iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Abu Ghraib Unit To Return To Iraq

DAVID DISHNEAU   04/ 9/10 07:46 PM ET   AP

Iraq Abu Ghraib

HAGERSTOWN, Md. — The Army Reserve unit tarnished by the Abu Ghraib detainee-abuse scandal has been mobilized to return to Iraq in its first deployment since photographs of naked, humiliated prisoners surfaced more than six years ago, the Army said Friday.

The 372nd Military Police Company of Cresaptown will leave April 29 for one to three months of training at Fort Bliss, Texas, followed by a planned deployment to Iraq, said Sgt. Darius Kirkwood, a spokesman for the 200th Military Police Command at Fort Meade. Few members of the unit remain from when the detainee photographs were taken, due to normal turnover, he said.

Kirkwood said the group's final destination could change, depending on the military's needs.

The 130 to 170 MPs could be assigned to guard or transport prisoners, provide security for an installation or convoy, or perform general police functions, Kirkwood said.

He dismissed questions about whether the 372nd's return to Iraq could provoke a hostile response. Militants there have used Abu Ghraib photographs to incite anti-American sentiment.

"I think that if that were a big enough concern, if anyone would think that was that big of an issue, this unit would not be deploying as it is," he said.

The unit became internationally known in 2004 when seven enlisted members were charged in connection with the mistreatment of detainees at the prison near Baghdad. All were convicted and six served prison time.

Four other low-ranking soldiers from outside the 372nd also were convicted of abusing Abu Ghraib prisoners.

Kirkwood said neither the other members of the unit at the time, nor its current roster should be judged by the crimes of a few.

"The unit itself, I would think, was not the problem, but perhaps the activities of several individuals," Kirkwood said. "I have no reason to believe we're not 100 percent confident in this unit."

Since returning from Iraq in 2004, the 372nd has functioned as a stateside reserve unit with members performing part-time duties that included assisting a Haitian hurricane-relief effort in 2005.

Kenneth A. Davis, a former unit member who wasn't charged in the scandal, said the reconstituted 372nd marks a new beginning.

"The unit is made up of good people. We've got a new administration. This is a nation of second chances. I would hope a Muslim nation would look at seven years passing and a new administration and show restraint and tolerance and give them a second chance as well," Davis said.

Col. Jan Apo, an MP working on a master's degree at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., said the Army has revamped its detention training since Abu Ghraib. Besides getting certified in detention skills during training, MPs who are assigned to take over guard duties from a departing unit get on-the-job supervision before the other unit leaves, Apo said. The Abu Ghraib defendants complained of a lack of training.

Apo also said the Army created a separate prison operations command structure to eliminate the confusion described at Abu Ghraib over whether the prisons were controlled by MPs or military intelligence.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

HAGERSTOWN, Md. — The Army Reserve unit tarnished by the Abu Ghraib detainee-abuse scandal has been mobilized to return to Iraq in its first deployment since photographs of naked, humiliated pri...
HAGERSTOWN, Md. — The Army Reserve unit tarnished by the Abu Ghraib detainee-abuse scandal has been mobilized to return to Iraq in its first deployment since photographs of naked, humiliated pri...
Filed by Jeff Muskus  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 21
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
11:44 PM on 04/09/2010
Lame. Who thinks this stuff up?
photo
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
10:20 PM on 04/09/2010
Lets hope for their sake there's no such thing as Karma. In Iraq somebody, whose fifteen year old daughter was held by MPs as a sex slave in Abu Graib, is waiting for their return.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
TerryDArc
The heart is the real Fountain of Youth
09:43 PM on 04/09/2010
What a GREAT tourist attraction AG is going to make! Anybody'd pay to see where Lindsey and the boys played with prisoners. Get a few unemployed Blackwater people to play the guards. Waterboarding would be an E ticket. What else? - NOT!
08:29 PM on 04/09/2010
As long as Romney is NEVER elected there is hope tortures will not come back... because Romney has clearly stated he is for the enhanced tortures his Mormon buddies, Mitchell and Jessen cooked up.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
07:43 PM on 04/09/2010
I expect the unit will be QUITE different in attitude now that it is under Obama's direction.
This is an opportunity to demonstrate just how much things have changed.
07:30 PM on 04/09/2010
Seems a little bit odd that this would be announced like this, Maybe a parade to.
07:07 PM on 04/09/2010
ha i work with Chip Fredrick the idiot that took those pictures..
photo
OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
06:48 PM on 04/09/2010
The problem is that the army - up to and including the president - is soft on torturers who have rank and priviledge - and that hasn't changed.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TeeLolly
06:47 PM on 04/09/2010
"The spokesman ... says the Army has 100 percent confidence in the 372nd."
___________________

Well, now that Bybee and Yoo and the rest of the Bush crew are no longer responsible for policy, his confidence is probably justified ...
05:59 PM on 04/09/2010
I think some here assume this unit will return to Iraq and perform correctional duties. That is not the case.
05:54 PM on 04/09/2010
Deja vu all over again
05:46 PM on 04/09/2010
While members of this unit did terrible things that only made things worse for us in the war, this article is pretty insignificant. The war is drawing down, and the tragedy of the entire war is almost over... hopefully.

I was in Iraq when the whole story broke out in 2004. Let me assure everybody that it was not good for the troops. Anyone who thought that they might not like/trust us, suddenly hated us.

But the real crime is the war itself. And it's mega powerful perpetrators will never face justice, but it is they're fault and nobody else's. We have suffered staggering casualties to prevent a WMD attack that never would have happened, destabilized the region, and caused hundreds of thousands of deaths. What was this all about again???
06:11 PM on 04/09/2010
Let hope that this travesty is coming to a conclusion. This has been a taxing burden on our service personnel, our nation, and on the Iraqi people as well. Let’s not forget those brave men and women of other nations and their sacrifices. It is over when the last man or woman comes home. Your service is recognized and honored.

Those who have perpetuated this tragedy should bear punishment for their lies and crimes. However, if they are not brought to trial, there is a higher court, higher than the court of law. There is a court of consciousness and history and it will judge regardless of the court of law. Peace unto you.

(Quote by Mohandas Gandhi)

Even if you are minority of one, the truth is the truth.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Burger
07:03 PM on 04/09/2010
In a just world it would end, we should never be there in the first place. But as US military policy goes we always need an enemy. Look for this to just move to Iran and Pakistan, same war just change the faces. Very Orwellian
05:29 PM on 04/09/2010
Why do we continue to rotate more military personnel into that place, when we should be rotating them out completely? Now, the military is sending the unit back that had previously been assigned to Abu Ghraib during the “Bush/Cheney Torture Gate” fiasco. It seems as though with this ludicrous move, the military is asking for trouble.
05:18 PM on 04/09/2010
Let's "abruptly cancel" all US foreign aid to Israel, then.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimstaro
05:16 PM on 04/09/2010
Not a good idea, the personal might have changed but the units history hasn't, one more way for the Iraqi opposition to the occupation to be used against us, adding to the already extreme hatreds!
05:48 PM on 04/09/2010
You are absolutely correct, jimstaro. With this move, the military seems to be asking for trouble. They may have changed some of the people in the unit, but they can’t change what occurred under the unit’s previous watch. I personally can’t blame another man or woman for others’ actions and behavior unless they are complicit in some way. Again, I think this is a wrong move on the military part.