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Thread: Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

  1. #1

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  2. #2

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  3. #3

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  4. #4

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  5. #5

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  6. #6

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  7. #7

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  8. #8

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  9. #9

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  10. #10

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  11. #11

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  12. #12

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  13. #13

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  14. #14

    Jailed 2 Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans

    http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/...ca.xlarge1.jpg
    Laith al-Ani, with his daughter, Al Budur, was recently released by the American military in Iraq after spending more than two years in detention facilities. He was never charged with a crime.
    By MICHAEL MOSS and SOUAD MEKHENNET
    Published: February 18, 2007

    DAMASCUS, Syria — In the early hours of Jan. 6, Laith al-Ani stood in a jail near the Baghdad airport waiting to be released by the American military after two years and three months in captivity.

    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.
    He struggled to quell his hope. Other prisoners had gotten as far as the gate only to be brought back inside, he said, and he feared that would happen to him as punishment for letting his family discuss his case with a reporter.

    But as the morning light grew, the American guards moved Mr. Ani, a 31-year-old father of two young children, methodically toward freedom. They swapped his yellow prison suit for street clothes, he said. They snipped off his white plastic identification bracelet. They scanned his irises into their database.

    Then, shortly before 9 a.m., Mr. Ani said, he was brought to a table for one last step. He was handed a form and asked to place a check mark next to the sentence that best described how he had been treated:

    “I didn’t go through any abuse during detention,” read the first option, in Arabic.

    “I have gone through abuse during detention,” read the second.

    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    In the room, he said, stood three American guards carrying the type of electric stun devices that Mr. Ani and other detainees said had been used on them for infractions as minor as speaking out of turn.

    “Even the translator told me to sign the first answer,” said Mr. Ani, who gave a copy of his form to The New York Times. “I asked him what happens if I sign the second one, and he raised his hands,” as if to say, Who knows?

    “I thought if I don’t sign the first one I am not going to get out of this place.”

    Shoving the memories of his detention aside, he checked the first box and minutes later was running through a cold rain to his waiting parents. “My heart was beating so hard,” he said. “You can’t believe how I cried.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/wo...4e6add&ei=5070

  15. #15

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

  16. #16

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

  17. #17

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

  18. #18

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

  19. #19

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

  20. #20

    everytime I read these testimonies

    I think about those who have simply been disappeared, like Australian Mohammed Abbass and former US citizen Aafia Siddiqui and all those who didn't make it out of Bagram, Abu Graib, Gitmo etc alive, all those currently undergoing torture in places like Egypt (just another service the US has contracted out to the third world).

    I think about all those people, faceless, nameless, in total limbo.

    How's that scorecard going;

    * Killing of civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Use of chemical weapons against civilians? - Saddam check, USA check

    * Arbitrary arrest, indefinite detention and torture at Abu Graib? - Saddam check, USA check

    Mmmm and the US definitely has WMD's, on any legitimate reckoning has an unelected government and is currently threatening aggression against a non combative nation...I wonder when the neocons will decide we need to "Shock and Awe" the White House

    http://www.cageprisoners.com/index.php

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