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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

i don't know the truth about lt colonel steven jordan

nor will i likely EVER know the truth about him. my HUNCH is he IS a scapegoat. they needed someone to point the proverbial finger at, and there he was!

seems like the CREDIBLE witnesses say he wasn't responsible AND they say he wasn't even in the CHAIN OF COMMAND.

we already know who's guilty ......... they will NEVER pay. hell, they'll never be charged (in their lifetimes and mine that is. i DO believe history will see the truth and they WILL be charged with war crimes AND treason. yes, that's right THE BIG DICK and KING GEORGE among others). we won't see it, but eventually the american people WILL take their heads out of their asses and see the truth and speak the truth and make those accountable pay - even posthumously

Conflicting Portraits of Officer Charged Over Abu Ghraib


By Josh White Washington Post Staff Writer
Army Lt. Col. Steven L. Jordan does not appear in any of the notorious images of detainee abuse that emerged from Abu Ghraib prison three years ago. Going into his tour in Iraq in 2003, he had no interrogation experience. And more than half a dozen military interrogators have said in recent interviews that Jordan had nothing to do with the hundreds of interrogations they conducted at the prison.
Nevertheless, Jordan, 51, is scheduled to become the first Army officer to face a court-martial for alleged abuse at Abu Ghraib. His trial will begin next month at
Fort Meade. Investigators and military officials have painted Jordan as a liar and an abuser, the lone officer who should be held criminally accountable for one of the most devastating events of the Iraq war.............

............Retired Staff Sgt. Mark Day, 48, who conducted about 100 interrogations of detainees at Abu Ghraib in late 2003, said that Jordan was not involved in his interrogations and that senior interrogators and officers in Iraq had to approve controversial approaches. Jordan was not in the authorization chain of command, and his name does not appear on any of the dozens of signed interrogation requests obtained by The Washington Post.
The Army is "sacrificing him on the altar of public opinion while slowly letting everyone else fade out of view," said Day, who was never interviewed by Army investigators. "He's now a prisoner of his own service. He's been in prison now for four years, emotionally, physically and almost literally because he hasn't been able to return to civilian life."........

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