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Thursday, 05/27/2004 3:30:21 AM

Thursday, May 27, 2004 3:30:21 AM

Post# of 704019
those missing 18 1/2 minutes ....

Missing Papers Have
Reference to Rumsfeld


By GREG JAFFE and DAVID S. CLOUD
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
May 27, 2004; Page A2

WASHINGTON -- U.S. officials said that among documents regarding the Iraq-prison scandal that the Pentagon failed to give Congress is one described as a "draft update for the Secretary of Defense" on interrogation rules.

The date and contents of the document referring to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld are unknown. But Col. Thomas Pappas, the senior intelligence officer at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison, has suggested in testimony to Army investigators that it discusses a set of rules to guide interrogations in Iraq and suggests that military police should "support interrogations," said a U.S. official.

It isn't clear if the draft document ever reached the defense secretary. Congressional investigators want to review it to see if Mr. Rumsfeld was involved in crafting or at least approving tough interrogation rules for prisoners in Iraq.

Congressional staffers raised concerns last week that they hadn't received 2,000 pages of the 6,000-page Army investigation into the prison-abuse scandal, conducted by Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba. Wednesday, the Pentagon acknowledged it inadvertently failed to give the Senate Armed Services Committee a full copy of the report.

Several members of the Senate Armed Services Committee are focusing on whether senior Pentagon officials played a role in putting in place coercive interrogation practices that later figured in the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. Pentagon spokesman Larry DiRita said neither Mr. Rumsfeld nor any of his senior Pentagon staff played such a role.

"I think we've exhaustively concluded that they were done in theater and improved in theater," he said. "There was no oversight or approval of any procedures and techniques being used in Iraq here in the Pentagon."

Also missing are three documents relating to a visit in late summer by Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller's to Iraq to provide suggestions on improving interrogations, officials said. They include Gen. Miller's written report about a visit to Abu Ghraib, and briefings he delivered upon entering and leaving Iraq, officials said. At the time, Gen. Miller was overseeing the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and is currently in charge of all U.S. detention facilities in Iraq.

Senior U.S. officials have testified that neither Mr. Rumsfeld nor his senior staff members were formally briefed on the results of Gen. Miller's visit. In a press conference Wednesday, Mr. DiRita also said no documents were purposely withheld. "The perception that was left was unfortunate, which is that we were somehow trying to withhold something from the committee," he said. "That was certainly not the case."

The Pentagon has asked Gen. Taguba, who is in Kuwait, to send a complete copy of his report, including all attachments, to Congress. Armed Services Committee Chairman John Warner (R., Va.) said in a memo to committee members, "I continue to believe that the department is working in good faith with the committee to provide a complete copy of the Taguba Report."

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