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Amerpie Donating Member (380 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-07-04 12:56 PM
Original message
Former GI and Prison Guard
One Friday in my early twenties, I took off my camouflage fatigues for the last time. The following Monday I reported to the best job I could get. I was given a new uniform, a can of mace, a set of handcuffs and the keys to a cellblock at a state prison in North Carolina. Although I was no longer in the infantry, my boss was still a sergeant and his boss was still a lieutenant. The paramilitary replaced the military but there was still an enemy and a mission. I no longer trained to kill Central-American communists. Instead, every day, I faced a prison population that was nearly eighty percent African-American in a state with a population that is nearly eighty percent white.

It was my intention to treat the inmates I was charged with supervising in much the same way I had been treated as a junior enlisted soldier in places like Ft. Benning, GA and Ft. Hood, TX. I had been belittled and dehumanized in the name of discipline. I intended to use the same tactics to control the criminal scum I was assigned to manage.

I was quickly disabused of that notion by more seasoned guards, and surprisingly, by inmates who, SHOCK! GASP!, weren’t mindless crack addicted drones. I was reminded that I’d volunteered to be in the military and that none of the prisoners on C-Block had signed a contract assigning them to their current surroundings.

I also quickly learned that the management of the prison where I worked was intensely interested in keeping their jobs. They didn’t want to rehabilitate anyone. They didn’t want to heal anyone. They didn’t want to cure anyone. They only wanted to continue to operate their little fiefdom as far from public scrutiny as possible. They weren’t even especially interested in getting promoted. Self-perpetuation was their goal.

It appears as though that model was not the one used at Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad. The management of that institution is intensely interested in more than just self-perpetuation. They’ve been presented with a unique opportunity to take advantage of a hellish situation to advance themselves in ways they never dreamed possible. They have an almost unlimited supply of evildoers from whom information must be extracted so that they can be BROUGHT TO JUSTICE!

To accomplish this noble mission, the officers and administrators of Abu Ghraib have a contingent of young soldiers much like I once was. These young men and women are products of a military that gave them a one-hour class on the Geneva Convention during their first month in the military. They have been trained and trained and drilled into mind-numbing unquestioning obedience ever since that moment. None of them have the slightest idea on how to refuse an unlawful order, much less on how to report a war crime.

Just as I didn’t question my place in a prison system that was blatantly racist, these soldiers place undeserved trust in the system, in their superiors and in the righteousness of their cause. Untold millions of dollars and hours of clandestine research have gone into studies on the best ways to extract information from human sources. The Central Intelligence Agency has been repeatedly sanctioned for offenses so horrendous that recounting them reminds us of bad spy novels: LSD experiments, assassination programs, and exploding cigars.

Is anyone really surprised that in defending themselves, the working class scapegoats of this whole horrible situation are pointing the finger at their superiors, at OGAs (Other Government Agencies) and at that new phenomena in the out-sourced military of the 21st century – civilian contactors (i.e., mercenary corporations)?

These soldiers, many of whom have been conditioned to accept racism and human degradation by working in US prisons are no more to blame for the outrages in Iraq than I was to blame for the conditions of the prison I worked in. There is an attitude in our country that trains us to accept the fate of those we are told are less deserving than ourselves. It isn’t the little people on the bottom who can be condemned for designing the system. It is the self-serving masterminds of the class system who should bear that burden.

President Bush says that he intends to get to the bottom of this situation. I suggest that he forgo that plan. He should instead get to the top of it instead.
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billybob537 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-07-04 01:08 PM
Response to Original message
1. My experience in the military
tells me this didn't happen without being condoned at a higher level. No soldier would have done this on his/her own it requires approval from higher up.
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Greylady Donating Member (156 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-07-04 01:13 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. And, wasn't this all brought into the light by
soldiers who knew that this was wrong? Not all soldiers agreed with what was happening and just went along with it.
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candy331 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-07-04 01:13 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. The higher level stops at the white house
with the commander-in- thief. I think that the God that he claims talks to him is revealing him to be the incompetent that he is.
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TahitiNut Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-07-04 01:26 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. (Me too.) Not only that, but peer "approval" too.
We see abundant and clear evidence that this was so ordinary and usual that taking pictures was "entertainment" because the abuse itself was losing it's novelty value.

In at least one of those pictures, we see other guards not even paying much attention to three nude, shackled prisoners being abused on the floor. Ordinary. No big deal. Just another "day's work."

This goes to the top. No doubt about it.
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