Using Wives As Leverage
Come on people! Come on! Far from not being a good tactic to "win the hearts and minds" of the Iraqis, we can hardly get indignant and self-righteous about insurgents kidnapping Westerners. You cannot go to Iraq and round up women like they are a bunch of hood rats in the projects. If people want to play dumb about why they hate us, let me spell it out:
The U.S. Army in Iraq has at least twice seized and jailed the wives of suspected insurgents in hopes of 'leveraging' their husbands into surrender, U.S. military documents show.
In one case, a secretive task force locked up the young mother of a nursing baby, a U.S. intelligence officer reported. In the case of a second detainee, one American colonel suggested to another that they catch her husband by tacking a note to the family's door telling him 'to come get his wife.'
The issue of female detentions in Iraq has taken on a higher profile since kidnappers seized American journalist Jill Carroll on Jan. 7 and threatened to kill her unless all Iraqi women detainees are freed.
The U.S. military on Thursday freed five of what it said were 11 women among the 14,000 detainees currently held in the 2 1/2-year-old insurgency. All were accused of 'aiding terrorists or planting explosives,' but an Iraqi government commission found that evidence was lacking.
Iraqi human rights activist Hind al-Salehi contends that U.S. anti-insurgent units, coming up empty-handed in raids on suspects' houses, have at times detained wives to pressure men into turning themselves in.
Iraq's deputy justice minister, Busho Ibrahim Ali, dismissed such claims, saying hostage-holding was a tactic used under the ousted Saddam Hussein dictatorship, and 'we are not Saddam.' A U.S. command spokesman in Baghdad, Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, said only Iraqis who pose an 'imperative threat' are held in long-term U.S.-run detention facilities.
But documents describing two 2004 episodes tell a different story as far as short-term detentions by local U.S. units. The documents are among hundreds the Pentagon has released periodically under U.S. court order to meet an American Civil Liberties Union request for information on detention practices.
In one memo, a civilian Pentagon intelligence officer described what happened when he took part in a raid on an Iraqi suspect's house in Tarmiya, northwest of Baghdad, on May 9, 2004. The raid involved Task Force (TF) 6-26, a secretive military unit formed to handle high-profile targets.
'During the pre-operation brief it was recommended by TF personnel that if the wife were present, she be detained and held in order to leverage the primary target's surrender,' wrote the 14-year veteran officer.
He said he objected, but when they raided the house the team leader, a senior sergeant, seized her anyway.
'The 28-year-old woman had three young children at the house, one being as young as six months and still nursing,' the intelligence officer wrote. She was held for two days and was released after he complained, he said.
Yes, nursing mothers make good leverage alright! Brilliant!
Update: My! I guess kidnapping wives and children has been a strategy from day one! So we really have created a new generation of "terrorists." Children will have forever etched in their brains, the images of their mothers and/or siblings, being snatched up and manhandled by American soldiers. Gosh, were good!




1 Comments:
Sometimes you read these stories and you just hope that it's fiction. I mean how do we stoop that low? Where do we draw the line? I think we may have stopped doing that a long time ago.
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