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More on Newsweeks retraction of the Koran story
By Kate Randall
30 May 2005
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New details emerging about detainee abuse at the Guantánamo
Bay prison camp underscore the utterly craven and politically
motivated character of Newsweeks retraction of its
May 9 article citing desecration of the Koran.
The latest developments confirm the charge contained in the
May 9 article that US forces at Guantánamo handled the
Koran in a contemptuous manner, and make clear that the decision
of the publishers to retract the story was not, as they declared
at the time, taken to uphold standards of accuracy or journalistic
ethics. Rather, Newsweek and its parent organization, the
Washington Post Company, capitulated in the face of a political
attack by the Bush administration.
The May 9 Newsweek article cited an unnamed US senior
officer who said an upcoming report by the Pentagons US
Southern Command would note a case in which interrogators,
in an attempt to rattle suspects, flushed a Koran down a toilet.
The account was blamed for triggering anti-US protests across
the Muslim world, claiming at least 17 lives in Afghanistan. Following
intense pressure from the Pentagon and the White Houseand
vilification in ultra-right media circlesNewsweek
retracted the story. (See Media
bows to US torture regime: Newsweek retracts Guantánamo
abuse story).
On May 26, one day after the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) released previously undisclosed FBI documents revealing
widespread desecration of the Koran during detainee interrogation
at Guantánamo, Brig. Gen. Jay W. Hood, commander of the
Guantánamo Joint Task Force, acknowledged that a Pentagon
review had documented 13 reported cases of mistreatment of the
Koran by US forces at Guantánamo, of which five had been
confirmed.
The ACLU obtained the documents as a result of Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) requests aimed at investigating the treatment of prisoners
at the facility. One of these documents includes an FBI interview
with a prisoner dated August 1, 2002, which includes the following
passage: About five months ago, the guards beat the detainees.
They flushed a Koran in the toilet.
According to the documents obtained by the ACLU, detainees
interviewed by the FBI also reported the Koran being kicked, withheld
as punishment and thrown on the floor. Prisoners also said they
were mocked during prayers.
In addition to these Koran-related abuses, detainees recounted
instances of being kicked in the stomach and back by several
individuals. They cited an occasion when a handcuffed prisoner
was kicked violently in the jaw after he had tripped
and fallen, and another instance when a prisoner was sexually
assaulted by a female guard.
The ACLUs release of these documents is but one more
confirmation of what is common knowledgeand not only among
the worlds Muslim population. The US military and American
intelligence agencies are engaged in a systemic violation of human
rights, involving torture, indefinite detention, extraordinary
rendition and other violations of international law.
The mistreatment of the Koran at Guantánamo, as well
as torture involving sexual humiliation and other sadistic methods
that were exposed at Abu Ghraib, are integral components of a
systemic policy that has been authorized at the highest levels
of government.
It is the US governments barbaric practices that have
evoked worldwide revulsion and hatrednot their exposure
by human rights organizations or, far more rarely, media outlets.
The claim by Bush administration officials that Newsweeks
one reference to the alleged Koran flushing incident was solely
responsible for anti-American riots was absurd. It was, however,
given a measure of credibility by Newsweeks rush
to accept culpability.
Following publication of the Newsweek story, the military
launched its own inquiry into the Koran abuse allegations. Last
Thursday, Brig. Gen. Hood held a Pentagon news briefing on its
preliminary findings. The event was a classic example of the doublespeak
and evasion that have become the stock-in-trade of the Bush administration.
Gen. Hood assured the assembled reporters: Id like
you to know that we have found no credible evidence that a member
of the Joint Task Force at Guantánamo Bay ever flushed
a Koran down a toilet.
The inquiry did, however, uncover 13 reported incidents in
which a guard or an interrogator mishandled the Koran, Hood acknowledged.
He claimed investigators had substantiated that the Koran had
actually been mishandled in only five of these cases, and that
none of these five incidents was a result of a failure to
follow standard operating procedures in place at the time the
incident occurred.
Hood claimed that a re-interview of the detainee cited by the
ACLU as having witnessed the Koran-flushing incident undermined
the story. He said investigators asked this prisoner whether he
had personally seen any such abuse of the Koran, and he
allowed as how he hadnt but he had heard guardsthat
guards at some other point in time had done this.
Hood said the detainee was not specifically asked about the
toilet incident, nor did investigators mention his previous interview.
The statements of this prisonerwhich have not been released
to the pressto the effect that he had heard of these practices,
but had not personally witnessed them, are the supposed credible
evidence that they never took place!
For its part, Newsweek has chimed in with a new article
on the topic, posted online and slated for its May 30 issue. Titled
The Quran Question, and penned by Evan Thomas
and Michael Isikoff, the author of the May 9 article, the piece
goes out of its way to accommodate the Pentagon line. It carries
the subtitle, In 31,000 documents the Pentagon has reviewed,
there are allegationsbut Defense says none is substantiated.
The article relies heavily on the statements of Defense Department
spokesman Lawrence Di Rita. It should be noted that this is the
same person who in a May 17 press conference dismissed out of
hand allegations by former detainees that the Koran had been mishandled
and abused at Guantánamo. He said that there hadnt
been any previous investigations because there havent
been credible allegations to that effect. In other words,
the charges of former prisoners were not even worthy of investigation.
After explaining guidelines introduced at Guantánamo
in January 2003 to respect the Koran, the article concludes: The
Pentagon is not ruling out the possibility of finding credible
reports of Quran desecration. But so far, said Di Rita,
it has not found any.
Having issued a cowardly apology for printing what was, in
essence, a legitimate story, Newsweeks editors
are seeking to further atone for their sins by uncritically toeing
the governments line. Their subservient behavior is but
one more demonstration of the spineless and reactionary role of
the US media.
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