Abuse of war zone detainees: Veterans' perceptions of acceptability

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Abstract

We assessed detainee abuse acceptance and variables associated with it. Outpatients from a veterans' hospital were administered questionnaires with three increasingly severe scenarios of a U.S. soldier abusing a detainee. Three questionnaire versions differed in the final line of each version's scenarios, describing abuse either as: soldier initiated, superior ordered, or wrong by a "whistleblower" soldier. Three hundred fifty-one veterans participated, 80% with service during the Vietnam War. Zero tolerance for abuse - "completely unacceptable" regardless of who the detainee was - increased with abuse severity (16% for exposure, 31% for humiliation, and 48% for rape of detainee) and with soldier initiation. The strongest, most consistently significant odds were of depressed veterans, veterans with comorbid depression/post-traumatic stress disorder, and men being approximately 2, 3, and 4 to 20 times more tolerant of abuse than those without depression/post- traumatic stress disorder and women, respectively. There may be potential value to using similar scenario-based questionnaires to study active duty military perceptions of detainee abuse. Results may inform prevention policies.

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APA

Holmes, W. C., Gariti, K. O., Sadeghi, L., & Joisa, S. D. (2007). Abuse of war zone detainees: Veterans’ perceptions of acceptability. Military Medicine, 172(2), 175–181. https://doi.org/10.7205/MILMED.172.2.175

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