US braced for Haditha effect
Create Post
Results 1 to 2 of 2
  1. #1

    Exclamation US braced for Haditha effect

    US braced for Haditha effect
    By John Simpson
    BBC News, World affairs editor


    What happened in Haditha may just possibly change the future of the war in Iraq.

    The lawyer for one of the marines accused of the massacre has told the BBC that criminal charges will probably be brought soon.

    And we have found that the marines were operating under some very disturbing conditions.

    The accusation is that after a US marine lance corporal died in a roadside bombing in Haditha last November, his fellow marines went on a killing spree.

    Twenty-four people died in the attack, including seven women and three children.

    A 12-year-old girl who survived says the Americans killed them indiscriminately.

    The marines said they had came under fire from the houses where the people died.

    The lawyer representing one marine told us he believed they would face charges, but said they were following their rules of engagement.

    "I don't think the facts will show they intentionally killed those civilians," Paul Hackett said. "It was in the heat of battle, in the heat of clearing the houses.

    "That is, like it or not, that is what those marines are required to do. They are required to close with the enemy, and kill the enemy."

    'Feral' conditions

    But Haditha is not the only massacre that has been alleged against the US forces.

    A US inquiry has cleared them of blame for the deaths of civilians in Ishaqi in March - yet leading figures in the Iraqi government are unhappy, and want a wider investigation.

    But what happened at Haditha seems more clear-cut.

    It is an intensely dangerous place for the Americans, and the battle-weary men of Kilo Company - the unit which included the marines accused of the massacre - had lost a lot of men there.

    And they were operating under disturbing circumstances.

    Kilo Company's headquarters were three miles north of Haditha, at a vast dam across the Euphrates. It is a big target, because it supplies power to much of southern Iraq.

    Four hundred men of the First Marine regiment were based in this decaying rabbit-warren. Conditions were so disgusting, many just moved out.

    They set up these unofficial shacks alongside it. Conditions at the dam have been described as "feral".

    Oliver Poole is one of the few reporters to have been there, shortly after the alleged massacre. He was shocked by these strange, primitive huts, which lacked even basic hygiene.

    "You walked in and the first words were 'F off', and they were ripping pieces of wood apart to feed the fire," he said. "You could see the conditions in which they lived. And they were filthy. It was disgusting."

    There seemed to him to be no real discipline.

    "The fact that the officers had let conditions deteriorate to the level in which where people living in such basic environment, that says something," he said. "Where were the officers keeping the standards that the US military keeps in the field?"

    Blame game

    The marines of Kilo Company are now back at Camp Pendleton, in California. But that question of keeping the men under proper control is essential.

    "The hardest thing is not necessarily killing someone or shooting someone; it's not killing someone or shooting someone when you're angry," said Paul Rieckhoff of the Iraqi Veterans Campaign.

    "When someone in your unit is killed or wounded it's like someone attacked your family. The responsibility then is on one of the squad leaders, platoon leaders, team leaders to hold those guys back."

    Up to now in the US, those against the war have blamed the people at the very top for what is happening in Iraq.

    But the news that three American soldiers have been charged in connection with the deaths of three prisoners in Iraq last month - and the probable charges over Haditha - may mean that Americans will now start blaming those who are actually fighting the war as well.

    Just as they did in Vietnam.

    Ellie


  2. #2
    June 21, 2006

    Investigation: Commanders failed to check Hadithah accounts

    Associated Press


    LOS ANGELES — An investigation into the killing of 24 Iraqis by Marines concludes that senior military personnel in Iraq did not follow up on potential inaccuracies in early accounts of the incident, according to a report published Wednesday.

    Military officials have said Marines killed the civilians in Hadithah on Nov. 19 after a roadside bomb rocked a military convoy, killing one Marine. The Marine Corps had initially attributed the civilian deaths to the bomb and crossfire during a battle between the Americans and insurgents.

    A report by Army Maj. Gen. Eldon Bargewell says problems with initial accounts submitted by Marines involved in the incident should have been apparent to commanders in the area, according to the Los Angeles Times.


    Bargewell questions why senior military officers in western Iraq did not conduct a thorough investigation into the incident. A portion of his report’s executive summary was read to the Times by a Defense Department official who requested anonymity because the report had not been released publicly.

    “Virtually no inquiry at any level of command was conducted into the circumstances surrounding the deaths,” Bargewell wrote, according to the Times. “There were, however, a number of red flags and opportunities to do so.”

    For example, the 2nd Marine Division comptroller, who was responsible for making compensatory payments to the families of the dead civilians, told the division’s judge advocate’s office, which functions as its legal counsel, that he thought the incident “might require further reporting.”

    The advocate’s office did not act on the comptroller’s request, according to the Times.

    The Marines have begun to overhaul how they investigate civilian deaths and to discipline officers who supervised the squad involved in the Hadithah incident.

    Ellie


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not Create Posts
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts