When the American media published photographs of U.S. soldiers
abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib, the Bush administration assured
the world that the abuse was isolated and that the perpetrators
would be held accountable. Over the next three years, it refined
its narrative at the margins, but by and large its public position
remained the same. Yes, the administration acknowledged, some
soldiers abused prisoners, but these soldiers were anomalous
sadists who ignored clear orders. Abuse, the administration said,
was aberrational-not systemic, not widespread, and certainly not a
matter of policy.
The government's own documents, obtained by the American Civil
Liberties Union, tell a starkly different story. They show that the
abuse of prisoners was not limited to Abu Ghraib but was pervasive
in U.S. detention facilities in Iraq and Afghanistan and at
Guant?namo Bay. Even more disturbing, the documents reveal that
senior officials endorsed the abuse of prisoners as a matter of
policy-sometimes by tolerating it, sometimes by encouraging it, and
sometimes by expressly authorizing it. Records from Guant?namo
describe prisoners shackled in excruciating "stress positions,"
held in freezing-cold cells, forcibly stripped, hooded, terrorized
with military dogs, and deprived of human contact for months. Files
from Afghanistan and Iraq describe prisoners who had been beaten,
kicked, and burned. Autopsy reports attribute the deaths of those
in U.S. custody to strangulation, suffocation, and blunt-force
injuries.
"Administration of Torture" is the most detailed account thus
far of what took place in America's overseas detention centers,
including a narrative essay in which Jameel Jaffer and Amrit Singh
draw the connection between the policies adopted by senior civilian
and military officials and the torture and abuse that took place on
the ground. The book also reproduces hundreds of government
documents--including interrogation directives, FBI e-mails, autopsy
reports, and investigative files--that constitute both an important
historical record and a profound indictment of the Bush
administration's policies with respect to the detention and
treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody abroad.
General
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