Gitmo Guards Often Attacked
by Detainees
July 31, 2006
By JOHN SOLOMON
Associated Press Writer
The prisoners held at
Incident reports
reviewed by The Associated Press indicate Military Police guards are routinely
head-butted, spat upon and doused by "cocktails" of feces, urine,
vomit and sperm collected in meal cups by the prisoners.
They've been
repeatedly grabbed, punched or assaulted by prisoners who reach through the
small "bean holes" used to deliver food and blankets through cell
doors, the reports say. Serious assaults requiring medical attention, however,
are rare, the reports indicate.
The detainee
"reached under the face mask of an IRF (Initial Reaction Force) team
member's helmet and scratched his face, attempting to gouge his eyes,"
states a May 27, 2005, report on an effort to remove a recalcitrant prisoner
from his cell.
"The IRF team
member received scratches to his face and eye socket area," the report
said.
Since its creation in
early 2002, the
At one point, more
than 600 foreign men captured in the war on terror were kept there. Many have
been released to their home countries, reducing the current population to about
450. Ten detainees have been accused of war crimes, but no one has been
tried.
The Supreme Court has
ruled that the men are entitled to lawyers and access to the courts and that
the administration's original plan to give them justice through military
tribunals was illegal.
Guards currently
stationed at
"I mean, seeing
a human being act that way, it's terrifying. ... You are constantly watching
before you take your next step to see if something is about to happen,"
Navy Senior Chief Petty Officer Mack D. Keen told AP in an interview from
"You see little
signs. They kind of show their hand every once in a while. They'll take their Quran and they'll cover it up," he said. "When
you see a group of detainees taking their Quran and putting
it away, you know something is about to happen."
Moazamm Begg,
38, a prisoner for more than two years at
"This just
doesn't make sense _ especially since for Muslims this would be something that
was disgusting, something that just wouldn't be done," he said. He added
that some detainees told him they had mixed toothpaste and spit in the
cocktails to make it look like semen.
Begg, who has written a
book and spoken frequently about his experience, said most incidents he
witnessed were spontaneous reactions "when word spread" among
prisoners that a guard had done something wrong.
"I rarely saw
lone prisoners acting out on their own for no reason except if they had some
sort of mental illness or if they were on medication," he said.
Nonetheless, the
incident reports released under the Freedom of Information Act and reviewed by AP, provide a rare chronicle of events inside the prison
from the guards' perspective.
Entire wings of
prisoners were reported to become riotous after complaints emerged that guards
mishandled a Quran or mistreated prisoners. On two
occasions, however, prisoners themselves were reported to have destroyed their
Muslim holy books, the reports state.
"Detainee
residing in cell (redacted) block tore his Quran into
small pieces," a guard reported in May 2003. A month later, a prisoner
"did intentionally destroy his Quran and throw
(it) out of his cell," another report stated.
The reports detail
more than 440 incidents between guards and prisoners from December 2002 through
summer 2005 that resulted in recommendations of discipline, an average of about
three per week. The names of guards and prisoners as well as the final
discipline were blacked out by the Pentagon.
Often, guards went
weeks without reporting problems; other times incidents were bunched together
during times of frustration and tension.
For instance, nearly
a quarter of the incidents occurred in July 2005, the month dozens of detainees
started an extended hunger strike.
Tensions likewise
flared during Christmas week 2004, with inmates frequently spitting on guards.
On Christmas Eve, a prisoner who was
angry that he couldn't finish his meal was said to have used a plastic
fork-spoon utensil _ called a spork
_ to attack a guard collecting his tray.
"Detainee
stabbed the MP guard ... in the hand with his spork
from chow meal," the report said, adding the prisoner later "made a
slicing motion across his neck" and vowed to kill the guard.
With many nearing
five years in
"They'll take
the smallest things, be it a piece of rust," he said. "They told us
they are going to take that piece of rust and they are going for the jugular,
they are going for the eye. They know what our vulnerabilities are,
anatomically speaking."
Meal plates, shower
flip-flops, cleaning brushes and other items deemed harmless in civilian life
also are commonly turned into weapons, the reports said. For instance:
_"Detainee in
cell (redacted) grabbed the radio from an MP and then threw the radio at the
MP. The detainee then threw rocks at the MP," a Dec. 23, 2003, incident
report stated.
_A detainee
"reached out of his bean hole and attacked MP (name redacted) with a piece
of metal foot pad from toilet striking him on the left hip area," a July
15, 2005, report said.
_"Detainee broke
off the top of his sink, subsequently broke out the window then began throwing
the sink and pieces of pipes at the Block Guard," a March 25, 2005, report
said.
One of the most
unusual incidents detailed in the four-inch stack of incident reports occurred
when a detainee in the prison recreation yard assaulted a guard with a bloody
tail torn from a lizard.
The detainee
"caught the iguana by the tail at which time the tail detached," the
May 2005 report described. When the guard turned to talk to a commanding officer, "he felt
something strike him in the lower right back" and then "saw the tail
on the ground at his feet and blood was in the same area of his uniform."
The detainee said he was "just playing."
Nicolucci said one of the most
serious incidents occurred this May, too recent to be recorded in the
Pentagon's released reports. A prisoner staged an apparent suicide attempt
while his inmates slicked the floors with human waste, seeking to overpower
guards when they slipped, he said.
"We provide fans
in order to keep them cool," Nicolucci recalled.
"And they were using the basket, or the grate of the fan as a shield, the
blades as machetes, the pole as a battering ram."
That disturbance was
turned back in a few minutes with some guards and prisoners sustaining minor
injuries, he said.
The Landmark Legal Foundation, a conservative legal
group that fought to force the Pentagon to release the reports under the
Freedom of Information Act, said it hopes the information brings balance to the
"Lawyers for the detainees have done a great job
painting their clients as innocent victims of
Though all detainees
are foreigners, many are clearly Americanized when it comes to their insults
and gestures. Male guards are frequently derided as "donkeys" while
female guards are routinely called "bitches" or harassed by
references to their breasts or genitalia, the reports said.
In all, nearly a
quarter of incidents involved female guards, the reports show.
"They absolutely
target female guards," Nicolucci said.
"They have a lot of cultural biases about females, and we let them know in
our culture that females do everything males do in a professional job
environment, and we just hold firm."
James A. Gondles Jr., executive director of the American
Correctional Association that sets standards for
"It happens from
time to time at facilities here, but it seems the majority of ... assaults at Gitmo were either spitting, or bodily fluids being thrown
on the guards," said Gondles, who has visited
The bodily fluid
attacks are so numerous that guards now frequently wear specialized shields to
protect their faces.
The incident reports
show waves of orchestrated behavior.
For instance,
prisoners repeatedly grabbed their guards' whistles over a five-day period in
June 2004. In July 2005, guards reported several instances of rock throwing,
spitting and flip-flop hitting. Rocks were hidden under shower mats, the
reports said.
The incident reports
also are noteworthy for information that is missing. With redacted names, it is
impossible to tell whether bad behavior is widespread or the work of a few
repeat offenders. Likewise, the documents don't tell whether certain guards are
prone to confrontation.
Prisoners' hunger
strikes, suicide attempts and threats to injure themselves
aren't considered disciplinary matters and thus aren't recorded in the incident
reports. Yet the Pentagon acknowledges there have been scores of such
incidents.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a prisoner of war during
"Our personnel
there have perhaps the most difficult task you can have in the military outside
of being in a combat zone. ... These are bad
guys and some of the most hardened of hardened criminals. And some I think will
need to be kept permanently," he said.
McCain said the
detainees' behavior and the likelihood of permanent confinement only hastens
the need for the administration and Congress to finalize detention and trial policies
consistent with the Supreme Court's direction.
While
"Yes, you do get
upset but you get somebody to take your place," Keen said in explaining
how he survives the tensions of the cell block. "You go outside. You walk
it off and you come back and (say) I want to be back in the fight."