[DEBATE] : List of Accusations of GIs in Iraq stuns experts

tony roshan samara straightup00us at yahoo.com
Mon Sep 25 17:11:48 BST 2006


      List of accusations of GIs in Iraq stuns       experts
      By Associated Press
      09/24/06 "AP'       -- -- The accounts are brutal: An Iraqi man dragged from his       home, executed and made to look as if he were an insurgent.       Three prisoners killed by their Army captors. A team of       revenge-seeking Marines going home to home, shooting down       unarmed Iraqi men, women, children.
      
      The recent flurry of accusations against U.S. servicemen has       stunned military analysts and experts. Many see a critical new       point in the war — though few agree whether it shows the toll of       combat stress, commanders resolved to stamp out war crimes, or,       as some claim, an overzealous second-guessing of the troops.
      
      But the number and gravity of the latest allegations have drawn       the greatest outcry against U.S. military actions since the Abu       Ghraib prison abuses.
      
      “All of a sudden there seem to be charges right and left,” said       Loren Thompson at the Lexington Institute, a defense think tank       in Arlington, Va. “It clearly has happened in some cases. But       it’s hard to tell whether this is a pattern of wrongdoing on our       part or just a pattern of closer supervision.”
      
      List of alleged incidents
      So far, none of the troops accused in the latest cases has even       been tried:
                                                               
   On Friday,              a Pennsylvania National Guard              spokesman said two Guardsmen were              being investigated in connection              with the shooting death of an Iraqi              earlier this year.             
   On              Wednesday, seven Marines and one              Navy corpsman were charged in the              April shooting death of an Iraqi man              in the town of Hamdania. Charging              documents claim the man was taken              from his home, forced into a hole,              shot and left with a stolen AK-47              near him to make it look as if he              fought the troops.             
   On Monday              and Wednesday, three soldiers and a              noncommissioned officer were charged              in the May deaths of three unarmed              Iraqis in military custody in              Salahuddin province. A Pentagon              official told The Associated Press              that the detainees were shot while              trying to flee.
                        Those             accusations come a few months after             another disturbing charge — that in             Haditha, a town in the Sunni hotbed of             Anbar province, members of a Marine unit             killed up to two dozen unarmed Iraqis in             and outside their homes after a roadside             bomb killed one of the troops. Neighbors             told the AP that a small group of             Marines went house to house over three             hours, while others stood watch.
                                                                                                                                             The death                   penalty is a                   possible                   punishment in at                   least some of                   these cases.

                
               
              
             
            
                                                                                                                                             Combat stress                   theory
                  One view is                   that, if proven                   true, these                   incidents                   reflect the toll                   Iraq has taken                   on U.S. troops.                   Since 2003, they                   have dealt with                   constant heat                   and filth,                   blurred lines                   between civilian                   and enemy, and                   insurgents who                   rely on dirty                   tactics like                   suicide and                   roadside bombs,                   lack of uniforms                   and beheadings.
                                                      “This is                   one of the                   nastier kinds of                   fights you could                   be in,” said                   Michael                   O’Hanlon, a                   defense analyst                   at the Brookings                   Institution.                   American troops                   “obviously lost                   a lot of their                   own compatriots,                   a lot of them                   have been there                   a number of                   times. Morale is                   still pretty                   strong, but I                   would think                   there’s a                   psychological                   toll.”
                                                      Some say                   that’s to be                   expected, but                   criminal                   behavior still                   must be                   prevented: War                   crimes are an                   indictment of                   leadership.
                                                      “It’s                   symptomatic of a                   combat stress                   management                   system that has                   failed,” said                   John Pike,                   director of                   Globalsecurity.org,                   a                   Washington-based                   military think                   tank.

                
               
              
             
            
                                                                                                                                             “Anybody                   who contemplates                   a decision to                   use force,                   anybody who                   contemplates                   putting boots on                   the ground has                   to understand                   that part of                   what they’re                   assuming                   responsibility                   for is                   stressed-out                   soldiers are                   going to                   massacre                   civilians. It                   just comes with                   the territory.”
                                                      Still,                   Pike said that                   even if true,                   the number of                   abuse cases                   isn’t shocking,                   given the number                   of troops and                   three-plus years                   of combat: “If                   this is the                   worst that the                   troops have                   done, the chain                   of command would                   appear to have                   done a pretty                   good job.”
                                                                        Blind                   eye opens
                  Others see a                   more emphatic                   message from                   military leaders                   to the troops                   and their field                   commanders.

                
               
              
             
            
                                                                                                                                             “The                   system which                   tended to turn a                   blind eye is now                   looking harder,”                   said Anthony                   Cordesman, a                   former Pentagon                   analyst.                   “Incidents which                   in the past                   might’ve been                   covered over or                   dodged are now                   leading to                   formal                   accusations.”
                                                      Others                   closer to the                   accused are                   bitter over what                   they see as a                   shift from the                   leaders in                   Washington.
                                                      “There                   seems to be a                   rush to                   judgment,” said                   Charles Gittins,                   an attorney who                   successfully                   defended former                   Marine 2nd Lt.                   Ilario Pantano,                   who was                   acquitted of                   murder after he                   shot two Iraqis                   and left a                   warning sign on                   their corpses.                   He argued                   self-defense.
                                                      “The                   war’s being run                   from the                   Pentagon and the                   Pentagon’s                   moving with the                   24-hour news                   cycle. There’s a                   tendency to                   charge first and                   let the facts                   play themselves                   out later,”                   Gittins said.                   “Back the                   soldiers!”
                                                                                          ‘Nobody’s                   running amok’
                  Pantano warned                   against sweeping                   conclusions.                   “Nobody’s                   running amok and                   being                   barbarians.
                                                      That’s so                   inaccurate,” he                   said. “The real                   jeopardy is                   there’s so much                   blowback every                   time you use                   force that                   troops are dying                   from                   hesitation.”
                                                      And the                   latest accused                   soldiers have                   yet to be fully                   heard.
                                                      In                   Charleston,                   S.C., the mother                   of 21-year-old                   Pfc. Corey R.                   Clagett — one of                   four charged                   with killing                   prisoners last                   month — said she                   spoke to her son                   by telephone.                   “He said, ’Mom,                   this is Corey. I                   didn’t do those                   things the way                   they said,”’                   Melanie Dianiska                   said.
                                                      Almost by                   definition, war                   creates chaos.                   Last week,                   Australian                   troops shot a                   civilian and a                   bodyguard to an                   Iraqi trade                   minister when                   they thought                   they were                   threatened. Two                   newly trained                   Iraqi policemen                   have been                   accused of                   shooting                   American troops.                   Meanwhile, two                   American                   soldiers were                   captured,                   brutalized and                   slain.
                                                                        Losing                   faith
                  The uncertainty                   over the troop                   accusations only                   adds to the                   confusion.
                                                      “I wonder                   whether people                   have lost faith                   in the military                   because of this                   kind of                   incident,”                   Cordesman said,                   referring to the                   allegations                   against American                   troops. A                   classic                   terrorist                   strategy, he                   noted, is to                   force the enemy                   into atrocities,                   turning the                   local population                   against the                   opponent and                   sapping its                   support at home.
                                                      Already,                   this war’s                   mistakes are                   being taught as                   cautionary                   tales. The                   failings at Abu                   Ghraib are now                   part of a West                   Point leadership                   course,                   alongside                   Vietnam’s My                   Lai, where some                   300 villagers                   were killed.
                                                      The                   military courts                   and public                   opinion will                   determine                   whether Haditha,                   Hamdania and                   Salahuddin join                   them.
                                     ©                    2006 The                    Associated                    Press.                    
                 
                
               
              
             
            
           
          
         
        
       
      
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