A lawyer for a soldier charged in the Abu Ghraib abuse case said a captain at the Iraqi prison has charged that Army Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez was present during some unspecified "interrogations and/or allegations of the prisoner abuse," The Washington Post reported on Sunday.
Citing a recording of a military hearing obtained by the newspaper, The Post said the military lawyer, Capt. Robert Shuck, was told that Sanchez, the highest-ranking US military officer in Iraq, and other senior officials were aware of what was taking place at Abu Ghraib.
Shuck is assigned to defend Staff Sgt. Ivan Frederick, one of the seven US soldiers, four men and three women, accused of abuses at the prison. One pleaded guilty on Wednesday and was imprisoned.
The Post reported on Saturday that Frederick had been accused by military police officers involved in the scandal of being an organiser of the abuse.
The US Congress and the Pentagon are both investigating the revelations of physical and sexual abuse of Iraqi inmates at the prison outside Baghdad that have surfaced in the past month. Details of the abuse, including graphic photos and sworn depositions, have shaken the Bush administration as it attempts turn back sovereignty to the Iraqis on June 30.
The Post on Saturday published testimony of soldiers speaking of fun and sadistic pleasure in abusing prisoners. A day earlier it published new images, including video, of Iraqis being beaten and sexually humiliated.
The newspaper said Shuck made the allegation regarding Sanchez at an April 2 hearing, stating he had been told that by the company commander, Capt. Donald Reese.
"Are you saying that Captain Reese is going to testify that General Sanchez was there and saw this going on?" the military prosecutor asked, according to the transcript.
"That's what he told me," Shuck said.
A Defence Department spokesman referred questions to US military officials in the Middle East. The spokesman told The Post that statements by defence lawyers or their clients should be treated with "appropriate caution."
The hearing was held at Camp Victory in Baghdad, the newspaper said, and that it obtained a copy of an audiotape recording.
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