Showing posts with label IRAQ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IRAQ. Show all posts

07 August 2006

Contractor burned and mutilated and hang in public place-Iraq


Four American workers killed, mutilated in Iraq



The 4 Blackwater contractors

Stephen Scotten “Scott” Helvenston, 38






Jerko Gerald “Jerry” Zovko, 32




Mike Teague, 38



Wesley John Kealoha Batalona, 48







LYNCHING PHOTOS































In Baghdad, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said the four killed in Fallujah were contractors working with the coalition. He did not say what they were doing in the city.

Chanting ''Fallujah is the graveyard of Americans,'' residents cheered after the grisly assault on two four-wheel-drive civilian vehicles, which left both in flames. Others chanted, ''We sacrifice our blood and souls for Islam.''


Associated Press Television News pictures showed one man beating a charred corpse with a metal pole. Others tied a yellow rope to a body, hooked it to a car and dragged it down the main street of town. Two blackened and mangled corpses were hung from a green iron bridge across the Euphrates.
''The people of Fallujah hanged some of the bodies on the old bridge like slaughtered sheep,'' resident Abdul Aziz Mohammed said. Some of the corpses were dismembered, he said.

Beneath the bodies, a man held a printed sign with a skull and crossbones and the phrase ''Fallujah is the cemetery for Americans.''


03 August 2006

Dead US soldier hung on public display-IRAQ

I dont know if these three stories that I've gather in the internet is somehow connected.. You judge.


But I was uncertain how we would be received by the Iraqi people. Regardless of our stated intentions we were still the invading army. As the war unfolded, reports of atrocities committed by Hussein's henchmen on his own people began to pour in. There was a woman who waved to British forces in Un Qasr and was found hung the next morning. There were mass executions of soldiers for deserting, or failing to stop the advance of coalition forces. Then there were the stories of our soldiers being tortured. One American soldier was stripped naked in the town square and executed in front of a horrified crowd, then his body was dragged through the streets for all to see..

Please check the whole story at the link below.

http://www.amarinestory.com/babtravelogue.html


Death of captured Marine
BY REX BOWMANTIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
WITH THE 1ST MARINE DIVISION, IRAQ

A U.S. Marine captured and supposedly strung up in the middle of the town of Shatrah is dead, military officials in Iraq confirmed yesterday.
Officials also said initial reports were wrong: The Marine was not strung up, though his body was left in view of townsfolk.
The Marine was captured Friday during an attack on a 200-vehicle convoy that was passing through Shatrah on Route 7, on its way north.

"What we can confirm is that some villagers tried to help him - they didn't know if he was alive or dead - and they may even have tried to get him to a hospital," said Maj. Dave Holahan, executive officer of the 1st Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment.
"But the Republican Guard, or death squads, took him away from the villagers and dumped him on the street. They didn't string him up, as previously stated, they just dumped him in the street."
Military officials are withholding the Marine's name until his family can be notified of his death.
The Marine was part of an air-wing support squadron making its way north late at night when it was hit by rocket-propelled grenades and machine-gun fire.
The attack turned over a 7-ton truck, and when members of the convoy repelled the attack and got back on the road, they noticed the Marine was missing.
The attack is an example of the kind of war Marines are fighting as they drive toward Baghdad.
They have yet to face large units of the Iraqi army but are instead being harassed by small-scale attacks in many of the towns they pass through.
Officials said the attacks are being carried out by local militia being forced to fight by local representatives of the Republican Guard.
"The villagers are torn," Holahan said.
"They're glad we're here, but as long as the death squads are around, they can't do anything or say anything. That's why we have to stay in the south and kick some ass."


Marines search for fallen comrade
US Marines moved into the southern Iraqi town of Shatrah today to recover the body of a dead comrade which had been hanged in the town square, officers said.
The Associated Press: From correspondents in southern IraqApril 01, 2003
US Marines moved into the southern Iraqi town of Shatrah today to recover the body of a dead comrade which had been hanged in the town square, officers said.Hundreds of troops were dispatched on the operation after intelligence reports indicated the body of a dead American, who was killed in a firefight last week, had been paraded through the streets and hanged in public.
"We would like to retrieve the body of the marine but it is not our sole purpose," said Lieutenant-Colonel Pete Owen, of the First Marine Expeditionary Force.
Military sources said another part of the operation was to arm local militias to fight against members of the ruling Baath party loyal to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
Shatrah is some 40km north of Nasiriyah, where Iraqi forces have been harassing US supply lines and putting up tough resistance for more than a week.

Sgt Donald Walters stripped naked executed-Iraq






Donald Ralph Walters
Rank: Sergeant,
507th Maintenance Company

U.S. ArmyHometown: Kansas City
Age: 33
Died where: Unlisted.
Died when: March 23, 2003

Cause of Death: Walters was originally thought to have been killed in the same convoy where Jessica Lynch was captured. Military officials later said he was captured by Iraqi fighters and executed while in custody.

Donald Walters was a military man, through and through. He grew up around the Air Force, until his father, Norman, retired, said his mother, Arlene Walters. A few months after graduating from high school in Salem, Ore., Donald Walters joined the Army and served in the first Gulf War.
He served in the Army Reserves until the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, inspired him to return to active duty, his mother said.
Walters worked as a guard at the Kansas City jail until he returned to Iraq, leaving behind his wife, Stacie, and three children.
But despite his love of the military and law enforcement, the father of three had a gentle side and a love of fishing.
"Our entire relationship revolved around going fishing," Stacie Walters said. "I don't know how many fishing trips we took. We took so many, I lost count."
Before he left for Iraq the second time, he penned a children's book, "My Very Special Fishing Trip," which recounted his first fishing trip with his father, Arlene Walters said. After his death, Donald Walters' friends and family arranged for the book to be illustrated and printed for those who knew him.
Donald Walters' friends and family will remember him as a Silver Star-awarded soldier and someone who would go out of his way to help a stranger.
"We were joined at the hip," Stacie Walters said. "He was


Unbearable Emptiness By Nicholas D. Kristof The New York Times
Thursday 28 July 2004
Salem, Ore. - Ever since a group of Iraqis told me last year about seeing a redheaded American soldier who was captured, held naked and then executed, I've been haunted by the question of his identity.
The first clues were in Nasiriya, Iraq, where in the aftermath of the war I interviewed the doctors and hospital staff who had cared for Pfc. Jessica Lynch. They said that the Pentagon had exaggerated the drama of her rescue, but what I could never put out of my mind was their tale of another American, whose name they never knew.
Abdul Hadi, an ambulance driver, tried to pick up a male American P.O.W. being held by Saddam Fedayeen. The American, he said, had been stripped naked and handcuffed, but he was allowed to smoke a cigarette while under guard. The prisoner, Mr. Hadi said, was about 19, with short red hair, lightly injured in the leg.
The hospital staff said the guards refused to give up the American and threatened the ambulance crew with guns and grenades. So the ambulance retreated - and several hours later, the same P.O.W. was brought to the hospital as a corpse, shot dead.
I mentioned this American in a sentence in my column at the time, but cautiously, because I couldn't match him with any known P.O.W., and I later wondered if the whole tale had been concocted.
Then I heard about Sgt. Donald Walters. He was a cook who vanished in the same firefight in which Jessica Lynch was captured, and his body was later recovered in Nasiriya. But some details didn't fit. He was 33, not 19. And his hair was said to be blond, not red.
So I visited Sergeant Walters's parents, Norman and Arlene Walters, at their home here in Salem, Ore. As they sat in their living room, heavy with memorials, photos and grief, Mr. and Mrs. Walters said that Don's hair had actually been reddish-blond, he had been injured in the leg, and he had smoked. Photos also show he looked young for his age.
What's more, the U.S. military recently informed Mr. and Mrs. Walters that Don had been captured before being shot.
It also seems that the heroism originally attributed to Private Lynch may actually have been Sergeant Walters's. Iraqi radio intercepts had described a blond U.S. soldier fighting tenaciously, and the Army this year awarded him a posthumous Silver Star in implicit acknowledgment that he was probably that soldier.
The citation reads: "His actions and selfless courage under fire resulted in saving lives of several other members of the convoy" - perhaps including Private Lynch. His cover fire allowed fellow soldiers to escape, while he remained alone in a hostile city; when he ran out of ammunition, he ran but was captured. So it looks as if the paramount hero of that day was not the one we thought, but rather a soldier who died anonymously.
Sergeant Walters left three children, then 9 months, 6 years and 8 years old. A veteran of the first gulf war, he had re-enlisted out of patriotism after 9/11.
Red, white and blue are everywhere in Mr. and Mrs. Walters's house, and Mr. Walters says that if he were president, he would threaten to nuke Baghdad unless the insurgency stopped, although in his next breath he backs off. I asked Mrs. Walters if she felt that her son had fallen for a noble purpose.
"That's hard," she said, pausing. "I have to feel that way, because so many soldiers have lost their lives."
One of the revelations in the 9/11 commission report was the casualness of the resort to war. On the afternoon of Sept. 11, Donald Rumsfeld spoke of attacking Saddam Hussein, and President Bush began asking about Iraq the next day. Older men blithely found a war for younger men and women to die in.
The result is the unbearable emptiness in homes like the Walters's all across America - and, even more often, in Iraq. The American victims are disproportionately from working-class families, not well represented either in White House meetings or in this newspaper's readership. It is those families of the dead and wounded who are bearing 99.9 percent of the burden of this war.
When hawks say that the Iraq war was worth the price,

Killed in Action: 507th Maintenance Company

The following soldiers of the 507th were killed in action (KIA):
Specialist Jamal R. Addison, 22, Roswell, Georgia
Master Sergeant Robert J. Dowdy, 38, of Cleveland, Ohio, who was the Company First Sergeant.
Private Ruben Estrella-Soto, 18, of El Paso, Texas.
Private First Class Howard Johnson II, 21, of Mobile, Alabama.
Specialist James M. Kiehl, 22, of Comfort, Texas
Chief Warrant Officer Johnny Villareal Mata, 35, of Pecos, Texas.
Private First Class Lori Piestewa, 23, of Tuba City, Arizona, first female soldier killed during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Private Brandon Sloan, 19, of Bedford Heights, Ohio.
Sergeant Donald Walters, 33, of Kansas City, Missouri.


Pics of American soldiers killed in Iraq
http://www.iraqwarheroes.com/