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WASHINGTON, May 11 (Xinhuanet) -- The US Army general who first probed into the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by the US soldiers deniedon Tuesday the abuse was "about policies and planning," as he did not
find orders
to soldiers to mistreat the detainees.
At the Senate Armed Services
Committee hearing, the second hearing in a week on the abuse scandal, Democrat
Senator Robert Byrd said the abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq was not just
about guards and interrogators lacking in personal values, but "about policies
and planning" from a higher level.
"I did not find any evidence of
a policy or a direct order given to these soldiers to conduct what they did,"
Major General Antonio Taguba replied.

Taguba said he believed the soldiers collaborated with
several military intelligence interrogators at the lower level and abused the
Iraqiprisoners "on their own volition."(Xinhua Photo)

Hillary Cliton at the Senate Armed Services Committee
hearing.(Xinhua Photo)
Taguba, who was
appointed in January 2004 to investigate the allegations of detainee abuse at
Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, said he believed the soldiers collaborated with
several military intelligence interrogators at the lower level and abused the
Iraqiprisoners "on their own volition."
"A few soldiers and civilians conspired to abuse and
conduct egregious acts of violence against detainees and other civilians outside
the bounds of international laws and the Geneva Convention," he said.
But Senator Carl Levin, a ranking Democrat in the
committee, also said the acts of abuse were not the spontaneous actions of lower
enlisted personnel and were "clearly planned and suggested by others."
At one point, Taguba disagreed with Stephen Cambone,
undersecretary of defense for intelligence, over which was in control of the Abu
Ghraib prison. Taguba said that control had been turned over to military
intelligence officials, while Cambonesaid the control was in the hands of the
military police.
They also differed on whether it was against Army
rules for intelligence personnel to involve military police in setting
conditions for interrogations.
The witnesses, including Taguba and Cambone and
others, however,agreed at the hearing that the US troops in Iraq were under
ordersto abide by the Geneva Conventions regarding the treatment of prisoners.
US Defense Donald Rumsfeld testified before the
committee last Friday over the abuse scandal, saying that he took "full
responsibility" for the abuse and apologizing to "those Iraqis who were
mistreated by members of the US armed forces." Enditem
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