You know, this is exactly why Mr. Rumsfeld called the torture "un-American" (there's another thread about his choice of wording). It's not all Americans doing it, but some people want to speak, think, and act as if it were all Americans.
It wasn't every US citizen.
It wasn't every US soldier.
It wasn't every US soldier in Iraq.
It wasn't the majority of US soldiers in Iraq.
It wasn't a significant portion of the soldiers in Iraq.
It was a small minority of US personnel in Iraq. A very small minority.
The night I first heard about and saw the pictures showing the terrible treatment of Iraqi prisoners, I was absolutely pissed. Not because "we" got caught in the act, but because it shouldn't have happened at all. I found my self thinking how these soldiers were guilty of atrocities very similar to those we went to Iraq to prevent. I believed - and still believe - that our military is in Iraq to make that country a better place for its citizens. What I was seeing on TV went against everything I believe our presence in Iraq represents. I was so angry to see soldiers that have no idea why they are there, what they represent, nor what standard they need to hold themselves to. What they did was un-American, not even close to accepted by the vast majority of Americans, and not even close to accepted by the vast majority of American military personnel.
Remember, it was an American soldier who blew the whistle and lead the military to open an investigation back in December. The majority of Americans in Iraq are like that whistle-blower, not like the torturers.
I live less than a mile from an Air Force base, so there are a lot of military families in my neighborhood. Some of my friends and neighbors are in Iraq right now. I know that none of them are mistreating Iraqis. First of all, most US soldiers aren't in a situation where they could mistreat Iraqis even if they wanted to. And they don't want to. That's obvious from what I hear from their families. All of them 1) are anxious to come home, 2) want Iraq to be a better place for the sake of the Iraqi people, and 3) wish they could do more to help. Many feel somewhat helpless, like nothing they can do will help Iraq be a peaceful country where Iraqi children don't have to live in fear, where the violent few don't threaten the safety of the peaceful majority. Without exception they want Iraqis to be happy.
Please don't confuse the actions of the majority with the actions of the few. Don't confuse the behavior of the guilty with the standards held by the innocent. And don't confuse your version of the US military's motives (even if you are right) with the motives of the individual soldiers who have sacrificed time, money, family, and perhaps even their lives to help make the world a better place for all, including the Iraqi people. You may not believe that's why they are there, but they believe that's why they are there.