Well, from the story it appears that he claims more than one person was hooded, placed on a box, and photographed. It does seem illogical that a person who is hooded and being 'strenously questioned' would know if they were being photographed.
Of course the Army maintains that only one person was ever subjected to this specific treatment. Unfortunately, their credibility in this is as questionable as that of Mr. Qaissi.
Quote:
Certainly, he was at Abu Ghraib, and appears with a hood over his head in some photographs that Army investigators seized from the computer belonging to Specialist Charles Graner, the soldier later convicted of being the ringleader of the abuse.However, he now acknowledges he is not the man in the specific photograph he printed and held up in a portrait that accompanied the Times article. But he and his lawyers maintain that he was photographed in a similar position and shocked with wires and that he is the one on his business card. The Army says it believes only one prisoner was treated in that way.
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