Revealed: how US marines massacred 24
By
Sarah Baxter, Washington
Hala Jaber and Ali Rifat, Baghdad
05/28/06 "The
Times" -- -- PHOTOGRAPHS taken by American
military intelligence have provided crucial evidence that up to
24 Iraqis were massacred by marines in Haditha, an insurgent
stronghold on the banks of the Euphrates.
One portrays an Iraqi mother and young child, kneeling on the
floor, as if in prayer. They have been shot dead at close range.
The pictures show other victims, shot execution-style in the
head and chest in their homes. An American government official
said they revealed that the marines involved had “suffered a
total breakdown in morality and leadership”.
The killings are emerging as the worst known American atrocity
of the Iraq war. At least seven women and three children were
among those killed. Witness accounts obtained by The Sunday
Times suggest the toll of children may be as high as six. “This
one is ugly,” a US military official said.
In Britain, the chief of the defence staff, Air Chief Marshal
Sir Jock Stirrup, said yesterday that the “appalling” reports of
the massacre could undermine British support for the war. “This
sort of accusation does make that harder to achieve,” he said.
The pictures of the dead, which are being closely guarded by the
US naval criminal investigation service, were taken by a
military photographer who is believed to have arrived on the
scene moments after the shootings.
Many American forces are accompanied by photographers to gather
intelligence and to shield soldiers from false accusations of
torture, intimidation and violence. In this case, the evidence
points fatefully to a murder spree by marines.
The stain on the American military could prove harder to erase
than the photographs of sadistic prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib.
Comparisons are being made to the My Lai massacre in 1968 in
Vietnam, in which American soldiers slaughtered up to 500
villagers.
Up to a dozen marines may face criminal charges including
murder, which carries the death penalty, dereliction of duty and
filing a false report. Three marine commanders were suspended
last month.
The naval inquiry is focusing on the actions of a sergeant who
may have been the leader of a four-man “fire team”.
Miguel Terrazas, 20, a lance-corporal from El Paso, Texas, was
travelling in a convoy of four Humvees in Haditha just after 7am
on November 19 last year when a roadside bomb struck his
vehicle, killing him and wounding two others.
The events that followed are the subject of two military
inquiries due to report soon: one into the facts, the other into
a cover-up.
One witness, Aws Fahmi, heard his neighbour, Yunis Salim Khafif,
plead for his life in English, shouting: “I am a friend, I am
good.”
“But they killed him, his wife and daughters,” Fahmi said.
It is clear the marines lied by blaming the deaths of 15
civilians on the roadside bomb and alleging that a further eight
Iraqis were insurgents who died in a gun battle.
Asked last week how many Iraqis were killed by the roadside
bomb, a Pentagon official said: “Zero.” The marines never came
under hostile fire, a spokesman added.
Investigators have established that the killings unfolded over
three to five hours. “This was not a burst of fire, but a
sustained operation,” a Pentagon official said.
The Sunday Times has reconstructed the events with the help of
Abdul Rahman al-Mashandani, of the Hammourabi human rights group
in Iraq. It appears the first killings took place when a taxi
carrying four students pulled up at a checkpoint set up by the
marines.
Abu Makram, 50, had been awakened by the roadside bomb and
watched from his window as the terror unfolded. The car’s
occupants were all ordered out and shot.
The marines then stormed three nearby houses. “They blew open
the front door of the first house,” Makram recalled, “Once they
were inside, we heard another explosion followed by a hail of
gunfire.”
It was the home of 76-year-old Abdul Hameed Ali Hassan, whose
leg had been amputated because of diabetes. “He was a blind old
man in a wheelchair,” Makram said.
Hassan’s granddaughter, Iman Waleed, 10, was in her
nightclothes. “About 10 marines entered the house,” she said.
“They threw hand grenades and began firing in all directions.
Grandpa was sitting close to the hall and they shot him dead.”
In a nearby room, her father was reading the Koran. “The
American soldiers went into the room and killed him too,” Iman
said. “They gathered all of us into one room — my grandma, my
mama, my brothers and my uncles. They threw in two handgrenades
and started shooting at us.”
The adults tried to protect the children with their bodies, but
were slain. When Iman dared to look, she saw that “everyone was
dead around me except for my brother and my uncle”.
Both were injured and Iman was hurt in the leg. The rest of the
family, including her brother, Abdullah, 4, died.
Iman fled next-door, where her other grandfather Yunis lived,
only to find everybody there appeared to have been killed too.
There was in fact one survivor, Safa Yunis Salim, 12.
“My daddy tried to open the door to let the Americans in, but he
was immediately shot in the head and body,” Safa said.
“I managed to hide under the body of my brother Mohammed. His
blood covered me and protected me as I pretended to be dead.”
They also killed her four sisters including Aysha, 4, and
Zainab, 2.
Five hours passed before Safa managed to escape. “I was the only
one who survived. I watched them kill my entire family. I am all
alone now,” she said, crying.
When the marines stormed the third house they changed tactics.
The men were separated from the women and stuffed into a large
cupboard, according to Yussef Ayed Ahmad, the brother of the
dead men, who lived next-door.
“They placed my four brothers into the wardrobe and proceeded to
shoot them as they were inside,” he said. “My mother and sister
told me later how they died.”
The marines found an AK 47 in the house — the only gun found in
all three homes — but there is no evidence it was fired.
The marines’ cover story quickly began to unravel. In March,
Time magazine revealed the existence of a video shot the day
after the attack by an Iraqi student journalist. It showed the
victims still in their nightclothes, a trail of blood and
shrapnel and bullet marks on the walls.
At the local morgue Waleed al Obeidi, who received the corpses
24 hours after the killings, also disputed the marines’ account.
“Two bodies were completely charred,” he said. “The others,
including women and children, had all been shot at close range.”
According to some reports, American warplanes dropped 500lb
bombs on the houses.
The marines paid $2,500 (£1,350) in compensation for each of the
15 victims who were shot in their homes. They refused to pay for
the four brothers and five occupants of the taxi, claiming they
were insurgents. Officials now say those men were innocent.
General Michael Hagee, the US Marine Corps commander, flew to
Baghdad last week to prepare his troops for the grim findings of
the investigation. Many marines had witnessed the deaths of
friends, he said. “The effects of these events can be numbing.
There is the risk of becoming indifferent to the loss of a human
life, as well as bringing dishonour upon ourselves.”
The conclusions are likely to provoke widespread revulsion.
President George W Bush said last week that the abuse at Abu
Ghraib was one of his greatest regrets about the Iraq war. If
the photographs from Haditha surface, they could provide a set
of images that would be every bit as shocking.
Copyright 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd.
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