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The sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners at Abu
Ghraib prison was not an invention of maverick
guards, but part of a system of ill-treatment
and degradation used by special forces soldiers
that is now being disseminated among ordinary
troops and contractors who do not know what they
are doing, according to British military sources.
The
techniques devised in the system, called R2I -
resistance to interrogation - match the crude
exploitation and abuse of prisoners at the Abu
Ghraib jail in Baghdad.
One
former British special forces officer who returned
last week from Iraq, said: "It was clear
from discussions with US private contractors in
Iraq that the prison guards were using R2I techniques,
but they didn't know what they were doing."
He
said British and US military intelligence soldiers
were trained in these techniques, which were taught
at the joint services interrogation centre in
Ashford, Kent, now transferred to the former US
base at Chicksands.
"There
is a reservoir of knowledge about these interrogation
techniques which is retained by former special
forces soldiers who are being rehired as private
contractors in Iraq. Contractors are bringing
in their old friends".
Using
sexual jibes and degradation, along with stripping
naked, is one of the methods taught on both sides
of the Atlantic under the slogan "prolong
the shock of capture", he said.
Female
guards were used to taunt male prisoners sexually
and at British training sessions when female candidates
were undergoing resistance training they would
be subject to lesbian jibes.
"Most
people just laugh that off during mock training
exercises, but the whole experience is horrible.
Two of my colleagues couldn't cope with the training
at the time. One walked out saying 'I've had enough',
and the other had a breakdown. It's exceedingly
disturbing," said the former Special Boat
Squadron officer, who asked that his identity
be withheld for security reasons.
Many
British and US special forces soldiers learn about
the degradation techniques because they are subjected
to them to help them resist if captured. They
include soldiers from the SAS, SBS, most air pilots,
paratroopers and members of pathfinder platoons.
A
number of commercial firms which have been supplying
interrogators to the US army in Iraq boast of
hiring former US special forces soldiers, such
as Navy Seals.
"The
crucial difference from Iraq is that frontline
soldiers who are made to experience R2I techniques
themselves develop empathy. They realise the suffering
they are causing. But people who haven't undergone
this don't realise what they are doing to people.
It's a shambles in Iraq".
The
British former officer said the dissemination
of R2I techniques inside Iraq was all the more
dangerous because of the general mood among American
troops.
"The
feeling among US soldiers I've spoken to in the
last week is also that 'the gloves are off'. Many
of them still think they are dealing with people
responsible for 9/11".
When
the interrogation techniques are used on British
soldiers for training purposes, they are subject
to a strict 48-hour time limit, and a supervisor
and a psychologist are always present. It is recognised
that in inexperienced hands, prisoners can be
plunged into psychosis.
The
spectrum of R2I techniques also includes keeping
prisoners naked most of the time. This is what
the Abu Ghraib photographs show, along with inmates
being forced to crawl on a leash; forced to masturbate
in front of a female soldier; mimic oral sex with
other male prisoners; and form piles of naked,
hooded men.
The
full battery of methods includes hooding, sleep
deprivation, time disorientation and depriving
prisoners not only of dignity, but of fundamental
human needs, such as warmth, water and food.
The
US commander in charge of military jails in Iraq,
Major General Geoffrey Miller, has confirmed that
a battery of 50-odd special "coercive techniques"
can be used against enemy detainees. The general,
who previously ran the prison camp at Guantánamo
Bay, said his main role was to extract as much
intelligence as possible.
Interrogation
experts at Abu Ghraib prison were there to help
make the prison staff "more able to garner
intelligence as rapidly as possible".
Sleep
deprivation and stripping naked were techniques
that could now only be authorised at general officer
level, he said.
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers
Limited 2005
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