Pentagon Probing Reports of U.S. Soldiers
Posting Gruesome Photos from Iraq at Web site
E&P
By E&P Staff
Published: September 27, 2005 9:00 PM ET
WASHINGTON The Army is investigating complaints that soldiers posted
photographs of mangled Iraqi corpses on an Internet site in exchange for access
to pornographic images on the site, officials said Tuesday.
An Army spokesman, Col. Joseph Curtin, said the Criminal Investigation
Division recently began investigating the matter on behalf of Lt. Gen. John
Vines, commander of the Multinational Corps in Iraq.
The East Bay Express, a New Times weekly in Emeryville, Ca. last week
published a lengthy story about the porn site, and interviewed its owner, who
said he gave soldiers free access in exchange for photos of dead or mutilated
Iraqis. The soldiers apparently had been having trouble subscribing to the site
because of credit card problems. AmericaBlog, a leading blog, then covered it
widely this week, and included links to some of the photos.
Many of the photos depict dismembered or charred Iraqi corpses and body
parts. It's unclear if torture was involved before death. Some photos were also
submitted by soldiers in Afghanistan.
An Islamic civil rights group said it wrote to Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld objecting to the practice, which it said may violate international
laws of war, and urging the Pentagon to bring it to an end.
"This disgusting trade in human misery is an insult to all those who have
served in our nation's military," Arsalan Iftikhar, legal director for the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in his letter to Rumsfeld.
Bryan Whitman, a spokesman for Rumsfeld, told the Associated Press that the
Pentagon had recently become aware of Internet postings and is looking into
it.
"Obviously, it is an unacceptable practice," Whitman said.
An Army spokesman, Paul Boyce, later told AP that the preliminary criminal
inquiry determined, based on available evidence, that felony charges could not
be pursued. But the matter, including the possibility of disciplinary action,
was being handled in coordination with other military services, he said.
E&P Staff (letters@editorandpublisher.com)
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