With the conviction of an Army dog handler, the military has now tried and
found guilty another low-ranking soldier in connection with the pattern of
abuses that first surfaced two years ago at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.
But once again, an attempt by defense lawyers to point a finger of
responsibility at higher-ranking officers failed in the latest case to persuade
a military jury that ultimate responsibility for the abuses lay further up the
chain of command.

Sgt. Michael Smith was sentenced to 6 months in prison for allowing his dog to scare detainees. Associated Press file photo, 2005, by Matthew S. Gunby
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Some military experts said one reason there have not been attempts to
pursue charges up the military chain of command is that the military does not
have anything tantamount to a district attorney's office.
"The real question is: Who is the independent prosecutor who is liberated
to pursue these cases?" said Eugene Fidell, a specialist in military law.
"There is no central prosecution office run by commanders. So you don't have a
D.A. thinking, 'I'm going to follow this wherever it leads.' "
Among all the abuse cases that have reached military courts, the trial of
the dog handler, Sgt. Michael Smith, had appeared to hold the greatest
potential. Some military experts had thought the trial might finally explore
the origins of the harsh interrogation techniques that were used at Abu Ghraib,
at the Bagram detention center in Afghanistan and at other sites where abuses
occurred.
Smith, who was sentenced on Wednesday to about six months in prison for
abusing detainees in Iraq with his black Belgian shepherd, had said he was
merely following interrogation procedures approved by the chief intelligence
officer at Abu Ghraib, Col. Thomas Pappas.
In turn, Pappas had said he had been following guidance from Maj. Gen.
Geoffrey Miller, the commander of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
who in September 2003 visited Iraq to discuss ways to "set the conditions" for
enhancing interrogations at the prison, as well as from superiors in Baghdad.
But in Smith's trial, Miller was never called to testify. Pappas
acknowledged that he had mistakenly authorized a one-time use of muzzled dogs
to keep prisoners in order outside their cells, but he said that he had no idea
that dog handlers were using unmuzzled dogs to terrorize detainees as part of
the interrogation process. Pappas had previously been reprimanded and relieved
of his command, but was permitted to testify under a grant of immunity.
Among previous defendants who have tried and failed to win approval from
military judges to summon high-ranking officers to explain their own role in
abuse cases have been Charles Graner and Lynndie England, two of the Army
reservists who were convicted in 2005 for their misconduct at Abu Ghraib.
In denying defense requests for testimony from Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld and Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, formerly the top U.S. commander in Iraq,
an Army judge, Col. James Pohl, ruled that their actions did not have any
direct bearing on the reservists' conduct.
Maj. Wayne Marotto, an Army spokesman, said in a telephone interview
Wednesday that more than 600 allegations of detainee abuse in Iraq and
Afghanistan since October 2001 had been investigated, and that 251 officers and
enlisted soldiers had been punished in some way for misconduct related to
prisoners.
To date, the highest-ranking officer convicted in relation to the abuses
is Army Capt. Shawn Martin, who was found guilty last March of kicking
detainees and staging the mock execution of a prisoner. He was sentenced to 45
days in prison and fined $12,000.
Smith had faced a maximum sentence of 8 1/2 years, but on Wednesday was
sentenced to just 179 days -- slightly less than under six months -- in
prison. He will also be demoted to private, fined $2,250 and will be released
from the Army with a bad-conduct discharge after serving his sentence.
"A mere tap on the wrist for abusing prisoners gives the appearance that
once again that the United States is not serious about its responsibility to
discipline those convicted of human rights violations," Curt Goering, Amnesty
International's senior deputy executive director for policy and programs, said
in a statement.
Several generals and colonels have received career-ending reprimands and
have been stripped of their commands, but there is no indication that other
senior-level officers and civilian officials will ever be held accountable for
the detainee abuses that took place in Iraq and Afghanistan.
©2006 San Francisco Chronicle
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