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On Mon, 25 Aug 2003 15:44:27 -0500, Jake Nichols
wrote: On Mon, 25 Aug 2003 17:03:45 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Mon, 25 Aug 2003 08:51:26 -0500, Jake Nichols wrote: On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 16:20:26 -0700, "Dan" wrote: A military has few compunctions about firing on armed combatants, but is more reluctant about doing so on unarmed civilians. Kent State University And in the middle of the Turbulent 60s, with bomb throwers, mass riots, takeovers and thrashing hundreds of universities, the only one you can come up with is Kent State? Four Dead in Ohiiiooo! Sounds pretty ****ing reluctant to me. Gunner We are talking about the USA military and not Militaries in general, yes? ****************** http://makeashorterlink.com/?C55B163B5 BAGHDAD - Panicked by the relentless Iraqi resistance attacks that target them day in and day out, trigger-happy U.S. troops shot dead pointblank an Iraqi father and three of his four children, one of them only eight years old, a leading British newspaper reported Sunday, August 10. ******************* http://makeashorterlink.com/?L1D9513B5 IT started when a young boy hurled a sandal at a US jeep - it ended with two Iraqis dead and 16 seriously injured. I watched in horror as American troops opened fire on a crowd of 1,000 unarmed people here yesterday. Many, including children, were cut down by a 20-second burst of automatic gunfire during a demonstration against the killing of 13 protesters at the Al-Kaahd school on Monday. *************************** http://makeashorterlink.com/?B21A233B5 (While the information on this link hasn't been proven or sufficently disproven, the allegation remains, IIRC) All of this has informed at least the establishment reaction to the news that Lt. j.g. Bob Kerrey and the six Navy SEALs he led into the Mekong Delta village of Thanh Phong on the night of Feb. 25, 1969, killed--murdered, it has been alleged--at least 13 unarmed women and children ****************** Behind Colin Powell's Legend After a brief mention of the My Lai massacre in My American Journey, Powell penned a partial justification of the Americal's brutality. In a chilling passage, Powell explained the routine practice of murdering unarmed male Vietnamese. "I recall a phrase we used in the field, MAM, for military-age male," Powell wrote. "If a helo spotted a peasant in black pajamas who looked remotely suspicious, a possible MAM, the pilot would circle and fire in front of him. If he moved, his movement was judged evidence of hostile intent, and the next burst was not in front, but at him. ****************** http://travel.hubcom.net/vietnam/mylai.html In one of the greatest attrocities of the whole war 504 unarmed civilians were murdered by American soldiers in the village of My Lai on the morning of 16th March 1968. The site has been carefully preserved both as a memorial to those who died and as a museum. **************** March 31 - US soldiers kill 10 members, all women and children, of the same family at a checkpoint near Najaf, Iraq. April 1 - US Marines kill a driver and wound his passenger as he approaches a checkpoint near Shatra, Iraq. No weapons or explosives were found. April 11 - US Marines fire on two cars approaching a checkpoint in Nasiriyah killing two children and wounding nine others. No weapons or explosives were found. April 28 - April 30 - US soldiers kill 20 unarmed protestors when they fire into crowds in Fallujah, Iraq. Human Rights Watch accuses troops of excessive force. Ninety civilians wounded. May 24 - US soldiers kill three teenage boys celebrating a wedding in a motorcade at a checkpoint in Samarra, north of Baghdad. No weapons or explosives were found. May 26 - US soldiers fire on a truck that failed to stop in time at a roadblock in Samarra, Iraq. Two children are killed. June 18 - US soldiers fire into a protesting crowd of 500 outside US Civilian Authority headquarters. Two Iraqi civilians killed. June 26 - US soldiers on patrol fire on a Baghdad house rooftop killing a12 -year old carrying a blanket. June 30 - US soldiers fire on separate cars at checkpoints. Four Iraqi civilians die. No weapons or explosives found. July 3 - An Iraqi civilian tells Agence France Presse that he was handcuffed, gagged and later beaten by a US soldier who found a handgun in his car. July 9 - US soldiers atop the Durah police station in Baghdad fire on an Iraqi civilian fixing a car at a repair shop. Soldiers mistook the car’s ignition distributor for a grenade. July 22 - US forces fired into a crowd of 40 to 50 rock-throwing protesters gathered in Karbala seeking entry to the Imam Hussein Mosque. One man is killed. July 26 - The Pentagon announces that four US soldiers will be put under investigation for beating Iraqi prisoners at detention centers. July 27 - US soldiers of Task Force 20 kill 11 civilian passers-by while raiding the home of Prince Rabiah Muhamed Al-Habib in search of Saddam Hussein. Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez admitted at a Baghdad press conference that “up to five” might have been killed, but refused to take responsibility. Eyewitnesses tell reporters that four of the dead were cremated in the car they were riding, which came under heavy US gunfire. July 30 - Two Iraqi civilians on foot shot dead by US soldiers in the Mansour district of Baghdad, Iraq. No weapons or explosives were found. August 8 - US forces fire on a car carrying an Iraqi family at a checkpoint north of Baghdad. Five Iraqis, including three children, were killed, and two others wounded. August11 - US soldiers kill six Iraqi civilians at three different checkpoints in Baghdad, Iraq. No weapons or explosives were found. The above list is by no means comprehensive. Other stories of civilians murdered in Iraq continue to go unreported. Hoping to stave off the incensed anger of a threatened Iraqi population, US military officials paid $262,263 in compensation as of August13 . However, most of the money was for property damaged during botched raids. US military personnel have refused to comment saying only that an Iraqi family has to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that US servicemen erred in killing an Iraqi civilian. In most cases, US military officials said that soldiers fired because they believed they were threatened. It remains to be seen whether US forces have been held accountable for the above deaths, and others. Human rights organizations have blamed US forces, as the occupying power, for the high number of civilian deaths. In most cases, Iraqi eyewitnesses have told this writer that soldiers just scream at confused Iraqi drivers in English. The Iraqis, who know of the deaths at checkpoints, panic and often do something wrong in their bid to avoid being shot or beaten. * Firas Al-Atraqchi is a Canadian journalist of Iraqi heritage. H Interesting stats. Now if it had been the Russians and Chesnians, or just about anyone else, each of those incidents would have been blown off as the fortunes of war and stupidity at ****ing with armed and often scared men. And would have resulted in the death of most of the members of the crowd. I noted some interesting lies by spin in your list, as well..such as the van failing to stop when warning shots were fired in front of it, so the troops simply blew it away, only later finding out it was filled with kids. Seems Momma was either on a Jihad or terminally stupid. Lots of examples of similar in that biased Al Gazeera listing. Great examples...snicker. Now..this has what to do with Kent State? Gunner "The French are a smallish, monkey-looking bunch and not dressed any better, on average, than the citizens of Baltimore. True, you can sit outside in Paris and drink little cups of coffee, but why this is more stylish than sitting inside and drinking large glasses of whiskey I don't know." -- P.J O'Rourke (1989) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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