CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr should
be given some kind of award for the most outrageously off-target reporting on
the newly released photos and videos
of U.S. torture and abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. In her
numerous appearances during the morning news cycle on CNN after the images were
first broadcast on Australia's SBS television, Starr described what she saw
as the "root of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal" as such:
"Let's start by reminding everybody that under U.S. military law and
practice, the only photographs that can be taken are official photographs for
documentation purposes about the status of prisoners when they are in military
detention. That's it. Anything else is not acceptable. And of course, that is
what the Abu Ghraib prison scandal is all about."
What? Here I thought the "scandal" was that the U.S. military was
systematically abusing prisoners. These new photos, with their documentation
of violently inflicted, open wounds, obliterate any notion that what occurred
at Abu Ghraib was anything short of torture by all accepted definitions of the
term. They reveal some horrifying scenes of naked, humiliated, bloodied prisoners,
some with apparent gunshot wounds. In a video broadcast on Australia's SBS,
naked, hooded prisoners were seen being forced to masturbate in front of the
camera. But, according to CNN's Starr, the real transgression was that some
soldiers documented the torture in violation of "U.S. military law and
practice." In a report later in the morning, Starr returned to her outrageous
characterization of the "scandal," beginning her report:
"As we look at a couple of the photographs, let's remind people that
why these are so inappropriate. Under U.S. military law and practice and procedure,
you simply cannot take photographs – as we're going to show you some of
them right now. You cannot take photographs of people in detention, in humiliating
positions, positions that are abusive in any way, shape or form. The only pictures
that are ever allowed of people in U.S. military detention would be pictures
for documentation purposes. And, clearly, these pictures are not that. That
is the whole issue that has been at the root of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal,
that it was abusive, the practices in which soldiers engaged in."
"You cannot take photographs of people in detention, in humiliating positions,
positions that are abusive in any way, shape or form," according to Starr.
But apparently it's OK to place them in those humiliating, abusive positions
– or at least not worth commenting on in these reports on CNN. Starr continued
her report, describing Pentagon reaction to the newly released photos:
"But the Pentagon certainly is not happy that these pictures, these
additional pictures, which had not been distributed publicly in the past, Pentagon
not happy that they are out. And the reason is, the Pentagon had filed a lawsuit
trying to prevent their publication in the United States out of concern, they
say, that it would spark violence in the Arab world to see these photographs
and it would put U.S. military forces at risk."
The release of the photographs will spark the violence? No – U.S. torture
of prisoners sparks massive outrage, and justifiably so. Moreover, this outrage
should not just be confined to the "Arab world" but should be felt
everywhere, particularly in the U.S. Besides, Pentagon lawyers have already
tried this defense in federal court, and a judge ruled that fear of facing the
consequences of your actions is not a legitimate defense.
Starr concluded another report saying the Pentagon is concerned that if the
images "appear in the Islamic world … they will incite unrest in the
Islamic world, and therefore put U.S. military troops at risk."
CNN anchor Zain Vergee then shot back, "And they were swiftly put on
Arab TV. As you say, they're out there."
They were swiftly put on Arab TV. Is there something devious about
that? Is "Arab TV" somehow committing some transgression against
freedom and democracy by broadcasting these images that were first put
out by Australian TV in a country Bush claims as his ally?
All of the images of the torture at Abu Ghraib should be made public, as the
Center for Constitutional Rights and ACLU have been fighting for, because they
are an accurate representation of what has happened and continues to happen
in U.S.-run and -supported gulags around the world.
When and if they are released, Barbara Starr should be reminded that
she is supposed to be a CNN reporter at the Pentagon, not a Pentagon
spokesperson on CNN.