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War on Iraq

Iraq: 'Rules of Engagement Thrown out the Window'

By Dahr Jamail, IPS News. Posted March 16, 2008.


Winter Soldiers tell of gut-wrenching experiences of occupation.
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Garret Reppenhagen received integral training about the Geneva Conventions and the Rules of Engagement during his deployment in Kosovo. But in Iraq, "Much of this was thrown out the window," he says.

"The men I served with are professionals," Reppenhagen told the audience at a panel of U.S. veterans speaking of their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, "They went to Iraq to defend the U.S. But we found rapidly we were killing Iraqis in horrible ways. But we had to in order to remain safe ourselves. The war is the atrocity."

The event, which has drawn international media attention, was organised by Iraq Veterans Against the War. It aims to show that their stories of wrongdoing in both countries were not isolated incidents limited to a few "bad apples", as the Pentagon claims, but were everyday occurrences.

The panel on the "Rules of Engagement" (ROE) during the first full day of the gathering, named "Winter Soldier" to honour a similar gathering 30 years ago of veterans of the Vietnam War, was held in front of a visibly moved audience of several hundred, including veterans from Iraq, Afghanistan and Vietnam. Winter soldiers, according to U.S. founding father Thomas Paine, are the people who stand up for the soul of their country, even in its darkest hours

Reppenhagen served in Iraq from February 2004-2005 in the city of Baquba, 40 kms northeast of Baghdad. He said his first experience in Iraq was being on a patrol that killed two Iraqi farmers as they worked in their field at night.

"I was told they were out in the fields farming because their pumps only operated with electricity, which meant they had to go out in the dark when there was electricity," he explained, "I asked the sergeant, if he knew this, why did he fire on the men. He told me because the men were out after curfew. I was never given another ROE during my time in Iraq."

Another veteran of the occupation of Iraq on the panel was Vincent Emmanuel. He served in the Marines near the northern Iraqi city of Al-Qaim during 2004-2005. Emmanuel explained that "taking potshots at cars that drove by" happened all the time and "these were not isolated incidents".

Emmanuel continued: "We took fire while trying to blow up a bridge. Many of the attackers were part of the general population. This led to our squad shooting at everything and anything in order to push through the town. I remember myself emptying magazines into the town, never identifying a target."

As other panelists nodded in agreement, Emmanuel spoke of abusing prisoners who he knew were innocent, adding, "We took it upon ourselves to harass them, and took them to the desert to throw them out of our Humvees, while kicking and punching them when we threw them out."

Two other soldiers testified about planting weapons or shovels on civilians they had accidentally shot, to justify the killings by implying the dead were fighters or people attempting to plant roadside bombs.


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Dahr Jamail is an independent journalist who reports from Iraq.

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No first stone
Posted by: HeidiLockwood on Mar 17, 2008 2:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Acts of intentional cruelty without remorse can seem to be unforgivable. But who has not knowingly and unnecessarily caused another to suffer?

The acts these men have told us about go beyond what most of us would think of as normal, though equally bizarre things take place in our midst commonly, screened from our view by prison and jailhouse, and other walls just as effective as the walls of distance and denial that shield us from the reality of Iraq. But no suffering is small, as any of us know, all having been on the receiving end as well, and all our cruelty, however, extreme or common, springs from the same impulse: that dark power-lust that lurks in every man, woman, and child of us until and unless overcome by our collective and individual desire for goodness, for safety, and for love. And by our remorse.

To you folks who have shared your stories here, and to those who may not have spoken but who suffer regret for intentionally causing needless suffering, let your own remorse absolve you, for if it doesn’t then we are all condemned.

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I am against the war
Posted by: rickiey on Mar 18, 2008 9:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But I'm not agains the soldiers fighting it.

I will not condemn a soldier who mistakenly kills an innocent while attempting to survive an attack.

The only way to stop atrocities like this, has nothing to do with the rules of engagement.

It has to do with ending the war itself.

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