GENERAL GEOFFREY MILLER
TORTURE EXPERT FOR IRAQ AND GUANTANAMO
REQUESTED BY RUMSFELD AND THE REST OF THE BUSH
GANG!
ORIGINAL PHOTO LEFT AND SOLARIZED RIGHT.. TO
SEE INSIDE THIS KREEP!
PHOTO OF THIS SNAKE FROM REUTERS>>
OBSERVE CLOSELY.. NO EYES WHERE THEY SHOULD BE EXCEPT LIKE A
SNAKE UNDER HIS NOSE.. THIS SHAPESHIFTER FROM HELL! TYPICAL
PLACEMENT OF EYES FOR A SNAKE PERSON
I BLEW THIS UP LARGER SO YOU CAN UNDERSTAND
BETTER WHAT YOU ARE SEEING>> THE WAR PROBLEMS NEED TO BE
ADDRESSED EXACTLY>> FOR THE REASONS OF THEIR BELIEF SYSTEMS
WHICH ARE SATANISM WHICH INCORPORATES TORTURE AND SEXUAL
DEVIATION..
SIMPLE SOLARIZED FILTER OF THIS SNAKE AND
DESATCH TO BLACK AND WHITE FOR CLARITY
Major General Geoffrey D. Miller, who took
command of the Abu Ghraib prison in April, talks to reporters as
they were allowed to visit and film some parts of the prison
where high risk detainees are kept at Abu Ghraib prison in
Baghdad May 10, 2004. The Red Cross saw U.S. troops keeping Iraqi
prisoners naked for days in darkness at the Abu Ghraib jail in
October, and was told by the intelligence officer in charge it
was 'part of the process,' a leaked report said on Monday.
REUTERS/Khampha Bouaphanh/Pool
Reuters - 12 hours, 2 minutes ago
------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. Major General Geoffrey Miller, commander
of U.S.-run prisons in Iraq (news - web sites), talks to
journalists in the Abu Ghraib, outside Baghdad, Iraq, May 5,
2004. U.S. President George W. Bush (news - web sites) pledged to
the Arab world on Wednesday that those responsible for abusing
Iraqi prisoners will be punished as he tried to quell growing
Arab outrage. Bush said he wanted Iraqis to know that the abuse
of Iraqi prisoners 'does not represent the America that I know.'
He said he first learned of allegations of Iraqi prisoner abuse
in January and that the U.S. government has been in the process
of investigating them. REUTERS/Anja Niedringhaus/POOL
Photo Tools
Top brass ¥picked man who ordered torture¥
news.com.au
May 10, 2004
THE torture tactics used to "soften up" Iraqi detainees
at Baghdad¥s Abu Ghraib jail began under orders from the highest
level of the US defence administration, it was claimed yesterday.
The creation of torture units was the consequence of orders by
the Defence Department headed by Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
to prise information out of prisoners.
Last August, the Department ordered General Geoffrey Miller
then in charge at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay to
go to Iraq to find ways to improve the flow of intelligence from
detainees, an investigation by Britain¥s Mail on Sunday
newspaper has found.
The general recommended creating a single central interrogation
unit at Abu Ghraib. It was in this unit where the degradation of
Iraqi prisoners now graphically exposed by more than 1000
photographs took place.
Unit members, acting to the orders of Military Intelligence
officers, carried out the sexual sadism and other abuses which
have shamed the US and there is still worse to come.
Unreleased images from Baghdad are reported to show:
AMERICAN soldiers beating an Iraqi to a bloody pulp.
A MALE US soldier having sex with a female Iraqi inmate.
SOLDIERS acting inappropriately with a dead body.
A VIDEO allegedly showing Iraqi guards raping young boys.
Mr Rumsfeld has apologised for the abuses at Abu Ghraib "on
my watch" but has taken no responsibility for having started
the process.
The decision to use General Miller came after he reported on Camp
X-Ray, saying three quarters of the 600 Taliban and Al-Qaida
suspects held there were becoming compliant and offering
intelligence tips.
The Washington Post reported that the Defence Department approved
interrogation techniques for Guantanamo Bay which included
forcing inmates to strip naked and subjecting them to loud music,
bright lights and sleep deprivation.
The techniques, approved in April 2003, required approval from
senior Pentagon officials and in some cases Mr Rumsfeld, the
paper reported.
The Pentagon declined to comment on the report but US Southern
Command spokesman Colonel David McWilliams confirmed a sliding
scale of techniques was approved. He denied this included
stripping detainees. "We do not do it," he said.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Richard Myers,
sent General Miller from Cuba to Baghdad in August last year to
suggest changes to prisoner interrogations.
General Miller recommended that detention operations must act as
an "enabler" for interrogation.
One of the soldiers in the jail photos and now facing charges,
Spc Sabrina Harman, 26, of the 372nd Military Police Company,
said she was told to break down the prisoners.
"They would bring in one to several prisoners at a time
already hooded and cuffed," she said. "The job of the
MP was to keep them awake, make it hell so they would talk."
General Miller, who had returned to Camp X-Ray, was last week put
in control of running Abu Ghraib.
He said he would halt or restrict some interrogation methods,
especially eight to 10 "very aggressive techniques"
including using hoods on prisoners, putting them in stressful
positions and depriving them of sleep.
Those methods were now banned without specific approval, he said.
Democrat Congressman Jim McDermott, said he was convinced abuse
had been sanctioned from the top. "It wasn¥t just six
soldiers who did it. It goes all the way to the top to the
Presidency," he said.
GEOFFREY GO BACK TO MARS !