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The U.S military said Saturday it had found no wrongdoing in the March
15 raid on a home in Ishaqi that left nine Iraqi civilians dead. But, as with
the apparent massacre in Haditha, will a military "coverup" in this
case come undone? E&P coverage from back in March, and other evidence, suggest
that the official story may soon unravel.
The Iraqi police charge that American forces executed the civilians, including
a 75-year-old woman and a 6-month-old baby. The BBC has been airing video of
the dead civilians, mainly children, who appeared to be shot, possibly at close
range. Photographs taken just after the raid for the Associated Press and Agence
France-Presse, and reports at the time by Reuters and Knight Ridder, also appear
to back up the charge of an atrocity.
After the attack, American officials said that they had demolished the house
in an airstrike after insurgents fired from the building. One insurgent, two
women and a child were killed in the attack, they said.
After the Haditha killings, the military said all of the Iraqis had been killed
in an explosion or a firefight.
"Allegations that the troops executed a family living in this safe house,
and then hid the alleged crimes by directing an airstrike, are absolutely false,"
today's U.S. military statement said. It did not explain how so many children
had been shot and killed.
A spokesman for Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki said today's report, which
cleared the U.S. soldiers, was unfair.
The government will demand an apology and compensation, the spokesman said.
More than two months ago, however, E&P covered the account by a
Knight Ridder reporter who had obtained a police report on the incident. Here
is our March 20, 2006, story, followed by the reporter's statements on a popular
U.S. radio program.
NEW YORK-- Matthew Schofield, a Knight Ridder reporter in Baghdad, has obtained
an Iraqi police report which, he reveals today, accuses American troops of
executing 11 people, including a 75-year-old woman and a 6-month-old infant,
in the aftermath of a raid last Wednesday on a house about 60 miles north
of Baghdad.
The villagers were killed after American troops herded them into a single
room of the house, according to the police. Then the soldiers burned three
vehicles, killed the villagers' animals and blew up the house. Knight Ridder
has distributed a copy of the report.
A U.S. military spokesman, Major Tim Keefe, said that the U.S. military has
no information to support the allegations and that he had not heard of them
before a Knight Ridder reporter brought them to his attention Sunday. "We're
concerned to hear accusations like that, but it's also highly unlikely that
they're true," he said. He added that U.S. forces "take every precaution
to keep civilians out of harms' way. The loss of innocent life, especially
children, is regrettable."
Just last week, Navy investigators announced they are looking into whether
Marines intentionally killed 15 Iraqi civilians - four of them women and five
of them children - during fighting last November in Haditha.
Schofield points out that the report of the latest killings "is unusual
because it originated with Iraqi police and because Iraqi police were willing
to attach their names to it....
"Brig. Gen. Issa al-Juboori, who heads the center, said that his office
assembled the report on Thursday and that it accurately reflects the direction
of the current police investigation into the incident."
The Knight Ridder article continues:
"According to police, military and eyewitness accounts, U.S. forces
approached the house at around 2:30 a.m. and a firefight ensued. By all accounts,
in addition to exchanging gunfire with someone inside the house, U.S. troops
were supported by helicopter gunships, which fired on the house.
"But the accounts differ on what took place after the firefight.
"According to the U.S. account, the house collapsed because of the heavy
fire. When U.S. forces searched the rubble they found one man, the al-Qaida
suspect, alive. He was arrested. They also found a dead man they believed
to be connected to al-Qaida, two dead women and a dead child.
"But the report filed by the Joint Coordination Center, which was based
on a report filed by local police, said U.S. forces entered the house while
it was still standing.
"'The American forces gathered the family members in one room and executed
11 persons, including five children, four women and two men,' the report said.
'Then they bombed the house, burned three vehicles and killed their animals.'
"The report identified the dead by name, giving their ages. The two
men killed were 22 and 28. Of the women, one was 22, another was 23, a third
was 30 and the fourth was 75. Two of the children were 5 years old, two were
3, and the fifth was 6 months old, the document said."
Schofield subsequently appeared on the Democracy Now radio program
with Amy Goodman. There, according to a transcript, he said:
"We were talking with the police officer who was first on the scene
earlier today. He explained the scene of arriving. He said they waited until
U.S. troops had left the area and it was safe to go in. When they arrived
at the house, it was in rubble. I don't know if you've seen the photos of
the remains of the house, but there was very little standing.
"He said they expected to find bodies under the rubble. Instead, what
they found was in one room of the house, in one corner of one room, there
was a single man who had been shot in the head. Directly across the room from
him against the other wall were ten people, ranging from his 75-year-old mother-in-law
to a six-month-old child, also several three-year-olds -- a couple three-year-olds,
a couple five-year-olds, and four other -- three other women.
"Lined up, they were covered, and they had all been shot. According
to the doctor we talked to today, they had all been shot in the head, in the
chest. A number of -- you know, generally, some of them were shot several
times. The doctor said it's very difficult to determine exactly what kind
of caliber gun they were shot with. He said the entry wounds were generally
small and round, the exit wounds were generally very large. But they were
lined up along one wall.
"There was a blanket over the top of them, and they were under the rubble,
so when the police arrived, and residents came to help them start digging
in, they came across the blankets. They picked the blankets up. They say,
at that point, that the hands were handcuffed in front of the Iraqis. They
had been handcuffed and shot. And the Iraqi assumption is that they were shot
in front of the man across the room. They came to be facing each other.
"There is nothing to corroborate that. The U.S. is now investigating
this matter, along with the Haditha matter. That's kind of where we stand
right now."
__________________
Civilians killed 'daily'
Telegraph.co.uk
Iraq's new prime minister yesterday accused American forces of killing
civilians "just on suspicion".
Nouri al-Maliki said violence against civilians had become a "daily phenomenon".
"They crush them with their vehicles and kill them just on suspicion,"
he said. "This is completely unacceptable."
His denunciation followed the implication of marines in the killing of 24 civilians
at Haditha.