WASHINGTON, Sept 6: The Pentagon on Wednesday issued a new policy statement explicitly requiring US military staff to respect the Geneva Conventions’ standards for treatment of prisoners held in its ‘war on terror’.

“It is DOD (Department of Defence) policy that: All detainees shall be treated humanely and in accordance with US law, the law of war and applicable US policy,” the directive reads.

“All persons subject to this directive shall observe the requirements of the law of war, and shall apply, without regard to a detainee’s legal status, at a minimum the standards articulated in Common Article 3 to the Geneva Conventions of 1949,” it adds.

Article 3 requires humane treatment of people detained during an armed conflict and forbids ‘cruel treatment and torture’ and ‘outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment’.

The policy is a switch for the administration which for years held that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to those fighting for the Taliban, Al Qaeda or other presumed terror groups.

It applies to prisoners under the authority of the Defence Department, said Bryan Whitman, a department spokesman. That means it does not apply to detainees held by CIA agents in secret prisons overseas.

The change came after the US Supreme Court ruled that the special military commissions established by the administration violated US and international law.

In July, Deputy Defence Secretary Gordon England made public an internal memo instructing military officials to treat prisoners from the ‘war on terror’, in accordance with the standards of Article 3.

Though it argued that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to terror detainees, the administration of George Bush has always insisted that it respected the human rights of detainees at the Guantanamo Bay prison.

PROHIBITIONS: Following are details of the tactics outlawed in the Pentagon’s new Army Field Manual.

Interrogators may not:

— use hoods or place sacks over a detainee’s head or use duct tape over his or her eyes

— beat or electrically shock or burn detainees or inflict other forms of physical pain

— use “water boarding,” which simulates drowning

— perform mock executions

— deprive detainees of necessary food, water and medical care

— use dogs in any aspect of interrogations.

Interrogators may:

— engage in ‘Mutt and Jeff’, or good-cop, bad-cop interrogation tactics

— use ‘false flag’, portraying themselves as someone other than American interrogators

— use ‘separation’ to keep unlawful enemy combatants apart from each other so that they can not coordinate their stories. This technique can be used only with ‘unlawful enemy Combatants’, not traditional prisoners of war, and requires special, high-level approval. The Pentagon said separation ‘does not mean solitary confinement’. —AFP/Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

Sustainable path?
Updated 13 Jun, 2026

Sustainable path?

The FY27 budget is the first clear signal that the government is ready to transition from stabilisation to growth.
Prioritising education
13 Jun, 2026

Prioritising education

THOUGH the improvement in the country’s literacy rate may be slight, as highlighted by the Economic Survey, it ...
Poverty’s rise
13 Jun, 2026

Poverty’s rise

AS attention turns to the government’s plans for the coming fiscal year, one set of figures deserves particular...
A difficult story
Updated 12 Jun, 2026

A difficult story

Unless productivity becomes the dominant target of economic policy, Pakistan will continue to oscillate between crises and fragile recovery.
Rough waters
12 Jun, 2026

Rough waters

AMONGST the key potential triggers for fresh conflict in South Asia is water. The Indian state is behaving in an...
Politicised football
12 Jun, 2026

Politicised football

ALMOST three-and-half years since Lionel Messi led Argentina to FIFA World Cup glory, the latest edition of...