Home > Third batch of Joe Ryan diaries (7-18 Mar 04 entries)

Third batch of Joe Ryan diaries (7-18 Mar 04 entries)

by Open-Publishing - Monday 14 June 2004

I have now obtained yet another installment of Abu Ghraib interrogator Joe Ryan’s diaries. This batch has been reconstructed from the search results preview text in the Wisenut search engine (http://www.wisenut.com/), and covers the period 7th - 18th March 2004. The new entries join the already discovered entries for April 11-26 (Google cache) and March 21 - April 02 (Alexa cache).

If you want to find out about the method used to reconstruct the diary entries, scroll down past the diary entries to the "How the entries were recovered" section.

These newest diary entries shed some light on the corporate shenanigans going on at the time. Ryan alleges that CACI International, his employer, was still using unqualified and untrained interrogators at Abu Ghraib as late as 7th March 2004: "In reviewing our manning document with LTC Faust this evening, I noticed that we have three people doing interrogations that are not school trained or certified. This is a rather large problem. LTC Faust stated that Tom Howard, one of our CACI higher ups working at the C2, told him that we could use analysts that showed promise and turn them into junior interrogators. After recovering from my convulsions, I explained that I would like my next stop to be home, not Ft. Leavenworth."

To summarize, there are now three sets of Joe Ryan diary entries:

* The April 11-26 entries, recovered from the Google cache:
this article broke the news of them: http://billmon.org/archives/001442.html
and a copy of the cached page is here: http://www.cyberjournalist.net/features/joeyrandiary.mht

* The Mar 21-April 02 entries, recovered from the cache of the Alexa search engine.
See last Wednesday’s UK Indymedia: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/292976.html
and the page in Alexa’s cache is here:
http://vista.alexa.com/cgi-bin/docache?CID=DW_crawl13.20040404223802_3491_77541762
Billmon has an excellent take on them: http://billmon.org/archives/001527.html

* These newest entries, for Mar 7-18, reconstructed from the snippets of text given by the Wisenut search results pages.

The reconstructed diary entries are given below. Then, an explanation of how the diary entries were recovered is given, plus the complete list of the search terms used.

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Joe Ryan Iraq Diary

18 March 2004

Last night was a shocking night. The hotel that was hit is right on the other side of the river from where the coalition forces patrol. That side of town is not secured. When the bomb went off, US forces sent teams over there to try and help, to include medical personnel. They were blocked off and turned back by Iraqis in the area. That was unexpected and sad because the engineer crews and medics sure could have helped. Today was even busier. Basra, in southern Iraq, had a hotel bombed. Fallujah received rockets into town that struck buildings and started fires. The "green zone" in Baghdad was hit again as well. It is weird seeing that Basra and Baghdad are getting hit so hard because those areas have been some of the more stable areas since we got here. Fallujah has not. I hope that this gets a little more under control in the near future, but I know that the attacks of soft targets will continue at least until the transitional government takes power at the end of June. Things have been pretty quiet here (knock on wood) and we have really beefed up our force here. Hopefully we will continue to keep our strong presence here and sufficiently deter attacks since it appears that they are only hitting areas that are easy targets. The International Red Cross arrived here today. They caused quite a stir when they started handing out these magazine type booklets to the detainees. In the booklet, it was all in Arabic and when one of the linguists started translating it, we found that it was anti-American propaganda. There was even a picture of a plane dropping a bomb on a child flying a kite. Needless to say, once this was discovered, the Colonel had the entire crew sent out of the front gate. They were supposed to be here a week, but he told them that until they account for their actions with Paul Bremer, they are not setting foot back inside our walls.

17 March 2004

Happy St Patrick’s Day. My sister sent a great big leprechaun hat and I had fun wearing it all day. It was quite the
site in the chow hall as everyone thought is was great. Since it was my day off today, I went into the chow hall early with the food coloring that also was sent by Diane and colored all of the water bottles on the tables. It sure is fun to make people laugh and smile in a place like this. Earlier in the day, Scott, one of the CACI guys that I have become good friends with, and I went down to where the military folks live and showed them how to build bunks like we have. It is much better than the cots they are currently using. Their Sergeant Major was against the idea until he came down the other night and took a look at our and realized that the soldiers could store their footlockers underneath and make everything look ’dress right dress.’ This is the same sergeant major who’s self admitted number one priority is soldiers wearing their uniforms in strict accordance with regulations. So much for common sense in a combat zone. Scott and I built two for them with them watching each step and then turned them loose. I bought a circular saw when ours gave up the ghost, so they are having fun actually using power tools. I took my clothes to the little dry cleaner shop we have on post. It is run by a local Iraqi family and they are a fun group of people. It sure is nice to have clean clothes. The Iraqis at the cleaners do not understand St Patrick’s Day, but they sure thought the big hat was funny! The free Brown and Root service is not making many friends as they have been losing clothes and staining others. The problem is that they take them to another military installation for cleaning and do not have a whole lot of control over the service there. We are planning on having a game night with cards and some movies tonight. A little green beer and the night would be complete!!

16 March 2004

There is a Marine Division replacing the 82nd Airborne Division out in Fallujah over the next couple of weeks. For bearings, we are half way between Fallujah and the Baghdad International Airport. The airport is on the western side of Baghdad. Since shortly after we had the ambush on our reaction force, we have had beefed up security. I told you about the Bradleys that were here and tore up the mortar teams. We also have regular patrols of Apache gunships along the highway all the way from the airport to Fallujah. Since we are next to the highway, we get free patrols all day. To give you an idea of how powerful they are, I have a video from one of the gunships that has been passed around. From three miles out, the gunship auto-locked and took out three individuals in a field...at night!! Since we are the only permanent theatre detainee facility, there have been efforts to boost our security. As the two companies of 82nd Airborne guys have moved out as of yesterday, an entire battalion of Marines has moved in to replace them. The 870th MP company that lives down by us leaves next Sunday and their replacements are the Long Range Surveillance unit from Michigan that numbers 150 men. It is nice living in hard sites and seeing the firepower improve. We are now integrating a new computer system for our intelligence database. Although it is said that it has a lot more capabilities than the current system we are using, it is much less user friendly and has a lot of bugs in it. They have been trying to bring this system on-line for the last three years and it keeps getting kicked back due to failures. The technicians that are here to teach people how to use it are very thin skinned about pointing out deficiencies. The funny part is that the system will be replaced within a year anyway. That is the typical progression. We were out on the deck right after getting back tonight and heard a loud whooshing sound like a
bottle rocket on steroids. There was no boom at the end of it. I went down and told the MPs and they rolled out a team and found an unexploded RPG round. It was sure a nice piece of dumb luck that we were standing out there to hear it so the unexploded round could be disposed of.

15 March 2004

The Ides of March. The downfall of Caesar and the success of American interrogators. I have been working a shift from
noon to midnight. We usually run over when we get a decent amount of reportable information. As interrogators, we always
are in competition to see who gets the best information from their interrogation. The other extreme is who had the person who should not have been detained. (Nobody even accused us of being sound of mind). Tonight I was sure I had the winning interrogation for information gathered. I came out with information to write three different reports. It paled in comparison to what two other people got tonight. I guess tonight was the night the detainees decided to all give up. The other end of the spectrum is the 4th Infantry Division. We have a little skit we act out for their Division Commander. We pour a cup of coffee, puff out our chest, and survey the room. Then you say in a thunderous voice, "Boys, today I want 150 Iraqis captured." Although this is our skit, it is all too true. The 4th Infantry Division thinks that there is a prize
if they leave the country with holding the record for the most Iraqi prisoners sent to Abu Ghurayb. The facts are this; when they hit a targeted house, they arrest every male over the age of 16 within a mile of the house just in case. This is why nobody has EVER accused the infantry of being intelligent. We received three new people today. We also have six people that are heading out to Division areas in the next week. The three new people are pretty good and one is an interrogator. Thank goodness because we are starting to run thin on interrogators in theatre. We increased the number of translators here by seven in the last week, which lets us do our job better, but a few interrogators have been sent to Divisions so we have to make up for that. Manpower will be a constant issue over here. The simple fact is that there are not enough army personnel to accomplish the mission. I, to the surprise of many who know me, will admit that this has nothing to do with politics. The simple fact is that the intelligence community has made signals intelligence the "sexy" aspect of intelligence and has ignored the human intelligence (HUMINT) aspect as a result. Well, last time I checked, most people around here do not use satellite phones, cell phones, or even regular telephones. They do no t hook up very well in caves and sand dunes. The only way to obtain intelligence information around here is to have personnel on the ground. I would say only one if fifty of the detainees that I talk to have phones.

14 March 2004

One of the guys who came over here with me, Jose Almanzar, headed out to work with one of the roving HUMINT Support Teams that support the individual Division assets. He will be missed. He is a good friend and kind of a celebrity in the intelligence world. While he was still in the army (he recently got out), he was with the first wave of military interrogators to go to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba when it was set up to take Al Quada detainees. He is also the one who identified and initially interrogated the person who is truly identified as the 20th high-jacker from the September 11th attacks. The story can be found in one of the January issues of Newsweek. The beautiful irony is that Jose is from New York City, so it could not be a better scenario for who got to look the terrorist in the eye. I had a very long day and did not make it back to my prison cell (I love saying that) until 4:30am. I did not anticipate this. I had a detainee tonight that we knew was somewhat involved with activities, but about an hour into the interrogation, he just started spilling his guts. Report writing became a large project tonight. We continue to enjoy nice weather and actually, the walk back to the living area was pretty cold tonight...a frigid 60 degrees or so. The mosquitoes over here are really coming out. They are not too numerous, but I think they have Kevlar exoskeletons because they just don’t seem to die when you hit them. The prospect that I may be taking over the site lead position when Dan leaves is looking more like a reality. I found out today that James Mayo, a man that could run this entire war operation single handedly, gave Dan his recommendation for me to take the manager position. This is humbling considering that James is a 30+ year law enforcement veteran that has done some
incredible things in his life. If I can be half as successful at life as he has been, I will consider myself very fortunate.

10 March 2004

Today was my day off, so I was busier than usual. We had to take Michele, one of the
CACI personnel that came over here the same time I did, to the airport. She will be spending the next week in Kuwait getting her foot surgically repaired. The medics thought it was a planter wart, but when they could not get it to heal up with treatment and it became worse, they decided to send her to Kuwait to get it looked at and fixed. She has been a real trooper. She has been battling with this since we got here and she has not missed a day of work. This includes the mile walk to and from work each day. This is the mentality and heart of the people working over here. While down at Camp Victory, I learned that they received a few mortars the other night and one of them hit the AAFES warehouse. It sure made for slim pickings at the post exchange store. I dropped off the timecards for our guys at CACI headquarters while down there and found out that Dan has not checked in with them for more than 48 hours. He was supposed to be on a plane from Ramstein Air Force Base two days ago. There is a little concern from us that he has decided to not return. Hopefully this is not the case. He is a good manager and good man. Above all, we hope he is doing ok. We had an incident with one of the interpreters this afternoon. He is actually not an active interpreter. He was fired back in December, but since Titan does not have a place for him, he is still here. He decided that he could help himself to our resources and just came sauntering in and hooked up to our internet connection. He was asked politely to leave by one of our guys and after he answered in a very rude manner, they came down and got me. After he told me to exercise a few expletives, I proceeded to go get CW# Dave Cope who is in charge of the interpreters before I throttled this punk. Come to find out, this interpreter has picked fights before and is why he was fired. He was told his bags better be packed and ready to go tomorrow when the Titan country manager gets here. The issue with Titan is that CACI spent $21,000 renovating the area where the interpreters reside under a verbal agreement that they would reimburse and also pay for half of the kitchen, tv room, and c omputer set up. When the bill came, Titan said they were no longer interested. I guess they want to keep in normal modus operandi with their current SEC fraud, waste, and abuse investigation. It is pathetic the way they treat their employees. To date, they have yet to provide a single thing to their folks up here. We received the four persons responsible for the Karbala bombing tonight. I have already been informed that I will have the pleasure of dealing with them tomorrow. They found the remains of the Marine Lieutenant Colonel and the Coalition Provisional Authority representative in the trunk of the car that the four detainees were caught in. Rest assured, these four will be turned over to the new Iraqi government when the time is right and dealt with more harshly than we ever would be allowed.

09 March 2004

The weather is holding quite nice. I know it is too much to hope avoiding the blistering summer heat, but we sure are not complaining about the nice temperatures now. I was asked what the booth was. We have two steel Connex containers (like a semi trailer) with doors cut into the sides. The containers are partitioned into three sections that are about 10 feet by 10 feet. In each booth, there is an air conditioner/heater, table and a few chairs. There is also a one way window for observations and, since the investigation last fall, there are also video cameras in each booth. With every interrogation, I have just the interpreter in with me, but sometimes I will have a junior interrogator in with me to get them trained up. We also will periodically have someone else in the booth from another government entity if the detainee is of high value or specific intelligence value. I am still running the three ring circus since there is no word from Dan or our folks at Camp Victory. It actually has been going very smoothly the last few days now that we have most of the issues ironed out. The guys have been great in pitching in and helping whenever needed. It is frustrating trying to get through all of the detainees that we have here. The normal flow is when a unit detains someone, they go to a Division level cage (detention facility). They usually spend a week or so there and are assessed by field interrogators at that point. Once initial interrogations are performed, the detainee is supposed to be assessed. If they potentially have further intelligence value or there is strong evidence linking them to illegal activities, they come here. If they were the case of wrong place at the wrong time, they are supposed to be released. The problem we are encountering is that no one at the Division level is willing to release a detainee and so they send everyone here. Since we are a Joint Interrogation Facility, we have the responsibility to talk to everyone and have to send each file to the Detainee Assessment Board to be reviewed before someone can be released. Since we are limited on linguists, this is an arduous process.

08 March 2004

I enjoyed reading letters from a class of third graders today. I took them into work and passed them around for everyone to enjoy. It is a great reminder of why we are here. We had a mouse decide to take up residence in our room yesterday. Fortunately, he did not get into any of our food stuff before I set a trap for him with success. I found that mice in Iraq love EZ Cheese. Hopefully this will not be an ongoing problem, but since we live in prison cells in one of the most notorious prisons in history, I will leave the traps set from now on. We have a couple of guys from other government agencies staying here for a while. They were put up by the army, but went straight to the Colonel complaining that they have to be on cots while we have our nice area down here. I was called in and then proceeded to show them pictures that some of the guys took of this area before we moved in. after seeing how much clean-up we had to do and me telling them that we earned this area, they backed off the Colonel. I had a short temper when dealing with this particular agency due to dealings with these clowns in the past. They are arrogant and usually ignorant as well so none of us are in a hurry to do them any favors. They have already burned bridges here by coming in and removing a couple detainees without authorization.
The result is that their agency had to send a couple guys to stay here or they could not come in and talk to any detainees. They also will have someone watching through the glass to ensure they adhere to our policie s. Some are asking about where I am located versus the news. The ’green zone’ is the area from central Baghdad to the southwest suburbs that is under relatively stable control by American forces. I am not in the ’green zone.’ Abu Ghurayb Prison is northwest of Baghdad right in the middle of the ’Sunni Triangle.’ The Sunni Triangle extends from Baghdad to Fallujah and is the area that is considered the ’red zone.’ The Sunni Triangle is the last area of any type of organized Baathist resistance. The last couple of days have been house cleaning as far as interrogations. I am letting my others stew for a couple of days as I have a couple of days of three-a-day interrogations coming up. Those will be some long days, but I have to admit it is an awesome feeling gleaning the intelligence to bring down these groups.

07 March 2004

It is terrible when the people working above you have no concept on laws or regulations.
In reviewing our manning document with LTC Faust this evening, I noticed that we have three people doing interrogations that are not school trained or certified. This is a rather large problem. LTC Faust stated that Tom Howard, one of our CACI higher ups working at the C2, told him that we could use analysts that showed promise and turn them into junior interrogators. After recovering from my convulsions, I explained that I would like my next stop to be home, not
Ft. Leavenworth. We brought in CW4 Olson and he concurred with my assessment. Now that is has been brought to the
attention of the command, it will be there call to deal with it, but I know it will be dealt with swiftly. The guerilla movement over here is basically broken down into two groups remaining. The remnants of the Baathist government and the foreign jihadists who came in from other countries to fight the United States. The Baathist loyalists are secular and are the ones trying to engage the American forces in traditional guerilla fashion. The foreign jihadists are religious zealots are the ones engaging softer targets, in particular suicide bombers. The foreign jihadists could have been much more successful if they would have had a better coordinated effort with the former Baathists. The other shortcoming was that the Sunni Muslims are helping some, but the Shiites are not helping in mass and since the Shiites make up majority of the population, they hampered the resources available. I am sure not complaining that things are going pretty well over here. Here is sit in the middle of the Sunni triangle and we are not even getting hit very hard. We have not had a mortar attack since the Bradley Fighting Vehicles tore up the last attackers (literally) and we had small arms fire on our towers for the first time since then tonight. That fire tends to stop quickly when the Mark 19 automatic grenade launchers start firing and the 50 caliber machine guns let loose. The bombing tonight in Baghdad is a prime example of the total limit of operations that can be conducted. These bombings are conducted in areas that the military is not fortified and showing a strong presence. I saw that on the news they were reporting that the rockets attacks were around the corps headquarters.
This is not exactly true. The Al Rasheed hotel is the one five star type hotel in Iraq and is where some of the theater
generals stay, but there is no way for someone to get close enough to do serious damage. this would explain only one injured. We finished getting our internet hooked up here in our living area and it is great. Now I can stay right here in the area and work on the computer. I also do not have to worry about time limits.

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How the above diary entries were recovered from the Wisenut search engine, and a list of the search terms used


The Wisenut search engine ( http://www.wisenut.com/ ) does not have a ’Cached page’ link next to its search results. However, the search results *do* show a couple of lines of text from each hit. An obvious search for Ryan’s diary gave me the first couple of lines of Wisenut’s version of Ryan’s diary (’joe ryan diary am1500’). Then, by searching for the last few words in that couple of lines, I was able to obtain the next couple of lines of text from the cached page. Repeating this process an extremely tediously large number of times gave the entire text of the article in 2-line snippets. There is enough of an overlap between each snippet to be able to amalgamate the snippets with confidence.

If you wish to check the validity of the reconstruction, and you have plenty of time on your hands, run the following searches through Wisenut. Alternatively, you can use the semi-automatic diary entry extractor:

http://nyc.indymedia.org/usermedia/text/11/joe_ryan_wisenut_extractor.html

This webpage has within it a Javascript program which contains a list of the search strings, and automatically runs a batch of the searches for you. To use it, download it and this helper html file:

http://nyc.indymedia.org/usermedia/text/4/joe_ryan_wisenut_search.html

to the same directory and open ’joe_ryan_wisenut_extractor.html’ in Internet Explorer 6 (other browsers not yet tested). The program only works properly when run locally in your computer. The source code is short and simple - check it first in Notepad if you’re concerned about viruses, etc.

For background info on the Wisenut search engine, see this:
http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/2160871

18 March 2004 search terms:

joe ryan diary am1500

am1500 "hotel that was hit is right on the"

"US forces sent teams over"

"area. That was unexpected and sad because"

"could have helped. Today was even"

"hotel bombed. Fallujah received rockets"

"started fires. The green zone in Baghdad"

"weird seeing that Basra and Baghdad"

"Fallujah has not. I hope that this"

"control in the near future, but I know that the"

"government takes power at the end of" hubbard

"power at the end of June. Things have"

am1500 "beefed up our force"

"sufficiently deter attacks"

"targets. The International Red Cross arrived"

"They caused quite a stir when they started handing"

"and when one of the linguists started translating it, we"

"There was even a picture of a plane dropping a bomb on a"

"front gate. They were supposed"

"told them that until they account for their actions with"

17 March 2004 search terms:

"inside our walls. 17 March 2004"

"sent a great big leprechaun hat"

am1500 "I went into the"

am1500 "It sure is fun to make people"

am1500 "I went down to where the military folks"

am1500 "bunks like we have. It is much"

am1500 "Their Sergeant Major was against the"

am1500 "make everything look" hubbard

am1500 "make everything look dress right dress"

am1500 "self admitted number one priority"

am1500 "for common sense in a combat zone"

am1500 "when ours gave up the ghost"

am1500 "It is run by a local Iraqi"

am1500 "but they sure thought the"

am1500 "friends as they have been losing clothes"

"another military installation for cleaning"

"a game night with cards"

16 March 2004 search terms:

"Marine Division replacing the 82nd Airborne"

"half way between Fallujah and the Baghdad"

"had the ambush on our reaction force"

am1500 "also have regular patrols"

"patrols all day. To give"

"video from one of the gunships"

"took out three individuals in a"

"there have been efforts to boost our"

"moved out as of yesterday"

"leaves next Sunday"

"It is nice living in hard sites"

"intelligence database. Although"

am1500 "current system we are using"

"been trying to bring this system"

am1500 "to use it are very thin"

am1500 "within a year anyway. That is the"

"tonight and heard a loud whooshing sound"

"I went down and told the MPs"

"hear it so the unexploded round"

15 March 2004 search terms:

"downfall of Caesar and the success"

"decent amount of reportable information"

am1500 "information from their interrogation"

am1500 "not have been detained"

"winning interrogation for information gathered"

"paled in comparison to what two"

am1500 "4th Infantry Division. We have"

"chest, and survey the room"

"this is our skit, it is all too"

"record for the most Iraqi prisoners sent"

am1500 "facts are this; when they hit"

"EVER accused the infantry of being"

"heading out to Division areas"

"goodness because we are starting to run"

"which lets us do our job better"

"make up for that. Manpower"

"fact is that there are not enough army"

"politics. The simple fact"

"signals intelligence the sexy aspect"

"result. Well, last time"

"satellite phones, cell phones, or even"

"caves and sand dunes. The only"

"way to obtain intelligence information around"

am1500 "talk to have phones"

14 March 2004 search terms:

"headed out to work with one of the roving"

"individual Division assets. He will"

"Division assets. He will be missed"

"celebrity in the intelligence world. While"

am1500 "he was with the first wave"

"Al Quada detainees. He is also"

"interrogated the person who is truly identified"

"The story can be found in one of the January"

"for who got to look the terrorist"

"make it back to my prison"

"knew was somewhat involved with"

"writing became a large project tonight"

"frigid 60 degrees or so. The"

"exoskeletons because they just don’t seem to die when"

"prospect that I may be taking"

"entire war operation single"

"This is humbling considering that"

"successful at life as he has been"

10 March 2004 search terms:

"day off, so I was busier than usual"

am1500 "airport. She will be spending"

"surgically repaired. The medics thought"

"planter wart, but when they could not"

"Kuwait to get it looked at and fixed. She has been"

"trooper. She has been battling with"

am1500 "day of work. This includes"

"mentality and heart of the people"

"night and one of them hit the AAFES"

"pickings at the post exchange store"

"Dan has not checked in with them"

am1500 "He was supposed to be on a plane"

"case. He is a good manager"

am1500 "We had an incident with one of the"

"Titan does not have a place for him"

"resources and just came sauntering in"

"guys and after he answered in"

"expletives, I proceeded to go get CW"

"find out, this interpreter has picked"

"tomorrow when the Titan country manager gets here"

"renovating the area where the interpreters"

"half of the kitchen, tv room, and" hubbard

"half of the kitchen, tv room, and c omputer"

"Titan said they were no longer interested"

"investigation. It is pathetic the way"

"have yet to provide a single thing"

"Karbala bombing tonight. I have already"

am1500 "dealing with them tomorrow"

"Colonel and the Coalition Provisional Authority"

"detainees were caught in. Rest"

"new Iraqi government when the time"

"when the time is right and dealt with"

9 March 2004 search terms:

"The weather is holding quite"

"complaining about the nice temperatures now"

"We have two steel Connex containers"

"feet. In each booth, there is"

"chairs. There is also a one way"

"investigation last fall, there are also"

"interrogation, I have just the interpreter"

"periodically have someone else in the"

"I am still running the three ring circus since"

am1500 "days now that we have most of the issues"

"helping whenever needed. It is frustrating"

"have here. The normal flow"

"they go to a Division level cage (detention facility"

"assessed by field interrogators at that point"

"supposed to be assessed. If they potentially"

am1500 "or there is strong evidence linking them to"

"case of wrong place at the wrong time"

"Division level is willing to release a detainee"

"Since we are a Joint Interrogation Facility"

"someone can be released" hubbard

"someone can be released. Since we are limited on"

8 March 2004 search terms:

am1500 "2004 I enjoyed reading"

am1500 "reminder of why we are here"

"set a trap for him with"

"Hopefully this will not be an ongoing problem"

am1500 "We have a couple of guys from"

"complaining that they have to be on cots"

"called in and then proceeded to show them pictures"

am1500 "me telling them that we earned"

"particular agency due to dealings"

am1500 "of us are in a hurry to do them any"

"by coming in and removing a couple detainees without"

"stay here or they could not come"

"watching through the glass to ensure they"

"green zone is the area from central"

"Abu Ghurayb Prison is northwest of"

"area of any type of organized Baathist resistance"

"I am letting my others stew for a couple"

"have to admit it is an awesome feeling"

7 March 2004 search terms:

am1500 "when the people working above you have no"

am1500 "I noticed that we have three"

am1500 "This is a rather large problem"

am1500 "showed promise and turn them into junior"

"turn them into junior interrogators. After recovering"

"I would like my next stop to be"

am1500 "concurred with my assessment"

am1500 "but I know it will be dealt with"

am1500 "here is basically broken down"

am1500 "came in from other countries to fight"

am1500 "are the ones trying to engage"

am1500 "religious zealots are the ones engaging softer"

am1500 "successful if they would"

am1500 "The other shortcoming was that the Sunni Muslims"

"population, they hampered the resources" hubbard

am1500 "resources available. I am sure not"

am1500 "going pretty well over here"

am1500 "We have not had a mortar attack since"

am1500 "tonight. That fire"

"automatic grenade launchers start firing"

"bombing tonight in Baghdad is a prime example"

"military is not fortified and showing a strong"

"reporting that the rockets attacks were around the corps"

"one five star type hotel in Iraq"

"close enough to do serious damage"

am1500 "serious damage. this would"

am1500 "hooked up here"

"work on the computer" hubbard broadcasting

am1500 ryan diary "hubbard broadcasting inc"