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Miller takes the Fifth
US general withholds testimony in Abu Ghraib abuse trial
By Joe Kay
19 January 2006
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The decision by Major General Geoffrey Miller to withhold his
testimony in a case involving abuse at Abu Ghraib highlights once
again the complicity of top political and military officials in
authorizing torture in Iraq and Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. In
spite of Millers role in the events leading up to the torture
at Abu Ghraib, he has never been punished or even reprimanded,
nor have any of those above him.
Defense lawyers for two Abu Ghraib dog handlerswho have
been court-martialed for allegedly using dogs to intimidate prisonershave
sought Millers testimony to argue that the use of dogs was
approved military procedure. Miller has responded by invoking
Article 31, the militarys equivalent to the Fifth Amendment
right against self-incrimination. While from a legal point of
view the move does not demonstrate any guilt or innocence on Millers
part, it is nevertheless a clear indication that the general has
something to hide. The use of Article 31 is generally considered
to be a highly unusual step for a top military official to take.
Lawyers for Miller have argued that he has already answered
questions on whether he discussed with US officials in Iraq the
need to use dogs against prisoners, and he has denied doing so.
In previous interviews with lawyers for the accused dog handlers,
Miller asserted, At no time did we discuss the use of dogs
in interrogations.
Millers announcement that he would not testify in the
case, however, comes shortly after defense lawyers reached an
agreement with prosecutors to obtain the testimony of Colonel
Thomas Pappas, the former commanding officer at Abu Ghraib. Pappas
has agreed to testify in exchange for immunity from prosecution,
and this raises the possibility that he may testify that he did
in fact discuss the use of dogs with Miller.
Pappas told investigators in the past that he did discuss the
use of dogs with Miller, a statement that has been corroborated
by other witnesses, including the former warden at Abu Ghraib.
Harvey Volzer, who represents Sergeant Santos Cardona, one
of the low-level military personnel charged in the case, argued
that Miller and the military brass in general may have something
to hide. I think what theyre hiding is material that
is exculpatory that says the interrogation techniques were approved
by powers above General Miller, he told the Washington
Post. Having Pappas available to testify may have given
Miller the impression that he is next to be accused of doing something
inappropriate or giving inappropriate orders.
On the specific issue of the use of dogs in terrorizing prisonersa
clear violation of international lawthere is an extensive
paper trail documenting the involvement of high-level political
and military officials in approving the technique. This by itself
does not absolve the soldiers of responsibility for their actions,
but it does demonstrate that the abuse is part of a broader criminal
policy authorized from above.
In November 2002, Rumsfeld signed a memo in which he included
inducing stress by use of detainees fears (e.g. dogs)
among a list of acceptable methods of interrogation in Guantánamo
Bay, where Miller was then in charge. While this memo was later
officially revoked, it established a precedent for the use of
dogs in interrogation, and the practice continued at Guantánamo
and later in Iraq.
In August and early September 2003, Miller was sent by Rumsfeld
to Iraq in order to Gitmo-ize operations there, as
some military personnel have called it, referring to the military
slang for Guantánamo Bay. On one of these visits, Rumsfeld
himself accompanied Miller. On September 14, 2003, General Ricardo
Sanchez, then the top military commander in Iraq, issued an order
authorizing a number of techniques, including presence of
military working dogs which will exploit Arab fear
of dogs while maintaining security during interrogations.
The use of dogs, however, was only one of a number of new methods
introduced into Iraq, some explicitly approved and some implicitly
condoned by Sanchez, Rumsfeld and Miller. Stripping prisoners
naked and forcing them to wear womens underwearpart
of a general policy of deliberate sexual humiliationwere
both practiced in Guantánamo Bay before being transferred
to Iraq. Miller was specifically cleared of responsibility for
the use of these methods in a probe into abuse at Guantánamo
Bay, on the grounds that they were approved military practice.
The bombardment of prisoners with loud music, forced sleep
deprivation, prolonged shackling in painful positionsall
of these methods were approved at one point or another by top
officials; all of them are overt violations of the Geneva Conventions.
A deliberate atmosphere of dehumanization was encouraged. Sanchez
once reportedly said that the prisoners were dogs,
and prison guards were encouraged to treat them as such.
It was this policy that led to the torture captured on film
at Abu Ghraib, including the notorious photos of prisoners being
assaulted by dogs. This torture took place only weeks after Millers
trip to Iraq, only weeks after the introduction of Tiger
Teams sent by Miller from Guantánamo Bay to train
US prison guards in Iraq. The photographs that came to light in
April 2004 were only a selection of the evidence of torture at
that one prison; since that time there has been a mountain of
further revelations of abuse throughout Iraq.
It is now over two years since the torture at Abu Ghraib took
place, and four years since the first prisoners were transferred
to Guantánamo Bay, and still not a single high-level military
official has been punished. The only individuals to be actually
convicted of offenses related to the systematic abuse perpetrated
by US forces have been a handful of low-ranking soldiers.
All the various investigations that were launched by the military
and other agencies into the abuse have been only so many exercises
in whitewash and damage control. One of these investigationsfollowing
from the release of emails written by FBI officials describing
the torture techniques used at Guantánamo Bayrecommended
that Miller be officially reprimanded for inadequate supervision
leading to the abuse of one prisoner, but even this extremely
mild rebuke was rejected by the military brass.
While Millers decision to avoid testifying is no doubt
related to concerns about his own future, it is also bound up
with the determination of the Bush administration to prevent prosecutions
from moving up the chain of command to their ultimate
sourcePresident Bush, Vice President Cheney, Rumsfeld, current
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and other top administration
officials.
The use of torture is the outcome of deliberate policies pursued
by the Bush administration beginning in 2001, using the attacks
of September 11 as a pretext. From the decision to ignore the
Geneva Conventions in the handling of prisoners captured in the
so-called war on terrorism, to the secret memos drawn
up by White House and Pentagon lawyers justifying torture, to
the establishment of secret CIA detention facilities around the
world and the vast increase in the practice of extraordinary
renditionthe US government has expanded its use of
torture as part of a general policy of military aggression and
its flouting of international law.
Not only has the policy of torture gone unpunished, it continues.
Much has been made of the recent provision passed as part of a
defense appropriations bill containing language prohibiting torture
by all US personnel. However, far from halting torture, it merely
serves to provide a cover for the continuation of the same policy.
Bush, moreover, sought to undermine even this formal prohibition
of torture. When signing the bill, he issued a statement declaring
that the executive branch would follow the law in a manner
consistent with the constitutional authority of the president
to supervise the unitary executive branch and as commander in
chief. These words are intended to convey a particular message
that is in line with the general position of the administrationthat
the president has virtually unlimited powers to authorize torture,
spy on the American people and arrest and detain anyone indefinitely
without chargeinvoking his position as commander in
chief. No matter what legislation Congress may pass, the
White House says it will be followed only insofar as it does not
constrain these powers.
The Bush administration is only able to pursue this course
because of the spinelessness and complicity of the nominal opposition
in Congress, the Democratic Party. The Democrats have never sought
to make torture a major political issue, and presidential candidate
John Kerry deliberately avoided attacking Bush on the question
during the 2004 elections. The scandal of Abu Ghraib has been
all but dropped by the Democrats and the media establishment following
the series of investigations and trials of low-ranking personnel.
The fact that Miller and his accomplices have gone unpunished
is a reflection of the general support within the entire political
establishment for the Bush administrations policies, including
the war in Iraq andwhether implicitly or explicitlythe
torture of prisoners.
See Also:
Bush administration domestic spying provokes
lawsuits, calls for impeachment
[18 January 2006]
Bush meets the wise men:
A cynical charade to legitimize Iraq war
[7 January 2006]
Bush administration seeks dismissal of
Guantánamo habeas corpus suits
[6 January 2006]
20,000 demonstrate
against US military torture training center
[24 November 2005]
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