Carceral Imperialism
BY MAHA HILAL
“To this day I feel humiliation for what was done to me… The time I spent in Abu Ghraib — it ended my life. I’m only half a human now.” That’s what Abu Ghraib survivor Talib al-Majli had to say about the 16 months he spent at that notorious prison in Iraq after being captured and detained by American troops on October 31, 2003. In the wake of his release, al-Majli has continued to suffer a myriad of difficulties, including an inability to hold a job thanks to physical and mental-health deficits and a family life that remains in shambles.
He was never even charged with a crime — not exactly surprising, given the Red Cross’s estimate that 70% to 90% of those arrested and detained in Iraq after the 2003 American invasion of that country were guilty of nothing. But like other survivors, his time at Abu Ghraib continues to haunt him, even though, nearly 20 years later in America, the lack of justice and accountability for war crimes at that prison has been relegated to the distant past and is considered a long-closed chapter in this country’s War on Terror.
The Abu Ghraib “Scandal”
On April 28th, 2004, CBS News’s 60 Minutes aired a segment about Abu Ghraib prison, revealing for the first time photos of the kinds of torture that had happened there. Some of those now-infamous pictures included a black-hooded prisoner being made to stand on a box, his arms outstretched and electrical wires attached to his hands; naked prisoners piled on top of each other in a pyramid-like structure; and a prisoner in a jumpsuit on his knees being threatened with a dog. In addition to those disturbing images, several photos included American military personnel grinning or posing with thumbs-up signs, indications that they seemed to be taking pleasure in the humiliation and torture of those Iraqi prisoners and that the photos were meant to be seen.
Once those pictures were exposed, there was widespread outrage across the globe in what became known as the Abu Ghraib scandal. However, that word “scandal” still puts the focus on those photos rather than on the violence the victims suffered or the fact that, two decades later, there has been zero accountability when it comes to the government officials who sanctioned an atmosphere ripe for torture.
Thanks to the existence of the Federal Tort Claims Act, all claims against the federal government, when it came to Abu Ghraib, were dismissed. Nor did the government provide any compensation or redress to the Abu Ghraib survivors, even after, in 2022, the Pentagon released a plan to minimize harm to civilians in U.S. military operations….
https://tomdispatch.com/carceral-imperialism/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Gaza genocide as explicit policy: Michael Hudson names all names
Patrick Lawrence: The End of Global Leadership
The Palestine Exception to Academic Freedom Must Go
Patrick Lawrence: Authorized Atrocities / Late-Imperial Duplicities
Seth Anziska on Dominant Orthodoxies
Ralph Nader: The Mutually Reinforcing US and Israeli Empires
Biden Is the Latest President To Tout the Vietnam War as Proud History
Henry Kissinger was the definition of elite impunity
Roaming Charges: Kissinger – the Dr. Caligari of American Empire
Revisiting Foucault and the Iranian Revolution
‘No innocent civilians’: the Violent Legacies of the U.S. War in Vietnam
How the trauma of the Vietnam War led to the age of “alternative facts”
Seymour Hersh on Witnessing American War Crimes in Vietnam
