Donald J. Ryder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Donald Ryder was a United States Army officer and military lawyer. Ryder was commissioned in 1971 He was promoted to Major General in 2001 He served as the most senior officer in the Criminal Investigation Division.
In 2003 Ryder conducted an inquiry into abuse of prisoners in Iraq, cited in the Taguba Report.
Some of the key recommendations of Ryder's report were directly contrary to the recommendations of Major General Geoffrey Miller, formerly the commander of Camp Delta. Ryder recommended that the duties of the military police who guarded detainees should be strictly separated from the duties of the Military Intelligence officers who interrogated them. General Miller had urged closer cooperation between guards and interrogators. Miller had recommended that guards "set the conditions" for successful interrogation -- a vague term that some critics believe was the trigger for some of the abuse some guards later committed. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's response to the public release of the news of the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse was to ignore Ryder and Taguba's recommendations and appoint General Miller to take over direction of the prison facilities in Iraq.
[edit] References
- ^ Annex 19 of the Taguba Report, Taguba Report
- ^ As Insurgency Grew, So Did Prison Abuse: Needing Intelligence, U.S. Pressed Detainees, Washington Post, May 10, 2004
- ^ Annex 20 of the Taguba Report, Taguba Report
![]() |
This biographical article related to the United States Army is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |