WASHINGTON
(AP) April 22, 2005 - The Army has cleared four top officers, including the
three-star general who commanded all U.S. forces in Iraq, of all allegations
of wrongdoing in connection with prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib, and they will
not be punished, officials said Friday.
Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who became the
senior commander in Iraq in June 2003, two months after the fall of Baghdad,
had been faulted in earlier investigations for leadership lapses that may have
contributed to prisoner abuse. He is the highest-ranking officer to face
official allegations of leadership failures in Iraq, but he has not been
accused of criminal violations.
After assessing the allegations against
Sanchez and taking sworn statements from 37 people involved in Iraq, the
Army’s inspector general, Lt. Gen. Stanley E. Green, concluded that the
allegations were unsubstantiated, said the officials, who were familiar with
the details of Green’s probe.
Actions of 12 officers scrutinized
Green reached the same conclusion in the
cases of two generals and a colonel who worked for Sanchez.
The officials who disclosed the findings
spoke only on condition of anonymity because Congress has not yet been fully
briefed on Green’s findings and the information has not yet been publicly
released. Green had scrutinized the actions of Sanchez and 11 other officers.
Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib were
physically abused and sexually humiliated by military police and intelligence
soldiers in the fall of 2003. Photos of some of the abuse created a firestorm
of criticism worldwide.
Congress has hotly debated the question
of accountability among senior Army and Defense Department officials who were
in positions of responsibility on Iraq detention and interrogation policy.
Some Democrats have accused the Pentagon of foisting all the blame onto
low-ranking soldiers.
More hearings on abuse expected
In a statement Friday that did not
mention specific cases, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John Warner,
R-Va., said that as soon as all Pentagon assessments of accountability are
complete he will hold a hearing “to examine the adequacy of those reviews” and
to hear senior civilian and military officials address the issue.
Warner said he strongly agrees with one
investigation report that concluded last year that commanders should be held
accountable for their action or inaction and that military as well as civilian
leaders in the Pentagon “share this burden of responsibility.”
The office of Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.,
top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, declined to comment on
the matter.
Some have said the blame should rest with
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, although none of the 10 investigations done
so far has concluded that he was directly at fault.
Asked about public expectations of
punishment for senior officers associated with Abu Ghraib, the Army’s chief
public affairs officer, Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks, said the Army went to great
lengths to make its investigations thorough and fair, with no preconceived
judgments.
“The thoroughness of the investigative
process preserves the rights of all individuals involved while ensuring that
the presumption of innocence must be disproved by facts before any allegation
is determined to be substantiated,” Brooks said.
Mitigating circumstances cited
In an interview Friday, three senior
defense officials associated with the Green investigations cited mitigating
circumstances in the Sanchez case, including the fact that his organization in
Iraq, known as Combined Joint Task Force 7, initially was short of the senior
officers it required. They also cited other complicating factors, including
the upsurge in insurgent violence shortly after Sanchez took command and the
intense pressure the military faced in hunting down Saddam Hussein, who was in
hiding and thought to have a hand in the insurgency.
The three officials spoke on condition of
anonymity.
Sanchez has been at the center of the Abu
Ghraib controversy from its start.
He issued a policy on acceptable
interrogation techniques on Sept. 14, 2003, then revised it on Oct. 12, about
the time the abuses were happening. The Army inspector general found in an
investigation last year that the policies were ambiguous and subject to
misinterpretation by soldiers.
A separate investigation by a panel
headed by former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger concluded that Sanchez
should have taken stronger action in November 2003 when he realized the extent
of problems among military intelligence and military police units running Abu
Ghraib.
Sanchez’s future unclear
A subsequent Army investigation, made
public last summer in what was called the Kern-Fay-Jones report, concluded
that although Sanchez and his most senior deputies were not directly involved
in the bases at Abu Ghraib, their “action and inaction did indirectly
contribute” to some abuses.
Sanchez remains commander of the Army’s
5th Corps, based in Germany. It is unclear whether he will be promoted to
four-star ranking and given another assignment after he finishes with 5th
Corps.
Sanchez and his former top deputy, Maj.
Gen. Walter Wojdakowski, were cited in the Kern-Fay-Jones report for failure
to “ensure proper staff oversight of detention and interrogation operations”
in Iraq, specifically at the Abu Ghraib prison.
It was left to Green, the Army inspector
general, to weigh the gravity of the various allegations against Sanchez and
other senior officers and determine whether they could be substantiated. In
only one case — that of Janis Karpinski, an Army Reserve brigadier general who
commanded the 800th Military Police Brigade at Abu Ghraib — did Green decide
that the allegations were substantiated. She has been suspended from her
command and given a written reprimand.
Seven unidentified officers also
investigated
In addition to clearing Sanchez, the Army
inspector general has determined that there should be no punishment given to
Wojdakowski or to Maj. Gen. Barbara Fast, who was Sanchez’s intelligence chief
in Baghdad, or to Col. Mark Warren, Sanchez’s top legal adviser at the time.
In addition to those five cases, which
have been the main focus of attention by the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Green examined allegations against seven other senior officers, all at or
above the rank of colonel. The names of the seven have not been disclosed, and
it is not yet known how many — if any — will be punished. One of the seven
cases is not yet closed.
Those seven others do not include two
accused officers whose cases are being considered by field commanders rather
than by the Army inspector general because they face possible criminal
charges. Those two are Col. Thomas Pappas, commander of the 205th Military
Intelligence Brigade at Abu Ghraib, and Lt. Col. Stephen Jordan, who directed
the prison’s interrogation center.
Fast was promoted to two-star general and
given command of Fort Huachuca, Ariz., and its Army Intelligence Center.
After her change-of-command ceremony at
Huachuca last month, Fast said of the Abu Ghraib debacle, “Could I have done
something to prevent this? I think we all ask ourselves that question.”