You'll have heard by now about the
much blogged
Human Rights Watch
report
on the treatment of Iraqi prisoners by American soldiers in Iraq --- in
the field, far away from Abu Ghraib. About how it was routine to beat them
or work them to exhaustion. About how this treatment was endorsed and
supervised by Army intelligence. About how it was routinely meted out
regardless by soldiers who were off duty and who weren't even trying
to elicit information --- just using the detainees as, literally, human
punching bags. About how this was all going on at
the same time
as the public show of contrition over the abuse at Abu Ghraib.
What gets me is the slimy term of art that the Army is using to
describe these people: they're "PUCs" --- Persons Under Control.
Because if anyone used the word "prisoner", or worse, "prisoner of
war" to describe the people that they rounded up and detained on the
information and belief that they were members of an opposing military
force, then someone might think the Geneva conventions applied. We
can't have that.
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