“If the American people heard these stories..."
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accurate information, not only about Iraq.
Most of the latest
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of mass media. And beyond that validation, the research also give us
some
understanding of what tactics and methods might be most effective.
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Discussion of research and critical insights regarding:
*WARNING* Some images in the Flash
presentation and image gallery may be uncomfortable and inappropriate
viewing for faint of heart and young children.
by Chris Floyd
What happened in the village of Abu Sifa, in the rural Al Ishaqi
district north of Baghdad, on the Ides of March? The murk of war – the
natural blur of unbuckled event, and its artificial augmentation by
professional massagers – shrouds the details of the actual operation.
But here is what we know.
We know that U.S. forces conducted a
raid on a house in the village on March 15. We know that
the
Pentagon said the American troops were "targeting an individual
suspected of supporting foreign fighters for the al-Qaeda in Iraq terror
network," when their team came under fire, and that the troops "returned
fire, utilizing both air and ground assets." We know that the Pentagon
said that "only" one man, two women and one child were killed in the
raid, which destroyed a house in the village.
We know
from
photographic evidence that the corpses of two men, four shrouded
figures (women, according to the villagers), and five children – all of
them apparently under the age of five, one as young as seven months –
were pulled from the rubble of the house and laid out for burial beneath
the bright, blank desert sky. We know that an Associated Press reporter
on the scene saw the ruined house, and a photographer for Agence France
Presse took the pictures of the bodies.
We know that two Iraqi
police officials, Major Ali Ahmed and Colonel Farouq Hussein – both
employed by the U.S.-backed Iraqi government – told Reuters that the 11
occupants of the house, including the five children,
had
been bound and shot in the head before the house was blown up. We
know that the U.S.-backed Iraqi police told Reuters that an American
helicopter landed on the roof in the early hours of the morning, then
the house was blown up, and then the victims were discovered. We know
that the U.S.-backed Iraqi police said that an autopsy performed on the
bodies found that "all the victims had gunshot wounds to the head." We
know that the U.S.-backed Iraqi police said they found "spent
American-issue cartridges in the rubble."
We know that a
Knight-Ridder reporter later saw a preliminary police report
indicating that the 11 victims had multiple wounds. This was presented
in American papers as a possible contradiction of the original Iraqi
police statements, which Knight-Ridder said spoke of victims suffering
"a single gunshot to the head." However, in all of the original reports,
the Iraqi police were quoted as saying the victims were shot in the
head; they did not say whether there were other wounds as well.
We know that Ahmed Khalaf, brother of
house's owner, told AP that nine of the victims were family members and
two were visitors, adding, "the killed family was not part of the
resistance, they were women and children. The Americans have promised us
a better life, but we get only death."
We know from the photographs that one
child, the youngest, the baby, has a gaping wound in his forehead. We
can see that one other child, a girl with a pink ribbon in her hair, is
lying on her side and has blood oozing from the back of her head. The
faces of the other children are turned upwards toward the sun; if they
were shot, they were shot in the back of the head and their wounds are
not evident. But we can see that their bodies, though covered with dust
from the rubble, are otherwise whole; they were evidently not crushed in
the collapse of the house. They died in some other fashion.
We know from the
photographs that two of the children – two girls, still in their pajamas
– are lying with their dead eyes open. We can see that the light and
tenderness that animate the eyes of every young child have vanished;
nothing remains but the brute stare of nothingness into nothingness. We
can see that the other three children have their eyes closed; two are
limp, but the baby has one stiffened arm raised to his cheek, as if
trying to ward off the blow that gashed and pulped his face so terribly.