War Atrocity getting some exposure (heard it on NPR too)

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Dardedar
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War Atrocity getting some exposure (heard it on NPR too)

Post by Dardedar »

US Troops Investigated Over Iraqi Massacres

By Patrick Cockburn
The Independent UK

Wednesday 22 March 2006

The US military is investigating two incidents in which American soldiers killed at least 26 Iraqi civilians and then claimed that they were either guerrillas or had died in cross fire.

The growing evidence of retaliatory killings of unarmed Iraqi families, often including children, by US soldiers seemingly bent on punishing Iraqis after an attack, will spark comparisons with the massacre of Vietnamese villagers at My Lai in 1968.

US troops have been notorious among Iraqis for their willingness to shoot any Iraqi they see in the aftermath of an insurgent attack. But it is only now that convincing and detailed information is becoming available about the killings.

In the most recent incident, in the town of Ishaqi north of Baghdad last week, Iraqi police said that US troops had shot 11 people, including five children, in their home. The local police chief, Colonel Farouq Hussein, said that all the dead had been shot in the head, according to autopsies. "It's a clear and perfect crime," he said. In an incident in the town of Haditha in western Iraq on 19 November last year, US soldiers went on a rampage in a village after a bomb attack and killed at least 15 civilians, according to witnesses and local officials cited by Time magazine in an investigation.

The US military first claimed a roadside bomb had killed a US Marine, Miguel Tarrazas, along with 15 Iraqi civilians caught in the blast. Later, a military statement said "gunmen attacked the convoy with small-arms fire" and in returning fire the Marines killed eight insurgents.

But after Time presented the US military with what Iraqis said had happened, an official investigation found that 15 of the civilians had been deliberately killed by US soldiers.

The bomb attack on the US Humvee took place at 7.15am. Eman Waleed, a nine-year-old child, lived in a house 150 yards from the explosion. "We heard a big noise that woke us all up," she recalled later. "Then we did what we always do when there's an explosion: my father goes in to his room with the Koran and prays the family will be spared harm."

The Marines claim they heard shots coming from the direction of Waleed's house. They burst in to the house and Eman heard shots from her father's room. They then entered the living room, where the rest of the family was gathered. She said: "I couldn't see their faces very well - only their guns sticking in to the doorway. I watched them shoot my grandfather, first in the chest and then in the head. Then they killed my granny."

The US soldiers started shooting in to the corner of the room where Eman and her eight-year-old brother, Abdul Rahman, were cowering. The other adults in the room tried to protect the two children with their bodies and were all shot dead. Eman and her brother were both wounded.

"We were lying there, bleeding and it hurt so much. Afterwards some Iraqi soldiers came. They carried us in their arms. I was crying, shouting, 'why did you do this to our family?' And one Iraqi soldier tells me, 'we didn't do it. The Americans did it'."

The Marines' explanation is that they heard the sound of a Kalashnikov being readied to shoot and had then fired their weapons. The Marines say they were fired at from a second house, where they broke down a door, threw in a grenade and opened fire. The eight who died in the second house included the owner, his wife, the owner's sister, a two-year-old son and three young daughters.

In a third house the Marines searched four young men were shot dead. A military investigation decided these were insurgent fighters, along with four others killed in the street.

The Marines later delivered 24 bodies to a hospital in Haditha, claiming they had been killed by shrapnel from a bomb. Dr. Wahid, the director of the hospital, said: "It was obvious to us there were no organs slashed by shrapnel. The bullet wounds were very apparent. Most of the victims were shot in the head and chest - from close range."

An US military investigation decided the deaths were "collateral damage". Relatives were paid $2,500 (£1,400) for each of the dead.

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http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/032206B.shtml
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"Imagine an enemy that says: We will kill
innocent people because we're trying to
encourage people to be free."
-- Bush, at a press conference today
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Betsy
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Post by Betsy »

This reminds me of exactly the same kinds of stories we heard during and after Viet Nam. There will always be people who say it isn't true and that the stories are being made up to undermine the US or if you talk about them you're unAmerican or whatever. Did you ever see the Winter Soldier documentary, about the Viet Nam soldiers who held a press conference/hearing to tell about all of the atrocities and how the US military had not only condoned but had programmed the soldiers to do the horrible things they did. Even though about ten vets from different branches and ranks one by one told story after horrible story about war atrocities they and their groups committed, there are people who say they were just lying.
Barbara Fitzpatrick
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Post by Barbara Fitzpatrick »

John Kerry was one of the group who came home from Viet Nam, testified about it, and worked with the Vietnam Vets for Peace - making him a major target for the chickenhawks in 2004. Even being a certified war hero didn't stop them (or apparently provide enough damage control). MSM parroted the Swiftliars. They probably will do the same to the Iraqi Vets for Peace who testify about this round of "Bury my heart at Wounded Knee".
Barbara Fitzpatrick
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