No Justice for Iraqis
The Haditha Massacre
by MARJORIE COHN
They ranged from little babies to adult males and females.
>I’ll never be able to get that out of my head. I can still smell the blood.
>This left something in my head and heart.
>–Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones
Last week, Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich was sentenced to a reduction in 
rank but no jail time for leading his squad in a rampage known as “The 
Haditha Massacre.” Wuterich, who was charged with nine counts of 
manslaughter, pled guilty to dereliction of duty. Six other Marines have had 
their charges dismissed and another was acquitted for his part in 
the massacre.
What was the Haditha Massacre? On November 19, 2005, US Marines from 
Kilo Company, Third Battalion, First Marine Division killed 24 unarmed 
civilians in Haditha, Iraq, execution-style, in a three to five hour 
rampage. One victim was a 76-year-old amputee in a wheelchair holding a 
Koran.  A mother and child bent over as if in prayer were also among the 
fallen. “I pretended that I was dead when my brother’s body fell on me 
and he was bleeding like a faucet,” said Safa Younis Salim, a 
13-year-old girl who survived by faking her death. Other victims 
included six children ranging in age from 1 to 14. Citing doctors at 
Haditha’s hospital, The Washington Post reported, “Most of the 
shots … were fired at such close range that they went through the bodies of the 
family members and plowed into walls or the floor.”
The executions of 24 unarmed civilians were apparent retaliation for 
the death of Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas when a small Marine convoy hit a 
roadside bomb earlier that day.   A statement issued by a US Marine 
Corps spokesman the next day claimed: “A US Marine and 15 civilians were killed 
yesterday from the blast of a 
roadside bomb in Haditha. Immediately following the bombing, gunmen 
attacked the convoy with small-arms fire. Iraqi army soldiers and 
Marines returned fire, killing eight insurgents and wounding another.” A 
subsequent Marine version of the events said the victims were killed 
inadvertently in a running gun battle with insurgents.
Both of these stories were false, and the Marines knew it. They were 
blatant attempts to cover up the atrocity, disguised as “collateral 
damage.”  Congressman John Murtha, a former Marine, was briefed on the 
Haditha investigation by Marine Corps Commandant Michael Hagee.  Murtha 
said, “The reports I have from the highest level: No firing at all. No 
interaction. No military action at all in this particular incident. It 
was an explosive device, which killed a Marine. From then on, it was 
purely shooting people.” Marine Corps officials told Murtha that troops 
shot a woman “in cold blood” as she was bending over her child begging 
for mercy. Women and children were in their nightclothes when they were 
killed.
The Haditha Massacre did not become public until Time magazine ran a story in 
March 2006.  Time had turned over the results of its investigation, including a 
videotape, to the US military in January. Only then did the military 
launch an investigation. These Marines “suffered a total breakdown in 
morality and leadership, with tragic results,” a US official told the Los 
Angeles Times.
Murtha said, “Our troops overreacted because of the pressure on them, and they 
killed innocent civilians in cold blood.” Many of our troops 
suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. Lance Cpl. Roel 
Ryan Briones, a Marine in Kilo Company, did not participate in The 
Haditha Massacre. T.J. Terrazas was his best friend.  Briones, who was 
20 years old at the time, saw Terrazas after he was killed. “He had a 
giant hole in his chin. His eyes were rolled back up in his skull,” 
Briones said of his buddy. “A lot of people were mad,” Briones said.  
“Everyone had just a [terrible] feeling about what had happened to T.J.”
After the massacre, Briones was ordered to take photographs of the 
victims and help carry their bodies out of their homes. He is still 
haunted by what he had to do that day.  Briones picked up a young girl 
who was shot in the head. “I held her out like this,” he said, extending his 
arms, “but her head was bobbing up and down and the insides fell on my legs.” 
“I used to be one of those Marines who said that 
post-traumatic stress is a bunch of bull,” said Briones, who has gotten 
into serious trouble since he returned home. “But all this stuff that 
keeps going through my head is eating me up. I need immediate help.”
Murtha told ABC there was “no question” the US military tried to 
“cover up” the Haditha incident, which Murtha called “worse than Abu 
Ghraib.” His high-level briefings indicated to him that the cover-up 
went “right up the chain of command.”
The Bush administration set rules of engagement that resulted in the 
willful killing and indiscriminate slaughter of civilians. In 
particular, U.S. troops in Iraq operated in “free-fire zones,” with 
orders to shoot everything that moves. Attacks in civilian areas 
resulted in massive civilian casualties, which the Bush administration 
casually called “collateral damage.”
Like other grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, these acts of 
summary execution and willful killing are punishable under the US War 
Crimes Act. Commanders have a responsibility to make sure civilians are 
not indiscriminately harmed and that prisoners are not summarily 
executed. Because rules of engagement are set at the top of the command 
chain, criminal liability extends beyond the perpetrator under the 
doctrine of command responsibility. George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and 
Donald Rumsfeld should be charged with war crimes.
A few days after the story of The Haditha Massacre became public, US 
forces killed eleven civilians after rounding them up in a room in a 
house in Ishaqi near Balad, Iraq, handcuffing and shooting them.  The 
victims ranged from a 75-year-old woman to a six-month-old child, and 
included three-year-olds and five-year-olds and three other women as 
well. A report by the US military found no wrongdoing by the US 
soldiers.
Allegations that US troops have engaged in summary executions and 
willful killing in Iraq have also emerged from other Iraqi cities, 
including Qaim, Abu Ghraib, Taal Al Jal, Mukaradeeb, Mahmudiya, 
Hamdaniyah, Samarra, and Salahuddin.  There are similar accusations 
stemming from incidents in Afghanistan as well.
Many people in Iraq are outraged as the legal books close on The 
Haditha Massacre. They are also perturbed at the US drones flying over 
Iraqi skies in Baghdad to protect the largest US embassy in the world 
that, even after the United States “pulled out” of Iraq, still houses 
11,000 Americans protected by 5,000 mercenaries. “Our sky is our sky, 
not the U.S.A.’s sky,” Adnan al-Asadi, acting Iraqi interior minister, 
said. The US military left Iraq because the Iraqis refused to grant US 
soldiers immunity for crimes like those at The Haditha Massacre.
The 24 Haditha victims are buried in a cemetery called Martyrs’ 
Graveyard.  Graffiti on the deserted house of one of the families reads, 
“Democracy assassinated the family that was here.”
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and past 
president of the National Lawyers Guild. Her most recent book is The United 
States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration, and Abuse. See her 
blog:www.marjoriecohn.com. 

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/01/31/the-haditha-massacre/


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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