A miserable attempt to make criminals victims, I cannot sympathize with these soldiers nor their leaders.
The movie's attempt to highlight their psychological state and how they have to live with that for the rest of their lives is disgusting . What about the victims prisoners who were tortured, sexually violated and killed?
What is the condition of those who survived so far and how can they live with these psychological wounds before the physical wounds?
Hence, reversing the facts and trying to put the aggressor and the attacked party on an equal footing is tantamount to denying the reality of events and to distorting the facts .
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
2007
Crime / Documentary / History / War
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
2007
Crime / Documentary / History / War
Keywords: woman director
Plot summary
Examines the abuse, torture, and murder of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison at the hands of U.S. military police in the fall of 2003 and debunks the "bad apples" theory. The film asks: how can decent young soldiers take these actions, and, what orders came from the chain of command. The filmmaker interviews former detainees, soldiers, and MPs involved in photographed degradation. He references Dr. Stanley Milgrim's early 60's experiments. The film also traces memoranda from Secretary Rumsfeld, General Sanchez, and the U.S. Department of Justice allowing various interrogation methods along with a 2003 visit to Abu Ghraib by General Miller, who had been running Guantanimo.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
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A desperate attempt to distort the facts
Shocking documentary
This documentary starkly (and unflinchingly) examines the prisoner abuse scandal involving American soldiers and detainees at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison in the fall of 2003. Director Rory Kennedy offers a scathing indictment of how the lax policies of the Bush administration enabled the soldiers to blatantly violate clearly stipulated rules of the Geneva Conventions: The prisoners were deprived of sleep, stripped naked, and sexually humiliated. Worse yet, one female soldier even went as far as to have a photo of herself taken with the dead body of a slain captive while smiling and giving the thumbs up sign. While the soldiers who did this vile misconduct were penalized, the superiors who let this appalling stuff happen got away scot free. The soldiers try to justify their actions by explaining that they were merely "following orders," which speaks volumes on how they are rigidly trained to do exactly what they are told without questioning any of it for a minute. So the whole military mind comes into question here; it's terrifying to think about man's capacity for extreme cruelty and inhumanity when provided the proper circumstances to indulge in such things (Donald Rumsfeld approved in a memo the harsh techniques the soldiers applied to the prisoners while the climate at the prison was unbearably tense and thus conducive to all kinds of brutality). One interviewee says it best when he remarks, "There's no such thing as a little bit of torture." Indeed. Torture is torture no matter what's being done and that's just flat-out wrong according to the Geneva Conventions. Searing stuff.
Another summary
Film Summary Through startling interviews with perpetrators, witnesses and victims, GHOSTS OF ABU GHRAIB examines and contextualizes the abuses that occurred in the fall of 2003 at the notorious Iraqi prison abuses documented in photographs that are etched in our national consciousness. The film probes the psychology of how typical American men and women came to commit these atrocious acts and, on a parallel track, explores the policy decisions that eroded our compliance with the Geneva Conventions and contributed to making the abuse a reality. Ultimately, the film asks what these events say about America, our government, our military and our human nature.