Iraq war logs: secret files show how US ignored torture
Insurgent
suspects are led away by US forces. Some of those held in
Iraqi
custody suffered appalling abuse, the war logs reveal. Photograph: Sean Smith
for the Guardian
A grim picture
of the US and Britain's legacy in Iraq has been revealed in a massive leak of
American military documents that detail torture, summary executions and war
crimes.
Almost
400,000 secret US army field reports have been passed to the Guardian and a number
of other international media organisations via the whistleblowing website
WikiLeaks.
The
electronic archive is believed to emanate from the same dissident US army
intelligence analyst who earlier this year is alleged to have leaked a smaller
tranche of 90,000 logs chronicling bloody encounters and civilian killings in
the Afghan war.
The new logs
detail how:
• US
authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape
and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be
systematic and normally unpunished.
• A US
helicopter gunship involved in a notorious Baghdad incident had previously
killed Iraqi insurgents after they tried to surrender.
• More than
15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents. US and UK officials have
insisted that no official record of civilian casualties exists but the logs
record 66,081 non-combatant deaths out of a total of 109,000 fatalities.
The numerous
reports of detainee abuse, often supported by medical evidence, describe
prisoners shackled, blindfolded and hung by wrists or ankles, and subjected to
whipping, punching, kicking or electric shocks. Six reports end with a
detainee's apparent death.
As recently
as December the Americans were passed a video apparently showing Iraqi army
officers executing a prisoner in Tal Afar, northern Iraq. The log states:
"The footage shows approximately 12 Iraqi army soldiers. Ten IA soldiers
were talking to one another while two soldiers held the detainee. The detainee
had his hands bound … The footage shows the IA soldiers moving the detainee
into the street, pushing him to the ground, punching him and shooting
him."
The report
named at least one perpetrator and was passed to coalition forces. But the logs
reveal that the coalition has a formal policy of ignoring such allegations.
They record "no investigation is necessary" and simply pass reports
to the same Iraqi units implicated in the violence. By contrast all allegations
involving coalition forces are subject to formal inquiries. Some cases of
alleged abuse by UK and US troops are also detailed in the logs.
In two Iraqi
cases postmortems revealed evidence of death by torture. On 27 August 2009 a US
medical officer found "bruises and burns as well as visible injuries to
the head, arm, torso, legs and neck" on the body of one man claimed by
police to have killed himself. On 3 December 2008 another detainee, said by
police to have died of "bad kidneys", was found to have
"evidence of some type of unknown surgical procedure on [his] abdomen".
A Pentagon
spokesman told the New York Times this week that under its procedure, when
reports of Iraqi abuse were received the US military "notifies the
responsible government of Iraq agency or ministry for investigation and
follow-up".
The logs also
illustrate the readiness of US forces to unleash lethal force. In one chilling
incident they detail how an Apache helicopter gunship gunned down two men in
February 2007.
The
suspected insurgents had been trying to surrender but a lawyer back at base
told the pilots: "You cannot surrender to an aircraft." The Apache,
callsign Crazyhorse 18, was the same unit and helicopter based at Camp Taji
outside Baghdad that later that year, in July, mistakenly killed two Reuters
employees and wounded two children in the streets of Baghdad.
Iraq Body
Count, the London-based group that monitors civilian casualties, says it has
identified around 15,000 previously unknown civilian deaths from the data
contained in the leaked war logs.
Although US
generals have claimed their army does not carry out body counts and British
ministers still say no official statistics exist, the war logs show these
claims are untrue. The field reports purport to identify all civilian and
insurgent casualties, as well as numbers of coalition forces wounded and killed
in action. They give a total of more than 109,000 violent deaths from all
causes between 2004 and the end of 2009.
This
includes 66,081 civilians, 23,984 people classed as "enemy" and
15,196 members of the Iraqi security forces. Another 3,771 dead US and allied
soldiers complete the body count.
No fewer
than 31,780 of these deaths are attributed to improvised roadside bombs (IEDs)
planted by insurgents. The other major recorded tally is of 34,814 victims of
sectarian killings, recorded as murders in the logs.
However, the
US figures appear to be unreliable in respect of civilian deaths caused by
their own military activities. For example, in Falluja, the site of two major
urban battles in 2004, no civilian deaths are recorded. Yet Iraq Body Count
monitors identified more than 1,200 civilians who died during the fighting.
Phil Shiner,
human rights specialist at Public Interest Lawyers, plans to use material from
the logs in court to try to force the UK to hold a public inquiry into the
unlawful killing of Iraqi civilians.
He also
plans to sue the British government over its failure to stop the abuse and
torture of detainees by Iraqi forces. The coalition's formal policy of not
investigating such allegations is "simply not permissible", he says.
Shiner is
already pursuing a series of legal actions for former detainees allegedly
killed or tortured by British forces in Iraq.
WikiLeaks
says it is posting online the entire set of 400,000 Iraq field reports – in
defiance of the Pentagon.
The
whistleblowing activists say they have deleted all names from the documents
that might result in reprisals. They were accused by the US military of
possibly having "blood on their hands" over the previous Afghan
release by redacting too few names. But the military recently conceded that no
harm had been identified.
Condemning
this fresh leak, however, the Pentagon said: "This security breach could
very well get our troops and those they are fighting with killed. Our enemies
will mine this information looking for insights into how we operate, cultivate
sources and react in combat situations, even the capability of our
equipment."