jegs2 wrote:From this link:
BBC News wrote:[Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt] said earlier: "We sent a ground force in to that location. They were shot at. We returned fire."
Those were not celebratory shots into the air. The wedding story is starting to smell more and more like a skunk.
...the wedding story is starting to sound like a skunk? I think its the other way around...
raqi police and witnesses said the attack killed dozens of innocent people, many of them women and children. Some said the bride and groom also were killed.
People who said they were guests said the wedding party was in full swing — with dinner just finished and the band playing tribal Arab music — when U.S. fighter jets roared overhead and U.S. vehicles started shining their highbeams.
Worried, the hosts ended the party; men stayed in the wedding tent, and women and children went inside the house nearby, the witnesses said.
About five hours later, the first shell hit the tent. Panicked, women clutching their children ran out of the house, they said.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,120436,00.html
...so according to witnesses-FIVE hours after any shooting in the air happened-the US attacked the village. Gen. James N. Mattis comments are amazingly childish-he sounds like a kid on a message board when he says:
"Ten miles from Syrian border and 80 miles from nearest city and a wedding party? Don't be naive," said Marine Maj. Gen. James N. Mattis in Fallujah. "Plus they had 30 males of military age with them. How many people go to the middle of the desert to have a wedding party."
...well General Mattis, sometimes people get married in the village they were born:
The celebration at Mukaradeeb was to be one of the biggest events of the year for a small village of just 25 houses. Haji Rakat, the father, had finally arranged a long-negotiated tribal union that would bring together two halves of one large extended family, the Rakats and the Sabahs.
Haji Rakat's second son, Ashad, would marry Rutba, a cousin from the Sabahs. In a second ceremony one of Ashad's female cousins, Sharifa, would marry a young Sabah boy, Munawar.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0, ... 58,00.html
...and yes, sometimes people of military age hang out together!!! How many guys out there are of military age? This is evidence of what, exactly?
...and when asked about the images of dead women and children-Mattis responded:
"I have not seen the pictures but bad things happen in wars. I don't have to apologise for the conduct of my men."
...so we have NO denials that woman and children were killed. And what other proof do they have that this was a foreign fighter safe house?
"During the operation, coalition forces came under hostile fire and close air support was provided," it said in a statement. Soldiers at the scene then recovered weapons, Iraqi dinar and Syrian pounds (worth approximately £800), foreign passports and a "Satcom radio", presumably a satellite telephone.
...anyone surprised that passports were found-near the border? What Iraqi family doesn't have weapons with them? and 800 pounds is hardly a lot of money to have at a wedding... the case just gets stronger doesn't it?
...oh, and this:
Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt (search) said the attack was launched after U.S. forces received "specific intelligence" about foreign fighters slipping into the country. "We sent a ground force in to the location
...how reliable is this "specific intelligence"? When the Red Cross state that 60-90% of prisoners at Abu Ghraib are probably innocent-and we know that a number of these "innocents" were abused and tortured to get information-the likelihood of them "lying" to get out of that abuse was high. And look at this case:
Intelligence had intercepted a phone conversation in which a man called Ayoub spoke of advancing to the next level to obtain landmines and other weapons. Soldiers broke through Ayoub's door early in the morning, but when the sleepy man did not immediately respond to their orders he was shot with non-lethal ordnance, little pellets exploding like gun shot from the weapon's grenade launcher. The floor of the house was covered with his blood. He was dragged into a room and interrogated forcefully as his family was pushed back against their garden's fence.
...sssnnnnniiiipppppp......
Several hours later a call was intercepted from another Ayoub. "Oh shit," said the unit's intelligence officer, "it was the wrong Ayoub." The innocent father of six who had the wrong name was not immediately let go so as not to risk revealing to the other Ayoub that the Americans were searching for him.
...sssnnnnnniiiiipppp........
Meanwhile Army intelligence was still confounded by the meaning of the intercepted conversations until somebody realized it was not a terrorist intent on obtaining weapons. It was a kid playing video games and talking about them with his friend on the phone.
http://www.reason.com/hod/nr032604.shtml
...there are countless cases where the US forces have been mislead by poor intelligence-whether it be accidental as posted above, or malicious, like below:
On a cold night in November, M., her mother, and four brothers had been sleeping when their door suddenly came crashing down during the early hours of the morning. The scene that followed was one of chaos and confusion… screaming, shouting, cursing, pushing and pulling followed. The family were all gathered into the living room and the four sons- one of them only 15- were dragged away with bags over their heads. The mother and daughter were questioned- who was the man in the picture hanging on the wall? He was M.'s father who had died 6 years ago of a stroke. You're lying, they were told- wasn't he a part of some secret underground resistance cell? M.'s mother was hysterical by then- he was her dead husband and why were they taking away her sons? What had they done? They were supporting the resistance, came the answer through the interpreter.
...sssssssnnnnniiiiipppppp......
M. and her uncle later learned that a certain neighbor had made the false accusation against her family. The neighbor's 20-year-old son was still bitter over a fight he had several years ago with one of M.'s brothers. All he had to do was contact a certain translator who worked for the troops and give M.'s address. It was that easy.
http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/2004_ ... 4488988448
...and, with the burial of well-known Iraqi WEDDING singer Hussein Ali in Bahgdad today, can you REALLY say that the wedding case is starting to look like skunk? With the track record of the CPA and the pentagon at the moment-with stories like this one coming out
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,141 ... 03,00.html
Mowhoush, considered a "high-priority target," turned himself in for questioning in November, according to documents. After two weeks in custody at an Al Qaim detention facility, northwest of Baghdad, two soldiers with the 66th Military Intelligence Company, slid a sleeping bag over his body, except for his feet, and began questioning him as they rolled him repeatedly from his back to his stomach, the documents show.
Then, one of the soldiers, an interrogator, sat on Mowhoush's chest and placed his hands over the prisoner's mouth, according to the report: "During this interrogation, the (general) became non-responsive, medics were called and he was later pronounced dead." According to the documents, "The preliminary report lists the cause of death as asphyxia due to smothering and chest compressions."
Immediately after Mowhoush's death was reported, U.S. military officials released a statement acknowledging he died during an interview.
"Mowhoush said he didn't feel well and subsequently lost consciousness," read the press statement, which is still posted on a Pentagon website. "The soldier questioning him found no pulse, then conducted CPR and called for medical authorities. According to the on-site surgeon, it appeared Mowhouse died of natural causes."
...I'm beginning to doubt ANYTHING coming out of the mouths of a CPA spokeman...