Military newspaper blames Rumsfeld,
Myers for "professional negligence" /
Mon May 10,10:52 AM ET
WASHINGTON (AFP) - Is
this newspaper right? Is he to blame?
A leading military newspaper said that US Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld set the tone for the prisoner abuse scandal in Iraq by refusing
to give captives rights due prisoners of war under the Geneva
Conventions.
"
This was a failure that ran straight to the top," said the editorial appearing
in the May 17 edition of the Military Times weeklies.
"
Accountability here is essential -- even if that means relieving top leaders
from duty in a time of war," it said.
Owned by Gannett, the Military Times publishes the Army, Navy and Air Force
times, weeklies that are widely read by servicemembers and distributed on US
military
bases around the world.
The editorial said the soldiers caught in photographs and videos abusing
prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison are referred to around the Pentagon as "the six morons who lost the war."
"
But the folks in the Pentagon are talking about the wrong morons," it
said.
Responsibility, it said, "extends all the way up the chain of
command to the highest reaches of the military hierarchy and its civilian
leadership."
"
The entire affair is a failure of leadership from start to finish," it
said.
"
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld set the tone early in this war by steadfastly
refusing to give captives the rights accorded to prisoners of war under the Geneva
Convention," it said.
" From the moment they are captured, prisoners are hooded, shackled
and accorded no rights whatsoever. The message to the troops: Anything goes."
The editorial also faults General Richard Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, for trying to persuade CBS television to refrain from airing the
images while failing to read the army's own damning internal report detailing
the abuses.
" On the battlefield, Myers' and Rumsfelds' errors would be called a lack of situational awareness -- a failure that amounts to professional negligence," it said.
Reported on Yahoo -- 5/10/04