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The Bush administration's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell Policy." U.S. intelligence
sources who served in Iraq report that after photos from Abu Ghraib prison surfaced
of naked male prisoners who were forced by their U.S. guards to form human pyramids
and masturbate, the U.S. military went into total denial mode. "It was a
'don't ask, don't tell policy,'" according to one intelligence source who
was assigned to both the Abu Ghraib and Camp Bucca prisons. Federal Judge Alvin
Hellerstein has ordered the Pentagon to release to the American Civil Liberties
Union 74 photos and 3 videotapes taken at Abu Ghraib in 2003. However, the Pentagon
is resisting the judge's order.
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There is good reason for the embarrassment of the Pentagon in the affair. The
orders to take the sexually-oriented photos and videos, some of which involve
teenage Iraqi boys and girls and sodomization by their guards, came directly from
a pedophile and closeted male homosexual ring operating in the White House, according
to the intelligence sources. Copies of the tapes and photos were sent directly
to the White House for the entertainment of senior members of the Bush White House,
including officials in the Vice President's office and the Executive Office of
the President.
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When the photos at Abu Ghraib became public, the senior military command structure
in Iraq "went nuts," according to an individual who witnessed the
cover-up of the affair. "They ordered an immediate policy of denial about
details of the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib," said the source. The source
added that senior officers were disgusted that lower ranking guards were prosecuted
and jailed when the order for the mistreatment came directly from the White
House.