(Reuters)
DENVER -- The U.S. Army plans to file charges against two military intelligence officers in the suffocation death of an Iraqi general during questioning in Iraq in November, The Denver Post reported on Thursday.
The newspaper said negligent homicide and manslaughter charges were being brought against two warrant officers over the death of Iraqi Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush, commander of Saddam Hussein's air forces.
Chief Warrant Officer Lewis Welshofer, based at Fort Carson, Colorado and a member of the 66th Military Intelligence Group, is accused of suffocating the general in a sleeping bag while sitting on his chest and covering his mouth, according to Pentagon documents obtained by the newspaper.
The other soldier, Chief Warrant Officer Jeff Williams, was involved in the interrogation at a U.S. military facility at Qaim, Iraq, the newspaper said.
The general's death was among more than 30 prisoner deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan that the Pentagon said last month it was investigating.
The treatment of prisoners came under scrutiny after photographs of physical and sexual abuse of Iraqi inmates at the Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad emerged earlier this year.
The general had undergone more than two weeks of daily interrogations while in U.S. custody, the newspaper said.
The U.S. military said at the time that he apparently died of natural causes after complaining that "he didn't feel well and subsequently lost consciousness." But an autopsy released by the Pentagon in May said Mowhoush died of asphyxia due to smothering and chest compression.
A spokesman at Fort Carson said he had no comment.
********
(emphasis added)
Those who would play down the absolutely shameful behaviour of American soldiers at Abu Gharib and elsewhere should think about this ... here you have the story of a man who was, even if inadvertantly, tortured to death by U.S. military personnel, and the military attempting to cover it up as death by "natural causes." While it is true that the majority of the incidents at Abu Gharib come nowhere close to this level of abuse, this is where it can lead, and that is why the people who were using Iraqi and Afghani prisoners as toys to pass the time in the Middle East need to be swiftly and severely punished, not just as a matter of preserving the intergrity and image of our military but simply as a matter of justice being served.
Phaedrus
DENVER -- The U.S. Army plans to file charges against two military intelligence officers in the suffocation death of an Iraqi general during questioning in Iraq in November, The Denver Post reported on Thursday.
The newspaper said negligent homicide and manslaughter charges were being brought against two warrant officers over the death of Iraqi Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush, commander of Saddam Hussein's air forces.
Chief Warrant Officer Lewis Welshofer, based at Fort Carson, Colorado and a member of the 66th Military Intelligence Group, is accused of suffocating the general in a sleeping bag while sitting on his chest and covering his mouth, according to Pentagon documents obtained by the newspaper.
The other soldier, Chief Warrant Officer Jeff Williams, was involved in the interrogation at a U.S. military facility at Qaim, Iraq, the newspaper said.
The general's death was among more than 30 prisoner deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan that the Pentagon said last month it was investigating.
The treatment of prisoners came under scrutiny after photographs of physical and sexual abuse of Iraqi inmates at the Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad emerged earlier this year.
The general had undergone more than two weeks of daily interrogations while in U.S. custody, the newspaper said.
The U.S. military said at the time that he apparently died of natural causes after complaining that "he didn't feel well and subsequently lost consciousness." But an autopsy released by the Pentagon in May said Mowhoush died of asphyxia due to smothering and chest compression.
A spokesman at Fort Carson said he had no comment.
********
(emphasis added)
Those who would play down the absolutely shameful behaviour of American soldiers at Abu Gharib and elsewhere should think about this ... here you have the story of a man who was, even if inadvertantly, tortured to death by U.S. military personnel, and the military attempting to cover it up as death by "natural causes." While it is true that the majority of the incidents at Abu Gharib come nowhere close to this level of abuse, this is where it can lead, and that is why the people who were using Iraqi and Afghani prisoners as toys to pass the time in the Middle East need to be swiftly and severely punished, not just as a matter of preserving the intergrity and image of our military but simply as a matter of justice being served.
Phaedrus