Middle East

Jury weighs Abu Ghraib officer's verdict (4th Roundup)

Middle East News

By Tony Czuczka Aug 27, 2007, 21:34 GMT


Your Talkback on this Story

Note posts made on our older Talkback system will still show below. However, new posts can only be made via the new system (above). We will export the old comments to the new shortly. You can still comment as a guest on the new system but it also allows you to login using various social network and other accounts.

Other features coming soon.

Talkback

page: 1 

serena1313Aug 28th, 2007 - 00:23:06

I do believe Jordan has been made a scapegoat, but if responsible for allowing this sort of abuse to take place he ought to be held accountable. Jordan would not have initiated it solely himself without the express orders from up the chain-of-command. Bush and his administration officials -- current and former -- are responsible.

It is well-documented that Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld allowed and even encouraged what happened at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib. But they needed 'legal' cover. So Attorney General Gonzales and former justice official Yoo calling the Geneva Conventions 'quaint' broke decades-long treaties by loosely redefining legal terms. It was with that premise in they twisted what, under 'normal' circumstances, is considered torture. Although the military purportedly no longer uses 'harsh' [torture] techniques the CIA and other intelligence personnel do. Bottom line it was on the 'decider-in-chief's' watch and ultimately under his orders the abuses took place. The jury is still out on the legality issue, but the moral issues are clear.

Equally important this is about much more than just Jordan. It is about an administration out-of-control. It is about humanity and dignity; It is about the rule of law, traditions and honouring decades long treaties. Americans used to champion human rights and civil liberties, but in an atmosphere of fear that vanished.

In absence of moral fortitude traditional values and principles cease to exist. Alleviating suffering is noble, but there is nothing cavalier in abusing and torturing people. More than enough suffering is felt in the world without adding to it. While Jordan may or may not be found guilty either way justice will not be served unless those that are responsible, all the way up to the POTUS, are held to account for heinous acts and crimes against humanity.

Report this comment

page: 1 

Similar articles

US soldier given life in prison for deaths of Iraqis
Death sentence handed to Iraqi for killing two US soldiers
ANALYSIS: Abu Ghraib justice spares higher-ups
Abu Ghraib officer's jury meets for second day
5TH Abu Ghraib officer's verdict hangs in the balance (Roundup)

Latest Headlines in Middle East

Bookmark and Share Share

From Sites We Like

Latest PopEater News

Taylor Swift Mocks Kate Gosselin, Kanye and Joe Jonas on 'SNL'
Susan Boyle Coming to 'Dancing With The Stars'
Ten Celebrities Who Need To Join Twitter
Lamar Wants Khloe Kardashian Pregnant
PopEater Poll Results: How You Voted on Rihanna, Mariah, Anderson and Taylor

Latest Cinema Blend News

Lawrence and Foxx Resurrect Sheneneh And Wanda
The Slammin' Salmon Trailer: Broken Lizard Serves Up Funny
Moon Director Brings Jake Gyllenhaal Source Code
Weekend Box Office - Christmas Comes Early... Again
Joe Johnston Talks Jurassic Park 4

Latest Tech Herald News

Shamed Brit cop busted for stealing videogames
RTFM: Jailbroken iPhones get iRickrolled due to weak SSH access
Review: Motorola Droid
Facebook settlement means little in the long run
Naked Windows 7 vulnerable to Malware if left in default state
USA