Media Ignores Real Controversy Behind Torture Photos; They Show Prison
Guards Raping Children
The real reason behind Obama's reversal of a decision to release the torture photos has been almost completely ignored by the corporate media - the fact that the photos show both US and Iraqi soldiers raping teenage boys in front of their mothers. The Obama administration originally intended to release photos depicting torture and abuse of detainees in Afghanistan and Iraq by the end of May, following a court order arising out of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit first filed by the ACLU in 2004. However, a reversal of Obama's decision was announced this week, after he "changed his mind after viewing some of the images and hearing warnings from his generals in Iraq and in Afghanistan that such a move would endanger US troops deployed there," according to a Washington Post report. In response, the ACLU charged that Obama "has essentially become complicit with the torture that was rampant during the Bush years by being complicit in its coverup." The Obama administration has also sought to protect intelligence officials involved in torture from prosecution at every turn. The primary reason why Obama is now blocking the release of the photos is that some of the pictures, as well as video recordings, show prison guards sodomizing young boys in front of their mothers, both with objects as well as physical rape. (ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)
Hersh's contention that minors were raped by prison guards while others filmed the vulgar spectacle is backed up by a leaked Abu Ghraib memorandum highlighted in a 2004 London Guardian report, in which detainees Kasim Hilas describes "the rape of an Iraqi boy by a man in uniform". The testimony was also part of the military's official Taguba Report into the torture at Abu Ghraib.
Another inmate, Thaar Dawod, described more abuse of teenage boys.
A 2004 London Telegraph report also described photos which showed "US soldiers beating an Iraqi prisoner nearly to death and having sex with a female PoW," as well as a videotape, apparently made by US personnel, which shows "Iraqi guards raping young boys". Former Governor Jesse Ventura today offered a solution to the controversy surrounding President Obama's decision to reverse an earlier promise to release the torture photos - let Ventura see the photos on behalf of the American people and then decide if they should be released. Ventura told the Alex Jones Show today, "How about if I step forward on behalf of the taxpayers and the citizens of the great United States of America - and I wanna go public with this - I will represent us, let me go where these photos are, let me go inside and see them and let me come out and report back as to what these photos are." "I think I have the right to do that, I think they have no right to keep me from doing that, you know why? I pay their salaries and I'm a governor, I'm a mayor, I'm a former Navy SEAL, I had a top secret security clearance - I think I'm fully qualified to walk in and view these photos," said Ventura, adding, "I'll report to the public, what it is why we shouldn't be able to see them because I understand it could infuriate the enemy, but I'm not the enemy and therefore I think I have every right to see these photos in private." [DISCUSS THIS STORY IN OUR FORUM]
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