The Cover-Ups That Exploded
Saturday 10 April 2010
by: Alexander Cockburn, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Photo: The U.S. Army; Edited: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t)
The Pentagon is reeling after two lethal episodes uncovered by diligent journalism show trigger-happy U.S. Army helicopter pilots and U.S. Special Forces slaughtering civilians, then seeking to cover up their crimes.
The World Wide Web was transfixed Monday when Wikileaks put up on YouTube a 38-minute video, along with a 17-minute edited version, taken from a U.S. Army Apache helicopter, one of two firing on a group of Iraqis in Baghdad at a street corner in July 2007. Twelve civilians died, including a Reuters photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen, 22, and a Reuters driver, Saeed Chmagh, 40.
At a press conference in Washington, D.C., Wikileaks said it had got the footage from whistle-blowers in the military and had been able to break the encryption code. The Pentagon has confirmed the video is genuine.
Meanwhile, in Afghanistan, the U.S. military has finally admitted that Special Forces troops killed two pregnant Afghan women and a girl in a February 2010, raid, in which two Afghan government officials were also killed. Brilliant reporting by Jerome Starkey of The Times of London has blown apart the U.S. military's cover-up story that the women were killed by knife wounds administered several hours before the raid.
It now appears that the knife wounds may have been inflicted by the Special Forces troops retrieving their bullets from the dead or dying women's bodies. Starkey's story last Sunday in The Times reported that "Afghan investigators also determined that American forces not only killed the women but had also 'dug bullets out of their victims' bodies in the bloody aftermath" and then "washed the wounds with alcohol before lying to their superiors about what happened."
The 17-minute video recording the U.S. military's massacre from the air in Baghdad is utterly damning. The visual and audio record reveal the two Apache helicopter pilots and the U.S. Army intelligence personnel monitoring the real-time footage falling over themselves to make the snap judgment that the civilians roughly a thousand feet below are armed insurgents and that one of them, peeking round a corner, was carrying an RPG -- that is, a rocket-propelled antitank grenade launcher.
The dialogue is particularly chilling, revealing gleeful pilots gloating over the effect of their initial machine-gun salvoes. "Look at those dead bastards," one pilot says. "Nice," answers the other. Then, as a wounded man painfully writhes toward the curb, the pilots eagerly wait for an excuse to finish him off. "All you gotta do is pick up a weapon," one pilot says yearningly.
Then suddenly, a civilian van, seeing the carnage, pulls up. A man jumps out and starts dragging the wounded man around to load him in. The pilots implore the intelligence monitors to give them the go-ahead to strafe the van, about which they have made the instant, fatally erroneous judgment that this is an insurgent rescue squad. A few moments later, the intelligence monitors, with zero visual evidence underpinning their judgment, give the go-ahead.
Another salvo finishes off the wounded man and his would-be rescuer, kills other civilians in the van and wounds two children in the front seat.
U.S. ground troops arrive on the scene, report the presence of wounded children. "Well, it's their fault for bringing their kids into a battle," one pilot tells the other. There are further sniggers as a U.S. armored vehicle rolls up. "I think they just drove over a body," one of the pilots cackles.
One disgraceful exchange discloses a brutal order to the U.S. ground troops not to take the wounded children to the nearest military hospital, thus condemning them to the long waits and understaffed, under-equipped Baghdad civilian hospitals. It clearly shows the culpability of the next command echelon, which is just as great as that of the pilots.
In the wake of the lethal onslaught, the U.S. military denied that any error had taken place, its version of events faithfully cited by The New York Times under the headline "2 Iraqi Journalists Killed as U.S. Forces Clash With Militias": "According to the (U.S. military's) statement, American troops were conducting a raid when they were hit by small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades. The American troops called in reinforcements and attack helicopters. In the ensuing fight, the statement said, the two Reuters employees and nine (sic) insurgents were killed."
The footage made public by Wikileaks makes it clear this was fiction, from start to finish.
Defense analyst Pierre Sprey, who led the design teams for the F-16 and A-10 and who spent many years in the Pentagon, stresses two particularly damning features of the footage. The first is the claim that Noor-Eldeen's telephoto lens could be mistaken for an RPG. "A big telephoto for a 35mm camera is under a foot and half at most. An RPG, unloaded, is 3 feet long, and loaded, 4 foot long. These guys were breathing hard to kill someone."
Sprey's second point is that an Apache helicopter makes a very loud "whomp, whomp" noise. " Twelve guys are unconcerned, with loud helicopters right overhead. Imagine if they were planning an assault on American troops. They'd be crouched down and skulking along walls, spread out. They would not be walking casually down the middle of the street, totally ignoring the helicopters."
A retired U.S. Marine was even blunter in an e-mail exchange:
"Not a good show at all. The group on the ground were banishing nothing that 'looked' or appeared as weapons, especially the voiced 'RPG' which is so obvious when loaded. And then again -- they were told in advance by intelligence (I am sure by the tone in the flight) that these people were bad guys. The Apache crews were just stupid and the intelligence clowns pointing them and egging them on are guilty of murder -- 'you are clear to engage.'"
In the aftermath, the U.S. military claimed that some AK-47s and a grenade launcher had been found at the scene. Sprey comments that, in the course of the subsequent cover-up, the weapons may well have been planted, LAPD style. According to Reuters, their men had been working on a story about weightlifting when they heard about a military raid in the neighborhood, and decided to drive there to check it out. Local witnesses say there was no firefight anywhere near where they were gunned down by the Apaches.
Reuters, which by that time had already had four employees killed in Iraq by the U.S. military (ultimately, to date, at least seven), demanded an investigation, which the Army says it undertook but found no breach of its Rules of Engagement by the pilots or U.S. Army intelligence.
Leave the last word to a retired U.S. Army man, answering the e-mail from the retired U.S. Marine quoted above:
"The damage this incident and its video evidence will do is immense ... it will irrefutably confirm for many that large chunk of anti-American propaganda which insists the American flyers are just playing computer shoot-em-up games using real flesh and blood as a proxy for the digital figures they usually slaughter only in the arcades.
"How much is simulator training responsible for the disconnection from reality demonstrated in this incident? The crew was detached from reality ... How (is) the Army ... producing crews that, having the potential for such incompetence, cannot detect it among themselves. If anyone in that crew had paused and asked if the action being taken was correct, surely it would have been aborted ... The Army has to find out why."
Alexander Cockburn is co-editor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. He is also co-author of the new book "Dime's Worth of Difference: Beyond the Lesser of Two Evils," available through www.counterpunch.com.
Copyright 2010 Creators.com
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.
War is Hell. And we brought
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 10:49 — OrwellWasAnOptimist (not verified)War is Hell. And we brought it to Iraq, and Afghanistan, and a lot of other places. It is true that "everybody does stuff like this in war", but how can that absolve us of the fact that WE STARTED THIS? And if I am not imagining things, I thought America was supposed to be better than this, that we had a Constitution and legal system that was supposed to "tend toward justice", and that generally speaking things would get better over time. Atrocities like this Apache Killing Spree are a sad reminder that America is fooling itself about its moral superiority.We murdered those people.
Horrifying and barbaric, I
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 10:54 — Anonymous (not verified)Horrifying and barbaric, I feel numb with the disgust I feel towards the military machine of the US.
I have not gone online for weeks only to find this news and I feel sick. How is this tolerated?
Is it any wonder why the US is hated, despised and feared? How long till this atrocity occurs at home on us?
Proof that brainwashing works on the young minds of those that chose to enlist to legally kill.
What do we do to stop this machine of terror called US Forces Against Humanity and Life?
What does everyone that reads this feel?
Fear has been fed to us so much that we are afraid to revolt, to say no more carnage.
How do you hold the military accountable and punish them? Eye for Eye? Surely this must be what other nations feel.
So Mr. President, Senators, how do you get out of this one? Can't hide the horrors any longer.
It is time to have a serious
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 11:54 — hammeringinthemorning (not verified)It is time to have a serious discussion about slashing the military budget so it is inline with what the other developed nations of the world spend.
It is time for our leaders to find out that killing people will not make them our friends.
And a deep racism is rampant
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 12:05 — Vic Anderson (not verified)And a deep racism is rampant among the Bush/Obama dupes, particularly their "special forces": "Can't trust ANY haji; kill 'em ALL and let Allah sort 'em out!". Accountability for this depraved disposition ends at the Casa Blanca buck stop - White House Barackades.
THIS IS WHY NON-EMBEDDED
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 12:38 — Anonymous (not verified)THIS IS WHY NON-EMBEDDED JOURNALISTS ARE BANNED FROM WAR THEATERS. The military loves killing. That is their profession. We THE PEOPLE must act to control the leaders to comply with our intent, not the interest of the very few who are more bloodthirsty than even the military, who would do anything to keep the free flow of money and power.
This must be the best piece
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 13:54 — Gordon UK (not verified)This must be the best piece of recruiting film for anti-American forces - or "terrorists" as they are called, but who are the terrorists?
Is it surprising that American forces are hated wherever they go in the world in their quest to bring peace, justice and democracy to backward countries?
Is it surprising that there are those who will attempt to hit back at the US whenever and wherever they can?
When will those in charge learn?
These two episodes are
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 13:59 — Robert Walters (not verified)These two episodes are sickening reminders of the inherent atrocity of war, and the depraved mentalities created by military training. The depravity, of course, is primarily resident in the mentality, amorality (psychopathy, really) and sick values of those who perpetrate war as policy. There is "honor" and "valor" in military service ONLY when rendered in DEFENSE -- NEVER in the kinds of wars the US seems so gleefully to wage: wars of conquest and empire. Disgusting, to say the least!
Funny and odd how
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 14:15 — Anonymous (not verified)Funny and odd how Washington's 1100 think tanks are pretty silent on this one.
Oh, that's right,,these are "the very few who are more bloodthirsty than even the military, who would do anything to keep the free flow of money and power."
When my grandson was 5 yrs
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 16:06 — Anonymous (not verified)When my grandson was 5 yrs old, I walked in on him while he was playing a computer game that was to my mind overly violent. My daughter when questioned about the inappropriateness of a game like this for a young child remarked, "well we have to start training up the next generation of warriors don't we?" What we have in the skies over Baghdad and in Afghanistan are the product of the computer game generation. They don't see the human side of war, and if they do, they don't last long in the military. I don't understand why anyone would be surprised at the carnage. War is NOT a moral enterprise. For the Christians in this war it is double jeopardy. For is it not written "Thou shalt not kill"? Don't see any exceptions included.
Stop paying taxes to support
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 18:31 — Anonymous (not verified)Stop paying taxes to support this insanity. I did during the Viet Nam "Conflict". Left a good paying career and went underground because, morally, I could no longer have my money used in this way.
"Beware of the military/industrial Complex".
This is what happens when
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 19:04 — Anonymous (not verified)This is what happens when you recruit the lowest of the low. Because the US military has been having so much difficulty the past decade in getting folks to join, they've lowered their standards, a lot. I watch videos on youtube of young boys in Iraq and Afghanistan and they look and sound like high school gangster dropouts. Race doesn't seem to matter. Gang style tattoos along with gangster "do rags" over their heads leads me to believe the US military is stocked with those who represent the bottom of the barrel. I'm sure the average IQ in the military is that of a 12 year old. Computer games plus idiots with guns plus a dismal officer corps plus poor training equals the incidents you are seeing now.
Wars are inherently nasty,
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 21:10 — Anonymous (not verified)Wars are inherently nasty, brutish and uncivilised and as such should be reserved as a measure of last resort when survival is threatened. If you don't like a war go after the politicians not the soldiers. If you want to settle differences in a "civilised" manner try the UN. The only proper use of the US military under the constitution is to defend the country. If and when that time comes we will only care if our military win or loses because the winners cleanse their own history and execute the losers.
Wars give humans the
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 01:21 — borisjimbo (not verified)Wars give humans the opportunity to be inhuman to other humans. If they can get away with it all the better. What fun it must be to actually blow apart into small red gobbets the body of someone who means absolutely nothing to you; let's do it while we have the chance! Sadists; I put them in the same category as those who pushed the war and those who inflicted that commander in chief upon us.
Sure the world is jumping up
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 01:59 — benalbanach (not verified)Sure the world is jumping up and down but will anything change ? These guys will be heroes in the up-coming movie. Aren't they all heroes ?
Q: When will those in charge
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 05:55 — jahf (not verified)Q: When will those in charge learn?
A: When those who are nominally subordinate stop doing what those who are supposedly in charge tell them to do.
It was when atrocities like
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 07:24 — Lincoln F (not verified)It was when atrocities like this came to light during the Vietnam War that public opinion solidified against it. I only hope we're not too numb to feel the pain or too arrogant to feel the shame.
We are responsible for the
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 08:27 — ksk (not verified)We are responsible for the results of our wars. In a representative form of government, decisions like waging war belong to all of us. And when we decide, or let our representatives decide on our behalf, to go to war, we share the responsibility that decision carries.
You mean to tell me American
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 10:42 — Dave (not verified)You mean to tell me American troops DON'T go overseas to give away candy and chewing gum to kids to make the world love us all the more???
A cover up?!? Hey, Cockburn,
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 10:50 — Adam S. (not verified)A cover up?!? Hey, Cockburn, sounds like you are promoting a government conspiracy theory. You said only wackos promoted government conspiracy theories.
if the u.s. is invaded by a
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 12:45 — sawbuck (not verified)if the u.s. is invaded by a foreign country, and i defend my house, family and neighborhood, does that make me an insurgent?
Supporting the troops means
Sun, 04/11/2010 - 17:03 — Marie Gilreath (not verified)Supporting the troops means taking care of them, rewarding them when they've done good and busting them when they are wrong. Covering up the war crimes of our troops is no different than the Catholic Church covering sexual abuses by their priest. Cover ups are cover ups and the thing about cover ups, is that the things that get covered up seldom stay covered up. When they get uncovered, it is all the more embarrassing.
The creation of "Plausible Deniability" was a very bad thing. Powerful people who make decisions are never responsible for the bad decisions they make. Hence, they often make it impossible to back track and undo those bad decisions in order to make bad actors pay for their bad acts. They do not want to pay for their own bad acts of committing the initial cover up.
Waiting for a whipping is much worst than having done with it.
hahaha good those dumbass
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 09:06 — zach (not verified)hahaha good those dumbass Iraqis deserved it. I saw that video and was thinking good job Troops, nice shooting. Who the hell even cares its Iraq, they bombed the world trade centers and run around with god damn bombs strapped to them selves, and you are defending them. You are not an American. If you want to defend Iraq after all they did to America then go and move to Iraq cause you dont deserve to live in America. Dumbass people
1. It was in a war zone. 2.
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 09:56 — Anonymous (not verified)1. It was in a war zone.
2. US Troops on the ground were taking fire just blocks away.
3. Two Reuters new correspondents are within arms reach of men carrying a RPG and an AK47.
4. Man with AK47 was firing.
What do you expect to happen? They were right there getting their "news." They should know the dangers of being a war correspondent. Reuters should recognize this also.
The audio is chilling, but so what... it is not meant for you to hear. Those men were professionals in action. They did NOT fire on crowds of un-armed people. They DID fire on active armed COMBATANTS. You expect them to do their job and cry for the dead simultaneously? Go to the ER and ask the nurses about their "humor." They will sicken you also unless you recognize context.
The officers that fly Apaches are not "low standard gangsters," They are likely more educated than you, and almost certainly more emotionally and morally challenged by their job than people reading this story on the internet.
It begins and ends with you
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 11:29 — Feral (not verified)It begins and ends with you and me. Anyone who would deny the appalling reality of not only this but other "leaked", "isolated incidents" is denying the reality of what they see and hear. We have used the term "context" in such a way that we can justify anything. The reason that we as individuals make these leaps of logic is understandable, but ultimately not excusable: the reason is self preservation. I speak of the preservation of one's identity as a citizen and a human being. We will go to the wildest extremes to justify the actions of our police, military, and political leaders because we see any indictment of their actions as a condemnation of ourselves. After all, these are Americans, and we will attempt the most outrageous justifications to shield not just the relevant actors, but ourselves- whom they are charged to serve and represent- from accountability.
Call this, if you will, a "collusion of identity" which allows otherwise responsible citizens making statements about "context" and finally resorting to ideas that have been proven lies such as some have repeated in comments here, in order too preserve their identities as Americans.Inevitably the entire process degenerates into a "love it or leave", "my country right or wrong"; "with us or against us " attitude that provides the carrier for ever greater abuses.
Speaking truth to power is a start, but in the end, it is we at the grassroots of America who must stop castigating those who embrace and speak the truth and begin to embrace and speak the truth ourselves. The guy who still believes the Iraq connection to 911 is your neighbor. Love and serve him by telling the truth, and you are not only loving and serving your country, you are saving your country and yourself.
Awesome! Everyone on the
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 11:58 — Anonymous (not verified)Awesome! Everyone on the anti-American bus!
Just remember, there WAS an AK and an RPG on the scene, and IT'S A FUCKING WARZONE. Shit like this happens all the time, it is not the fault of America, it is the fault of humanity as a whole. WAR IS TRAGIC, AND EVIL but believe it or not, war is not a creation of America.
Also to everyone bitching and moaning still, more people than this die EVERY SECOND of every day and you don't give a shit. Why do you pretend to now? You wish to appear the valiant, righteous crusader of truth?
Quit exploiting the accidental deaths of a few people for your own causes.
Just like to point out that
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 13:33 — Anonymous (not verified)Just like to point out that the wording in this article is pretty biased. If you watch the video, some of the motivation behind what's said isn't necessarily as sinister as the article makes it out to be.
The pilots laughing at the HUMVEE driving over a body, to me sounded like, 'Really? You couldn't just drive around that? lol, idiot.' As for the pilots being eager to open fire on the van, if they truly thought that these were insurgents, which to me even through the crappy video feed looked like unarmed civilians, sounded frustrated that they couldn't do their job because command wouldn't get back to them. The longer they wait, the longer the enemy has to set up shots on the pilots' allies.
All that said, I can't quite figure out how the pilots could go along with the ground forces assessment that they were looking at hostiles. The cameras on their straps looked like cameras on straps even through the crappy video quality that the helicopter cameras picked up. It's pretty lame that they thought the cameras were weapons. I mean... a camera and an AK totally look alike. I can understand how they could be confused. Or not.
The apologists for these
Mon, 04/12/2010 - 17:17 — basta (not verified)The apologists for these atrocities have indeed chosen to forget that the US invaded and occupied Iraq based on numerous lies about the nonexistent threat that was supposedly presented by that country. Add to that the wholesale slaughter of people who don't like having their country destroyed and their oil stolen--pardon me, I mean insurgents--and the numerous lies that the Pentagon spews and the apathy of Congress and the public and you have a recipe for ongoing war crimes that will ultimately make Vietnam look like a birthday party.
Dear Basta: The apologists
Fri, 04/16/2010 - 12:49 — Frances in California (not verified)Dear Basta: The apologists for the atrocities are PAID to forget about the US illegal invasion. What they don't like to think about is that exposure like this is what ended US involvement in Vietnam; if the US is forced out of Iraq and/or Afghanistan (Graveyard of Empires, remember?), they and a whole lot of their disgustingly wealthy friends will stop being so disgustingly wealthy.