The Pentagon plans to put at least 20 more US troops before military courts for abuse of detainees in the wake of last week's high profile trial of the ringleader in the Abu Ghraib scandal, military spokesmen said yesterday.
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But while the Pentagon had hoped that Graner's conviction would demonstrate its determination to impose harsh punishment on troops who abuse detainees, the verdict provoked two very different reactions yesterday.
Although there was no official response from Iraq's interim government, reaction on the streets of Baghdad was condemnatory. Abdul-Razak Abdul-Fattah, a 65-year-old retired army officer, said he was shocked to see television footage of Graner leaving the court smiling and laughing even though his legs and hands were shackled.
"It showed on his face that he did not regret the shameful acts he and his colleagues committed," he said.
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"The truth is my son was convicted the day President Bush went on television and said seven bad apples disgraced the country," his mother, Irma Graner, told reporters.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1392087,00.html