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Think Services Are Torture? |
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by Tamar Fox, June 19, 2007 |
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The Pictures From Abu Ghraib: still make me nauseousWidespread interrogation methods in American detention facilities in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay have included kicking, slapping, forced nudity, painful shackling into “stress positions” for agonizing lengths of time, use of dogs, hooding and isolation, sensory bombardment, food, water and sleep deprivation, and threats to detainees and their family members. Other documented techniques include electric shocks and water-boarding (a form of near suffocation that produces a similar sensation to drowning).
In February 2005, the Pentagon confirmed leaked accounts that female interrogators repeatedly tried to "break" devout Muslim detainees at the U.S. prison camp in Guantánamo Bay through provocative sexual touching and suggestion— wearing skimpy clothing like miniskirts and lacy, thong underwear, making sexually explicit comments, and rubbing their bodies up against them. In one disturbing example, a female interrogator touched her breasts, rubbed them against a prisoner's back, and commented on his apparent erection. She then reached into her pants and removed what appeared to be red blood, but was in fact red ink, which she proceeded to smear on the prisoner's face, telling him she had cut off the water supply in his cell so he wouldn't be able to wash. After this incident was leaked to the press, a Pentagon inquiry revealed several other instances in which female interrogators had used red dye to pretend to wipe menstrual blood on the bodies or clothing of detainees. In July 2005, the Army released Lt. Gen. Randall M. Schmidt's report of his investigation into abuses at Guantánamo, which concludes that "stripping detainees, forcing one to wear women's lingerie and wiping red ink on a detainee and telling him it was menstrual blood" are all "authorized approaches called 'ego down' or 'futility,' which are used to make the interrogation subject question his sense of personal worth or the value of resisting."
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Tamar Fox has an MFA from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, but she still doesn't like sweet tea. Born and raised in Chicago, she's also lived in Iowa City, Dublin, Oxford, and Jerusalem. When she's not rocking out at honky tonks she teaches More... |