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Veteran admits: Bodies melted away before us.
White phosphorous used on the civilian populace: This is how the US
"took" Fallujah. New napalm formula also used.
In soldier slang they call it Willy Pete. The technical name is white phosphorus.
In theory its purpose is to illumine enemy positions in the dark. In practice,
it was used as a chemical weapon in the rebel stronghold of Fallujah. And it
was used not only against enemy combatants and guerrillas, but again innocent
civilians. The Americans are responsible for a massacre using unconventional
weapons, the identical charge for which Saddam Hussein stands accused.
An investigation by RAI News 24, the all-news Italian satellite television channel,
has pulled the veil from one of the most carefully concealed mysteries from
the front in the entire US military campaign in Iraq.
A US veteran of the Iraq war told RAI New correspondent Sigfrido Ranucci this:
I received the order use caution because we had used white phosphorus on Fallujah.
In military slag it is called 'Willy Pete'. Phosphorus burns the human body
on contact--it even melts it right down to the bone.
RAI News 24's investigative story, Fallujah, The Concealed Massacre, will be
broadcast tomorrow on RAI-3 and will contain not only eye-witness accounts by
US military personnel but those from Fallujah residents. A rain of fire descended
on the city. People who were exposed to those multicolored substance began to
burn. We found people with bizarre wounds-their bodies burned but their clothes
intact, relates Mohamad Tareq al-Deraji, a biologist and Fallujah resident.
I gathered accounts of the use of phosphorus and napalm from a few Fallujah
refugees whom I met before being kidnapped, says Manifesto reporter Giuliana
Sgrena, who was kidnapped in Fallujah last February, in a recorded interview.
I wanted to get the story out, but my kidnappers would not permit it.
RAI News 24 will broadcast video and photographs taken in the Iraqi city during
and after the November 2004 bombardment which prove that the US military, contrary
to statements in a December 9 communiqué from the US Department of State,
did not use phosphorus to illuminate enemy positions (which would have been
legitimate) but instend dropped white phosphorus indiscriminately and in massive
quantities on the city's neighborhoods.
In the investigative story, produced by Maurizio Torrealta, dramatic footage
is shown revealing the effects of the bombardment on civilians, women and children,
some of whom were surprised in their sleep.
The investigation will also broadcast documentary proof of the use in Iraq
of a new napalm formula called MK77. The use of the incendiary substance on
civilians is forbidden by a 1980 UN treaty. The use of chemical weapons is forbidden
by a treaty which the US signed in 1997