WASHINGTON (AP) - Military officials said Monday that eight prisoner deaths in Afghanistan have been investigated since mid-2002, a higher number than previously reported. Human Rights Watch said slow-paced investigations had ``spawned a culture of impunity'' that may have fueled prisoner abuse in Iraq.
``It's time for the United States to come clean about crimes committed by U.S. forces in Afghanistan,'' said Brad Adams, the group's Asia division director.
Failure to prosecute incidents in Afghanistan has allowed abusive interrogation techniques to spread to Iraq, Adams said. ``The U.S. government is dragging its feet on these investigations,'' he said.
A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Col. John Skinner, said commanders go to ``enormous lengths to investigate any credible allegations of detainee abuse.'' Many death investigations have determined that detainees died due to natural causes or because of injuries suffered before their capture, he said.
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