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For those doubting that Iraqi soldiers were tortured
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_torture_and_prisoner_abuse
Simon Ralli's comment though was that it was army policy for this to happen.
Documentary films like "Standard Operating Procedure" tried to show a cover-up had taken place but did not prove this.
A few bad apples in the US army (many of whom are now serving jail sentences) should not be allowed to be seen as representative of the armed forces as a whole who are doing a professional and couragous job in these places.
In the same way a few muslim nutters should not be seen as representative of the wider muslim community.
I don't think anyone doubts what went on in that prison. Neither do I think that any right minded person would condone it. It was totally wrong.
However raping and torturing of children as claimed by Simon? I'm not seeing any evidence.
Back to the OP, let them protest if they want, for me personally, it was the reaction of the public out on that street to those guys protesting that made me swell with pride. Fair cop to the pensioner giving them what for, they don't like it up 'em eh? That and the fact the lads marching past ignored them, professional and disciplined.
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Coyote - Member
I don't think anyone doubts what went on in that prison. Neither do I think that any right minded person would condone it. It was totally wrong.
However raping and torturing of children as claimed by Simon? I'm not seeing any evidence.
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+1
I dont condone torture, but accept that it probably goes on. And in some cases is probably sanctioned/ignored form quite high up.
I don't however believe that the US army is institutionaly paediophilic, its a big organisation so probablility says there are some peadophophiles. But to say people high up were acomplices in any way, im failry sure the media would be all over it if any evidence existed.
Ok then..
SimonRalli raises some good points. Shocking, isn't it, to think that 'Our Boys' might be guilty of such things? What, the Glorious British Army, raping a torturing people? Never! Really?
Wake up and smell the coffee. War is evil. I doubt we'll ever hear the full extent of atrocities committed by both sides of that conflict.
The 'Muslim' crankpots had every right to protest. Appropriate? Well, two were arrested, so that suggests perhaps not. Disrespectful to the returning 'Heroes'? No. We have an entirely volunteer military. I'm sure there have been many heroic acts by many British Troops in the various 'theatres', but as to the British Army as a whole being considered 'heroic', no. They have been used as a weapon of the State, to invade and oppress a foreign nation.
Trouble is, the vast majority of British Muslims are probbly sitting there, watching that, thinking 'What the **** are you doing, you stupid fools!'. Let's just see them as a totally unrepresentative extreme minority, and leave it at that. In the East End, certainly, there has been a backlash against such extremist types; East London Mosque has banned many individuals from holding any meetings there. There have actually been scuuffles there, when xtremists have tried to hijack prayer meetings. again, this response by 'ordinary' Muslims goes unreported. Moderate Muslims don't make for juicy headlines.
Meanwhile, the real Tyrants sit back and count their winnings...
It might seem odd that luton was the sight of this demo, but it does have a very large muslim population and for those that were upset by the war and didnt agree with it was the perfect opportunity to protest
its not like blair and bush are ever gonna parade through the streets of luton
tho cherie did commute there, without paying mind!
[url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/cherie-falls-foul-of-the-law-on-first-day--as-a-judge-728609.html ]as much of a crook as any MP or their wife[/url]
I have no issues with the protest but they should be protesting againt the correct people - the soldiers did not start the war, they are merely pawns in a politcal game.
Well they probably succeeded in getting the BNP a few more recruits
FWIW - I think the squaddies deserve their parade & I - for one - salute & thank them
At last rudeboy is back to explain it to us, in his fully correct and everyone else has wrong way that is so educational. Your coffee don't smell to good to me. Lets change one of your comments a little "They have been ABUSED as a weapon of the State", for a number of crap wars in the last 10 years. Killed by the poor leadership (goverment) of thier own side, shit kit and not enough of the good stuff like food and ammunition but they stick it out. They are not perfect by a long way but I'd rely on them completely to protect me and mine and they would do the same for you no question. I'm proud of them and glad that they are around. The protest was good as a reminder on what we have here, them and others need a voice.
At last rudeboy is back to explain it to us, in his fully correct and everyone else has wrong way that is so educational.
I don't actually get that, mt. I was merely expressing my opinion, as everyone else on here was.
And I agree with you, the military forces have been abused by our wonderful Government.
As for public parades; I don't feel our military forces have actually been used to protect us. In fact, since the start of the War On Terror™, there has been a massive increase in acts of terror committed in our country, and elsewhere. In Britain, mostly by British citizens. I fail to see how securing control of natural resources in some far away land is making things safer here...
I'm not against ceremonies to acknowledge acts of bravery. I just don't think they ought to be conducted in the public arena, especially considering the enormous death toll of soldiers and civilians, in Iraq and elsewhere.
But if you criticise such parades, you are marked as 'unpatriotic', it seems.
I don't feel that British Military involvement in Iraq is serving me, as a British citizen. Too many people are dying. I don't want to see people dying. The British government, and military forces, are ultimately responsible for many of those deaths.
But we've done all this, countless times...
I didnt want to get into this, and its probably only a small minority, but here is some video clips of what shouldn't be happening - I
[url= http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=526_1201479595 ]Iraq war crimes[/url]
[url= http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=8ba_1181107086 ]Entire family of iraqi girl murdered by US troops[/url]
[url= http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=c7e_1181108233 ]Us soldiers murder entire family to r*p* girl then k*ll girl [/url]
I guess this is what they're protesting against!
rudeboy, "ok then. wake up smell the coffee" perhaps it's the style rather than the content.
im not condoning what the protesters are doing or saying, i think its disgusting, and reckon they should be lynched, if we let them live in our country, they should abide by our rules and not complain if out beliefs dont fit in with thiers, but in the same breath;
the troops are doing a job, they chose to do it, and they are beign paid for it.
when i get a parade for coming home from work without being run over by a digger or a piling rig, so should they.
until then, pick up the paycheque and go home at the end of the tour.
i know a soldier, who joined up "for the fighting", and while he comes across as a nice guy and his mates come across as nice enough average british toms, but anyone who has a tattoo on his trigger finger for every enemy hes dropped (they are snipers) needs his head kicking in.
each to thier own, and its not for me to judge, but in my opinion, some people have thier heads wired wrong.
(incidently, you get it in all lines of work i think too, i believe its a very small minority, and would like to believe its more the yanks then the brits, but then again, people join the police purely so they can bash people and not get in trouble.
it happens.
its sick
if we let them live in our country, they should abide by our rules and not complain if out beliefs dont fit in with thiers
Oh dear....
If only Bush senior had supported the Kurds who he had encouraged to rise up in 91 and then finished off Saddam then we would never have had to carry out this ill planned campaign.
I still don't quite understand quite why we're supporting the US in Iraq anyway - or is it because its a bit like Saudi but less troublesome?
My thoughts exactly RudeBoy.
I was asked to provide source information. Here it is.
After their initial claims last week, Mr Blair said any misconduct in British ranks was "exceptional" and limited to a handful of servicemen.
But the two soldiers said the photographs were "just the tip off the iceberg".
They claim troops serving in southern Iraq had swapped hundreds of pictures among themselves. The soldiers, who last night said they stood by "every single word of our story", insisted it was not a hoax and that the Army knew a lot more had happened.
[url] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/soldiers-say-pictures-are-tip-of-the-iceberg-562059.html [/url]
America was braced last night for new allegations of torture in Iraq after military officials said that photographs apparently showing US soldiers beating an Iraqi prisoner nearly to death and having sex with a female PoW were about to be released.
The officials told the US television network NBC that other images showed soldiers "acting inappropriately with a dead body". A videotape, apparently made by US personnel, is said to show Iraqi guards raping young boys.
Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, head of coalition forces in Iraq, issued an order last October giving military intelligence control over almost every aspect of prison conditions at Abu Ghraib with the explicit aim of manipulating the detainees' "emotions and weaknesses", it was reported yesterday.
The memorandum came to light as more details emerged of the extent of detainee abuse. Formal statements by inmates published yesterday describe horrific treatment at the hands of guards, including the rape of a teenage Iraqi boy by an army translator.
[url] http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/may/22/iraq.usa1 [/url]
Hersh gave a speech last week to the ACLU making the charge that children were sodomized in front of women in the prison, and the Pentagon has tape of it. The speech was first reported in a New York Sun story last week, which was in turn posted on Jim Romenesko's media blog, and now EdCone.com and other blogs are linking to the video. We transcribed the critical section here (it starts at about 1:31:00 into the ACLU video.) At the start of the transcript here, you can see how Hersh was struggling over what he should say:
"Debating about it, ummm ... Some of the worst things that happened you don't know about, okay? Videos, um, there are women there. Some of you may have read that they were passing letters out, communications out to their men. This is at Abu Ghraib ... The women were passing messages out saying 'Please come and kill me, because of what's happened' and basically what happened is that those women who were arrested with young boys, children in cases that have been recorded. The boys were sodomized with the cameras rolling. And the worst above all of that is the soundtrack of the boys shrieking that your government has. They are in total terror. It's going to come out."
[url] http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2004/07/15/hersh/index.html [/url]
Have I heard right, that the two arrested were not protestors but in fact arrested for protesting at the protest?
WackoAK
I have no issues with the protest but they should be protesting againt the correct people - the soldiers did not start the war, they are merely pawns in a politcal game.
I think one of the issues is that Labour has made it illegal to protest in the exact location that would get through to the right people.
All this 'we must support our brave boys' stuff is just used as a propaganda tool to get people on side whenever there is a conflict. People who join the army do so out of their own free will. It might be dangerous, but they knew that when they started and are paid relatively well to reflect that.
I have a mate in the army who has served in Iraq, Afghanistan etc, and I would be very sad if he was hurt or killed, but I am not gonna commend him for doing his job any more than he does for me doing mine.
mefinks i worded that wrong rudeboy, im not a BNP terror tubby
They have a right to protest, leave them to it unless they get violent. If they do get violent it simply shows their inability to deal with things in a rational manner and their arguments are destroyed.
Simon
I appreciate the fact that you have provided sources and these where indeed outrages. I would take issue with your assertion that they were policy.
Policy is delibarete plan and whilst it seems to have been the deliberate plan of isolated groups it was not Army/UK or US policy in the larger sense.
Personally I think they were bang out of order to protest like that. The soldiers have been away serving and the large majoirty of people have welcomed them back by having a parade. Any one that reckons that the forces dont deserve a parade because 'they' dont get a parade for doing their jobs needs to grow up. They are paid to do the job fair enough. But I think most of you armchair pilots wouldn't put your arse on the line for the amount of money that they get. In fact the most hazardous thing a majority face at work is boredom.
As some have mentioned if these idiots wanted to protest like that in the islamic states then I dont think that they would be dealt with so gently.
I have the greatest of respect for anyone in the forces and in my humble opinion any one that hasn't served should never criticise and only say Thank You.
I think its a bloody disgrace. It's a shame there was police attendance otherwise they'd have got what they need.
There's a time and a place for protests and it wasn't there.
Amazing how easily people are wound up into a right-wing lynch mob by the tabloids isn't it. How pathetic. 🙁
They can protest but I would like to interview them about their fashion sense.
Is growing beard the new fashion?
What identity do they see themselves in?
🙄
Its amazing how vocal folk can be about the apparent sins of the country which provides a safe environment in which to make such public protests, especially considering the lack of such freedom of protest in states which are run under the same belief system they so crave.
In these times of freedom of speech maybe they should of let the soldiers had theirs with the protesters 😉
Kuco - Member
In these times of freedom of speech maybe they should of let the soldiers had theirs with the protesters
I was most proud of one part of the footage, as the squaddies marched by in perfect step, one of them spared half a second to look across and just shook his head. He may even have tutted.
He did nothing. He, and his comrades in arms, simply walked on by. They didn't rise to it. They didn't care. They knew they had done their job and they knew that they were being cheered home by the country. The actions of a tiny minority of nutters didn't even break their stride.
Glass raised.
The irony is that they protest like mad in the west but would gladly impose their views on the minority in the countries they are supporting ...
I bet they want to change the fashion too ...
😆
From The Independent story
"[i]British soldiers in Iraq swapped hundreds of photographs of civilians being mistreated, according to new claims made in the Daily Mirror[/i]"
The same Daily Mirror from which the low-life Piers Morgan had to resign due to making stories up?
From the Telegraph
The two most horrendous allegations, US soldiers having sex with a POW and Iraqi guards sodomising boys, seem to use the word "apparently". There is no mention of the photos coming to light. The rest of the allegations seem to refer to the Abu Ghraib outrage, of which we are all aware.
From The Guardian
Again more allegations of abuse relating to the Abu Ghraib outrage.
Finally the Salon.com recycles the stuff above but also makes unsubstantiated claims.
Obviously we all know of some of the horrors that took place in Abu Ghraib however nothing in the pieces you reference substantiates your claims that it was policy for British and US troops to rape young boys in front of female POWs.
Obviously not that much is going to be written down. But you have to look at the British and the American's as a single unit.
It is those at the very top I have a problem with, and they acted as one, emphasising their unity.
"Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, head of coalition forces in Iraq, issued an order last October giving military intelligence control over almost every aspect of prison conditions at Abu Ghraib with the explicit aim of manipulating the detainees' "emotions and weaknesses", it was reported yesterday."
And
"Taguba discovered that guards have also videotaped and photographed naked female detainees. The Bush administration has refused to release other photographs of Iraqi women forced at gunpoint to bare their breasts (although it has shown them to Congress) - ostensibly to prevent attacks on US soldiers in Iraq, but in reality, one suspects, to prevent further domestic embarrassment.
Earlier this month it emerged that an Iraqi woman in her 70s had been harnessed and ridden like a donkey at Abu Ghraib and another coalition detention centre after being arrested last July. Labour MP Ann Clwyd, who investigated the case and found it to be true, said, "She was held for about six weeks without charge. During that time she was insulted and told she was a donkey."
In Iraq, the existence of photographs of women detainees being abused has provoked revulsion and outrage, but little surprise. Some of the women involved may since have disappeared, according to human rights activists. Professor Huda Shaker al-Nuaimi, a political scientist at Baghdad University who is researching the subject for Amnesty International, says she thinks "Noor" is now dead. "We believe she was raped and that she was pregnant by a US guard. After her release from Abu Ghraib, I went to her house. The neighbours said her family had moved away. I believe she has been killed."
[url] http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/may/20/iraq.gender [/url]
Compelling new evidence emerged yesterday that torture techniques used at Abu Ghraib prison were either endorsed or encouraged high up the US military chain of command, and that complaints by at least five military policemen assigned to "soften up" prisoners for interrogation were disregarded by their superiors for several months.
[url] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/abu-ghraib-torture-was-approved-at-senior-military-level-732024.html [/url]
New evidence that the physical abuse of detainees in Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay was authorised at the top of the Bush administration will emerge in Washington this week, adding further to pressure on the White House.
The Telegraph understands that four confidential Red Cross documents implicating senior Pentagon civilians in the Abu Ghraib scandal have been passed to an American television network, which is preparing to make them public shortly.
According to lawyers familiar with the Red Cross reports, they will contradict previous testimony by senior Pentagon officials who have claimed that the abuse in the Abu Ghraib prison was an isolated incident.
"There are some extremely damaging documents around, which link senior figures to the abuses," said Scott Horton, the former chairman of the New York Bar Association, who has been advising Pentagon lawyers unhappy at the administration's approach. "The biggest bombs in this case have yet to be dropped."
....you have to look on the British and Americans as a single unit....
Why do you? To make crass generalisations easier?
Some on here are all to willing to accept that the ranting of these Muslim protestors is just a "lunatice fringe" and not representative of Muslims as a whole.
However they are all to ready to accept that the acts of some soldiers are representative of both the UK and US armed forces as a whole.
[i]Why do you? To make crass generalisations easier?[/i]
No - I am talking about those at the very top. They are working towards the same objectives, the same plan. Hence the British support for rendition flights for example, and those at the top of the British army not willing to speak out about the crimes in Iraq. More recent examples of torture currently in the news also demonstrate this.
Blair and Bush always emphasised that it was a "coalition of the willing" no? We are also the coalition of the torturers, although no, I say it again as I already have done twice before, I do not hold the regular Army to account. I don't know how many times I have to say I am not generalising, I am looking at the actions of those at the very top.
Which brings us back nicely to the OP.
Were the protestors right to protest?
Well they were protesting at people who do not decide where and when to fight but who believe, maybe sometimes rightly or sometimes wrongly, that they are signing up to protect the British people. So I would say no, and that we need to find peaceful ways to stop the decision makers and stand up and say no to the decision makers.
Tonga were in the CoW, do they share the blame for rendition flights? What about those two Icelandic 'military' nurses (Iceland has no formal military) who were working with the British in Basrah (and lovely they were too), were they really nasty torturesses by proxy?
Morning all.
Ok, breezed through the latest offerings and it would seem that all the allegations surround Abu Ghraib. We KNOW that outrageous abuses of human rights happened there. A good number of US soldiers have rightly been jailed and booted out of the army as a result. However I am not seeing anything to support your statement that the British and American soldiers are sadistic paedophiles.
Coyote
Hi - I can't see where I wrote that so I will sign off now. This isn't going anywhere.
I did of course write this
"What is the best way to try and educate the public about the fact that it was British and American policy not just to torture male Iraqis, but to rape and torture the children of women in front of the women prisoners. (Seymor Hersh, the journalist who revealed the initial photos, and has watched all the videos, has been touring the US lecturing on what he saw on video but that was not reported in the press.)"
So I do feel what I should have written in the first place, and what I have been trying to say in subsequent posts, but clearly failing to do, was that while American soldiers comitted atrocities towards male, female and child prisoners of war, those at the very top stood by and did nothing to prevent it.
There are only so many times I can say I do not hold the British troops to account, so I'll sign off now. The word "policy" was wrong in this instance, as to me it means one thing and to others another, so yes, here is my apology for using that word when trying to describe something slightly different.
I have given you the links to Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Seymour Hersh to back up my claims, but if that is not enough then we have to try and peacefully agree that we do not agree on this.
Peace to you
Right to protest - tick
Inflammatory behaviour aimed at provoking violence - cross
Brave and admirable UK soldiers - tick
Honest politicians - very cross indeed
Vote with your conscience.
Simon
those at the very top stood by and did nothing to prevent it.
Whilst indefensible is not the same as:
the fact that it was British and American policy not just to torture male Iraqis, but to rape and torture the children of women in front of the women prisoners
That is my point. Reaction to circumstances is not the same as creating a policy from the outset or even a broad policy during the conflict.
Terrible things happen in wars and its testimony to our sense of what is right and wrong that these are seen (in the benefit of the "cold light of day") as outrageous and appalling and whilst I wouldn't necessarily defend the outrages you refer to there is an argument that our soldiers are confronted with a hostile and murderous enemy and their responses are coloured by that.
The word "policy" was wrong in this instance, as to me it means one thing and to others another, so yes, here is my apology for using that word when trying to describe something slightly different.
I could only interpret the use of the word "policy" in one way. And to say you're only describing something [i]slightly[/i] different is incredible. In the former it sounds like you're stating it's the responsibility of the governments and on the other you step back and say (No) just the top brass of the US and British army. Is this actually realistic?
Or is it realistically more like the actions of collective individuals whom the top brass in the army has tried to hush?