Senior U.S. Army generals in Iraq were told in
December 2003 that special operations troops and CIA personnel were
suspected of abusing Iraqi prisoners -- four months before the scale of
prisoner abuse became public in television photos that shocked the
world. The December 2003 report on suspected prisoner abuse, confirmed
by U.S. officials on Wednesday, also showed the U.S. leadership in Iraq
had clues about prisoner treatment before photographs of detainees
being abused at Abu Ghraib jail emerged within the military in the
middle of January. But officials disputed the notion that the warning
had been ignored. "It's indicative that there were some troubling
signs, and actions were taken early on. It got overcome by other
investigations (after the Abu Ghraib abuse became known). But it was
not ignored," an Army official said. When the abuse photographs,
including ones showing a U.S. female soldier holding a naked prisoner
on a leash, were shown on U.S. television, they prompted calls by
political opponents and human rights activists for Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld to resign. The Pentagon said it was investigating but
the existence of the 2003 report was not revealed. [more]