Incredible... Bush Administration condemns *broadcast* of Abu Ghraib images but not the abuse itself.....



Abuse photos reignite scandal of Abu Ghraib
By Tim Reid and Ray Marcello

New images could fan tensions across the Middle East
Abu Graib pictures




THE Bush Administration and the new Iraqi Government condemned
the broadcast yesterday of previously unpublished images of US soldiers
abusing prisoners in Abu Ghraib jail in Baghdad, saying that the pictures
would worsen tensions across the Middle East.

The images, aired by the Australian public television
broadcaster SBS, showed injured Iraqi prisoners, an apparently dead man and
sexual abuse.

The pictures, apparently from the same cache of infamous
pictures taken by US soldiers at the jail in late 2003, were broadcast less
than a week after the release of video footage showing British soldiers
kicking and beating Iraqis in the southern city of al-Amarah in 2004.

The broadcast also followed huge protests across the Muslim
world over caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad published in Danish and other
European newspapers.

A Pentagon official told The Times that the broadcast threatened
to exacerbate an already tense situation, saying: "The release of these
images endangers the lives of US soldiers and in the case of Iraq not just
American soldiers."

Within hours of the original Australian broadcast, the pictures
were being shown on al-Jazeera, al-Arabiya and other networks across the
Middle East. Although some of the most shocking pictures were not broadcast,
those that were seemed certain to reawaken bitter memories of the Abu Ghraib
scandal. When some of the pictures were first made public in May 2004 they
triggered international outrage and fanned anti-US resentment across the
Arab world.

Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya aired footage, including video of a
man repeatedly banging his head against a wall, photos of a hooded man in
his underwear and of a naked figure lying on the floor next to what appeared
to be a pool of blood.

Other pictures shown on the SBS current affairs programme
Dateline included those of a man whose throat had apparently been slit, a
group of men being forced to masturbate in front of guards, photographs of
bloodied Iraqis who had been shot and prisoners with burns and weeping
wounds.

Although just a handful of the images were leaked in 2004,
causing perhaps the worst US public relations disaster since the invasion of
Iraq, hundreds more have been kept secret by the Pentagon.

They are now the subject of legal battle in the US. The American
Civil Liberties Union has sued for their release, and the matter is before
the courts. A spokesman for Dateline declined to say how the programme had
obtained the images but said that SBS was "confident in the credibility of
the source". A Pentagon official confirmed last night that the images were
authentic.

Nine American soldiers - all low-ranking Reservists - have been
convicted in connection with the abuse and received sentences ranging from
discharge from the Army to ten years' imprisonment.

Labeed Abbawi, an adviser to Iraq's Foreign Minister, condemned
the images, but said: "I feel bringing up these issues is only going to add
heat to an already fragile situation in Iraq and they don't help anybody."
Gerald ***, editor of the Middle East Economic Survey, said: "Each time
something like this appears it makes Arabs doubt what America's true motives
are and makes them look more and more like a colonial power."

But in Baghdad there was little surprise. "Nothing is new to
us," Muhammad Shati, 34, a Baghdad telecom engineer, told The Times. "Those
are the Americans we know already. They should stop giving speeches on
fighting for freedom: an army of terror cannot defeat terror."










begin 666 trans.gif
M1TE&.#EA`0`!`)$"````,P```/___P```"'Y! $```(`+ `````!``$`0 ("
$5 $`.P``
`
end

.