Quote from msfe:
Exclusive: Western Journalists Beaten, Starved by Americans
Essam Al-Ghalib, Arab News War Correspondent
KUWAIT CITY, 3 April 2003 â Two Western journalists have arrived safely back in Kuwait City after being arrested, beaten up and deprived of food and water in Iraq â by members of the US Armyâs military police.
http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=24644
Let's just set aside the fact that the text does not justify the headline - that if the journalists had been "starved," they wouldn't be able to describe their situations, in that they'd be dead. And let's set aside that their comments, presuming that that they're accurate at all, are distinctly unprofessional - in that they purport to describe the activities of Americans throughout Iraq, but are obviously based on a single incident in a single locale, mixed with hearsay. The exaggerated and sensationalistic tone does, however, well suit the reflexively anti-American Arab media.
Talking about journalists, and beatings:
Sounds of beatings and torture echoed through reporter's cell
By David Blair in Amman
(Filed: 04/04/2003)
A British journalist described yesterday how the cries of torture victims echoed throughout his eight nights in an Iraqi jail and prisoners were repeatedly beaten yards from his cell.
Lying on the concrete floor, Matthew McAllester, a reporter for Newsday, a US daily, endured the sound of allied air raids as jets screamed overhead and exploding bombs shook the prison walls.
"All of us, from the moment we realised we were being taken to prison to the moment we crossed into Jordan, thought our lives were in danger at any minute," McAllester said in the Jordanian capital, Amman. He said he saw prison guards beat the Iraqi inmates of neighbouring cells time and again.
"They were beaten with some kind of implement within a yard or two of where I was sleeping." McAllester, from Edinburgh, was arrested with Moises Saman, a Spanish photographer working for Newsday. Saman, 29, described the beating of prisoners as a "daily ritual".
"A group of people would come and pick on someone for whatever reason and take them away, not too far because we could hear the screams."
One prisoner was beaten so severely that he lay moaning on the floor of his cell until medical help was summoned.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/04/03/wtort03.xml
So, on the one hand, we have an exceptional incident that took place amidst battlefield conditions, and involved the rough treatment of a couple of wandering journalists, and, on the other, we have one of countless incidents that, according not to American propagandists but to globally recognized human rights organizations, are normal for Hussein's regime - a fact which, in my observation, msfe has, in months of posting, never acknowledged. If I missed the concession, I hope he'll point it out, or re-state it here.