The two soldiers who were kidnapped earlier this week were found, and apparently they were tortured prior to their murders. This is a retaliatory action. The executive branch of our government has allowed torture in it's interrogation techniques. Bush went so far as to write a signing statement exempting his branch from following McCain anti torture law. With that exemption he exempted our own troops from the protection of higher moral ground. 'Do as I say, not as I do', does not work in war or in peace.

God Bless the families of the two young men who suffered this way. God bless the families of all the people harmed by this horrid evil War. God bless us all. Units

iraq.190.22usarmyviaAP.jpeg menchaca%2520europeanpressphotoagency.jpeg

June 20, 2006, 9:55AM Bodies of missing U.S. soldiers show signs of torture

The bodies of two U.S. soldiers who had been reported kidnapped have been found near the checkpoint where the men disappeared after an attack, senior Iraqi and U.S. military officials said this morning.

Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for killing the soldiers, and said the successor to slain terror leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had "slaughtered" them, according to a Web statement that could not be authenticated. The language in the statement suggested the men had been beheaded.

Pfc. Kristian Menchaca, 23, of Houston and Pfc. Thomas L. Tucker, 25, of Madras, Ore., went missing Friday near the town of Youssifiyah, south of Baghdad. Spc. David J. Babineau, 25, of Springfield, Mass., was killed in the attack.

All were assigned to the 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division from Fort Campbell, Ky.

"Coalition forces have recovered what we believe are the remains of the soldiers,'' Major General William Caldwell told a news conference.

Al_Mah2.jpg According to a report in the Midland Reporter-Telegram, Green was arrested for misdemeanor possession of alcohol on Jan. 31, 2005. Days later, just a few months shy of his 20th birthday, he enlisted in the Army.

He was deployed to Iraq from September 2005 to April 2006 as an infantry soldier in B Company, 1st Battalion of the 502nd Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

 

An Iraqi military official says bodies found showed signs of torture and of being killed in "a barbaric way.''

Mario Vasquez, Menchaca's uncle, said Army officials had told the family early this morning that the bodies of two uniformed soldiers had been found, both of them beheaded. He said the Army would be conducting DNA tests, but the family believes the men were Menchaca and Tucker.

"They're not sure it's him, but we don't know of any other (missing) soldiers they have,'' said Vasquez.

"This is bad news,'' said the soldier's aunt Mariaelena Garcia.

At the home of Menchaca's mother in Brownsville, Guadalupe Vasquez was too upset to speak. Mario Vasquez said her other son, Cesar Vasquez in Houston, was packing to leave for Brownsville to be with his mother.

"He's taking it OK for now,'' his uncle said, ``but I'm sure he's just being strong.''

Abdul-Aziz Mohammed, the director of the defense ministry's operation room, said the bodies of Menchaca and Tucker were found on a street in Youssifiyah.

"We found the bodies of the two abducted American soldiers in Youssifiyah, near a power transformer,'' Mohammed said.

The Sunni Arab region, also known as the Triangle of Death, is the site of frequent ambushes of U.S. soldiers and Iraqi troops.

Posted 07/07/2006

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Rape, murder – and conspiracy

Joseph Cannon – Cannonfire July 6, 2006
Most of you know about Steven Gre
en, the soldier accused of raping a 15-year-old girl and then murdering both her and her family last March. Green hails from Midland, Texas, the same town the Bush family used to call home.

Even progressives seem to have accepted the official version of the event. Unfortunately, something larger, even more disturbing seems to be going on here.

Green was dismissed due to an unspecified "personality disorder," diagnosed after the crime came to light. Or so we have been told. But evidence suggests that military officials knew all about the massacre the night that it occurred.

We also have good reason to suspect that someone made the decision to scapegoat Green. Initial reports in the American press, as well as detailed reports in the foreign media, reveal that Green had plenty of accomplices. Why have no other names floated to the surface? Why do all fingers point to one guy?
I find this eyewitness account persuasive:

On an afternoon in March 2006, a force of 10 to 15 American troops raided the home of Qasim Hamzah Rashid al-Janabi, who was born in 1970 and who worked as a guard at a state-owned potato storehouse. Al-Janabi lived with his wife, Fakhriyah Taha Muhsin, and their four children - 'Abir (born 1991), Hadil (born 1999), Muhammad (1998), and Ahmad (1996).

(Emphasis added.) Abir, also spelled Abeer, was the rape victim. By all accounts, she was a pretty girl. Her youthful beauty was the family's undoing.

The FBI says that the murder party consisted of but four men (including Green), and that the incident came to light only after one of the other perpetrators spoke of it during psychological therapy. (I guess patients don't have confidentiality rights in the military.)

I do not dismiss the higher figure, and I refuse to believe that one man -- one private -- could order soldiers into such an action. Who led the unit? This matter must involve someone of higher rank At the end of this piece, I will suggest one reason why someone higher-up may have wanted this act of barbarism to occur.

Even if we posit a highly unlikely scenario in which the commanding officer had no advance knowledge of an attack of this kind, the person in charge still must take responsibility for the actions of his unit. Why does this officer's name remain unknown?

The Americans took Qasim, his wife, and their daughter Hadil and put them in one room of their house. The boys Ahmad and Muhammad were at school since the time the Americans invaded the home was about 2pm. The Americans shot Qasim, his wife, and their daughter in that room. They pumped four bullets into Qasim's head and five bullets in to Fakhriyah's abdomen and lower abdomen. Hadil (7 years old) was shot in the head and shoulder.

After that, the Americans took 'Abir into the next room and surrounded her in one corner of the house. There they stripped her, and then the 10 Americans took turns raping her. They then struck her on the head with a sharp instrument - according to the forensic medical report - knocking her unconscious - and smothered her with a cushion until she was dead. Then they set fire to her body.

The following account comes from a neighbor who saw the aftermath:

"Then I went into 'Abir's room. Fire was coming out of her. Her head and her chest were on fire. She had been put in a pitiful position; they had lifted her white gown to her neck and torn her bra. Blood was flowing from between her legs even though she had died a quarter of an hour earlier, and in spite of the intensity of the fire in the room. She had died, may God rest her soul. I knew her from the first instant. I knew she had been raped since she had been turned on her face and the lower part of her body was raised while her hands and feet had been tied. By God, I couldn't control myself and broke into tears over her, but I quickly extinguished the fire burning from her head and chest. The fire had burned up her breasts, the hair on her head, and the flesh on her face. I covered her privates with a piece of cloth, God rest her soul. And at that moment, I thought to myself that if I go out talking and threatening, that they would arrest me, so I took control of myself and resolved to leave the house calmly so that I could be a witness to tell the story of this tragedy."

Hiding emotion under such conditions must have taken a superhuman act of will. The "piece of cloth" is a detail which coincides with the crime scene photo, as described by various news reports.

Here's the part of the story most Americans do not yet know: The authorities soon put a (rather threadbare) cover-up into place.

"After three hours the [American] occupation troops surrounded the house and told the people of the area that the family had been killed by terrorists because they were Shi'ah. Nobody in town believed that story because Abu 'Abir was known as one of the best people of the city, one of the noblest, and no Shi'i, but a Sunni monotheist. Everyone doubted their story and so after the sunset prayers the occupation troops took the four bodies away to the American base."
If Steve Green was the only guilty party -- if we must place all blame on a classic "lone nut" -- then who authorized the official lie? How can we believe the claim that the crime remained unknown until after Green was diagnosed, when an official falsehood went out within hours of the massacre? Are we really supposed to believe that four privates could initiate such a strike and put a cover-up in place?

The American media has carried hints that the Iraqi resistance (we are allowed to use that term now) killed American soldiers in retaliatory strikes. The neighbor's account would seem to verify this notion:

The neighbor went on: "Then we decided that we must not be silent so we asked the mujahideen to respond as quickly as possible. They responded with 30 attacks on the occupation in two days, bringing down more than 40 American soldiers.

So. A number of troops -- perhaps as many as 15 -- planned a horrifying rape and mass murder, which officialdom tried to cover up with a transparent lie. The all-too-predictable result: Vengeance attacks on 40 other Americans. (That number seems high. Of course, it includes non-fatal casualties.) Green's unit has Iraqi and American blood on its hands.
stalking
Apparently, Green's unit targeted poor Abir about a week before the atrocity:

"I personally wasn't surprised that Umm 'Abir ['Abir's mother] came to me on 9 March 2006 and asked that 'Abir be allowed to spend the night with my daughters. She was afraid because of the way the occupation troops looked at her when she went out to feed the cows..."

Who are Green's co-conspirators?

Another mystery: What happened to Abir's body, which could divulge important DNA evidence? According to the account given above, the bodies were taken away to an American base. However, NPR has said that the military is "working with the family" to get the body. (Or so reports a DU poster, whose word I see no reason to doubt.) Have you seen any reports of a funeral?

The semen in that poor girl's corpse would identify her assailants. The perpetrators understood that fact -- thus, the attempt to burn the evidence. The conflicting accounts of the body's whereabouts will lead many to suspect a cover-up.
Pys-op
More mystery: Initial reports said that Green and the others changed into civilian clothes before the attack. Why? Obviously, they did not intend to pass as American tourists. Obviously, authorites would not give a cover story for an atrocity commit by four Americans disguised as civilians. Obviously, the soldiers hoped to pass as Iraqis -- as mujahideen.

Was this whole operation a bungled psy-op? Were the soldiers instructed to commit an atrocity while posing as insurgents? That theory may be speculative -- but to me, it makes more sense than does the official story.

Think about it. A group of Ameican soldiers leave base -- supposedly without their commanding officer's knowledge. They are dressed as insurgents. They commit a despicable act. They return. Other military men immediately come to the scene and ascribe the crime to the insurgency. The cover story falls apart because the Americans foolishly got the victims' religion wrong.

If you don't like the psy-op theory, feel free to come up with another one that covers all of these facts.

By the way, the above picture comes from an Army News Service article which appeared last December. The caption: "Pfc. Steven Green, B Co. 1-502 prepares to blast a lock off the gate of an abandoned home during a search of homes in Mullah Fayed on Dec. 2." The original article seems to have been here.

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Last updated 07/07/2006

This is another comment of such import that I am making it a post in itself. The possibility of a "cover-up" at platoon, company, battalion and higher seems more and more likely for all the reasons that "Chris" gives below.

Pat Lang

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

"For what its worth and taken with some reservation of judgement, some eyewitness descriptions in the islamic press include many more US soldiers involved...from 10 up to 15.

Many, many other questions here. Why is Green the only soldier named and in theory facing justice? at least one other rapist and several accomplices in the officially sanctioned version.

"Another soldier, referred to as KP1, also allegedly raped the girl.

According to accounts provided to investigators by other soldiers, Green and took several other soldiers with him to a nearby house intending to rape the woman. Green, according to an affidavit submitted by FBI Special Agent Gregor J. Ahlers in support of the arrest warrant, killed the woman's parents and young sister, raped the woman along with another soldier, then shot her in the head and set her body on fire.

There were four soldiers who went to the residence, knowing that the plan was for the girl to be raped. They are referred to in the affidavit as SO12, SO13, Green and KP1. You can read the affidavit for Green's arrest here. Page 6 lays out the events and players.

Amid the more disgusting details, provided by S012 and SO13 who have cooperated with authorities: They go to the house, SO13 stays in front on guard, the other three go in the house. K1 smacks the girl down in the living room, Green goes in the bedroom, shoots and kills her three family members. SO13, hearing the shots, comes in the house. Green comes back out to the living room where Green and KP1 rape the girl, after which, Green shoots her and kills her. SO12 tells SO13 to get rid of the AK-47 Green used to kill them all.

No NCO or officer above these privates named? How can privates change into civilian clothes and go on a local raid without a superior's knowledge?

("he criminal complaint [FindLaw image] alleges that Green was the ringleader of the four soldiers who took part in the violence while a fifth soldier remained in a humvee to stand guard. The complaint also alleges that the soldiers had been drinking alcohol beforehand and had changed into civilian clothes, indicating that the alleged acts were not spontaneous).

What about his chain of command?

This guy and his pals were planning this attack for at least a week, and the woman's family felt threatened enough beforehand to try to take preventative action.

Plus unit discipline obviously broke down to allow the capture of single paratroopers on guard/checkpoint duty, which should be very difficult under normal circumstances.

I'll take the liberty of copying a comment from Rick at Talkleft.com....

"Green had been in the Army eleven months by the time he was discharged for an unspecified personality disorder. The discharge occurred after the rape/murder. He was a problem for the command at platoon and company levels, and they got rid of him. Quietly, so as to not disturb the higher commanders. To discharge him it had to go through battalion S1 (Personnel.)

The three soldiers at the traffic control point were set up. Someone attacked the group and ran. Part of the group left to chase them, leaving the three troops at the traffic control point. One was killed, two were captured, tortured, beheaded and left to be found. These three soldiers were ~in the same platoon~ as Green had been. For purposes of payback, being in the same platoon as the rapist/murderers is the same as being in the extended family, so they were responsible to the extended family four Green killed.

The rape/murder very probably led to Green's discharge, and was almost certainly known to everyone in his platoon, his company commander and first sergeant, the battalion commander and XO, and the Battalion Personnel section. This is at a minimum.

The hullabaloo caused by the capture of the two soldiers brought the entire U.S Army in the Iraq command out in force, and included - what was it? - some 6,000 soldiers searching for them over the weekend until the bodies were found? That tore to top off the cover up within the 502d bn. It was exposed in the debriefings after the deaths of the three soldiers.

I can understand your genteel use of the term "~may have caused~ the soldier's kidnappings, beheadings." but for this to all happen in the same single platoon is just to unlikely to be a reasonable coincidence. Especially when connected to the discharge of the prime suspect for some unspecified "personality disorder" after he has only been in the Army for a total of eleven months. Gimme a break. Every bit of this stuff is connected. That discharge itself is very unlikely to have occurred to anyone. That it happened to the person identified as the prime suspect in a rape/murder shortly after the crime happened is too unreasonable to be a coincidence.

By the way, notice that Green was a high school dropout with a GED. Prior to the invasion of Iraq, he would not even have been allowed into the Army. The standards had to be lowered a lot just to get him in, and look what happened as a result. High school graduates are a lot less likely to be this kind of discipline problem. But the Army wasn't making the enlistment quotas, remember?

I'd really like to know Green's training and discipline record prior to March."

And another commenter, Tom, gives the FBI document a close read, noting that "Seeing a couple of comments about the possibility of an initial cover-up of the horrible incident in Mahmoudiya, I would note the following issues seem to be raised by a careful reading of the FBI Affidavit supporting the warrant for Steven Green's arrest:
(1) para. 13 of the Affidavit indicates that "fifteen crime scene photos" had been provided to the Affiant by the Army's CID, and further indicates that bodies appeared in the photos.

Shrink
(2) since the actual rape and murder occurred during the evening of March 11, 2006 (paras. 8, 9 and 12) bodies would clearly have been removed from the scene of the crime before the "combat stress debriefing" of "on/about 06/20/2006" when the crime was "discovered (para. 6). If the crime scene photos predate the 6/20/06 debriefing, why were they taken, and if as part of an investigation, what did it conclude? Is anyone following up with a FOIA Request to get all relevant CID files?
(3) the references in the FBI Affidavit as to the initial US awareness of the incident are a little bit contradictory - - para. 5 states the incident was brought to the attention of US forces "about 1730, 03/12/2006" by "three unknown Iraqi males" while para. 12 indicates that notification was received from "an Iraqi National on 03/11/2006." If the incident indeed came to light on March 11, 2006, the very day of the alleged incident, what kind of follow-up was there?
(3) since the FBI affidavit para. 5 reference to the three unknown Iraqi males, continues that the incident occurred "in their house," and since news accounts have mentioned that the girl who was raped had three brothers who were not at home when the incident occurred, was the initial report made by those three brothers? If so, what did they say, especially in light of news reports now indicating that the young girl's family had expressed fears for the safety of the girl because of advances by US troops?"

It seems to me there's at least the possibility of a company-level coverup attempt that's failed here."

Chris

 

In Cold Blood: Iraqi Tells of Massacre at Farmhouse

A cousin describes finding the shot and shattered bodies. A U.S. soldier is in custody.

By Raheem Salman and J. Michael Kennedy, Times Staff Writers
July 6, 2006

BAGHDAD — He was the first to enter the charred farmhouse where the bodies of his relatives lay strewn about the floor, shot and bludgeoned to death.

And he watched more than three months later as a U.S. Army officer took the two surviving children in his arms, barely able to hold back tears as he told them that the people who had killed their family would be punished.

Discovers bodies "Never in my mind could I have imagined such a gruesome sight," Abu Firas Janabi said of the day in March when his cousin, Fakhriya Taha Muhsen; her husband, Kasim Hamza Rasheed; and their two daughters were slain and their farmhouse set ablaze.

"Kasim's corpse was in the corner of the room, and his head was smashed into pieces," he said. The 5-year-old daughter, Hadel, was beside her father, and Janabi said he could see that Fakhriya's arms had been broken.

In another room, he found 15-year-old Abeer, naked and burned, with her head smashed in "by a concrete block or a piece of iron."

"There were burns from the bottom of her stomach to the end of her body, except for her feet," he said.

"I did not believe what I was seeing. I tried to fool myself into believing I was in a dream. But the problem was that we were not dreaming. We put a piece of cloth over her body. Then I left the house together with my wife."

At least four American soldiers from a nearby checkpoint are the prime suspects. The case, which includes the alleged rape of the older daughter, has caused a firestorm in the United States and Iraq. And the soldiers, including one charged Monday with rape and murder, have become lurid symbols of the American military at its worst.


The image has not been helped in recent weeks by the emergence of other accusations that U.S. soldiers had killed Iraqi civilians.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki complained Wednesday that immunity from Iraqi prosecution had encouraged atrocities by American troops. And the U.S. military is clearly on the defensive. On Wednesday, Army Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell IV, the chief military spokesman in Iraq, defended the troops here, complaining that the "acts of a few outweigh the deeds of many."

Janabi, who has emerged as a potential witness, has been interviewed by a U.S. investigator.

He lives about half a mile from the scene of the killings, just outside the town of Mahmoudiya. It's agricultural country, where the small farms are divided by mesh wire fences and the people who toil on them make a subsistence living.

Janabi and his wife were home March 12 when a neighbor ran to tell him that the farmhouse of his cousin and her husband was on fire and that he could see slain family members inside the burning building.

Janabi said that when he arrived at the house, he began to call for others to help him.

"But nobody came," he said in a telephone interview Tuesday from Mahmoudiya, describing the eeriness he felt as he and his wife stood there. "I felt that I had made a disastrous decision. I felt I had made a mistake to rush so quickly to the house, because if the murderers were still there, they would kill me as well."

He and his wife had to douse some of the flames before they could enter the home.

The couple had found the two young boys in the family crying as they stood outside the farmhouse, where they could see the bodies inside. The boys had been at school when the killings occurred but were home by the time Janabi and his wife arrived.

Together, they went to a checkpoint guarded by Iraqi soldiers to tell them what had happened. Then they went back to the house and watched as the bodies were placed in nylon bags and taken to a nearby Iraqi base.

Janabi said Abeer was not in school and, like other peasant girls, seldom left the house. But he said that three days before the killings, the Rasheed family was at his house and his cousin was complaining that the American soldiers at the nearby guard post were constantly searching her house. Janabi said the parents believed that the "girl was the target."

"I suggested they come and live in the house beside mine that was empty," Janabi said. "But they said, 'There are a lot of families close to us, and nothing bad will happen.' "

Janabi said he returned to the burned-out house the day after the attack as villagers gathered to scavenge for furniture. He asked the villagers whether they knew of any enemies that Kasim had made. They answered no, saying he was just a poor farmer like them who barely made ends meet, working in a Baghdad factory to earn an extra $3 a day. But the villagers had heard stories about the slayings.

In one story, the killers wore black shirts and military pants. In another, they were wearing track suits, and in a third, there was a dog with them.Janabi said he suspected the Americans because the dozens of shots fired would have been heard by U.S. troops at the nearby checkpoint. And from what he could gather, the killers were at the house for more than two hours, too long for them to have gone unnoticed by the Americans. He also said he suspected that whoever carried out the killings had used Kasim's AK-47 assault rifle, the only item that Janabi said was missing from the house.

Initially, U.S. military officials said the killings were the result of intra-Iraqi feuding, a plausible conclusion given the dozens of revenge killings that happen each day in the country. But a U.S. soldier came forward recently with rumors of American involvement in the alleged rape and killings.

On Monday, Steven D. Green, 21, a former private with the 502nd Infantry Regiment, was charged in Charlotte, N.C., in the case. The Army has said that no other soldiers have been charged or detained, but that several were under close supervision in Iraq.

Janabi said he learned of the inquiry involving the soldiers last week, and an American investigator asked him to tell his side of the story.

"He was saying that he wants to find out the truth," Janabi said. "I told him I didn't want any money or compensation. The most important thing is that the criminal must be punished in a punishment in the same level of the crime he committed. He must not be imprisoned for four to six months and that is all."

Janabi said he asked the investigator why all this was happening now, when the killings took place three months earlier.

"He told me that a soldier confessed and we want to know the truth," he said.

Then, Janabi said, the investigator told him that a high-ranking U.S. officer wished to pay his condolences to the family. The next day, he brought Fakhriya's cousin, Mohammed, to the base along with the two boys to meet the commander.

"He hugged the children and kissed them several times," Janabi said. "It was hard for him to control his tears."

The discussions, Janabi said, now center on whether the bodies can be exhumed for autopsies. He said they received only a cursory examination when they were taken to the Mahmoudiya hospital in March.

Janabi said that the two boys were with their uncle in the village of Iskandariya, but that their faces told the effects of their misery.

"They lost their father and mother," Janabi said. "They lost their house and sisters. Basically their family was too poor and they have not inherited anything. Their life is deplorable."

 

The allegations of rape could generate a particularly strong backlash in Iraq, a conservative, strongly religious society in which many women will not even shake hands with men who are not close relatives

(CBS/AP)


(AP) The justice minister demanded Tuesday that the U.N. Security Council ensure a group of U.S. troops are punished in the alleged rape and murder of a young Iraqi and the killing of her family, calling the attack "monstrous and inhuman."

Two female legislators also called for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to be summoned to parliament to give assurances that justice would be done.

Meanwhile, gunmen in camouflage uniforms kidnapped Deputy Electricity Minister Raed al-Hares, along with 11 of his bodyguards in eastern Baghdad, security officials said.

The gunmen stopped al-Hares' convoy in the Shiite neighborhood of Talbiya, then forced the official and his bodyguards into their vehicles, said police Lt. Ahmed Qassim.

The kidnapping occurred three days after gunmen seized female Sunni legislator Tayseer al-Mashhadani in a Shiite area of east Baghdad. She and seven bodyguards are still missing.

The March 12 attack on the family in Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad, was among the worst in a series of cases of U.S. troops accused of killing and abusing Iraqi civilians. Iraq's largest newspaper, Azzaman, said in an editorial Tuesday the rape "summarizes what has been going in Iraq for the past years not only by the American occupation army, but also by some Iraqi groups."

Former Pfc. Steven D. Green appeared in federal court in Charlotte, N.C., on Monday to face murder and rape charges. At least four other U.S. soldiers still in Iraq are under investigation, and the military has stressed it is taking the allegations seriously.

"If this act actually happened, it constitutes an ugly and unethical crime, monstrous and inhuman," said Justice Minister Hashim Abdul-Rahman al-Shebli, a Sunni Arab. "The Iraqi judiciary should be informed about this investigation which should be conducted under supervision of international and human organizations. Those involved should face justice."

"The ugliness of this crime demands a swift intervention of the U.N. Security Council to stop these violations of human rights and to condemn them so that they will not happen again," he added.

The two lawmakers, Safiya al-Suhail and Ayda al-Sharif, said condemnation was not enough.

"We demand severe punishment for the five soldiers involved," al-Sharif said. "Denouncements are not enough. If this act has taken place in another country, the world would have turned upside down."

Al-Suhail said al-Maliki should appear before parliament "to make sure investigations are taking place."

Mahmoudiya Mayor Mouayad Fadhil said Iraqi authorities have started their own investigation and that he had asked the hospital where the victims were taken for more details.

Green is accused of raping the woman and killing her and three relatives — an adult male and female and a girl estimated to be 5 years old. An official familiar with the investigation said he set fire to the rape victim's body in an apparent cover-up attempt.

Iraqi authorities identified the rape victim as Abeer Qassim Hamza. The other victims were her father, Qassim Hamza, her mother, Fikhriya Taha, and her sister, Hadeel Qassim Hamza.

The affidavit estimated the rape victim was about 25. But a doctor at the Mahmoudiya hospital gave her age as 14. He refused to be identified for fear of reprisals.

Mahdi Obeid, a neighbor, said that on March 12, he saw fire coming from the house. He rushed over to find Abeer's body on fire. He extinguished the flames and saw bullet wounds in her head and chest.

"It was a horrible scene," he said. "If I could go back in time, I would have not dared enter the house. I cannot wipe those barbaric scenes from my memory."
Jeish propaganda
An insurgent group, the Mujahedeen Army, distributed an account of the incident on an Islamist Web site. It appeared the report, which generally corresponded with details already made public, was designed to draw attention to the deaths and stir up hostility against the U.S. military.

The Azzaman newspaper expressed skepticism the soldiers would be severely punished.

"The U.S. Army will conduct an investigation and the result at best is already known. One or two U.S. soldiers will receive a 'touristic punishment' and the whole crime will be forgotten as it happened with Abu Ghraib criminals," the newspaper said, referring to the abuse of Iraqi prisoners by U.S. guards at a prison in west Baghdad.

Iraqi authorities, meanwhile, imposed an 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. car and pedestrian curfew in Basra to bolster a state of emergency that has failed to curb increasing violence in the southern city. The measure will take effect on Friday, police Col. Karim al-Zeidi said.

A roadside bomb struck a police patrol in eastern Baghdad, killing three policemen and wounding three others, Lt. Bilal Ali said.

Police also found six bodies of construction workers in Baghdad —
four who were shot in the head and left near a Sunni mosque and two others — a Shiite and a Sunni — who were left in a different location, Lt. Maitam Abdul-Razzaq said.

A Sunni sheik who was shot by gunmen on Monday in Fallujah died of his wounds and large numbers of clerics and other mourners participated in a funeral procession.

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2003/iraq/forces/casualties/2006.06.html

BAGHDAD, Iraq - America's two top officials in

Iraq on Thursday sought to calm Iraqi anger over allegations that U.S. soldiers were involved in the rape-murder of a girl, promising an open investigation and calling such acts "absolutely inexcusable and unacceptable." The rare joint statement from U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and Gen. George W. Casey, the senior U.S. commander in Iraq, came as military officers investigated the apparent failures of leadership to keep a close watch on American troops.

Several groups of soldiers and Marines are under investigation for alleged slayings of unarmed civilians, and three U.S. soldiers were killed by insurgents last month after they apparently were left alone despite procedures designed to prevent that.

The joint statement underscored U.S. efforts to contain the political damage that the March 12 killing of a girl and three relatives has caused among an Iraqi public increasingly weary of foreign troops.

"The alleged events of that day are absolutely inexcusable and unacceptable behavior," the statement said. "We will fully pursue all the facts in a vigorous and open process as we investigate this situation."

President Bush called the attack "a despicable crime, if true," that could color perceptions of American troops.

 

"These are very serious charges and what the Iraqis must understand is that we will deal with these in a very transparent, upfront way," Bush said during an interview broadcast on CNN's "Larry King Live."

Khalilzad and Casey promised a vigorous investigation and prosecution of the case and pledged to "work closely with the government of Iraq to ensure transparency as we complete the investigatory and legal processes."

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has called for an independent investigation into the attack and a review of the agreement granting U.S. forces immunity from prosecution by Iraqi courts.

Ex-soldier Steven Green has been charged with rape and four counts of murder in the March 12 incident in Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad. At least three soldiers still in Iraq are under investigation, including a sergeant, a specialist and a private first class, a defense official in Baghdad told The Associated Press on Thursday.

The case has raised questions about adherence to procedures set for U.S. troops in Iraq, as well as discipline within the suspects' unit. The soldiers were from the 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, the same unit hit by the insurgent killings of three soldiers last month.

Spokesmen for the 101st Airborne and the Multinational Corps of Iraq refused to discuss the case on the record because of its sensitivity.

Leaving Base

The U.S. military has strict rules for soldiers operating outside their bases, designed to ensure they are under supervision and also to protect them. All soldiers leaving their bases are supposed to be accompanied by a noncommissioned officer and travel in at least two vehicles.

The rape-murder investigation has raised questions about whether there are problems with how the military operates since soldiers allegedly left their post without someone raising questions.

U.S officials and analysts say the problem may not be the procedures but the leaders responsible for enforcing them.

"Somebody had to have known. The procedures are fine," said Tim Brown, an analyst with Globalsecurity.org, a Washington-based military think tank. "Maybe in the case of this particular unit the failure goes a lot higher, to the failure of the command to properly enforce the rules."

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is under way, maintained the procedures "that are in place are right and good." The official said the question is whether the procedures are being "followed all the time."

Manning checkpoint  Infront of base

According to a federal affidavit, Green and at least two other soldiers drank alcohol, abandoned the checkpoint they were manning, changed clothes to avoid detection and then headed to the victims' house about 200 yards from a U.S. military camp. A fourth soldier stayed in uniform, the affidavit said.

Nearly all those steps — including drinking alcohol — are violations of regulations, U.S. officials say.

Even before the rape-murder investigation surfaced, the military was investigating the incident in which three soldiers from the same battalion were killed by insurgents near Youssifiyah. Two of those apparently were abducted and then slain, with their bodies mutilated.

The Army said it was trying to determine how the soldiers were left by themselves with a single vehicle in a known stronghold of al-Qaida in Iraq.

At a news conference Wednesday, the U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, said U.S. officials were looking into the leadership of the unit "from an administrative standpoint."

Brown said the case demonstrated a bigger problem facing the strapped U.S. military.

"Maybe it's a case where the manager knew that he had disciplinary and morale problems but he was under pressure," Brown said. "They have limited resources ... and something's got to give."

 

Former soldier charged with rape, murder

By Tim Whitmire
Associated Press
 

 

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Federal prosecutors charged a former soldier with murder and rape Monday following an investigation into the killing of an Iraqi woman and three members of her family.

Steven D. Green, a 21-year-old former private first class who was discharged from the Army “due to a personality disorder,” appeared in a federal magistrate’s courtroom in Charlotte Monday.

The charges grew out of a military investigation involving up to five soldiers in the March rape and killing of the woman in Mahmoudiya and three of her relatives, one of them a young girl believed to be about 5 years old.

Prosecutors said Green and others entered the home of a family of Iraqi civilians, where he and others raped the woman before Green shot her and her relatives. According to an accompanying affidavit, photos taken by Army investigators showed a burned body of “what appears to be a woman with blankets thrown over her upper torso.”

FBI agents arrested Green on Friday in Marion, North Carolina. He is being held in Charlotte without bond pending a transfer to Louisville, Ky.

The case is being handled by federal prosecutors there because Green, who served 11 months with the 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, is no longer in the military. According to an affidavit filed with the criminal complaint, he was given an honorable discharge “before this incident came to light. Green was discharged due to a personality disorder.”

He faces a possible death sentence if convicted of murder.FBI account

In Baghdad, a U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Joseph Breasseale, said “at this time” no other charges have been filed in the Mahmoudiya case.

The affidavit, filed by FBI special agent Gregor J. Ahlers of Louisville, said Green and three other soldiers from the 101st’s 502nd Infantry Regiment were working a traffic checkpoint in Mahmoudiya on March 12 when they conspired to rape a woman, who investigators estimated was 25 years old, who lived nearby.

According to the affidavit’s account, the soldiers changed their clothes before going to the woman’s residence to avoid detection. Once there, the affidavit said, Green took three members of the family — an adult male and female, and a girl estimated to be 5 years old — into a bedroom, after which shots were heard from inside.

“Green came to the bedroom door and told everyone, ‘I just killed them. All are dead,”’ the affidavit said.

The affidavit is based on interviews conducted by the FBI and investigators at Fort Campbell with three unidentified soldiers assigned to Green’s platoon. One of the soldiers said he witnessed another soldier and Green rape the woman.

“After the rape, (the soldier) witnessed Green shoot the woman in the head two to three times,” the affidavit said.

Ahlers said in the affidavit that he also reviewed photos taken by Army investigators in Iraq of bodies found inside a burned house, including photos of an Iraqi man, woman and young girl who all appear to have died of gunshot wounds. He said he also reviewed a photo of a burned body of “what appears to be a woman with blankets thrown over her upper torso.”

An official familiar with details of the investigation in Iraq has told The Associated Press that a flammable liquid was used to burn the rape victim’s body in a cover-up attempt. U.S. officials have said they believed the victims were killed in sectarian violence.

On Friday, the U.S. military acknowledged that Maj. Gen. James D. Thurman, commander of the 4th Infantry Division, had ordered a criminal investigation into the alleged slaying of a family in Mahmoudiya.

Four members of the 502nd have had their weapons taken away and were confined to a U.S. base near Mahmoudiya, officials said.

The suspects belong to the same unit as two soldiers kidnapped and killed south of Baghdad last month, a military official said on condition of anonymity because the case was under way.

The military has said that one and possibly both of the slain soldiers were tortured and beheaded. The official said the mutilation of the slain soldiers stirred feelings of guilt and led at least one member of the platoon to reveal the rape-slaying on June 22.

According to the affidavit filed Monday, investigators learned of the March 12 attack during a combat stress debriefing that occurred around June 20.

Green will have a preliminary hearing and a detention hearing on July 10 in Charlotte, and will then be brought to Louisville, said Marisa Ford, chief of the criminal division for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Louisville.

———

Associated Press writers Brett Barrouquere in Louisville and Mark Sherman in Washington contributed to this report.

 



 

 
 

 

 

 

(06-17) 15:36 PDT BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) --

 

Insurgents foiled heightened security in Baghdad and killed more than two dozen people Saturday after an al-Qaida threat to avenge the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, dealing a blow to the Iraqi government's pledge to bring peace to the capital.

 

Eleven more Iraqis, including four in Baghdad, died in shooting attacks across Iraq.

 

U.S. troops, meanwhile, combed through the "Triangle of Death," a predominantly Sunni Arab region south of the capital looking for two soldiers missing since an attack Friday on a traffic checkpoint that also killed one of their comrades.

 

The spree of bombings and mortar attacks in Baghdad was an embarrassment for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who ordered more police and army checkpoints for the city last week to restore security for its 5 million residents.

 

His Sunni Arab deputy prime minister, Salam Zikam Ali al-Zubaie, charged that the plan was not properly thought out and needed more work.

 

"I can say that I am not pleased with the way the Baghdad security plan began," he told al-Jazeera television. "The Baghdad plan has begun, but it will need a year or more to finish."

 

Al-Zubaie said the Interior Ministry, which is responsible for Iraq's police forces, first has to be cleansed of people who may be responsible for "human rights violations." Many Sunnis charge that Shiite-dominated security services have been infiltrated by Shiite militias blamed for sectarian violence.

 

"There are a lot of officials who were responsible for committing numerous acts of foolishness and many human right violations who are still in positions of responsibility," al-Zubaie said.

 

Eight attacks killed at least 27 people and wounded dozens in the Baghdad area.

 

The violence included a suicide bomber who blew up his car as it was being towed near a police checkpoint in Mahmoudiya, south of the city, killing four civilians and injuring 15. The bomber had claimed his car broke down and hired a tractor to tow it while he rode inside, police Capt. Rashid al-Samarie said.

Sunni town

A mortar barrage also hit a residential area in Mahmoudiya, a predominantly Sunni town about 20 miles south of Baghdad, killing one civilian and wounding three.

 

In Baghdad itself, a mortar shell hit one of Baghdad's best known markets, in the predominantly Shiite suburb of Kazimiyah, killing at least four people and wounding 13, police said.

 

About a half hour later, two people died and 24 were wounded when a bomb left in a plastic bag exploded at an outdoor market where secondhand goods are sold in central Baghdad.

 

Police said a suicide bomber targeting an Iraqi army patrol near Wathiq Square in the same neighborhood killed seven people when he blew himself up.

 

A parked car bomb in southwest Baghdad killed six people and wounded 36, police said.

 

Three mortar rounds hit a popular open-air market in the al-Bour area of northern Baghdad, killing two and wounding 14.

 

One other person died from a roadside bombing.

 

The blasts stepped up a surge of violence that has shattered the fragile calm imposed by the security crackdown launched a week after bombs dropped by a U.S. warplane killed al-Zarqawi in a hideout June 7.

 

On Friday, a suspected shoe bomber targeting a Shiite imam who criticized al-Zarqawi blew himself up inside the Buratha mosque during the main weekly religious service, killing 13 people and wounding 28. The assault was staged during a four-hour driving ban meant to prevent suicide car bombs during Friday prayers.

 

It was the second attack on the Buratha mosque in just over two months. On April 7, four suicide bombers, including a woman, set off their explosives during Friday prayers, killing at least 85 worshippers. The U.S. military blamed al-Zarqawi's followers.

 

On Friday, Al-Jazeera aired an audio tape of a key insurgency leader calling al-Zarqawi's death a "great loss" but saying it would strengthen the militants' determination.

 

The broadcaster identified the voice as that of Abu Abdullah Rashid al-Baghdadi, head of the Mujahedeen Shura Council, which groups five Iraqi insurgent organizations including al-Qaida in Iraq. The authenticity of the tape could not immediately be verified.

 

Discussing the missing American soldiers, Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said that four raids had been carried out since Friday's attack and that ground forces, helicopters and airplanes were taking part in the search.

 

The soldiers came under attack at a traffic checkpoint next to a canal southwest of Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad. The area is considered and insurgent hotbed.

 

"We are currently using every means at our disposal on the ground, in the air and in the water to find them," Caldwell said.

 

Mahmudiyah

     
 

http://www.taskforcethunderbolt.com/ThunderRumblings/thunder_rumblings_20MAY05.htm

http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=2872729

http://www.erichseipp.com/gallery/view.php?gallery_id=46&page=1

http://www.albasrah.net/images/iraqi-pow/iraqi-pow1.htm

http://www.freearabvoice.org/Iraq/Report/report567.htm ... phony zionist website

 

 
     

FOB St. Michael

 

The city of Mahmudiyah is located 25 kilometers south of Baghdad.

In April 2003 soldiers with the Army Reserve's 431st Civil Affairs Battalion, attached to the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), went out on an assessment mission of the local infrastructure of the town of Al Mahmudiyah. The were basically identifying problems they are having such as water, sewage and power. The team separated in to four groups, established rally points and discussed the plans of the day. Within minutes the soldiers came upon a large group of civilians. Fortunately for the soldiers, the mood of the crowd was a pleasant.

TF 3-505 operates out of FOB St Michael. They are making great progress in defeating enemy and threat forces in their zone. In October 2003 they conducted a cordon and search detaining a former Iraqi Republican Guard two star general. This general was very sought after. He gave them very useful information during his interrogation that will undoubtedly result in more successful missions. TF 3-505 continues to make improvements to their FOB. They recently expanded their FOB by building a half-mile perimeter around the backside of their FOB. They are in the process of repositioning the living tents and reinforcing them with wooden floors, walls and roofs. They are also constructing a running track.

An ambush on a convoy traveling near Al Mahmudiyah, south of Baghdad, led to one 3rd Corps Support Command soldier being killed by small arms fire at about 6:30 p.m. local time, 09 July 2003. One soldier from 3rd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division was killed and two were wounded when their patrol was ambushed by rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire near the city of Mahmudiyah at approximately 8:00 p.m. 05 November 2003.

As of mid-September 2003 TF 3-505 continued FOB improvements and have turned an old Chicken Meat Packing Plant into a robust FOB. It is amazing what troopers will do with a little money and a few vertical engineers. They were constructing a running track around the backside of their erimeter. They continue to operate in and around the Mahmudiyah area and are making good process. All of the troopers in 3 Panther are living in Tier 3 Tents with A/C and a wooden frame. They get showers daily and are eating at least two hot meals daily.

 

CBS/AP) Investigators believe the U.S. soldiers suspected of raping an Iraqi woman, then killing her and members of her family plotted the attack for nearly a week, a U.S. military official said Saturday.

The official, who is close to the investigation, told The Associated Press that flammable liquid was used to burn the woman's body in a cover-up attempt, although it was not clear if it was gasoline or lighter fluid.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, said it appeared the attack was "totally premeditated" and that the soldiers "studied them for about a week."

According to the official, the Sunni Arab family had just moved into a new home in the insurgent-riddled area around Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad. The Americans entered the home, separated three males from the woman, then raped her and set fire to her body, the official said. The three males were also slain.

U.S. officials said they knew of the deaths but thought the victims died due to sectarian violence. But Mahmoudiya police Capt. Ihsan Abdul-Rahman said Iraqi officials received a report March 13 alleging that American soldiers had killed the family. The incident occurred in the Khasir Abyad area, about 6 miles north of Mahmoudiya, he said.

There were some discrepancies over how many soldiers were being investigated. The U.S. official said it was at least four. Two other U.S. officials said Friday that five were under investigation but one already had been discharged for unspecified charges unrelated to the killings and was believed to be in the United States.

In Baghdad, the U.S. military issued a terse statement Friday, saying only that Maj. Gen. James D. Thurman, commander of the 4th Infantry Division, ordered a criminal investigation into the alleged slaying of a family of four in Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad.

The four still in the Army have had their weapons taken away and are confined to a U.S. base near Mahmoudiya, officials said. If convicted of premeditated murder, the soldiers could receive a death sentence under U.S. military law.

The suspects in the killing were from the same platoon as two soldiers kidnapped and killed south of Baghdad this month, another official close to the investigation said Friday. Their mutilated bodies were found June 19, three days after they were abducted by insurgents near Youssifiyah southwest of Baghdad.

The military has said one and possibly both of the slain soldiers were tortured and beheaded. The official said the mutilation of the slain soldiers stirred feelings of guilt and led at least one member of the platoon to reveal the rape-slaying on June 22.

One soldier was arrested after admitting his role in the alleged attack on the family, he said on condition of anonymity because the case is under way. The official said the rape and killings appear to have been a "crime of opportunity," noting that the soldiers had not been attacked by insurgents but had noticed the woman on previous patrols.

One of the family members they allegedly killed was a child, said a senior Army official who also requested anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. The senior official said the alleged incident was first revealed by a soldier during a routine counseling-type session. The official said that soldier did not witness the incident but heard about it.

A second soldier, who also was not involved, said he overhead soldiers conspiring to commit the crimes and then later saw bloodstains on their clothes, the official said.

The allegations of rape could generate a particularly strong backlash in Iraq, a conservative, strongly religious society in which many women will not even shake hands with men who are not close relatives.

The case is among the most serious against U.S. soldiers allegedly involved in the deaths of Iraqi civilians. At least 14 U.S. troops have been convicted.

In other developments:

 
  • Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden issued an Internet message Saturday addressing Islamist militants in Iraq and Somalia. Speaking to Iraqi fighters, he said in his fifth statement this year and his second in two days, that the Islamic community was depending on them.

     
  • A parked car bomb exploded at a popular outdoor market Saturday in a Shiite slum in Baghdad, killing at least 66 people and wounding nearly 100, authorities said.

     
  • Also Saturday, gunmen kidnapped a Sunni female member of parliament in a Shiite area of the capital, officials said. Lawmaker Tayseer Mashhadani was traveling from nearby Diyala province in a three-car convoy to attend a parliament session Sunday in Baghdad when her party was stopped by gunmen in the east of the city, officials said.

     
  • In his latest Web audio tape, Osama bin Laden vows the attacks on the U.S. will continue. In the 19-minute message, bin Laden paid tribute to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, calling him a "lion of the holy war" and a "prince," CBS News correspondent Richard Roth reports. Bin Laden called on President Bush to release al-Zarqawi's body to his family, and said Jordan should allow the slain terrorist to be buried in his homeland. Bin Laden will also release a new Internet message dealing with Somalia and Iraq, according to the IntelCenter.

     
  • Elsewhere, a Marine was killed Friday in fighting in the volatile Anbar province west of Baghdad, while a U.S. soldier died the day before in small arms fire in the northern city of Mosul, the military said. The deaths raised to at least 2,531 members of the U.S. military who have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

    The accused soldiers were from the same platoon as privates Kristian Menchaca and Thomas Turner. The military has said one and possibly both of the slain soldiers were tortured and beheaded.

    Last week, seven Marines and one Navy medic were charged with premeditated murder in the shooting death of an Iraqi man near Fallujah west of Baghdad.

    U.S. officials are also investigating allegations that U.S. Marines killed two dozen unarmed Iraqi civilians Nov. 19 in the western town of Haditha in a revenge attack after a fellow Marine died in a roadside bombing.

    Other cases involve the deaths of three male detainees in Salahuddin province in May, the shooting death of unarmed Iraqi man near Ramadi in February, and the death of an Iraqi soldier after an interrogation in 2003 at a detention camp in Qaim.

    The official said the mutilation of the slain soldiers stirred feelings of guilt and led at least one of them to reveal the rape-slaying on June 22.

    According to a senior Army official, the alleged incident was first revealed by a soldier during a routine counseling session. The official, who requested anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, said that soldier did not witness the incident but heard about it.

    A second soldier, who also was not involved, said he overhead soldiers conspiring to commit the crimes, and then later saw bloodstains on their clothes, the official said.

    He also said the four people killed included three adults and a child, and one of the adults was the woman who allegedly was raped.

    One of the accused soldiers already has been discharged and is believed to be in the United States, several U.S. officials said on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. The others have had their weapons taken away and are confined to Forward Operating Base Mahmoudiyah

  •  

    Jewish website

         
     
     
    (Your Voice in a World where Zionism, Steel, and Fire have
    turned Justice Mute)

    Iraqi Resistance Report 567

     

    Iraqi Resistance Report for events of Saturday, 1 July 2006.  Translated and/or compiled by Muhammad Abu Nasr, member, editorial board, the Free Arab Voice.  http://www.freearabvoice.org

    Saturday, 1 July 2006.

     

    Mafkarat al-Islam: eyewitness testimony about US rape, murder of Iraqi
    family in al-Mahmudiyah in March
    2006



    In a dispatch posted at 11:55pm Makkah time Saturday night, Mafkarat al-Islam submitted its correspondents' in-depth report on the rape and murder case in March that the American military have now been compelled to investigate.

    Mafkarat al-Islam noted that the number of rapes of Iraqi women committed by US occupation troops is already legion and continues to climb. Many women have been victimized within Abu Ghurayb and the other prisons; while many others have fallen prey to the rapists in American uniform who prowl the large prison that is occupied Iraq.

    But there is one case of rape that has come to the surface in recent days, which stands out for a savagery and brutality that goes beyond all bounds.

    On an afternoon in March 2006, a force of 10 to 15 American troops raided the home of Qasim Hamzah Rashid al-Janabi, who was born in 1970 and who worked as a guard at a state-owned potato storehouse. Al-Janabi lived with his wife, Fakhriyah Taha Muhsin, and their four children – `Abir (born 1991), Hadil (born 1999), Muhammad (1998), and Ahmad (1996).

    The Americans took Qasim, his wife, and their daughter Hadil and put them in one room of their house. The boys Ahmad and Muhammad were at school since the time the Americans invaded the home was about 2pm. The Americans shot Qasim, his wife, and their daughter in that room. They pumped four bullets into Qasim's head and five bullets in to Fakhriyah's abdomen and lower abdomen. Hadil was shot in the head and shoulder.

    After that, the Americans took `Abir into the next room and surrounded her in one corner of the house. There they stripped her, and then the 10 Americans took turns raping her. They then struck her on the head with a sharp instrument – according to the forensic medical report – knocking her unconscious – and smothered her with a cushion until she was dead. Then they set fire to her body.

    witness

    The neighbor of the martyred family told the correspondent for Mafkarat al-Islam:

    "At 2pm a force of Americans raided the home of the martyr Qasim, God rest his soul. They surrounded him and I heard the sound of gunfire. Then the gunfire fell silent. An hour later I saw clouds of smoke rising from the room and then the occupation troops came quickly out of the house. They surrounded the area together with Shi`i `Iraqi National Guard' forces, and they told us that terrorists from al-Qa`idah had entered the house and killed them all.  They wouldn't let any of us into the house. But I told one of the `National Guard' soldiers that I was their neighbor and that I wanted to see them so that I could tell al-Hajj Abu al-Qasim the news about his son and his son's family, so one of the soldiers agreed to let me enter.

    "So I went into the house and found in the first room the late Qasim and his wife and Hadil. Their bodies were swimming in blood. Their blood had spewed out of their bodies with such force that it had flowed out from under the door of the room. I turned them over but there was no response; their lives were already gone."

    The neighbor continued his account: "Then I went into `Abir's room. Fire was coming out of her. Her head and her chest were on fire. She had been put in a pitiful position; they had lifted her white gown to her neck and torn her bra. Blood was flowing from between her legs even though she had died a quarter of an hour earlier, and in spite of the intensity of the fire in the room. She had died, may God rest her soul. I knew her from the first instant. I knew she had been raped since she had been turned on her face and the lower part of her body was raised while her hands and feet had been tied. By God, I couldn't control myself and broke into tears over her, but I quickly extinguished the fire burning from her head and chest. The fire had burned up her breasts, the hair on her head, and the flesh on her face. I covered her privates with a piece of cloth, God rest her soul. And at that moment, I thought to myself that if I go out talking and threatening, that they would arrest me, so I took control of myself and resolved to leave the house calmly so that I could be a witness to tell the story of this tragedy.

    American arrive

    "After three hours the [American] occupation troops surrounded the house and told the people of the area that the family had been killed by terrorists because they were Shi`ah. Nobody in town believed that story because Abu `Abir was known as one of the best people of the city, one of the noblest, and no Shi`i, but a Sunni monotheist. Everyone doubted their story and so after the sunset prayers the occupation troops took the four bodies away to the American base. Then the next day they handed them over to the al-Mahmudiyah government hospital and told the hospital administration that terrorists had killed the family. That morning I went with relatives of the deceased to the hospital. We received the bodies and buried them, may God have mercy on them."

    The neighbor went on: "Then we decided that we must not be silent so we asked the mujahideen to respond as quickly as possible. They responded with 30 attacks on the occupation in two days, bringing down more than 40 American soldiers. But our blood was still not cooled, so we decided to go to al-`Arabiyah satellite TV to tell them the story since it is a station that broadcasts in Iraq. But al-`Arabiyah paid no attention to us and said we were liars. They told us that their policy was to rely on official announcements issued by the American army, and that they were not able to get into a story over which they had no power. This was told to us by the al-`Arabiyah correspondent Ahmad as-Salih. So we went to local newspapers and they slammed the doors in our faces because we are Sunnis and the rape victim was a Sunni girl. But the Resistance fighters told us that God does not allow the blood of any Muslim to be lost, and they told us to patiently persevere and we would see such a punishment for the blood of `Abir and her family, for the violation of the honor of our sister, a punishment that would make people's hair stand on end.

    "I personally wasn't surprised that Umm `Abir [`Abir's mother] came to me on 9 March 2006 and asked that `Abir be allowed to spend the night with my daughters. She was afraid because of the way the occupation troops looked at her when she went out to feed the cows. I agreed to that because there was an occupation forces' command post just 15 meters from Qasim's house, God rest his soul. But frankly I thought it unlikely that anything would happen to the girl because she was only something like 16 and she was just a little girl. But I agreed and she spent one night at our place and then went back to her home in the morning. We had no idea that the occupation troops would carry out heir crime in broad daylight."

    The neighbor concluded: "The occupation troops came last Friday – that is, one day before the Mafkarat al-Islam correspondent visited the scene of the crime – and asked the people of the area to exhume the body of `Abir to conduct tests on it. And they also asked me to provide eyewitness testimony and I will go anywhere to make sure that justice is served."

    Mafkarat al-Islam was the first news agency to disclose the crime committed by US troops on that March day in al-Mahmudiyah.

     

     
         

     

    Candy

    Suicide car bomber kills 30 in Iraq

    08:01 PM EST on Thursday, November 24, 2005

    By CHRIS TOMLINSON / Associated Press Writer

    BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide bomber blew up his car outside a hospital south of Baghdad on Thursday while U.S. troops handed out candy and food to children, killing 30 people and wounding about 40, including four Americans.

    112405iraq.jpg
    AP Photo

    People gather around the site of a car bomb outside the hospital in Mahmoudiya, Iraq, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2005.
     

    As U.S. troops spent another Thanksgiving at war, two soldiers died in another bombing near the capital, and the U.S. command said four American deaths occurred Wednesday.

    Elsewhere, 11 Iraqis were killed and 17 injured Thursday when a car bomb exploded near a crowded soft drink stand in Hillah, a mostly Shiite Muslim city 60 miles south of Baghdad. More than 200 people - mostly Shiites - have died from suicide attacks and car bombs since Friday.

    Amid the bloodshed, at least four insurgent groups reportedly were mulling a government offer to talk peace - a hopeful sign for efforts to end an insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives.

    Three women and two children were among the dead in the attack outside the hospital in Mahmoudiya, a flashpoint town 20 miles south of Baghdad in the "triangle of death" notorious for attacks on Shiite Muslims, U.S. troops and foreign travelers.

    A civil affairs team from the U.S. Army's Task Force Baghdad was at the hospital studying ways to upgrade the facility when the bomber struck just outside the guarded compound, a U.S. military statement said.

    Mosque

    Al_Mah31.jpg

    A homicide car bomber carried out the second worst strike when he blew himself up outside a Shiite mosque shortly before evening prayers in Mahmoudiya, a town 20 miles south of Baghdad. Police said it killed at least 10 people and wounded 30 — many of them children.

    Sunni Muslims opposed to Iraq's Shiite-dominated government are thought to provide the backbone of the insurgency, and some Sunni extremists are attacking Shiite targets in an effort to provoke a sectarian war.

     

    Elsewhere, a car bomb exploded outside a Shia mosque in Mahmoudiya, a town south of Baghdad. At least seven people were killed and more than 20 injured.

    Doctors said many of the casualties were children.

    "The kids were playing outside the mosque when a car came up quickly and then exploded," said a witness, Mohammed Awad.

    A homicide car bomber carried out the second worst strike when he blew himself up outside a Shiite mosque shortly before evening prayers in Mahmoudiya, a town 20 miles south of Baghdad. Police said it killed at least 10 people and wounded 30 — many of them children.

     

    platoon

    Green's platoon is made up of 36 people.

     

    U.S. Sees Possible Links Between Incidents in Iraq

    The slayings of three soldiers near the site of an alleged rape and the killing of a family may have been an act of revenge, an official says.
    By Julian E. Barnes, Times Staff Writer
    July 5, 2006


     

    BAGHDAD — The U.S. military is investigating whether the kidnapping, killing and mutilation of two American soldiers was carried out in retaliation for an alleged rape and murder of an Iraqi woman by another member of the same unit three months earlier, a military official said Tuesday.

    The incidents occurred in nearby towns and the
    soldiers involved were in the same unit. The bodies of the two American soldiers and at least one Iraqi were mutilated. A third U.S. soldier was killed during the kidnapping of his comrades.

    The official, citing results of a preliminary military investigation, also said military officers had forced the chief suspect in the rape case out of the Army before the accusation against him came to light because they believed he could pose a threat to Iraqi civilians.

    The official spoke on condition of anonymity because investigations of both incidents are incomplete.

    Military officials initially believed that the three soldiers attacked in the town of Yousifiya were selected because they were vulnerable when separated from the rest of their unit. But as information about the alleged rape-killing has emerged, so have new theories about the kidnappings-killings.



    "Was it a target of opportunity or was it a warning: Don't do this to our women?" said the military official.

    The rarity of kidnappings of U.S. troops — only one other is missing in Iraq — and the apparent complexity and brutality of the attack in Yousifiya has investigators looking further into possible connections.

    "We are trying to find out if this hit on these three soldiers was a retribution for the rape and murder," said the official. "I cannot fathom the
    audacity it would take to do such a complex attack. What sort of rage exists in the populace? Are they saying, 'We aren't going to take this from people who do this to our women?' "

    On Monday, Steven D. Green, 21, a former Army private with the 502nd Infantry Regiment, appeared in federal court in Charlotte, N.C., on charges that he raped and murdered an Iraqi woman in the town of Mahmoudiya. According to accounts provided to investigators by other soldiers,
    Green dressed in black and took several other soldiers with him to a nearby house with the intent of raping the woman. According to an affidavit submitted by FBI Special Agent Gregor J. Ahlers in support of the arrest warrant, Green killed the woman's parents and young sister; he and another soldier raped the woman; then he shot her in the head and set her body on fire.

    Ahlers said his six-page affidavit was drawn largely from the work of Army investigators. No other current or former soldier has been charged in the case.

    Although the incident occurred in March, military officials learned only recently that it might have been carried out by a group of Americans, rather than the
    insurgents who initially were blamed.

    The attack on the three American soldiers working alone at a checkpoint in Yousifiya, near Mahmoudiya, occurred in June. One soldier, Spc. David J. Babineau, 25, of Springfield, Mass., was killed. Pfc. Kristian Menchaca, 23, of Houston and Pfc. Thomas L. Tucker, 25, of Madras, Ore., were kidnapped, apparently tortured and killed. Their bodies were found beheaded and mutilated beyond recognition.

    It was during counseling after the deaths of the three soldiers that military officials heard the allegations that Americans were responsible for the killing of the four civilians in Mahmoudiya.

    By that time, Green had been honorably discharged from the Army. Officially, he was discharged because of a "personality disorder." But unit commanders removed Green because they feared he posed a threat to Iraqi civilians, said the military official, citing documents produced by investigators.

    The other soldiers remain under investigation.

    Responding to the allegations against Green, Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on Tuesday denounced murder or rape of Iraqis as "totally unacceptable." Appearing on NBC's "Today Show," Pace promised that the military would find out what happened in Mahmoudiya.

    "We will do the investigations, we will find out what the truth is and, if necessary, we will take those who deserve to be taken to court so they can have their day in court," Pace said.

    Military officials are reeling from a series of allegations of atrocities involving U.S. troops in Iraq. The cases include the slayings in November of 24 civilians in Haditha. The graphic details about the Mahmoudiya case have top officers in Iraq worried that the charges could prove as explosive as the photographs of abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison.

    Some Iraqi officials have expressed outrage, and the mayor of the area that includes Mahmoudiya has promised his own investigation.

    As the American military was wrestling with how to handle the situation, another high-ranking Iraqi official was briefly kidnapped Tuesday on the outskirts of Baghdad.

     

     

    Four soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment have been taken to a U.S. military camp in Baghdad for questioning, Wright said. He would not say if those soldiers had been arrested, but another U.S. official said Saturday that several more soldiers would soon be charged. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

    Based on interviews and records, the U.S. military now believes the woman who Green is accused of raping and killing was between the ages of 14 and 20, Army spokesman Paul Boyce said Friday. While the military initially said she was 20, Boyce said he has seen documents that indicate she could have been about 14.

    Wright said officials are also considering whether certain parts of a standard Western autopsy would be taboo in Iraq and if a religious leader or family members should be present to ensure cultural barriers are not crossed.

    He said U.S. military commanders in Iraq are working with the family's relatives to expedite the investigation, but that it was not immediately clear whether Iraqis or Americans would have custody of the woman's remains.

    U.S. officials are concerned that the alleged rape-slaying, which occurred March 12 near Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad, will strain relations with the new U.S.-backed government and increase calls for changes in the agreement that exempts American soldiers from prosecution in Iraqi courts.

    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has demanded an independent investigation into the case, which followed a series of allegations that U.S. troops killed and mistreated Iraqi civilians.

    According to an FBI affidavit, Green and at least two others targeted the teenager and her family for a week before the attack, which wasn't revealed until witnesses came forward in late June.

    The soldiers drank alcohol, abandoned their checkpoint, changed clothes to avoid detection and headed to the victims' house, about 200 yards from a U.S. military checkpoint in the so-called "Triangle of Death", a Sunni Arab area south of Baghdad known for its violence, the affidavit said.

    In the week since the allegations came to light, the military has remained tightlipped even amid growing cries by Iraqi leaders for a fair investigation.

    President Bush, speaking on CNN's "Larry King Live" last Thursday, said the Iraqis should understand that the allegations will be handled "in a very transparent upfront way."

    "People will be held to account if these charges are true," Bush said.

    In the chow halls and barracks, many soldiers remain convinced that the alleged rape and killings in Mahmoudiya were aberrations and that most American service members respect the rules of war.

    "These crimes are against all the Army values, so if you don't have any of those values, you shouldn't even call yourself a soldier," said Staff Sgt. Ahmand Brown, 28, of Flint, Mich.

    In the aftermath of claims that Marines killed civilians in the western town of Haditha in November, the U.S. military in Iraq ordered all personnel to undergo values training.

    The Army has also paid greater attention to its rules of engagements, which determine when a soldier can use deadly force. But a bad soldier is a bad soldier, no matter the training, Brown said.

    Green, who served 11 months with the 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort Campbell, Ky., received an honorable discharge and left the army in mid-May. He was discharged because of an "anti-social personality disorder," according to military officials and court documents.

    But even before the rape-murder allegation surfaced

     

     

    By ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writer 1 minute ago
     

    BAGHDAD, Iraq - Four more U.S. soldiers have been charged with rape and murder and a fifth with dereliction of duty in the alleged rape-slaying of a young Iraqi woman and the killings of her relatives in Mahmoudiya, the military said Sunday.

    The five were accused Saturday following an investigation into allegations that American soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division raped the teenager and killed her and three relatives at her home south of Baghdad.

    Ex-soldier Steven D. Green was arrested last week in North Carolina and has pleaded not guilty to one count of rape and four counts of murder.

    The U.S. statement said the five soldiers still on active duty will face an Article 32 investigation, similar to a grand jury hearing in civilian law. The Article 32 proceeding will determine whether there is enough evidence to place them on trial.

    One of the soldiers was charged with failing to report the attack but is not believed to have participated in it directly, the statement said.

    The names of the four soldiers were not released.

    The March 12 attack on the family was among the worst in a series of cases of U.S. troops accused of killing and abusing Iraqi civilians. U.S. officials are concerned that the alleged rape-slaying will strain relations with the new U.S.-backed government and increase calls for changes in the agreement that exempts American soldiers from prosecution in Iraqi courts.

    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has demanded an independent investigation into the case, which followed a series of allegations that U.S. troops killed and mistreated Iraqi civilians.

    According to an FBI affidavit filed in Green's case, Green and at least two others targeted the teenager and her family for a week before the attack, which was not revealed until witnesses came forward in late June.

    The soldiers drank alcohol, abandoned their checkpoint, changed clothes to avoid detection and headed to the victims' house, about 200 yards from a U.S. military checkpoint in the so-called "Triangle of Death," a Sunni Arab area south of Baghdad known for its violence, the affidavit said.

    The affidavit estimated the rape victim was about 25. But a doctor at the Mahmoudiya hospital gave her age as 14. He refused to be identified for fear of reprisals.

    Green is accused of raping the woman and killing her and three relatives — an adult male and female and a girl estimated to be 5 years old. An official familiar with the investigation said he set fire to the rape victim's body in an apparent cover-up attempt.

    Iraqi authorities identified the rape victim as Abeer Qassim Hamza. The other victims were her father, Qassim Hamza; her mother, Fikhriya Taha; and her sister, Hadeel Qassim Hamza

    col Smith

         
     
     

     

    DISPATCH FROM THE FRONT LINES
    What's really going on Iraq
    A message from the U.S. Marine Corps' 'Mad Ghosts'


    The Commander of Mamudiya - FOB St Michael

    Lt Col Mark Smith

     

    Lt. Col. Mark Smith


    Posted: January 19, 2005
    1:00 a.m. Eastern

    Editor's note: Lt. Col. Mark Smith is commander of the "Mad Ghosts," the 2/24th Battalion (U.S. Marine Corps Reserve – Chicago). When he is not leading Marines in Iraq, he is an Indiana state trooper.

    © 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

    Greetings from FOB St. Michael. Hopefully, and prayerfully, this week's update finds you all healthy, happy and joyful. For another week in your separation from your loved one is behind you, and you are yet one day closer to that reunion where a hug will be more than a hug, a kiss more than a kiss and a touch more than a touch! That moment of reunion will be the point in space and time when the victory is yours.

    Victory over loneliness, victory over stress, victory over challenge, victory over hardship. Victory over all those things that the devil uses to turn people's heart to stone, but that the Lord uses to turn people's heart to thanksgiving. The victory over these things will only be sweetened by the fact that they were endured for a cause worthy of the pain: the cause of freedom and security for you, for us, for Iraq and it's global impact on all of our futures, and for the blessings of liberty that come with the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA! Bless us all.

    Now, with greetings out of the way ... let me get to this week's update.

    And, if I might, a short story. I received an email from a reporter from the Milwaukee Sentinel Journal last week by the name of Meg. Meg requested to do either a phone interview or a written interview via email.

    Well, that one was a no-brainer; given my 3rd grade writing skills, I opted for the phone interview so that if the questions actually required more than monosyllabic response, I could cover the voice meter, make that swooooosh sound, and claim I had a bad connection. You see, deception planning is a subordinate task of any good military plan!

    The appointed time and place came, and I made a satellite call to Ms. Meg. After we exchanged pleasantries and salutations, which for me is a Rocky Balboa 'how you doin,' Ms. Meg began the questioning. I would like to pause at this point, in case she ends up being a recipient of this email, and state for the record that Ms. Meg was very polite, very professional, very pleasant and in my opinion VERY SINCERELY INTERESTED IN THE MAD GHOSTS of 2/24.

    Anyhow, back to our story: she asked many well thought out questions. I, as is my policy, answered all in brute frankness and honesty, and then began the ritual of "sweating bullets" until publication to see who is offended or who races to challenge my assertions. (Bothers me not who does, as I stand by my statements and always stand ready to defend them, as I "defend to the death the right of those who vehemently disagree with them.")

    But, the point is that one of the questions she asked me struck me as odd. She asked me, and I am paraphrasing, "how do you decide what to write about in your updates."

    Now, this struck me as odd, and although I did not give her this particular answer, it struck me as odd because my challenge each week is not to "decide what TO write about," my challenge every week is to "decide what NOT TO write about." Simply put, every minute of every hour of every day of every week spent in the company of the Mad Ghosts IS something to write home about. You see, the challenge is that these magnificent Marines accomplish so much in the course of a day, an entire book could be written about just that day, and it would be the size of War and Peace, no pun intended. I struggle so hard with what details not to talk about, but I also know that the biggest challenge I could ever undertake is to attempt to actually give you a feel for this place, these Marines and what they accomplish: Day In, Day Out.

    The best I can do is ask you to just look around your house and imagine, Barney style, just imagine. Imagine that every single thing you take for granted you now have to provide: your electricity, your water, your toilets, your very dwelling, your food, your entertainment, ALL OF IT.

    You have to provide it, and then sustain and maintain it: Day In, Day Out. And, you have to do it while hunting an evil enemy relentlessly!

    Everywhere you go the ground is subject to explode in a milli-second of ear shattering violence and a cloud of lethal dust. Everything you do is subject to being interrupted by the thump/boom of rockets and mortars and their deadly payload.

    How would you feel? What would be your status? What would be your motivation? What would you do?

    Well, I can tell you, as both a participant and an observer, that the answer to those questions for the Mad Ghosts is as follows:

    How do you feel? Quite rationally fearful.

    What would be your status? Mission capable, locked/cocked and ready to rock.

    What would be your motivation? That I am a United States Marine, like all United States Marines that have gone before, some giving their last full measure of devotion.

    What would you do? Your duty...because that is your oath, and that is your motto: Semper Fidelis!

    Yeah, I could fill pages of each week's update with exploits. Exploits like Echo Company conducting a night helo assault in Black Hawk Helicopters in 1% illumination, striking the Landing Zone at the exact minute as planned, capturing 3 known terrorists and locating 14 artillery shells primed and prepared to be IEDs, just waiting to be buried on the side of the road...and all done in a darkness so black you couldn't see your hand in front of your face, and with a precision that would make any "special forces" unit envious.

    Yeah, I could talk about exploits like the Engineers and Mobile Strike Teams from Weapons Company moving in the middle of the night and establishing an obstacle fortress at a suspected enemy ambush site that would make the makers of the Infiltration Course at Quantico as jealous as a jilted lover.

    Yeah, I could talk about Fox Company who this week entertained both street workers and A CANDIDATE FOR PUBLIC OFFICE WHO CAMPAIGNED IN YUSUFIYAH, a town so under the control of the terrorists and without MNF presence three months ago that people did not venture from their homes!!!

    Yeah, I could talk about Golf Company, their never-ending identification and detention of terrorists in a previous hotbed at a rate three times what they should realistically be able to accomplish with their combat power.

    Yeah, I could talk about the Marines of H&S who work 16-18 hour days and also provide some of the most stellar and demanding security duties you can imagine.

    Yeah, I could talk about all of that, but all I would be doing is adding to the layers of such stories that you are innundated with everyday from the national media.

    OH YEAH, THAT'S RIGHT, THEY RARELY TALK ABOUT THOSE KIND OF EXPLOITS!

    No, they would rather tell you about every single IED or SVBIED that detonates.

    They would rather tell you that Iraq is overrun with insurgents.

    They would rather tell you that all is lost and hopeless and the only victory is in how soon we can get out of Iraq.

    Well, I refuse to "tow that line." I refuse to tow that line because it is misrepresentation at best, and these American HEROES deserve better.

    The other part of the media misrepresentation that really agitates me, now that you have spun me up, is the incessant undertone that the military senior leadership is either wrong or incompetent. This one agitates me like a Whirlpool 9000 agitates laundry. (I don't really know if there is a Whirlpool 9000, but if there was it would agitate laundry really hard!)

    I have been fortunate to host several General Officers here at FOB St. Michael, and I can tell you, they are without a doubt the most intelligent, genuine, "lead by example" Warriors I have ever seen. They care deeply about the Soldiers and Marines, and do things for all the right reasons.

    Now, before I am accused of "sucking up," rest assured, I have all the chance of ever making General as my beloved Cincinnati Bengals do of winning the Super Bowl. But, to make my point, let me tell you about our most recent General visit, which occurred on Wednesday. It was from Major General Dunford, Assistant Division Commander, Fighting First Marine Division. (As a side note, if you do a web search and study the exploits of Major General Dunford as Colonel Dunford, CO, 5th Marine Regiment during OIF, you would know the quality of leader, tactician and human being we are talking about: which on all counts is the highest caliber the scale can register.) The purpose of his visit was simple: he wanted to ensure the Marines of 2/24 that despite our current Tactical Control to the United States Army, that the 1st Marine Division would ensure that when the time comes for redeployment, the 1st Marine Division stood ready to ensure all our needs were met and that our redeployment would be smooth and seamless.

    Now, for those with little military experience, this is not something that is even remotely required of a General Officer. And, if the General Officer does decide it is necessary, he can easily do it with a phone call or email. But no, not General Dunford. He conducted a 2 hour vehicular patrol from his FOB to ours, through high risk avenues of approach to deliver the message in person, and to get to shake some hands of the Mad Ghosts. THAT IS THE CALIBER OF OUR GENERALS.

    No Ladies, rest assured, your loved one has the best Generalship in the World, whose passion is their Marines and whose focus is their Marines' success and welfare!

    What General Dunford said to the Staff in his closing remarks was one of the most brilliant, and yet simple things I think I have ever heard and communicates what I have been trying to communicate to you, but without the requisite intelligence or prose. He said, and again I paraphrase, "you hear talk in the media and other places of an exit strategy. Usually communicated in the form of a question, such as, what is our exit strategy?

    Well, professional Warriors DO NOT ESTABLISH EXIT STRATEGIES, WE ACHIEVE AN END STATE! And our end state in Iraq is a freely and democratically elected government in Iraq, sustained and protected by a viable, competent and professional security force.

    Have we won?...NO, are we winning?...YES!"

    Exactly, was my thought. No doubt it will take time. But if we remain WILLFUL as a Nation, if we deliberately and with cold calculation understand the cause, then the effort is required, the hardship endured, the VICTORY ASSURED.

    Your Mad Ghost is the tip of the spear, but YOU are the shaft. The tip delivers the blow, the shaft provides the steadiness during the LONG flight to the target. So, as always, it comes full circle.

    What is necessary is faithfulness...sound familiar?

    Always faithful...always faithful to God, Country and Corps.

    So again, and until next week, SEMPER FI!

    NOTE: I was the recipient of a forwarded email from Regina Simon and her discussion of a surgical procedure Chad (SSgt Simon) will soon undergo. She signed off her letter saying, "I am scared." As I have said before, rational fear is understandable. And no person I know of has more reason for rational fear than Regina Simon. So, I would ask all the families of 2/24 to pray, pray hard and pray often for Regina and Chad Simon, because I know an entire Battalion of Marines that is.

    And I know that with that much prayer, no matter what the Lord has in store for Regina and Chad and their family, I know fear will dissipate and peace will be found. Because in my heart of hearts I know in the darkest of times the refrain from a Hymn I often hear in my local parish reruns in my head over and over and over and over, and peace is found:

    "the Lord is my light and my salvation, of whom shall I be afraid...of whom shall I be afraid."

    God Bless all the magnificent families of 2/24.

    Mark

    Lt. Col Mark A. Smith, MAYHEM 6
    CO, Task Force 2/24
    "Mayhem from the Heartland"
    or as the terrorists call us
    "The Mad Ghosts"
     

    Mahmudiyah, IZ
    2nd Bn, 24th Marines, H&S Co, Bn Cmdr
    Unit 43495
    FPO-AP 96426-3495

     



     

     

     
         
    Fallujah
    Hoosier Marine Leads Fight in Fallujah
     
    Lt. Col. Mark Smith
    Lt. Col. Mark Smith
     
    US troops in Fallujah this week
    US troops in Fallujah this week
     

    By Karen Hensel

    An Indiana state trooper is leading the charge as a US Marine in the fight in Fallujah. His wife talks for the first time and exclusively with I-Team 8.

    It has been a dangerous two days in Fallujah. The military confirms ten Americans are dead. Among those on the front lines are Indiana Marines and one Indiana state trooper.

    US Army and Marine units pushed into the center of Fallujah this week. It's too early to tell if two days of bombings and gunfights have loosened rebel control. Some 15,000 American troops backed by 2,000 Iraqi soldiers continue to pound away.

    Among the troops is Indiana State Trooper Mark Smith.  He is also a lieutenant colonel with the US Marine Corps.

    Lt. Col. Smith is the top commander in charge of 1,100 Marines and soldiers in Fallujah. He called his wife via satellite phone just an hour before I-Team 8’s interview.

    "I asked how he was doing. It was one of his roughest days yesterday,” said Sheila Smith, his wife. Smith lost some of his own men in the fighting Monday.

    "He said it was up close and personal, so we'll patiently wait to get the names and be there for families when we find out who it was,” she said.

    It is not the first time he has lost a Marine brother. In weekly e-mails home to the wives and families he writes of losing Lance Corporal Daniel Wyatt last month. He wrote that he "personally recovered Daniel's body and escorted him back...for his final ride home."

    "When we lost Lance Corporal Wyatt it felt like one of our own kids,” said Sheila.

    Lt. Col. Smith describes "...the soul touching sight of combat hardened Marines, encrusted with weeks of sweat and dust...respect in the handling of the body of one of their own.”

    At 6:00 pm Indiana time, it is the middle of the night and the middle of their mission. Lt. Copl. Smith and those he leads are in intense fighting.

    "In the Marines, you learn to know no news is good news,” said Sheila.

    The Department of Defense released the names of two soldiers killed Monday: Cpl. Nathaniel T. Hammond, 24, of Tulsa, Okla. And Lance Cpl. Shane K. O'Donnell, 24, of DeForest, Wisc. Both Marines died Nov. 8 as a result of enemy action in Babil Province, Iraq. They were assigned to the Marine Corps Reserve's 2nd Battalion, 24th Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, Chicago, Ill.

    Lt. Col Smith is making the sacrifice of being away from his family. On Wednesday, we’ll show you how his two young daughters are making their own sacrifice and how you can help.

    Battle Lines

    Hospital

     

    A_Week3.jpg

    BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A suicide bomber blew up his car outside a hospital south of Baghdad on Thursday while U.S. troops handed out candy and food to children, killing 30 people and wounding about 40, including four Americans.

    Two soldiers died in another bombing near the capital, and the U.S. command said four Americans were killed Wednesday.

    Elsewhere, 11 Iraqis were killed and 17 injured Thursday when a car bomb exploded near a crowded soft drink stand in Hillah, a mostly Shiite Muslim city 60 miles south of Baghdad. More than 200 people -- mostly Shiites -- have died from suicide attacks and car bombs since Nov. 18.

    'MY CHILDREN ARE GONE'

    Three women and two children were among the dead in the attack outside the hospital in Mahmoudiya, a flashpoint town 20 miles south of Baghdad in the "triangle of death" notorious for attacks on Shiite Muslims, U.S. troops and foreign travelers.

    A civil affairs team from the U.S. Army's Task Force Baghdad was at the hospital studying ways to upgrade the facility when the bomber struck just outside the guarded compound, a U.S. military statement

    Some American soldiers were distributing toys and food to children when the attack occurred about 10:40 a.m., Iraqi police Maj. Falah al-Mohammedawi said.

    Car bombs target hospital, market

    Iraqi civilians, politician among those killed

    Thursday, November 24, 2005; Posted: 5:32 p.m. EST (22:32 GMT)
     
    A car bomb Thursday in Mahmoudiya, Iraq, killed dozens of people and left a huge hole outside a hospital.

    BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The U.S. military is blaming a suicide car bomb for a deadly attack on a hospital in Mahmoudiya, 20 miles (32 kilometers) south of Baghdad earlier Thursday. Thirty people, most of them Iraqi civilians, were killed, police said.

    In addition to the attack, a roadside bombing killed an Iraqi police official in Mahmoudiya Thursday afternoon.

    Also Thursday, gunmen assassinated a member of the Iraqi National Accord, whose chairman is Ayad Allawi, the former prime minister with the Iraq Interim Government. An official with Allawi's party confirmed the member as Adnan Khahtan al-Jarah.

    The U.S. military said the attack on the Mahmoudiya hospital occurred as Task Force Baghdad soldiers were conducting an assessment on upgrading the hospital.

    In earlier reports the military said 18 Iraqi civilians and six security guards with the Force Protection Services were killed. It said that 30 other civilians and four U.S. soldiers were wounded.

    Police, who customarily report only Iraqi casualties in such incidents, said 23 people were wounded. Some were taken to hospitals in Baghdad, police said.

    "Task Force Baghdad officials said the target appears to have been the hospital, but the terrorist was unable to penetrate the security perimeter before detonating," the U.S. military said in a news release.

    Market

    Al_Mah29.jpg

    Bomb strikes market Mahmoudiya kills three, wounds 22
    Jul. 3, 2006

    A bomb struck a popular market in Mahmoudiya for a second consecutive day today, killing at least three people and wounding 22, the police said. It was the same market that was hit by a bomb on Sunday evening, police Capt Rasheed al-Samaraie said. Preliminary reports said three people were killed and 22 wounded today, while three were killed and 21 wounded in the previous attack, police said. The town, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Baghdad, is at the centre of a US investigation into allegations that a group of American soldiers raped a woman, then killed her and three members of her family in an apparent cover-up attempt. Dozens of mourners held a funeral procession for one of yesterday's blast victims, chanting "there is no god but Allah."

     

     

    Five named

    U.S. military names soldiers charged in rape, murder probe

    (CNN) -- The U.S. military Monday released th
    e names of five soldiers, including two sergeants, charged in the rape and murder of Iraqi civilians in Mahmoudiya, Iraq.

    The military said that
    Sgt. Paul E. Cortez, Spc. James P. Barker, Pfc. Jesse V. Spielman, and Pfc. Bryan L. Howard were charged on Saturday in connection with their alleged participation in the rape and murder of an Iraqi female, and the murders of three other family members.

    Sgt. Anthony W. Yribe was charged with dereliction of duty "for his failure to report the rape and murder of these Iraqi civilians, but is not alleged to have been a direct participant in the rape and killings," the military said.


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