" one source
asked.
It was explained that several of the "interrogation" techniques used by U.S.
forces in Iraq have in fact been used by Israel "for years."
And:
Word in NYC diplomatic circles is that some of the "civilians" seen in recent
Iraq prison photos are in fact Israeli nationals "advising" U.S. forces.
For a brief period, other news organs carried this remarkable tale.
This BBC report quotes an unimpeachable source,
Brigadier General Janis Karpinski. She told the BBC that she personally
encountered Israeli interrogators at the notorious prison. The Israeli
government denied all such allegations, of course.
Gen Karpinski was in charge of the military police unit that ran Abu Ghraib and
other prisons when the abuses were committed. She has been suspended but not
charged.
She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme she met a man claiming to be Israeli
during a visit to an intelligence centre with a senior coalition general.
"I saw an individual there that I hadn't had the opportunity to meet before, and
I asked him what did he do there, was he an interpreter - he was clearly from
the Middle East," she said in the interview.
"He said, 'Well, I do some of the interrogation here. I speak Arabic but I'm not
an Arab; I'm from Israel.'"
Seymour Hersh chimed in, claiming that the Israelis had hoped to interrogate
intelligence agents who belonged to Saddam Hussein's anti-Israel units.
And then the story disappeared into the ether.
Over the past three years, we have continued to hear much about Abu Ghraib. The
nation and the world continues to discuss and decry what occurred there. But why
did all talk of Israeli involvement vanish? Why would Israeli Shin Bet and
Mossad officers be working alongside our own? Did the Israelis actually have a
role in "teaching" naive an easily-manipulated young American soldiers to forego
all sense of decency?
http://www.trustme.com/story.php?title=Israelis-at-Abu-Ghraib
Also see:
Israeli interrogators in Iraq (BBC report with this website's comments)
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=2001
Worst rape photos of Iraqi women detainees not yet officially released
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1861
Israeli Agents Believed Involved in Abu Ghraib
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1859
Who is Behind the Abuse at Abu Ghraib?
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1784
Who is John Israel? Why was he Running the Show?
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1788
Israeli Torture and U.S. Complicity
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1790
Reproduced from:
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/
**********************************************************
Reprinted from NewsMax.com
Monday, May
24, 2004 12:28 p.m. EDT
Israeli Agents Believed
Involved in Abu Ghraib
Diplomatic sources in Washington tell NewsMax's U.N.
correspondent Stew Stogel that Israeli nationals are believed to be involved in
the Iraq prison controversy.
"Israelis have been to Abu Ghraib and other prisons [in
Iraq]," says one source familiar with the U.S. operations.
It was explained that the Israelis involved have been
assigned as "civilian contractors" to work with Coalition forces in
interrogating Iraqi POWs.
The "contractors" are said to be veterans of Israel's
domestic intelligence unit, Shin Bet, as well as the more famous international
intelligence agency, the Mossad.
"Who has better experience in dealing with the Arabs
than Israel?" one source asked.
It was explained that several of the "interrogation"
techniques used by U.S. forces in Iraq have in fact been used by Israel "for
years."
The technique of stripping Arab prisoners naked, to
embarrass and humiliate them, has been used by Israelis, according to Arab
diplomats at the U.N.
It should be noted, however, that torture and
mutilation are common techniques used by Arab countries on their prisoners.
Word in NYC diplomatic circles is that some of the
"civilians" seen in recent Iraq prison photos are in fact Israeli nationals
"advising" U.S. forces.
Neither U.S. nor Iraqi diplomatic officials in NYC or
Washington were available for comment.
The charges come after an incident in April in which an
Israeli Arab working in Iraq was kidnapped and charged with spying.
Nabil George Yaakob Razouk, an Israeli Arab employed by
Research Triangle International, a North Carolina-based firm under contract to
the State Department, was abducted by Iraqi insurgents and said to be a spy.
Razouk, working on "local governance" advising, was
seized in Najaf and held for more than two weeks.
Only the personal intervention of Yassir Arafat, who
acted after pleas from the Razouk family, is believed to have saved him from
execution.
The latest disclosures come as an Iraqi diplomatic team
has temporarily canceled a visit to U.N. headquarters to consult with the
Security Council about the modalities for the transfer of power expected on July
1.
Among the Council ambassadors with whom the Iraqis are
expected to meet is U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte.
Negroponte will leave his U.N. post next month to
become the new U.S. ambassador to Iraq, once the Coalition authority is
dissolved.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Israel
Saddam Hussein/Iraq
Reproduced from:
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/5/24/131401.shtml

Israeli
interrogators 'in Iraq'
Published: 2004/07/03
16:15:16 GMT

Members of Karpinski's (l) brigade have
been accused of abuse
The US officer at the heart of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal says she has
evidence that Israelis helped to interrogate Iraqis at another facility.
Brig Gen Janis Karpinski told the BBC she met an Israeli working as an
interrogator at a secret intelligence centre in Baghdad.
A BBC reporter says it is the first time a senior US officer has suggested
Israelis worked with the coalition.
The Israeli foreign ministry said the reports were completely untrue.
Intelligence access
Gen Karpinski was in charge of the military police unit that ran Abu Ghraib and
other prisons when the abuses were committed. She has been suspended but not
charged.
She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme she met a man claiming to be Israeli
during a visit to an intelligence centre with a senior coalition general.
"I saw an individual there that I hadn't had the opportunity to meet before, and
I asked him what did he do there, was he an interpreter - he was clearly from
the Middle East," she said in the interview.
"He said, 'Well, I do some of the interrogation here. I speak Arabic but I'm not
an Arab; I'm from Israel.'"
Until a 1999 ruling by the Israeli Supreme Court, Israeli secret service
interrogators were allowed to use "moderate force".
The US journalist who broke the Abu Ghraib scandal told the programme his
sources confirm the presence of Israeli intelligence agents in Iraq.
Seymour Hersh said that one of the Israeli aims was to gain access to detained
members of the Iraqi secret intelligence unit, who reportedly specialise in
Israeli affairs.
'Convenient scapegoat'
The BBC reporter, Matthew Grant, says that whatever the truth, these allegations
could cause anger in the Arab world.
Photographs of naked Iraqi detainees being humiliated and maltreated first
started to surface in April, sparking shock and anger across the world.
One soldier has been sentenced and six others are awaiting courts martial for
abuses committed at Abu Ghraib jail.
Gen Karpinski has said she was being made a "convenient scapegoat" for abuse
ordered by others.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/middle_east/3863235.stm
Published: 2004/07/03 16:15:16 GMT
© BBC MMVII
Sundance
Review:
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
Posted Jan 24th 2007 3:02PM by
James Rocchi
Reproduced from:
http://www.cinematical.com/2007/01/24/sundance-review-ghosts-of-abu-ghraib/

There's an infamous essay
about David Cronenberg's first film, Shivers, which was
financed in part by Canadian tax dollars: "You Should Know How
Bad This Film Is; After All, You Helped Pay For It." A
paraphrase of that title rang in my mind as I watched the
Sundance documentary Ghosts of Abu Ghraib: We should
know how bad this situation is; after all, we've all helped pay
for it. Director Rory Kennedy combines interviews, photos and
on-site footage from Iraq's infamous prison -- which went from
being Saddam Hussein's execution factory to being the site of an
American scandal -- to make a potent piece of documentary
filmmaking that demonstrates a clear chain of lawless, inhuman
cruelty and corruption that went from the gleaming conference
tables of the Oval Office and Pentagon to the blood-spattered,
shit-smeared halls of a prison in Iraq.
Kennedy's methodology is meticulous and human -- many of the
ex-service people who served time for the documented prisoner
abuses captured in the infamous photographs speak on-camera
about what they did, and why; several Iraqis are interviewed as
well. Soldiers talk about how superior officers gave them
minimal or conflicting guidance on how much pressure was too
much pressure to induce captives to talk; ex-captives of Abu
Ghraib talk about how, for example, they watched as their father
was beaten so severely it lead to respiratory illness, which led
to death -- with medical attention denied every time it was
begged for by a weeping son.
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
is only 'liberal' insofar as that phrase suggests a basic level
of human decency and kindness; more importantly, Kennedy reminds
us that in a war on terror, bad investigatory work is more
dangerous than no investigatory work at all. It's possible that
one or two of the captives at Abu Ghraib were culpable
terrorists; after pictures of them being assaulted by dogs,
forced to simulate male-on-male fellatio or threatened with
electrocution made it into the world media, it's far more
probable that those inflammatory images inspired dozens,
hundreds, thousands of young men and women to take up arms
against the nation-state responsible.
Most of the time, we see torture in movies like
Hostel or
Turistas -- we like to
imagine torture as the work of foreign psychopaths, not as a
cornerstone of foreign policy. But as we watch Donald Rumsfeld
dance around the language of the Geneva Convention's
proscription against torture, it's clear that the entire
administration is complicit in a colossal enterprise of hideous
cruelty -- and if Bill Clinton can be nearly impeached over
parsing " ... it depends on what the meaning of what the word
'is' is. ..." then why hasn't George W. Bush faced impeachment
for allowing his direct advisors to play a similar game with the
phrase "severe pain?" The Geneva Convention prohibits torture
that results in loss of bodily function, organ function or
death; the Bush administration made a high-level decision to
figure out how far they could go, and how long they could
torture people, before those three things happened. Anyone who
thinks this is an acceptable use of American resources is
invited to contemplate being locked in a room with a group of
people who can do anything they want to you, for as long as they
want to, as long as it doesn't result in death or organ failure
or a crippling injury.
It's an ugly thing to
imagine. It's an uglier thing to see. Several Army higher-ups
referred to the Abu Ghraib photos as capturing nothing more than
"Animal House on the
night shift." The film systematically destroys that glib
evasion. The Deltas snuck a horse into Dean Wormer's office;
they weren't beating people until they died, denying them sleep,
threatening their wives and children. And
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
also brings home another sad legacy of the Bush administration:
There's no better way to get horrible results than asking people
to do the impossible with no resources. At Abu Ghraib, 300
guards watched 6,000 prisoners; the worst of the worst, the
1,000 prisoners kept in the 'hard site' at the prison were
watched by as few as six or seven guards. Watching
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib, we
see how under-paid, under-supported people in their teens and
twenties wound up going to jail for their actions; we also see
how the higher-ranking civilian and military leaders who set
their tasks and objectives avoided prosecution, earned
promotions, stayed on in their jobs and positions as lesser
functionaries paid for carrying out their wishes.
Over and over we're told
that "the gloves are off" in the fight against America's
enemies. Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
is an essential declaration of the truth behind that cliché:
Taking the gloves off is no guarantee the job will get done; it
is a guarantee that you'll get your hands dirty. I can only hope
that as many people as possible can see
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
before April 15 and tax time roll around: This is what we have
paid for with money, this is what American soldiers will pay for
in blood, this is what our children will pay for as nations
around the world perceive that America has gone from a defender
of liberty to a swaggering thug. This is what
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
shows us: lost lives, lost honor and fascist brutality in the
name of democracy and freedom.
http://www.cinematical.com/2007/01/24/sundance-review-ghosts-of-abu-ghraib/
Who is
Behind the Abuse
at Abu Ghraib?
By Christopher Bollyn – Rumor
Mill News May 6, 2004
Despite extensive coverage, the mainstream media has failed to ask the key
questions about the abuse of the Iraqi detainees: Who is really behind the
torture and humiliation of the Iraqi prisoners and why was it done?
“I share a deep disgust that those prisoners were treated the way they were
treated,” President George W. Bush said about the published photographs of
tortured and humiliated Iraqi prisoners from the U.S.-run prison near Baghdad.
“Their treatment does not reflect the nature of the American people. That's not
the way we do things in America.”
Most Americans would agree that the abuse caught on film at Abu Ghraib prison
seems utterly foreign. The media, however, is not exploring the question implied
by the president’s statement: If not American, then who is behind the
humiliation of the Iraqi prisoners?
While the mainstream media wallows in the details of the abuse at the Abu Ghraib
prison near Baghdad it avoids asking the questions that could reveal who is
behind the sordid saga.
The lowly Army reservists seen smiling in scenes of abuse appear to be mere
actors – useful idiots – in a drama directed by a hidden hand. But who is truly
responsible for this drama? And why was it photographed?
A May 5 New York Times article about Hayder Sabbar Abd, a 34-year-old Shiite
Iraqi being victimized in the infamous photos, raises the most obvious question:
Why was the perverse abuse he and six other simple detainees suffered
photographed?
Ordered by the Translator
“The curiosity, through much of the ordeal, was the camera,” Ian Fisher wrote.
“It was a detail he mentioned repeatedly as he recalled being forced against a
wall and ordered by the Arabic translator to masturbate.” It’s odd that,
according to Abd, the translator was giving the orders.
“All the while, he [Abd] said, the flash of the camera kept illuminating the dim
room that once held prisoners of Mr. [Saddam] Hussein, recording images that
have infuriated the Arab world and badly sullied America’s image.”
It seems unlikely that a group of U.S. Army Military Police [MP] would allow
themselves to be filmed indulging in “sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal
abuses.” The prisoners being abused in the photos were not being abused prior to
interrogation, according to Abd. The mistreatment in the photos “appeared to be
punishment for bad behavior,” the Times reported.
“The truth is we were not terrorists,” Abd said. “We were not insurgents. We
were just ordinary people. And American intelligence knew that.”
Abd claims that he was never interrogated, and never charged with a crime. Most
of the American soldiers had treated him well and with respect. “Americans did
not mistreat me in general,” he said. “But these people must be tried.”
Taguba's Investigation
Major General Antonio M. Taguba, who conducted the Army’s investigation into the
alleged abuses at Abu Ghraib earlier this year, said Army investigators have
“extremely graphic photographic evidence” of abuse in “pictures and videos.”
Taguba’s report says “egregious acts and grave breaches of international law”
were committed when an “ambiguous command relationship” existed at the prison.
This breakdown in the chain-of-command was due to Fragmentary Order 1108, dated
19 November 2003.
“This effectively made an MI [Military Intelligence] Officer, rather than an MP
Officer, responsible for the MP units conducting detainee operations at that
facility,” Taguba wrote.
Fragmentary Order 1108 made Col. Thomas M. Pappas, Commander of the 205th MI
Brigade, responsible for the MP units at Abu Ghraib prison.
Taguba’s report, which was presented to his superiors in early March,
recommended that an investigation be conducted “to determine the extent of
culpability of MI personnel.”
Apart from the failings of the senior officers who should have done more to
prevent the abuse, Taguba names four individuals as key suspects.
“Specifically,” Taguba wrote, “I suspect that Col. Thomas M. Pappas, LTC Steve
L. Jordan, Mr. Steven Stephanowicz, and Mr. John Israel were either directly or
indirectly responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib and strongly recommend
immediate disciplinary action.”
Jordan is former director of the Joint Interrogation and Debriefing Center and
Liaison Officer to the 205th MI Brigade.
Stephanowicz is a “civilian interrogator” employed by CACI International of
Chantilly, Va., and “John Israel” is said to be a “civilian interpreter.” Both
were working with the 205th MI Brigade at the time of the abuse. According to
the report these private contractors were at times supervising the
interrogations.
“In general,” Taguba wrote, “U.S. civilian contract personnel (Titan Corp., CACI,
etc.) third country nationals, and local contractors do not appear to be
properly supervised within the detention facility at Abu Ghraib.” The third
country nationals are not identified in the report.
Although Stephanowicz and Israel are both named as being “directly or indirectly
responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib,” very little has been said about
either of them in the mainstream media. Why are they being overlooked?
Who is John Israel?
The Taguba report isn’t clear about John Israel. In the body of the report he is
mistakenly identified as a CACI employee. Only in the annex on the last page is
he noted as being with Titan Corp., a high tech military company based in San
Diego.
Questions abound about “John Israel.” Ralph Williams, spokesman for Titan Corp.,
told the Times that Israel “worked for a Titan subcontractor that he would not
name.”
“John Israel” is most likely the nom de guerre of an Arabic-speaking
intelligence agent who was placed in Iraq through Titan. Both Titan and CACI
have directors with strong ties to the Israeli military establishment.
The director of Titan with the largest stake in the company is Edward H. Bersoff,
who received the Distinguished Leadership Award by the Washington Chapter of the
American Jewish Committee in 1999. Bersoff has been an honored speaker at the
Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, along with the likes of Sharon’s
right-wing ally Binjamin Netanyahu.
On January 14, Dr. J.P. (Jack) London, chairman, president, and CEO of CACI
International, flew to Israel to receive the Albert Einstein Technology Award
from the Jerusalem Fund. The award was presented by Israeli Defense Minister
Shaul Mofaz and Uri Lupolianski, Jerusalem’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish Mayor at a
ceremony in the occupied city on January 14, 2004.
CACI was awarded a $10,118,040 firm-fixed-price contract from the U.S. Army on
Feb. 26, 2004 for 24 contract specialists, like Stephanowicz, to work in Iraq.
Each CACI specialist is costing the U.S. taxpayer $421,585 per year.
On May 3, Titan reported a 21 percent growth in its first quarter revenues of
$459 million. “Titan's linguist contract with the U.S. Army” was noted as a
“primary driver” behind the companies increased revenues. The only language tool
Titan offers on its website is for “Levantine Arabic,” i.e. the Arabic spoken in
Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria.
Last July, however, Titan Systems Corporation of Fairfax, Va., placed an ad for
“native Arabic, Aramaic, Kurdish, Persian, Pashto, Turkish and Dari speakers.”
Titan’s ad for interpreters required the native speakers be U.S. citizens and
fluent in English. It is extremely unlikely that any native speaker of Arabic
would be named “John Israel.”
Still on the Job
Taguba’s report called for Stephanowicz to be terminated and reprimanded, but on
April 25 he was still on the job at Abu Ghraib hitting golfballs from the roof
onto the highway in his free time, according to the “Iraq Diary” of one of his
co-workers. Until recently, Joe Ryan, one of the interrogators, had his
revealing journal about his work at Abu Ghraib posted on the website of KSTP, a
St. Paul, Minnesota radio station. According to KSTP’s Ron Rosenbaum, the
journal was removed at Ryan’s request when the photos of abuse surfaced.
As of May 5, however, two months after Taguba had called for Stephanowicz to be
fired, CACI, Stephanowicz’s employer, said they had “received no information
from the Dept. of Defense” on the matter.
Phenomenal Damage
"Everybody understands the phenomenal damage this accusation has caused in that
part of the world," Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, the senior Democrat on the
Foreign Relations Committee, said. "This is the single most significant
undermining act that's occurred in a decade in that region of the world, in
terms of our standing."
The abuse at Abu Ghraib resembles Israeli methods applied in the occupied
territories. “Israel is the only country in which the kind of abuse documented
at Abu Ghraib occurs as a matter of policy,” Hussein Ibish, spokesman for the
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), the largest Arab-American
organization, told American Free Press.
Palestinian news sources are replete with similar accounts of Israeli soldiers
forcing Palestinians to strip and perform degrading sexual acts. Reports of
Palestinian prisoners having been sodomized during torture sessions with Israeli
military interrogators are common.
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs has articles on such abuse going back
to 1996. Israeli soldiers paraded naked Palestinians through the streets of
Jerusalem after the massacre of Deir Yassin in April 1948. Dr. Hazem Nusseibeh
of Palestine Broadcasting witnessed the massacre and its aftermath. Nusseibeh
said women were bayoneted and about 11 children were made to parade naked
through the streets of Jerusalem.
Palestine Chronicle, an online news source, carried an article in November 2002
titled “Stripping Palestinians has Become Common Practice.”
The article described an incident in which Israeli soldiers ordered a young
resident of the town of Nablus to strip completely naked in the street and act
like a dog.
Deliberate Intelligence Tactic
“It was a deliberate intelligence tactic,” Ibish said when asked if he thought
the photos could be part of an Israeli intelligence plot to damage U.S.
relations in the Arab world. “[Ariel] Sharon plays a zero-sum game,” he said.
“He thinks the worst possible relations between United States and the people of
the Arab and Muslim world is good for Israel.”
American Free Press asked the coalition press desk in Baghdad if Israeli
advisors worked with the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq or at the Abu Ghraib prison.
“No to both,” was the response from Major Carolyn Dysart.
Rafael Barak, spokesman at the Israeli embassy in Washington, said he was “not
aware” of any Israeli presence in Iraq.
The accused military personnel may face courts martial, but the civilian
contractors can be charged with war crimes through the War Crimes Act of 1996
and the Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000, according to Francis A.
Boyle, author and professor of international law at the University of Illinois.
War crimes cases against U.S. civilians working with the military in Iraq would
be prosecuted by the Dept. of Justice, Boyle said.
“The question is how high this goes,” he added. “[Lieut. General Ricardo S.]
Sanchez is letting the superiors off the hook.” Boyle’s latest book on Iraq is
entitled Destroying World Order: U.S. Imperialism in the Middle East Before and
After September 11th.
"Tell him to walk and bark like a dog." That's right, good. O.K., I've got the
picture."
Question: Where have we seen this before?
Answer: ISRAELI OCCUPIED PALESTINE
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=48426
Also see:
Who is John Israel? Why was he Running the Show?
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?id=1788

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