Brian Doherty | February 28, 2008
Via Wired.com, and from the collection of psychologist Philip Zimbardo who was a defense expert witness for one of the guards, some more gruesome photos from Abu Ghraib. Some are pretty similar to the classic hooded figure one, some of them defensible on some level as weird black humor, but for the most part showing some very dark behavior seemingly motivated from some of the very dark feelings generated by life during wartime.
[Tip via reader John-David Filing.]
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I don't understand photo 10.
Is there something else going on besides two guys holding up a
mousetrap with a mouse in it?
I must be missing something.
The guards at Abu Ghraib were just pissed because they didn't get their flowers and candy.
When you train people to become killers and stick them in a warzone, I don't get why we're so shocked when they behave like killers in a warzone.
Adamness,
I think that was the whole point. The accompanying article sheds
some light on that very matter.
The Abhu Ghraib prison guards weren't "trained killers". They were civilian prison guard activated reservists
They were civilian prison guard activated reservists
If thats true it goes a long way towards explaining their (to put
it mildly) unprofessional behavior. This is something I agree with
John McCain on--nothing gave fuel to anti-American sentiments not
only in Iraq but the entire world over like those photos did.
...but for the most part showing some very dark behavior
seemingly motivated from some of the very dark feelings generated
by life during wartime.
I think the evidence is very clear that being soldiers in wartime
had very little to do with the abuses. They never heard a shot
fired in anger. Several of the guards already had abuse complaints
against them from their work in the civilian prison system. They
were people already prone to abuse prisoners.
The critical failure occurred when the commander of the prison
implemented "casual friday" and stopped enforcing standards of
military discipline and decorum. The guards stopped thinking of
themselves as soldiers on mission and more like weirdos on
vacation.
People forget that military discipline exist primarily to stop
people in war from killing, looting and raping. History is replete
with stories of units in every military in the world turning into
criminals when their commanders stop demanding they act like
soldiers.
Regrettably, humans need no training to kill and no incentive to
cruelty. Military discipline is the most important tool we have in
reducing the horrors of war.
They were civilian prison guard activated
reservists
Really? Are you serious? [light bulb comes on]
Prison guards tend to be, well, sadistic bastards.
In the OC, every Sheriff must do his first four years in Main Jail
as a guard. That just tells the tale don't it?
BTW, that one chick looks like she's posing with a dead guy. I saw a few shots like that on grainy polaroid from Nam. Difference was, they weren't prisoners, they were what was left of the VC when the firefight was over.
I don't understand photo 10.
Is there something else going on besides two guys holding up a
mousetrap with a mouse in it?
I must be missing something.
I'm going to guess it has some relevance to the psychologist's
analysis, the contempt they show for the rat is indicative of their
behavior towards the prisoners.
The critical failure occurred when the commander of the prison
implemented "casual friday" and stopped enforcing standards of
military discipline and decorum. The guards stopped thinking of
themselves as soldiers on mission and more like weirdos on
vacation.
That sounds like a Dilbert Cartoon gone bad-getting "casual friday"
leads down the road of depravity and sadism.
Brian: None of these pictures are even remotely
defensible.
If these pictures in anyway represent the typical professional
behavior of American "corrections officers", that entire profession
is hopelessly fucked.
If a single one of the physically battered, naked and sexually
humiliated people in these photos were a female, I wonder how many
American women would still support our involvement in the "war" in
Iraq. My guess would be zero.
Peter, I take it you've never had the chance to meet prison
guards socially?
If so, count yourself lucky.
The admittedly small number of prison guards I've met has left me
with the distinct impression that they are all composed of easily
angered, monosynaptic cretins.
I just clicked link that said "more gruesome pictures" while eating breakfast. Oh well, lesson learned.
The guards at Abu Ghraib were just pissed because they didn't get their flowers and candy...
The critical failure occurred when the commander of the prison
implemented "casual friday" and stopped enforcing standards of
military discipline and decorum. The guards stopped thinking of
themselves as soldiers on mission and more like weirdos on
vacation.
That sounds like a Dilbert Cartoon gone bad-getting "casual friday"
leads down the road of depravity and sadism.
some more gruesome photos from Abu Ghraib. Some are pretty
similar to the classic hooded figure one, some of them defensible
on some level as weird black humor, but for the most part showing
some very dark behavior seemingly motivated from some of the very
dark feelings generated by life during a minimum wage
job."
Obviously, the guards at Abu Ghraib were "typical
Americans"...
"BTW, How many 'snotburgers' do you think
YOU have eaten... lately?!!"
We still haven't seen all the videos and photos. I would even
bet money that there are as-bad or worse photos from other
coalition jails in Iraq. It does not seem to be a high media
priority to figure this out.
Here is a current news story about a torture death in a US
jail:
http://www.11alive.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=62415
Moneyquote:
According to the Gwinnett county medical examiner, it is unclear if
the Taser caused Williams' death.
District Attorney Danny Porter provided details of the
investigations to a grand jury and that grand jury decided not to
pursue an investigation of their own. They, however, chose not to
view the videotape taken at the jail.
"They were aware of the tape and the disturbing aspects of it, but
chose not to view it," Porter said. "They chose not to see it and
chose not to go any farther."
"For all intents and purposes, this ends my case," he said.
"At times it gets pretty frustrating, frustrating to the point
where I want to scream," [the victim's widow] said.
Interesting to see Philip Zimbardo of Stanford prison experiment fame involved with this. I hadn't been reading past the headlines to see that either he was involved or that this was part of a TED talk.
For what it's worth:
Several years ago, I met a maintenance worker for the City of
Denver. He told me about seeing photographs of smiling SWAT
officers posed over dead bodies, "like hunters with a deer they
shot," hanging in police locker rooms.
Nice Lee quote on the lede. Spoken in 1862, it didn't keep him from continuing the butchery of bluebellies, and his own men, in a hateful cause, for another 2 and a half years.
This is something I agree with John McCain on--nothing gave
fuel to anti-American sentiments not only in Iraq but the entire
world over like those photos did.
I'm not sure of the point you're trying to make with this
statement. Do you think they shouldn't have been shown? Or is the
sentiment correct?
And while it did increase anti-American sentiment, that isn't the
point; people will always react disproportionately and blame the
entire system, when the individuals should be held mostly
responsible. It's important that situations like this be publicized
(although MSM usually fearmongers anyway) both to inform
citizens/taxpayers of these activities and to publicize the censure
these lawbreakers deserve.
Several of the guards already had abuse complaints against
them from their work in the civilian prison system. They were
people already prone to abuse prisoners.
And then they're send to a prison where they see other American
officials torture and abuse prisoners with official authorization,
and are recruited to help "prepare" prisoners for those
interrogation sessions.
If that dead guy in the freezer is who I think he is, that's an
Iraqi general who died under American torture - he suffocated in a
sleeping bag his interrogators stuffed him in.
There was a lot more going on than these people being soldiers in a
warzone.
Well, joe, that leads to the question:
If Obama is the next President, does he re-open the Abu Ghraib
investigation? Does he open all the files pertaining to CIA
detention, Armed Forces detention, and allied detention [e.g.
Afghan prisons]? Does he get together in a room everyone who has
resigned in disgust from one aspect or another of running
Guantanamo and the military tribunals and ask for the real story?
Does he realize the Abu Ghraib photos and videos that Rumsfeld and
Bush suppressed?
Because every one of these things has to be done before the
reputation of the United States can be rehabilitated - before it
can deserve to be rehabilitated.
Those who think that by trying to keep a lid on these matters we're
"preventing anti-Americanism" or "fighting the propaganda war" or
any of that crap are deluded. Nobody but US voters is deceived by
any of it. Only full disclosure can create the catharsis necessary
to clear the air.
Nobody but US voters is deceived by any of it.
I remember outraged sputtering from National Review about "crazy
rumors" of Americans abusing people at that prison before the
pictures came out.
As you say, nobody in Iraq or within the broadcast range of Al
Jazeera had any troubling knowing that such things were going
on.
If Obama is the next President, does he re-open the Abu
Ghraib investigation?
I can think of some other investigations I would like for him to
re-open as well.
Vote Obama (if you live in a close state).
Obama should be civil just because some low ranking enlsited
guys harshly interrogated a few anti-semitc, freedom hating,
islamic terrorist doesn't mean that there is a vast conspiracy of
any sort. I'm sure Dick Cheney and Rumsfeld were jsut trying to
spread freedom like Micahel Young advocates. There is no possible
way any of us could have predicted these interrogation techniques
would be used and just besides Obama supported patriot act 2 whcih
allows the government to use the harsh interrogation techniques on
americans now so he can't act like he is above it all.
The only intellectually serious thing to do is for Obama to move on
to the future and pardon all the high level officials for any and
all supposed crimes and we should all hope things will be better
from now on.
patriot act 2 whcih allows the government to use the harsh
interrogation techniques on americans now
I'm sorry, but thanks for playing.
Several of the guards already had abuse complaints against them from their work in the civilian prison system. They were people already prone to abuse prisoners.
So basically they treated Iraqi POW's the same as they treated
American convicts.
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