‘The war in Iraq, like Vietnam, will probably be remembered as the one time that we were not the heroes. We were not the saviors. And these photographs will play a big part in that.’ – BRENT PACK, ARMY INVESTIGATOR
But nothing undermined the allies’ claim that they were helping bring democracy to the country more than the scandal at Abu Ghraib. Frederick was one of several soldiers who took part in the torture of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib. All the more incredible was that they took thousands of images of their mistreatment, humiliation and torture of detainees with digital cameras and shared the photographs. The most widely disseminated was “the Hooded Man,” partly because it was less explicit than many of the others and so could more easily appear in mainstream publications.
The man without stretched arms in the photograph was deprived of his sight, his clothes, his dignity and,with electric wires, his sense of personal safety. And his pose? It seemed deliberately,unnervingly Christlike. The liberating invaders, it seemed, held nothing sacred.