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Last Updated: Tuesday, 24 August, 2004, 12:57 GMT 13:57 UK
Rumsfeld awaits Abu Ghraib report
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
Rumsfeld will escape direct blame, reports say
A commission appointed by US Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld is set to publish its report on the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal in Iraq.

The panel was appointed by Mr Rumsfeld at the height of the scandal in May.

Leaks suggest Mr Rumsfeld will be faulted for not exercising sufficient oversight of interrogation policies.

On Tuesday the judge in the Abu Ghraib abuse hearings taking place in Germany rejected a move by defence lawyers to call Mr Rumsfeld as a witness.

Judge James Pohl told lawyers for Sergeant Javal Davis they had not shown sufficient evidence of "a connection between this group and the authorities in Washington".

Defence officials briefed on the imminent report told the New York Times that Mr Rumsfeld would escape direct accusations of misconduct and of ordering polices that encouraged prisoner abuse.

Reservists accused

The Abu Ghraib scandal surfaced in April when photographs of hooded and naked Iraqi prisoners being maltreated first came to light.

Four of the seven soldiers charged with cruelty and maltreatment of prisoners at the prison have been facing preliminary hearings at US barracks in Mannheim, Germany, to decide whether they should stand trial.

Abu Ghraib cells
Abu Ghraib prison dates from the Saddam Hussein era

Lawyers for reservists Staff Sergeant Ivan Frederick, Sergeant Javal Davis and Specialists Charles Graner and Megan Ambuhl have argued that their clients were following orders.

On Monday, Sgt Frederick said he would plead guilty to some charges, but did not specify which ones.

Military dogs

The commission appointed by Mr Rumsfeld - headed by former defence secretary James Schlesinger - was given the task of reviewing ongoing Pentagon inquiries and recommend areas that still needed further examination.

However, it expanded its remit, hired a staff of about 20 investigators and focused its attention on senior policy makers and commanders, including interviewing Mr Rumsfeld himself.

The commission's accusations that Mr Rumsfeld and other top military and civilian leaders at the Pentagon did not exercise rigorous oversight are also thought to apply to prisons in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay as well as in Iraq.

Court sketch of Spc Charles Graner in court in Mannheim
Spc Graner is one of four reservists accused of abusing Iraqi prisoners

If the leaks are accurate, this would be the first report into the prison scandal that implicitly links Pentagon leadership, including Mr Rumsfeld, to the abuses that occurred at Abu Ghraib, says the BBC's Michael Buchanan in Washington.

Another report into the affair, conducted by the US army, and focussing on the role of military intelligence soldiers, is due to be published in the next few days.

It will criticise senior officers in Iraq for failures of leadership, but clear them and the Pentagon of ordering any abuse, army officials told the Washington Post.

Those briefed on the findings told the newspaper that the investigation found that military police dogs were used to frighten detained Iraqi teenagers.

The report also acknowledges that military intelligence soldiers failed to list a number of prisoners on official records, and hid them from international humanitarian organisations.


WATCH AND LISTEN
The BBC's Ian Pannell
"The report is likely to be critical of both military and civilian leaders"




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