The Pentagon on
Friday released 198 photographs linked to allegations of abuse of
detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan, many of them showing close-ups of
cuts and bruises to arms and legs of prisoners held in U.S. facilities. The
Pentagon said the photos came from criminal investigations into 56
allegations of misconduct by U.S. personnel. It said 14 of those
allegations were substantiated and even led to life imprisonment. The
American Civil Liberties Union, which filed a Freedom of Information
Act lawsuit more than a decade ago for the photos, said the images were
part of a larger collection of 2,000 mostly unreleased photographs tied
to American detainees. "The
still-secret pictures are the best evidence of the serious abuses that
took place in military detention centers," said ACLU Deputy Legal
Director Jameel Jaffer in a statement. "The government's selective disclosure risks misleading the public about the true extent of the abuse." The
release follows a November decision by U.S. Defense Secretary Ash
Carter to not recertify the images under the Protected National Security
Documents Act, thus allowing them to be made public subject to request. The photos
released on Friday, while graphic, were unlikely to have the same impact
as the images depicting abuse of Abu Ghraib detainees that emerged in
2004. Some detainees there claimed they endured physical and sexual
abuse, infliction of electric shocks, and mock executions. Still, the Pentagon
said the independent criminal investigations tied to the photos
released on Friday led to disciplinary action against 65 U.S. service
members, ranging from letters of reprimand to life imprisonment.
Pentagon releases photos tied to Afghan, Iraq detainee abuse

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