US military commanders have reversed plans to send a soldier convicted of offenses at the Abu Ghraib prison back to Iraq after the media disclosed the deployment, the US Army said.
Spc Santos Cardona, a dog handler during his assignment at Abu Ghraib, was convicted in June of using his dog to assault a prisoner at the jail outside Baghdad.
He was sent with his military police unit from the United States to Kuwait late last month and had been preparing to go into Iraq, the army said. But after a reporter called to ask about the deployment and news of it began to spread, senior commanders ordered that Cardona should stay in Kuwait, fearing he and his unit could be targeted by insurgents because of his role at Abu Ghraib.
They later announced he would return to his base at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
The army said in a statement that Cardona would be "assigned duties commensurate with his Military Occupation Specialty and rank that allows him to be a productive member of the military police corps and the United States Army."
The army had no immediate explanation as to why Cardona's unit commanders had planned to deploy him, given his record in Iraq. The abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib came to light after pictures of the incidents were released in 2004.
Cardona was demoted from sergeant, sentenced to 90 days of hard labour and fined $7,200 by a court martial for his role in the Abu Ghraib scandal, which sparked worldwide revulsion after the pictures' release.
He was convicted of failing to handle his dog properly and using the unmuzzled Belgian shepherd to threaten an inmate with a force "likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm."
The Army said Cardona was no longer a member of a canine unit and his specific duties in Iraq for this tour of duty had not been determined when his deployment was halted. Cardona serves with the 23rd Military Police Company and deployed from Fort Bragg to Kuwait on October 30th, the army said.