Haditha update...
Marine Says Rules Were Followed
Sergeant Describes Hunt for Insurgents in Haditha, Denies Coverup
What is described here has to be considered an extremely sad, but expected and not uncommon, example of the horrors of war. Has our Armed Forces have set the bar so high for themselves (we apparently could have had Zarqawi sooner, but we were concerned about civilian targets) that any civilian deaths are now considered outrageous? Has Murtha and the MSM just gone mad?
If this turns out to not be Marines losing their cool, Murtha is in trouble. These Marines are defending America. They deserve our trust and our respect...not to be sacrificed as political scapegoats.
I'm finding it hard not to be irritated with the Bush administration too. A "Mother of war" (Vickie) speaks for me...
More updates as they come...
A must-watch from HotAir:
What an impressive individual. He'll have a strong political career. Defend the defenders!
Here's a video of Pantano interviewed by Ann Curry on Today. Here's MM's post too.
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Sergeant Describes Hunt for Insurgents in Haditha, Denies Coverup
Staff Sgt. Frank D. Wuterich, 26, told his attorney that several civilians were killed Nov. 19 when his squad went after insurgents who were firing at them from inside a house. The Marine said there was no vengeful massacre, but he described a house-to-house hunt that went tragically awry in the middle of a chaotic battlefield.Here's how it apparently went down...
"It will forever be his position that everything they did that day was following their rules of engagement and to protect the lives of Marines," said Neal A. Puckett, who represents Wuterich in the ongoing investigations into the incident. "He's really upset that people believe that he and his Marines are even capable of intentionally killing innocent civilians."
On Nov. 19, Wuterich's squad left its headquarters at Firm Base Sparta in Haditha at 7 a.m. on a daily mission to drop off Iraqi army troops at a nearby checkpoint. "It was like any other day, we just had to watch out for IEDs [improvised explosive devices] and any other activity that looked suspicious," said Marine Cpl. James Crossan, 21, in an interview from his home in North Bend, Wash. He was riding in the four-Humvee convoy as it turned left onto Chestnut Road, heading west at 7:15 a.m.The rest here.
Shortly after the turn, a bomb buried in the road ripped through the last Humvee. The blast instantly killed the driver, Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas, 20. Crossan, who was in the front passenger seat, remembered hearing someone yell, "Get some morphine." Then he passed out.
Wuterich, driving the third Humvee in the line, immediately stopped the convoy and got out, Puckett said.
Puckett said that while Wuterich was evaluating the scene, Marines noticed a white, unmarked car full of "military-aged men" lingering near the bomb site. When Marines ordered the men to stop, they ran; Puckett said it was standard procedure at the time for the Marines to shoot suspicious people fleeing a bombing, and the Marines opened fire, killing four or five men.
"The first thing he thought was it could be a vehicle-borne bomb or these guys could be ready to do a drive-by shooting," Puckett said, explaining that the Marines were on alert for such coordinated, multi-stage attacks.
Iraqis in the Haditha neighborhood interviewed in recent weeks said the vehicle was a taxi carrying a group of students to their homes and that the driver tried to back away from the site, fleeing in fear. One account said that the Marines shot the men while they were still in the car.
Wuterich officially reported to his headquarters that there had been a makeshift bomb and called for a Quick Reaction Force, Puckett said. The first group encountered an unexploded bomb on another route -- fueling concerns that insurgents were mounting an attack on the daily morning convoy -- and a second force headed out. That group, including Marines with the 3rd Squad and the platoon's leader, a young second lieutenant, arrived minutes later.
Wuterich told Puckett that no one was emotionally rattled by Terrazas's death because everyone had a job to do, and everyone was concerned about further casualties. As Wuterich began briefing the platoon leader, Puckett said, AK-47 shots rang out from residences on the south side of the road, and the Marines ducked.
A corporal with the unit leaned over to Wuterich and said he saw the shots coming from a specific house, and after a discussion with the platoon leader, they decided to clear the house, according to Wuterich's account.
"There's a threat, and they went to eliminate the threat," Puckett said.
A four-man team of Marines, including Wuterich, kicked in the door and found a series of empty rooms, noticing quickly that there was one room with a closed door and people rustling behind it, Puckett said. They then kicked in that door, tossed a fragmentation grenade into the room, and one Marine fired a series of "clearing rounds" through the dust and smoke, killing several people, Puckett said.
The Marine who fired the rounds -- Puckett said it was not Wuterich -- had experience clearing numerous houses on a deployment in Fallujah, where Marines had aggressive rules of engagement.
Although it was almost immediately apparent to the Marines that the people dead in the room were men, women and children -- most likely civilians -- they also noticed a back door ajar and believed that insurgents had slipped through to a house nearby, Puckett said. The Marines stealthily moved to the second house, kicking in the door, killing one man inside and then using a frag grenade and more gunfire to clear another room full of people, he said.
Wuterich, not having found the insurgents, told the team to stop and headed back to the platoon leader to reassess the situation, Puckett said, adding that his client knew a number of civilians had just been killed.
What is described here has to be considered an extremely sad, but expected and not uncommon, example of the horrors of war. Has our Armed Forces have set the bar so high for themselves (we apparently could have had Zarqawi sooner, but we were concerned about civilian targets) that any civilian deaths are now considered outrageous? Has Murtha and the MSM just gone mad?
If this turns out to not be Marines losing their cool, Murtha is in trouble. These Marines are defending America. They deserve our trust and our respect...not to be sacrificed as political scapegoats.
I'm finding it hard not to be irritated with the Bush administration too. A "Mother of war" (Vickie) speaks for me...
Now there are the events in Haditha. I'm sure that any first year Psychology student can tell you that this is an extreme case of displaced aggression. The President has been quick to point out that any guilty parties will be held accountable. Does anyone else find this troubling? Don't get me wrong, I don't condone the killing of innocent civilians. Let me repeat that, the killing of civilians is wrong! But I am frustrated that this administration is so quick to hold our young men and women in uniform accountable for actions taken under unimaginable stress, but refuse to acknowledge their roll in it. My frustration grows when I think that some mothers son or daughter may be sentence to life in prison because they broke under the pressure that is war.I found the "Mothers of War" site after reading Marie Jon's latest effort. That also brought me to info about the movie "My Child - Mothers of War", which I expect is really good.
More updates as they come...
A must-watch from HotAir:
What an impressive individual. He'll have a strong political career. Defend the defenders!
Here's a video of Pantano interviewed by Ann Curry on Today. Here's MM's post too.
-Home-