Team Infidel
Forum Spin Doctor
This FORMER General won't keep her :cen: :cen: mouth shut about the crap she pulled at Abu Ghraib, and this gets American soldiers killed.
Former Abu Ghraib commander's book aims to tell her side of the story
Published Tue, Oct 11, 2005
By PENNY STARR
The Island Packet
HILTON HEAD ISLAND -- Sitting in her comfortable home on Hilton Head Island, it's clear Col. Janis Karpinski is far from the grim and scandal-haunted corridors of Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad.
She doesn't carry a gun when she goes for a daily run on the beach, and the closest hint of the military is the small red, white and blue flag pinned to her civilian clothes.
But she remains at war.
"Look how they've tormented me, what they've taken away from me," Karpinski said of being relieved of command and her demotion from brigadier general to colonel after allegations that dereliction of duty led to the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib.
On July 1, after more than a 28-year military career, Karpinski became a regular American citizen -- a citizen with a passion even stronger than her love of soldiering: Clearing her name. Karpinski, 52, has written a book, "One Woman's Army, the Commanding General of Abu Ghraib Tells Her Story," that she hopes will do just that.
But even the title of the book indicates how the truth about the prisoner abuse scandal -- and who is responsible for it -- can be as elusive as a seemingly stellar career brought to a sudden end.
As commanding general of the reserve unit responsible for overseeing the chaotic prison system in Iraq, Karpinski said she wasn't in charge of Abu Ghraib at the time of the scandal.
It was Gen. Geoffrey Miller, commander of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay -- a change in command she believes was ordered and endorsed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in order to interrogate "security detainees," whom authorities hoped could lead them to Saddam Hussein.
"How could (the military) hold me accountable when I had no direct access?" Karpinski said. "How come they didn't hold Rumsfeld accountable. How is that possible?"
But, according to Karpinski, the story is much more complicated, from a "muddled" chain of command to a constantly changing military and State Department plan -- or lack thereof.
As commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade, Karpinski's mission was to guard prisoners of war. When President Bush declared an end to hostilities in May 2003, the goal of the more than 3,000 reserve soldiers under her command was to oversee the release of those prisoners of war.
Abu Ghraib had, in fact, never been intended to be a prison, she said, but a clearinghouse to process and transport those arrested by the military to other prisons around Iraq.
But the summer before the infamous photographs of prisoners on dog leashes and pyramids of naked men became public in November 2004, Karpinski said, Abu Ghraib was transformed into the center of interrogation in Iraq -- at the behest of Miller.
"He told me he wanted control (of Abu Ghraib)," she said. "I told him it wasn't mine to give. He'd have to ask (Ambassador Paul) Bremer," former administrator of the U.S.-led occupation.
Karpinski said she first learned of the photographs by e-mail in January 2004 and wasn't formally questioned about the alleged abuse until the Army's Criminal Investigation Division interrogated her as part of a Pentagon-ordered probe.
And she said she was never given access to the seven soldiers in the 372nd military police company that were under her command and were charged in the investigation.
"I've never spoken to any of them," Karpinski said.
She did meet with Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who reprimanded her for the photographs, told her corrective action would be taken and forbade her from speaking publicly about them -- a move she said positioned her "to take the fall, not him."
Throughout the book, Karpinski also tells about the hardships of rising through the ranks in the male-dominated military, including sexual harassment. In the end, she believes being female was one of the reasons she became a target in the abuse scandal.
And, she said, the Bush administration and the military couldn't let accountability stop with enlisted reservists.
"They wanted to satisfy people who wanted punishment of people in high places," she said.
On April 8, Karpinski was formally relieved of command of the 800th Military Police Brigade. On May 5, President George Bush approved her demotion.
The charges against her included dereliction of duty, making a material misrepresentation to investigators, failure to obey a lawful order and shoplifting. Only the dereliction of duty and shoplifting -- an unsubstantiated charge, she claims, dating back years -- remain.
Despite the ordeal, Karpinski said she still loves the military and is proud of her accomplishments, including a Bronze Star from the first Gulf War and her work as the leader of a special mission to train Arab women as a fighting force in the Middle East.
She said she hopes her book also will help end mistreatment of the women in the military. But she admits her experiences can't be inspiring to women in what she sees as an uphill battle for equality.
"I think it could hurt women," she said.
And for now, at least, very few people are suffering following one of the darkest moments for the military in Iraq.
"No one else is sitting in prison with (Charles) Graner and Lynndie England," she said.
Karpinski has accepted her fate, she said, but she hopes victory isn't impossible.
"I hope people continue to pursue the truth," she said, "because the truth about the war and Abu Ghraib hasn't been told. People should demand the truth and accountability."
Former Abu Ghraib commander's book aims to tell her side of the story
Published Tue, Oct 11, 2005
By PENNY STARR
The Island Packet
HILTON HEAD ISLAND -- Sitting in her comfortable home on Hilton Head Island, it's clear Col. Janis Karpinski is far from the grim and scandal-haunted corridors of Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad.
She doesn't carry a gun when she goes for a daily run on the beach, and the closest hint of the military is the small red, white and blue flag pinned to her civilian clothes.
But she remains at war.
"Look how they've tormented me, what they've taken away from me," Karpinski said of being relieved of command and her demotion from brigadier general to colonel after allegations that dereliction of duty led to the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib.
On July 1, after more than a 28-year military career, Karpinski became a regular American citizen -- a citizen with a passion even stronger than her love of soldiering: Clearing her name. Karpinski, 52, has written a book, "One Woman's Army, the Commanding General of Abu Ghraib Tells Her Story," that she hopes will do just that.
But even the title of the book indicates how the truth about the prisoner abuse scandal -- and who is responsible for it -- can be as elusive as a seemingly stellar career brought to a sudden end.
As commanding general of the reserve unit responsible for overseeing the chaotic prison system in Iraq, Karpinski said she wasn't in charge of Abu Ghraib at the time of the scandal.
It was Gen. Geoffrey Miller, commander of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay -- a change in command she believes was ordered and endorsed by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in order to interrogate "security detainees," whom authorities hoped could lead them to Saddam Hussein.
"How could (the military) hold me accountable when I had no direct access?" Karpinski said. "How come they didn't hold Rumsfeld accountable. How is that possible?"
But, according to Karpinski, the story is much more complicated, from a "muddled" chain of command to a constantly changing military and State Department plan -- or lack thereof.
As commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade, Karpinski's mission was to guard prisoners of war. When President Bush declared an end to hostilities in May 2003, the goal of the more than 3,000 reserve soldiers under her command was to oversee the release of those prisoners of war.
Abu Ghraib had, in fact, never been intended to be a prison, she said, but a clearinghouse to process and transport those arrested by the military to other prisons around Iraq.
But the summer before the infamous photographs of prisoners on dog leashes and pyramids of naked men became public in November 2004, Karpinski said, Abu Ghraib was transformed into the center of interrogation in Iraq -- at the behest of Miller.
"He told me he wanted control (of Abu Ghraib)," she said. "I told him it wasn't mine to give. He'd have to ask (Ambassador Paul) Bremer," former administrator of the U.S.-led occupation.
Karpinski said she first learned of the photographs by e-mail in January 2004 and wasn't formally questioned about the alleged abuse until the Army's Criminal Investigation Division interrogated her as part of a Pentagon-ordered probe.
And she said she was never given access to the seven soldiers in the 372nd military police company that were under her command and were charged in the investigation.
"I've never spoken to any of them," Karpinski said.
She did meet with Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who reprimanded her for the photographs, told her corrective action would be taken and forbade her from speaking publicly about them -- a move she said positioned her "to take the fall, not him."
Throughout the book, Karpinski also tells about the hardships of rising through the ranks in the male-dominated military, including sexual harassment. In the end, she believes being female was one of the reasons she became a target in the abuse scandal.
And, she said, the Bush administration and the military couldn't let accountability stop with enlisted reservists.
"They wanted to satisfy people who wanted punishment of people in high places," she said.
On April 8, Karpinski was formally relieved of command of the 800th Military Police Brigade. On May 5, President George Bush approved her demotion.
The charges against her included dereliction of duty, making a material misrepresentation to investigators, failure to obey a lawful order and shoplifting. Only the dereliction of duty and shoplifting -- an unsubstantiated charge, she claims, dating back years -- remain.
Despite the ordeal, Karpinski said she still loves the military and is proud of her accomplishments, including a Bronze Star from the first Gulf War and her work as the leader of a special mission to train Arab women as a fighting force in the Middle East.
She said she hopes her book also will help end mistreatment of the women in the military. But she admits her experiences can't be inspiring to women in what she sees as an uphill battle for equality.
"I think it could hurt women," she said.
And for now, at least, very few people are suffering following one of the darkest moments for the military in Iraq.
"No one else is sitting in prison with (Charles) Graner and Lynndie England," she said.
Karpinski has accepted her fate, she said, but she hopes victory isn't impossible.
"I hope people continue to pursue the truth," she said, "because the truth about the war and Abu Ghraib hasn't been told. People should demand the truth and accountability."