Civilian Killings Went Unpunished
Declassified papers show U.S. atrocities went far beyond My Lai.
By Nick Turse and Deborah Nelson, Special to The Times
08/06/06 "Los
Angeles Times" -- -- The men of B Company were in a
dangerous state of mind. They had lost five men in a firefight the
day before. The morning of Feb. 8, 1968, brought unwelcome orders to
resume their sweep of the countryside, a green patchwork of rice
paddies along Vietnam's central coast.
They met no resistance as they entered a nondescript settlement in
Quang Nam province. So Jamie Henry, a 20-year-old medic, set his
rifle down in a hut, unfastened his bandoliers and lighted a
cigarette.
Just then, the voice of a lieutenant crackled across the radio. He
reported that he had rounded up 19 civilians, and wanted to know
what to do with them. Henry later recalled the company commander's
response:
Kill anything that moves.
Henry stepped outside the hut and saw a small crowd of women and
children. Then the shooting began.
Moments later, the 19 villagers lay dead or dying.
Back home in California, Henry published an account of the slaughter
and held a news conference to air his allegations. Yet he and other
Vietnam veterans who spoke out about war crimes were branded
traitors and fabricators. No one was ever prosecuted for the
massacre.
Now, nearly 40 years later, declassified Army files show that Henry
was telling the truth — about the Feb. 8 killings and a series of
other atrocities by the men of B Company.
The files are part of a once-secret archive, assembled by a Pentagon
task force in the early 1970s, that shows that confirmed atrocities
by U.S. forces in Vietnam were more extensive than was previously
known.
The documents detail 320 alleged incidents that were substantiated
by Army investigators — not including the most notorious U.S.
atrocity, the 1968 My Lai massacre.
Though not a complete accounting of Vietnam war crimes, the archive
is the largest such collection to surface to date. About 9,000
pages, it includes investigative files, sworn statements by
witnesses and status reports for top military brass.
The records describe recurrent attacks on ordinary Vietnamese —
families in their homes, farmers in rice paddies, teenagers out
fishing. Hundreds of soldiers, in interviews with investigators and
letters to commanders, described a violent minority who murdered,
raped and tortured with impunity.
Abuses were not confined to a few rogue units, a Times review of the
files found. They were uncovered in every Army division that
operated in Vietnam.
Retired Brig. Gen. John H. Johns, a Vietnam veteran who served on
the task force, says he once supported keeping the records secret
but now believes they deserve wide attention in light of alleged
attacks on civilians and abuse of prisoners in Iraq.
"We can't change current practices unless we acknowledge the past,"
says Johns, 78.
Among the substantiated cases in the archive:
• Seven massacres from 1967 through 1971 in which at least 137
civilians died.
• Seventy-eight other attacks on noncombatants in which at least 57
were killed, 56 wounded and 15 sexually assaulted.
• One hundred forty-one instances in which U.S. soldiers tortured
civilian detainees or prisoners of war with fists, sticks, bats,
water or electric shock.
Investigators determined that evidence against 203 soldiers accused
of harming Vietnamese civilians or prisoners was strong enough to
warrant formal charges. These "founded" cases were referred to the
soldiers' superiors for action.
Ultimately, 57 of them were court-martialed and just 23 convicted,
the records show.
Fourteen received prison sentences ranging from six months to 20
years, but most won significant reductions on appeal. The stiffest
sentence went to a military intelligence interrogator convicted of
committing indecent acts on a 13-year-old girl in an interrogation
hut in 1967.
He served seven months of a 20-year term, the records show.
Many substantiated cases were closed with a letter of reprimand, a
fine or, in more than half the cases, no action at all.
There was little interest in prosecuting Vietnam war crimes, says
Steven Chucala, who in the early 1970s was legal advisor to the
commanding officer of the Army's Criminal Investigation Division. He
says he disagreed with the attitude but understood it.
"Everyone wanted Vietnam to go away," says Chucala, now a civilian
attorney for the Army at Ft. Belvoir in Virginia.
In many cases, suspects had left the service. The Army did not
attempt to pursue them, despite a written opinion in 1969 by Robert
E. Jordan III, then the Army's general counsel, that ex-soldiers
could be prosecuted through courts-martial, military commissions or
tribunals.
"I don't remember why it didn't go anywhere," says Jordan, now a
lawyer in Washington.
Top Army brass should have demanded a tougher response, says retired
Lt. Gen. Robert G. Gard, who oversaw the task force as a brigadier
general at the Pentagon in the early 1970s.
"We could have court-martialed them but didn't," Gard says of
soldiers accused of war crimes. "The whole thing is terribly
disturbing."
Early-Warning System
In March 1968, members of the 23rd Infantry Division slaughtered
about 500 Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of My Lai. Reporter
Seymour Hersh exposed the massacre the following year.
By then, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in
Vietnam at the time of My Lai, had become Army chief of staff. A
task force was assembled from members of his staff to monitor war
crimes allegations and serve as an early-warning system.
Over the next few years, members of the Vietnam War Crimes Working
Group reviewed Army investigations and wrote reports and summaries
for military brass and the White House.
The records were declassified in 1994, after 20 years as required by
law, and moved to the National Archives in College Park, Md., where
they went largely unnoticed.
The Times examined most of the files and obtained copies of about
3,000 pages — about a third of the total — before government
officials removed them from the public shelves, saying they
contained personal information that was exempt from the Freedom of
Information Act.
In addition to the 320 substantiated incidents, the records contain
material related to more than 500 alleged atrocities that Army
investigators could not prove or that they discounted.
Johns says many war crimes did not make it into the archive. Some
were prosecuted without being identified as war crimes, as required
by military regulations. Others were never reported.
In a letter to Westmoreland in 1970, an anonymous sergeant described
widespread, unreported killings of civilians by members of the 9th
Infantry Division in the Mekong Delta — and blamed pressure from
superiors to generate high body counts.
"A batalion [sic] would kill maybe 15 to 20 [civilians] a day. With
4 batalions in the brigade that would be maybe 40 to 50 a day or
1200 to 1500 a month, easy," the unnamed sergeant wrote. "If I am
only 10% right, and believe me it's lots more, then I am trying to
tell you about 120-150 murders, or a My Lay [sic] each month for
over a year."
A high-level Army review of the letter cited its "forcefulness,"
"sincerity" and "inescapable logic," and urged then-Secretary of the
Army Stanley R. Resor to make sure the push for verifiable body
counts did not "encourage the human tendency to inflate the count by
violating established rules of engagement."
Investigators tried to find the letter writer and "prevent his
complaints from reaching" then-Rep. Ronald V. Dellums (D-Oakland),
according to an August 1971 memo to Westmoreland.
The records do not say whether the writer was located, and there is
no evidence in the files that his complaint was investigated
further.
Pvt. Henry
James D. "Jamie" Henry was 19 in March 1967, when the Army shaved
his hippie locks and packed him off to boot camp.
He had been living with his mother in Sonoma County, working as a
hospital aide and moonlighting as a flower child in Haight-Ashbury,
when he received a letter from his draft board. As thousands of
hippies poured into San Francisco for the upcoming "Summer of Love,"
Henry headed for Ft. Polk, La.
Soon he was on his way to Vietnam, part of a 100,000-man influx that
brought U.S. troop strength to 485,000 by the end of 1967. They
entered a conflict growing ever bloodier for Americans — 9,378 U.S.
troops would die in combat in 1967, 87% more than the year before.
Henry was a medic with B Company of the 1st Battalion, 35th
Infantry, 4th Infantry Division. He described his experiences in a
sworn statement to Army investigators several years later and in
recent interviews with The Times.
In the fall of 1967, he was on his first patrol, marching along the
edge of a rice paddy in Quang Nam province, when the soldiers
encountered a teenage girl.
"The guy in the lead immediately stops her and puts his hand down
her pants," Henry said. "I just thought, 'My God, what's going on?'
"
A day or two later, he saw soldiers senselessly stabbing a pig.
"I talked to them about it, and they told me if I wanted to live
very long, I should shut my mouth," he told Army investigators.
Henry may have kept his mouth shut, but he kept his eyes and ears
open.
On Oct. 8, 1967, after a firefight near Chu Lai, members of his
company spotted a 12-year-old boy out in a rainstorm. He was unarmed
and clad only in shorts.
"Somebody caught him up on a hill, and they brought him down and the
lieutenant asked who wanted to kill him," Henry told investigators.
Two volunteers stepped forward. One kicked the boy in the stomach.
The other took him behind a rock and shot him, according to Henry's
statement. They tossed his body in a river and reported him as an
enemy combatant killed in action.
Three days later, B Company detained and beat an elderly man
suspected of supporting the enemy. He had trouble keeping pace as
the soldiers marched him up a steep hill.
"When I turned around, two men had him, one guy had his arms, one
guy had his legs and they threw him off the hill onto a bunch of
rocks," Henry's statement said.
On Oct. 15, some of the men took a break during a large-scale
"search-and-destroy" operation. Henry said he overheard a lieutenant
on the radio requesting permission to test-fire his weapon, and went
to see what was happening.
He found two soldiers using a Vietnamese man for target practice,
Henry said. They had discovered the victim sleeping in a hut and
decided to kill him for sport.
"Everybody was taking pot shots at him, seeing how accurate they
were," Henry said in his statement.
Back at base camp on Oct. 23, he said, members of the 1st Platoon
told him they had ambushed five unarmed women and reported them as
enemies killed in action. Later, members of another platoon told him
they had seen the bodies.
Tet Offensive
Capt. Donald C. Reh, a 1964 graduate of West Point, took command of
B Company in November 1967. Two months later, enemy forces launched
a major offensive during Tet, the Vietnamese lunar New Year.
In the midst of the fighting, on Feb. 7, the commander of the 1st
Battalion, Lt. Col. William W. Taylor Jr., ordered an assault on
snipers hidden in a line of trees in a rural area of Quang Nam
province. Five U.S. soldiers were killed. The troops complained
bitterly about the order and the deaths, Henry said.
The next morning, the men packed up their gear and continued their
sweep of the countryside. Soldiers discovered an unarmed man hiding
in a hole and suspected that he had supported the enemy the previous
day. A soldier pushed the man in front of an armored personnel
carrier, Henry said in his statement.
"They drove over him forward which didn't kill him because he was
squirming around, so the APC backed over him again," Henry's
statement said.
Then B Company entered a hamlet to question residents and search for
weapons. That's where Henry set down his weapon and lighted a
cigarette in the shelter of a hut.
A radio operator sat down next to him, and Henry was listening to
the chatter. He heard the leader of the 3rd Platoon ask Reh for
instructions on what to do with 19 civilians.
"The lieutenant asked the captain what should be done with them. The
captain asked the lieutenant if he remembered the op order
(operation order) that came down that morning and he repeated the
order which was 'kill anything that moves,' " Henry said in his
statement. "I was a little shook … because I thought the lieutenant
might do it."
Henry said he left the hut and walked toward Reh. He saw the captain
pick up the phone again, and thought he might rescind the order.
Then soldiers pulled a naked woman of about 19 from a dwelling and
brought her to where the other civilians were huddled, Henry said.
"She was thrown to the ground," he said in his statement. "The men
around the civilians opened fire and all on automatic or at least it
seemed all on automatic. It was over in a few seconds. There was a
lot of blood and flesh and stuff flying around….
"I looked around at some of my friends and they all just had blank
looks on their faces…. The captain made an announcement to all the
company, I forget exactly what it was, but it didn't concern the
people who had just been killed. We picked up our stuff and moved
on."
Henry didn't forget, however. "Thirty seconds after the shooting
stopped," he said, "I knew that I was going to do something about
it."
Homecoming
For his combat service, Henry earned a Bronze Star with a V for
valor, and a Combat Medical Badge, among other awards. A fellow
member of his unit said in a sworn statement that Henry regularly
disregarded his own safety to save soldiers' lives, and showed
"compassion and decency" toward enemy prisoners.
When Henry finished his tour and arrived at Ft. Hood, Texas, in
September 1968, he went to see an Army legal officer to report the
atrocities he'd witnessed.
The officer advised him to keep quiet until he got out of the Army,
"because of the million and one charges you can be brought up on for
blinking your eye," Henry says. Still, the legal officer sent him to
see a Criminal Investigation Division agent.
The agent was not receptive, Henry recalls.
"He wanted to know what I was trying to pull, what I was trying to
put over on people, and so I was just quiet. I told him I wouldn't
tell him anything and I wouldn't say anything until I got out of the
Army, and I left," Henry says.
Honorably discharged in March 1969, Henry moved to Canoga Park,
enrolled in community college and helped organize a campus chapter
of Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
Then he ended his silence: He published his account of the massacre
in the debut issue of Scanlan's Monthly, a short-lived muckraking
magazine, which hit the newsstands on Feb. 27, 1970. Henry held a
news conference the same day at the Los Angeles Press Club.
Records show that an Army operative attended incognito, took notes
and reported back to the Pentagon.
A faded copy of Henry's brief statement, retrieved from the Army's
files, begins:
"On February 8, 1968, nineteen (19) women and children were murdered
in Viet-Nam by members of 3rd Platoon, 'B' Company, 1st Battalion,
35th Infantry….
"Incidents similar to those I have described occur on a daily basis
and differ one from the other only in terms of numbers killed," he
told reporters. A brief article about his remarks appeared inside
the Los Angeles Times the next day.
Army investigators interviewed Henry the day after the news
conference. His sworn statement filled 10 single-spaced typed pages.
Henry did not expect anything to come of it: "I never got the
impression they were ever doing anything."
In 1971, Henry joined more than 100 other veterans at the Winter
Soldier Investigation, a forum on war crimes sponsored by Vietnam
Veterans Against the War.
The FBI put the three-day gathering at a Detroit hotel under
surveillance, records show, and Nixon administration officials
worked behind the scenes to discredit the speakers as impostors and
fabricators.
Although the administration never publicly identified any fakers,
one of the organization's leaders admitted exaggerating his rank and
role during the war, and a cloud descended on the entire gathering.
"We tried to get as much publicity as we could, and it just never
went anywhere," Henry says. "Nothing ever happened."
After years of dwelling on the war, he says, he "finally put it in a
closet and shut the door."
The Investigation
Unknown to Henry, Army investigators pursued his allegations,
tracking down members of his old unit over the next 3 1/2 years.
Witnesses described the killing of the young boy, the old man tossed
over the cliff, the man used for target practice, the five unarmed
women, the man thrown beneath the armored personnel carrier and
other atrocities.
Their statements also provided vivid corroboration of the Feb. 8,
1968, massacre from men who had observed the day's events from
various vantage points.
Staff Sgt. Wilson Bullock told an investigator at Ft. Carson, Colo.,
that his platoon had captured 19 "women, children, babies and two or
three very old men" during the Tet offensive.
"All of these people were lined up and killed," he said in a sworn
statement. "When it, the shooting, stopped, I began to return to the
site when I observed a naked Vietnamese female run from the house to
the huddle of people, saw that her baby had been shot. She picked
the baby up and was then shot and the baby shot again."
Gregory Newman, another veteran of B Company, told an investigator
at Ft. Myer, Va., that Capt. Reh had issued an order "to search and
destroy and kill anything in the village that moved."
Newman said he was carrying out orders to kill the villagers'
livestock when he saw a naked girl head toward a group of civilians.
"I saw them begging before they were shot," he recalled in a sworn
statement.
Donald R. Richardson said he was at a command post outside the
hamlet when he heard a platoon leader on the radio ask what to do
with 19 civilians.
"The cpt said something about kill anything that moves and the lt on
the other end said 'Their [sic] moving,' " according to Richardson's
sworn account. "Just then the gunfire was heard."
William J. Nieset, a rifle squad leader, told investigators that he
was standing next to a radio operator and heard Reh say: "My
instructions from higher are to kill everything that moves."
Robert D. Miller said he was the radio operator for Lt. Johnny Mack
Carter, commander of the 3rd Platoon. Miller said that when Carter
asked Reh what to do with the 19 civilians, the captain instructed
him to follow the "operation order."
Carter immediately sought two volunteers to shoot the civilians,
Miller said under oath.
"I believe everyone knew what was going to happen," he said, "so no
one volunteered except one guy known only to me as 'Crazy.' "
"A few minutes later, while the Vietnamese were huddled around in a
circle Lt Carter and 'Crazy' started shooting them with their M-16's
on automatic," Miller's statement says.
Carter had just left active duty when an investigator questioned him
under oath in Palmetto, Fla., in March 1970.
"I do not recall any civilians being picked up and categorically
stated that I did not order the killing of any civilians, nor do I
know of any being killed," his statement said.
An Army investigator called Reh at Ft. Myer. Reh's attorney called
back. The investigator made notes of their conversation: "If the
interview of Reh concerns atrocities in Vietnam … then he had
already advised Reh not to make any statement."
As for Lt. Col. Taylor, two soldiers described his actions that day.
Myran Ambeau, a rifleman, said he was standing five feet from the
captain and heard him contact the battalion commander, who was in a
helicopter overhead. (Ambeau did not identify Reh or Taylor by
name.)
"The battalion commander told the captain, 'If they move, shoot
them,' " according to a sworn statement that Ambeau gave an
investigator in Little Rock, Ark. "The captain verified that he had
heard the command, he then transmitted the instruction to Lt Carter.
"Approximately three minutes later, there was automatic weapons fire
from the direction where the prisoners were being held."
Gary A. Bennett, one of Reh's radio operators, offered a somewhat
different account. He said the captain asked what he should do with
the detainees, and the battalion commander replied that it was a
"search and destroy mission," according to an investigator's summary
of an interview with Bennett.
Bennett said he did not believe the order authorized killing
civilians and that, although he heard shooting, he knew nothing
about a massacre, the summary says. Bennett refused to provide a
sworn statement.
An Army investigator sat down with Taylor at the Army War College in
Carlisle, Pa. Taylor said he had never issued an order to kill
civilians and had heard nothing about a massacre on the date in
question. But the investigator had asked Taylor about events
occurring on Feb. 9, 1968 — a day after the incident.
Three and a half years later, an agent tracked Taylor down at Ft.
Myer and asked him about Feb. 8. Taylor said he had no memory of the
day and did not have time to provide a sworn statement. He said he
had a "pressing engagement" with "an unidentified general officer,"
the agent wrote.
Investigators wrote they could not find Pvt. Frank Bonilla, the man
known as "Crazy." The Times reached him at his home on Oahu in
March.
Bonilla, now 58 and a hotel worker, says he recalls an order to kill
the civilians, but says he does not remember who issued it.
"Somebody had a radio, handed it to someone, maybe a lieutenant,
said the man don't want to see nobody standing," he said.
Bonilla says he answered a call for volunteers but never pulled the
trigger.
"I couldn't do it. There were women and kids," he says. "A lot of
guys thought that I had something to do with it because they saw me
going up there…. Nope … I just turned the other way. It was like,
'This ain't happening.' "
Afterward, he says, "I remember sitting down with my head between my
knees. Is that for real? Someone said, 'Keep your mouth shut or
you're not going home.' "
He says he does not know who did the shooting.
The Outcome
The Criminal Investigation Division assigned Warrant Officer
Jonathan P. Coulson in Los Angeles to complete the investigation and
write a final report on the "Henry Allegation." He sent his findings
to headquarters in Washington in January 1974.
Evidence showed that the massacre did occur, the report said. The
investigation also confirmed all but one of the other killings that
Henry had described. The one exception was the elderly man thrown
off a cliff. Coulson said it could not be determined whether the
victim was alive when soldiers tossed him.
The evidence supported murder charges in five incidents against nine
"subjects," including Carter and Bonilla, Coulson wrote. Those two
carried out the Feb. 8 massacre, along with "other unidentified
members of their element," the report said.
Investigators determined that there was not enough evidence to
charge Reh with murder, because of conflicting accounts "as to the
actual language" he used.
But Reh could be charged with dereliction of duty for failing to
investigate the killings, the report said.
Coulson conferred with an Army legal advisor, Capt. Robert S.
Briney, about whether the evidence supported charges against Taylor.
They decided it did not. Even if Taylor gave an order to kill the
Vietnamese if they moved, the two concluded, "it does not constitute
an order to kill the prisoners in the manner in which they were
executed."
The War Crimes Working Group records give no indication that action
was taken against any of the men named in the report.
Briney, now an attorney in Phoenix, says he has forgotten details of
the case but recalls a reluctance within the Army to pursue such
charges.
"They thought the war, if not over, was pretty much over. Why bring
this stuff up again?" he says.
Years Later
Taylor retired in 1977 with the rank of colonel. In a recent
interview outside his home in northern Virginia, he said, "I would
not have given an order to kill civilians. It's not in my makeup.
I've been in enough wars to know that it's not the right thing to
do."
Reh, who left active duty in 1978 and now lives in Northern
California, declined to be interviewed by The Times.
Carter, a retired postal worker living in Florida, says he has no
memory of his combat experiences. "I guess I've wiped Vietnam and
all that out of my mind. I don't remember shooting anyone or
ordering anyone to shoot," he says.
He says he does not dispute that a massacre took place. "I don't
doubt it, but I don't remember…. Sometimes people just snap."
Henry was re-interviewed by an Army investigator in 1972, and was
never contacted again. He drifted away from the antiwar movement,
moved north and became a logger in California's Sierra Nevada
foothills. He says he had no idea he had been vindicated — until The
Times contacted him in 2005.
Last fall, he read the case file over a pot of coffee at his dining
room table in a comfortably worn house, where he lives with his
wife, Patty.
"I was a wreck for a couple days," Henry, now 59, wrote later in an
e-mail. "It was like a time warp that put me right back in the
middle of that mess. Some things long forgotten came back to life.
Some of them were good and some were not.
"Now that whole stinking war is back. After you left, I just sat in
my chair and shook for a couple hours. A slight emotional stress
fracture?? Don't know, but it soon passed and I decided to just keep
going with this business. If it was right then, then it still is."
Times researcher Janet Lundblad contributed to this report.
About this report
Nick Turse is a freelance journalist living in New Jersey. Deborah
Nelson is a staff writer in The Times' Washington bureau.
This report is based in part on records of the Vietnam War Crimes
Working Group filed at the National Archives in College Park, Md.
The collection includes 241 case summaries that chronicle more than
300 substantiated atrocities by U.S. forces and 500 unconfirmed
allegations.
The archive includes reports of war crimes by the 101st Airborne
Division's Tiger Force that the Army listed as unconfirmed. The
Toledo Blade documented the atrocities in a 2003 newspaper series.
Turse came across the collection in 2002 while researching his
doctoral dissertation for the Center for the History and Ethics of
Public Health at Columbia University.
Turse and Nelson also reviewed Army inspector general records in the
National Archives; FBI and Army Criminal Investigation Division
records; documents shared by military veterans; and case files and
related records in the Col. Henry Tufts Archive at the University of
Michigan.
A selection of documents used in preparing this report can be found
at latimes.com/vietnam.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us