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Iraq-Jordan
US Soldiers Told to Ignore Sight of Iraqis Abusing Prisoners
2004-08-08
From The Los Angeles Times, crediting The Portland Oregonian
Oregon National Guard soldiers tried to stop Iraqi jailers from abusing dozens of prisoners, but were ordered to return the prisoners to their abusers and leave, according to an article published in the Oregonian, which had a writer with the unit. A soldier with the 2nd Battalion, 162nd Infantry, spotted a man beating a prisoner June 29 — Iraq's first official day as a sovereign country — in a courtyard near the Interior Ministry, the newspaper reported in Sunday's edition. Members of the unit later saw other prisoners who appeared to have been beaten, and items such as metal rods and rubber hoses that could have been used to torture them. Capt. Jarrell Southall gave the newspaper a written account of the incident and other guardsmen, speaking on condition of anonymity, echoed his account, the newspaper said. ....

The incident reportedly occurred after Iraqi officials announced a crackdown on crime and police and security forces arrested about 150 people in a Baghdad neighborhood. They were taken to the grounds of the Interior Ministry. The Oregon soldiers who were on a routine neighborhood patrol alerted headquarters. The battalion commander, Lt. Col. Daniel Hendrickson, led a group of soldiers to the compound and entered the detention yard unchallenged, according to the account by Southall, of Newark, Calif., who serves with the Oregon Guard. The guardsmen separated the prisoners from the Iraqi police and gave the prisoners water and administered first aid. "Many of these prisoners had bruises and cuts and belt or hose marks all over," Southall said. "I witnessed prisoners who were barely able to walk." After Hendrickson radioed the Army's 1st Cavalry for instructions, he was told to return the prisoners to the Iraqi authorities and leave the detention yard.
Caption on one of the photos at the Oregonian: The prisoners, many whom appeared to be non-Arab immigrants ...

Immigrants? Is that the latest PC word? Kee-rist, them boys are jihadis. NOW I know why the Iraqi police were thumping them, and why the Guard were ordered away.

"Tyrone! Step back and let Ahmed do his job."
"Yessir, LT. Mr. Ahmed, sorry, and here's your truncheon."
"Thank you, American soldier. Now please stand back, it's a number four."
Posted by:Mike Sylwester

#10  The prisoners, many whom appeared to be non-Arab immigrants ...

Pursian (i.e. Iranian 'Undocumented freedom fighters')....
Posted by: CrazyFool   2004-08-08 7:46:00 PM  

#9  The prisoners, many whom appeared to be non-Arab immigrants ...

Chechens? Pakistani?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-08-08 7:36:42 PM  

#8  Mike---all we are saying, is give peas a chance.
Posted by: Seafarious   2004-08-08 7:24:03 PM  

#7  RC brings up a good point here. Iraq is a Sovereign nation right now, but the moonbats who called for Iraqi Sovereignty/No US Imperialism are going to be the same who call on us to stop this.

So what's it going to be: Play the "role" of Imperialistic overlords or allow "innocent" Jihadi's to be beaten for information?
Posted by: Charles   2004-08-08 5:02:46 PM  

#6  MS: Ever since then, my heart has bled for abused prisoners who might be innocent of any wrong-doing.

I know - better that a whole country revert to Saddam than one innocent jihadi get beaten up.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2004-08-08 12:32:01 PM  

#5  Beating prisoners is bad, I agree. But what, exactly, did the Oregonian WANT them to do about it do now that Iraq was sovereign? Beat them if they didn't stop?

Funny, the LA times, Oregonian, CNN CBS/NBC/ABC etc. never had their panties knotted when Sadaam or Iran or any other Muslim country was busy torturing their citizens, but when an American soldier witnesses the bruises (not the event itself) somehow GW is to blame.
Posted by: B   2004-08-08 12:05:18 PM  

#4  spotted a man beating a prisoner June 29 — Iraq’s first official day as a sovereign country

In other words, some of our soldiers saw agents of a sovereign nation doing something we didn't like, and were reminded that Iraq is, in fact, a sovereign nation.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-08-08 12:00:26 PM  

#3  
My Mom served over-cooked peas, and my Dad insisted I eat them. Ever since then, my heart has bled for abused prisoners who might be innocent of any wrong-doing.
.
Posted by: Mike Sylwester   2004-08-08 11:07:05 AM  

#2  Mike, were you abused as a child? Just wondering...
Posted by: .com   2004-08-08 10:55:54 AM  

#1  Here are some photographs of the prisoners at the site.
Posted by: Anonymous6014   2004-08-08 10:54:01 AM  

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