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BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhuanet) -- New front in Iraq detainee abuse scandal?
With attention focused on the seven soldiers charged with abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison, U.S. military and intelligence officials familiar with the situation tell NBC News the Army's elite Delta Force is now the subject of a Pentagon
inspector general investigation into abuse against detainees.
The target is a top-secret site near Baghdad's airport. The battlefield
interrogation facility known as the "BIF" is pictured in satellite photos.
 Satellite photo of Baghdad airport where the
top-secret BIF is located. (China Daily/Digital
Globe) | According to two top
U.S. government sources, it is the scene of the most egregious violations of the
Geneva Conventions in all of Iraq's prisons. A place where the normal rules of
interrogation don't apply, Delta Force's BIF only holds Iraqi insurgents and
suspected terrorists - but not the most wanted among Saddam's lieutenants
pictured on the deck of cards.
These sources say the prisoners there are hooded from the moment they are
captured. They are kept in tiny dark cells. And in the BIF's six interrogation
rooms, Delta Force soldiers routinely drug prisoners, hold a prisoner under
water until he thinks he's drowning, or smother them almost to suffocation.
In Washington Thursday evening, a senior Pentagon official denied
allegations of prisoner abuse at Battlefield Interrogation Facilities operated
by Delta Force in Iraq. And he said the tactics described in this report are not
used in those facilities.
All of those practices would be violations of the Geneva Conventions. The
conventions do not apply to stateless terrorists - the so-called non-enemy
combatants like al-Qaida suspects caught by the United States in Afghanistan.
But as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has made clear, the Geneva
Conventions do apply in Iraq.
¡°Iraq's a nation. The United States is a nation. The Geneva Conventions
applied. They have applied every single day from the outset," Rumsfeld has said.
So, does Rumfeld know about the BIF and what goes on there?
Several top U.S. military and intelligence sources say yes, and that he,
through other top Pentagon officials, directed the U.S. head of intelligence in
Iraq, Gen. Barbara Fast, and others to bring some of the methods used at the BIF
to prisons like Abu Ghraib, in hopes of getting better intelligence from Iraqi
detainees.
The Pentagon's top spokesman in Iraq says the military will not comment on
the BIF or what goes on there. He was unwilling to even confirm or deny its
existence. Gen. Fast declined our request for an interview due to the ongoing
prison abuse investigation, one that has so far yielded charges against only the
military's lowest ranks.
(China Daily/NBCnews) |