Posted on 08/09/2007 7:40:29 PM PDT by RedRover
Evidence currently before Marine Corps Lt. Gen. J.N. Mattis shows that a 2nd Marine Division public affairs officer intentionally misrepresented what happened in Haditha, Iraq twenty months ago when he claimed that 15 civilians were killed by an Improvised Explosive Device rather than Marine small arms fire. The official statement was approved at Division-level despite multiple attempts by Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessanis subordinates to correct it, investigation documents show.
Yesterday, Chessanis second, three-hour long Article 32 hearing at Camp Pendleton, CA was held to determine if there is evidence to believe he was derelict for failing to update two combat journal (JEN) entries. During his first Article 32 examination in May and June Chessani endured 11 days of scrutiny. Col. Christopher Conlin, the Investigating Officer presiding over his hearing, has already recommended to Mattis that Chessani be charged with three counts of dereliction of duty and failing to obey orders for not accurately reporting what happened on November 19, 2005 at Haditha.
Mattis is the convening authority and final arbiter in the investigation to determine whether seven Marines from 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines are guilty of massacring civilians at Haditha and then covering it up. On Thursday he dismissed three charges of unpremeditated murder against LCpl Justin L. Sharratt and dereliction of duty charges against Captain Randy W. Stone, charged with violation of a lawful order and two specifications of negligent dereliction of duty.
Sharratt, a distinguished SAW gunner in the terrible fights in Fallujah during 2004, is the first of three enlisted Marines to be exonerated of massacring civilians. He intends to leave the Marine Corps. Stone, an SJA lawyer and volunteer for hazardous duty in al Anbar Province, was on his first combat deployment. Two other enlisted Marines and three officers still face possible disciplinary action.
According to documents obtained during various legal maneuvers preceding the charges against the Marines in December 2006, the misleading press report was written by 2nd MarDiv PAO Captain Jeffrey Pool, who has since been promoted to major. Pool was never charged with any crime and has never testified at any of the proceedings. He did however give both a deposition to Maj Gen Eldon A. Bargewells investigators as well as a statement to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
Pool told investigators last year that he was given reports from 3/1 staff officers that accurately described the Marines' killing of 15 civilians during a firefight. Pool claimed he released the incorrect press release anyway because he believed the civilian deaths were attributable to the roadside bombing because it led the Marines to counter-attack. During the engagement 24 Iraqis and one Marine were killed and eleven Marines were wounded.
The evidence recently presented to Mattis by Chessanis defense team shows that Pools press account was an intentional misrepresentation. Pool was informed about the civilian deaths before he wrote the press release.
When 3/1 Operations Officer Maj. Samuel Carrasco saw the erroneous information he immediately informed RCT-2 staff officers it was inaccurate and asked for changes to be made. His request was disregarded by RCT-2 and 2nd Division. For awhile afterwards, however, the JEN notation (20-007) Chessani is now under investigation for not updating still showed the civilians were killed in the IED blast, the evidence shows.
Later the same evening, however, Carrasco called Lt. Col. Christopher Starling, the RCT-2 S-3 (Operations) Officer to inform him of the inaccurate content of Pools press release. Carrasco told Starling that Kilos Marines were taking fire from buildings that they had to go in and clear those buildings. When they got into the buildings there were civilians, Starling said in a statement to NCIS investigators. They had to clear buildings and some of the NKIA (civilian dead) were inside the structures.
In addition, Capt. Jeffrey Dinsmore, 3/1s S-2 (intelligence officer) prepared a story board the same day and used it to brief Maj Gen. Richard A. Huck, the 2nd Division commander. Huck had no questions for the 3/1 staff nor did he request a detailed assessment of how these civilians died, the evidence shows. All of this material was available to Pool and anyone else in authority concerned enough to ask for it. Nobody did until media inquires alleging a massacre at Haditha began appearing.
When the initial press report was later changed to reflect that the civilians had been killed by a squad of Kilo Company Marines storming four houses occupied by insurgent gunmen it touched off a press furor. The resulting media frenzy sparked world-wide condemnation of the Marines. Public pressure, fueled largely by a series of reports in Time magazine, was trumpeted by Congressman John Murtha (Dem-PA) as gospel.
Last year Murtha publicly labeled the Marines cold-blooded murderers and liars who covered up the crime to protect their skins. He repeatedly told reporters interviewing him on CNN and other news outlets that he obtained his evidence from the Time magazine stories. His influence both as a former Marine colonel and House appropriations czar for the Marine Corps made him a fearsome antagonist. Pragmatic Marine generals reportedly dont fool around with Mother Murtha.
According to a June 4, 2006 Time magazine story called How Haditha Came to Light, Time reporter Aparisim Ghosh got the word on March 14 2006 that the Iraqis had been killed by Marines and not an insurgent IED. That is when a U.S. military official in Baghdad finally responded to his inquiries, he said.
In Ghoshs account it took military authorities in Baghdad almost four months to find out from Marines what really happened at Haditha on November 19, 2005. According to the official, the probe concluded that the civilians were in fact killed by Marines and not by an insurgent's bomb; that the civilian deaths appeared to be the result of "collateral damage" rather than malicious intent.
The probe: was in fact a routine Request for Information that came down to 3/1 from a Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF) officer wishing to know what happened at Haditha the preceding November. The RIF indicated MEF PAOs were receiving reports of atrocities of some sort at Haditha.
By then Time magazine reporter Tim McGirk had already broken the story of the alleged massacre using video tape and the personal accounts provided by Thaer [Taher] al-Hadithi and Ali Omar Abrahem al-Mashadani for evidence. McGirk elevated the two Iraqi men to near sainthood for being unwavering human rights advocates, as well as budding journalists and well-intentioned students. It would be more than a year before evidence emerged that clearly showed McGirk was an unwitting tool of a brilliant intelligence coup perpetrated by al-Hadithi and al-Mashadani. Many Marines believe the damage to Marine Corps morale by McGirks star witnesses could last for years.
Ironically, in the same Time story writer Jeffrey Kluger said, If there is any beneficiary at all of the tragedy, it is Hammurabi, the human-rights group, which is flooded with new volunteers and free to do its work more aggressively.
Here's what was reported in the New York Times:
The Bargewell report, which was recently declassified, also established that junior officers, including a captain who issued a news release on the episode that blamed a roadside bomb planted by insurgents for most of the deaths, knew from the beginning that marines had killed the civilians, the lawyers said.
The captain, Jeffrey Pool, told Bargewell's investigators that he was given reports from battalion commanders that accurately described the marines' killing of civilians, said lawyers who read the report. But Pool said he issued a news release blaming the insurgents for the deaths because he believed that they were ultimately the result of the roadside bombing of the convoy that led the marines to strike back, the lawyers said.
"The way I saw it was this," Pool told two colonels questioning him, according to a lawyer who read the report. "A bomb blast went off, or was initiated, that is what started, that is the reason they're getting this, is a bomb blew up, killed people. We killed people back and that's the story."
Lawyers for the four officers charged with failing to properly investigate the civilian killings say the inaccurate news release created a false perception that the U.S. Marine Corps chain of command had covered up the killing of civilians.
"It was a colossal blunder," a lawyer involved in the case said. But the lawyer also said that Pool's thinking reflected that of his superiors, who believed that civilian casualties, though regrettable, were an inevitable part of the Iraq war.
"That's the rubric that the whole division was operating under," the lawyer said. The Bargewell report, he said, came to a similar conclusion. "It just was the culture of the marine corps," he said, paraphrasing the report, "to think that the Iraqis' story was propaganda, and didn't investigate."
Lawyers representing the four officers charged in the case - two captains, a first lieutenant and a lieutenant colonel who reported the civilian deaths immediately - said the Bargewell report showed that military prosecutors had charged their clients with failing to investigate but gave their superior officers, including Huck and Davis, a pass.
"It's understandable why they didn't go after the line officers," said Kevin McDermott, who represents Captain Lucas McConnell, the company commander who was not at the scene of the shootings in Haditha. "They would have had to throw Huck under the bus as well."
The msm does this on a daily basis, so why are they so outraged about it? McQuirk did the same thing when he wrote the story.
BTW I just re-read this a$$hole's "Thanksgiving With the Taliban" I will not put down my thoughts.
I really do not like this character, Mother Murtha. I have another "Mother" in mind, but I am a lady (and a Christian), so I will refrain....
What makes Huck untouchable?
Yet another good piece by Nat Helms. It seems he does his homework and writes clearly and concisely, he’s a pleasure to read and informative.
He’s just too high up. The suggestion is that charging Gen Huck means charging the Corps itself. So they’re pruning the branch at the lieutenant colonel level to preserve the rest of the tree (so to speak).
This isn’t my theory, but it’s what people mean when they say the Corps eats its own to protect itself.
I agree. We’re lucky to have him on the case. (BTW, Nat worked as a combat reporter after he left the Army.)
Why should this scenario be a surprise? After all:
Outstanding work on getting all of this info out there, Red. I know that it won't make too big a splash in the Media as bad news and blood are all they care about. That's why I want to see Murtha beaten to a bloody pulp at High Noon in the Well of the House, then publicly taken out and shot as a traitor and terrorist sympathiser. Yeah. I know; getting him shot might be a small problem! ;^)
Well, it's satisfying to at least think about it. :-)
I'm sure, deep down,that they were all inconsolable.
Someone in JAG and NCIS has some SPLAININ’ to do at the very least. As to the Presstitutes and Cong. Mullah Murtha well... we all know about them.
Murtha should exercise the Boorda option....
His shame is far greater, and did damage to the Corps and the Republic...
I’m sure he still has his 1911, and hasn’t forgotten how to use it....
Unfortunately, Murtha doesn’t have the character or conscious to off himself...
>> Yet another good piece by Nat Helms
I agree. In this Haditha tragedy, there are so many facets of interest and deception, the case can be difficult to follow - for me anyway. Helms presents his points with context and completeness. His articles are indeed informative.
Thanks for posting Red.
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