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Sign In Not a Subscriber?Join NowMonths after the Bush administration insisted to the world that the Abu Ghraib abuses had been halted, a 15-year-old Iraqi claims, he was detained for two weeks outside Baghdad, held under onerous conditions, sexually abused, then told his arrest had been a mistake. And he may not be the only one. Interviewing Iraqis who say they have been detained and brutalized without explanation—including, possibly, the man wearing a hood and poncho in one of the most notorious Abu Ghraib photos—DONOVAN WEBSTER explores the perversion of America's mission
February 2005 Donovan Webster Ron HavivMonths after the Bush administration insisted to the world that the Abu Ghraib abuses had been halted, a 15-year-old Iraqi claims, he was detained for two weeks outside Baghdad, held under onerous conditions, sexually abused, then told his arrest had been a mistake. And he may not be the only one. Interviewing Iraqis who say they have been detained and brutalized without explanation—including, possibly, the man wearing a hood and poncho in one of the most notorious Abu Ghraib photos—DONOVAN WEBSTER explores the perversion of America's mission
February 2005 Donovan Webster Ron HavivSubscribers have complete access to the archive.
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