"BEATING SPECIALIST BAKER"


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By NO COMMENT on Sunday, June 6, 2004 - 01:49 pm:

    Beating Specialist Baker

    June 5, 2004
    By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF





    The prison abuse scandal refuses to die because soothing
    White House explanations keep colliding with revelations
    about dead prisoners and further connivance by senior
    military officers - and newly discovered victims, like Sean
    Baker.

    If Sean Baker doesn't sound like an Iraqi name, it isn't.
    Specialist Baker, 37, is an American, and he was a proud
    U.S. soldier. An Air Force veteran and member of the
    Kentucky National Guard, he served in the first gulf war
    and more recently was a military policeman in Guantánamo
    Bay.

    Then in January 2003, an officer in Guantánamo asked him to
    pretend to be a prisoner in a training drill. As
    instructed, Mr. Baker put on an orange prison jumpsuit over
    his uniform, and then crawled under a bunk in a cell so an
    "internal reaction force" could practice extracting an
    uncooperative inmate. The five U.S. soldiers in the
    reaction force were told that he was a genuine detainee who
    had already assaulted a sergeant.

    Despite more than a week of coaxing, I haven't been able to
    get Mr. Baker to give an interview. But he earlier told a
    Kentucky television station what happened next:

    "They grabbed my arms, my legs, twisted me up and
    unfortunately one of the individuals got up on my back from
    behind and put pressure down on me while I was face down.
    Then he - the same individual - reached around and began to
    choke me and press my head down against the steel floor.
    After several seconds, 20 to 30 seconds, it seemed like an
    eternity because I couldn't breathe. When I couldn't
    breathe, I began to panic and I gave the code word I was
    supposed to give to stop the exercise, which was `red.' . .
    . That individual slammed my head against the floor and
    continued to choke me. Somehow I got enough air. I muttered
    out: `I'm a U.S. soldier. I'm a U.S. soldier.' "

    Then the soldiers noticed that he was wearing a U.S. battle
    dress uniform under the jumpsuit. Mr. Baker was taken to a
    military hospital for treatment of his head injuries, then
    flown to a Navy hospital in Portsmouth, Va. After a six-day
    hospitalization there, he was given a two-week discharge to
    rest.

    But Mr. Baker began suffering seizures, so the military
    sent him to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center for
    treatment of a traumatic brain injury. He stayed at the
    hospital for 48 days, was transferred to light duty in an
    honor burial detail at Fort Dix, N.J., and was finally
    given a medical discharge two months ago.

    Meanwhile, a military investigation concluded that there
    had been no misconduct involved in Mr. Baker's injury. Hmm.
    The military also says it can't find a videotape that is
    believed to have been made of the incident.

    Most appalling, when Mr. Baker told his story to a Kentucky
    reporter, the military lied in a disgraceful effort to
    undermine his credibility. Maj. Laurie Arellano, a
    spokeswoman for the Southern Command, questioned the extent
    of Mr. Baker's injuries and told reporters that his medical
    discharge was unrelated to the injuries he had suffered in
    the training drill.

    In fact, however, the Physical Evaluation Board of the Army
    stated in a document dated Sept. 29, 2003: "The TBI
    [traumatic brain injury] was due to soldier playing role of
    detainee who was non-cooperative and was being extracted
    from detention cell in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, during a
    training exercise."

    Major Arellano acknowledges that she misstated the facts
    and says she had been misinformed herself by medical
    personnel. She now says the medical discharge was related
    in part - but only in part, she says - to the "accident."

    Mr. Baker, who is married and has a 14-year-old son, is now
    unemployed, taking nine prescription medications and still
    suffering frequent seizures. His lawyer, Bruce Simpson, has
    been told that Mr. Baker may not begin to get disability
    payments for up to 18 months. If he is judged 100 percent
    disabled, he will then get a maximum of $2,100 a month.

    If the U.S. military treats one of its own soldiers this
    way - allowing him to be battered, and lying to cover it up
    - then imagine what happens to Afghans and Iraqis.

    President Bush attributed the problems uncovered at Abu
    Ghraib to "a few American troops who dishonored our
    country." Mr. Bush, the problems go deeper than a few bad
    apples.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/05/opinion/05KRIS.html?ex=1087497768&ei=1&en=92dd6a1cb0ffbf83