Posted on 11/05/2003 9:51:58 PM PST by saquin
BY PAUL D. COLFORD AND CORKY SIEMASZKO New York Daily News
NEW YORK - (KRT) - Jessica Lynch was brutally raped by her Iraqi captors.
That is the shocking revelation in "I Am a Soldier, Too," the much-anticipated authorized biography of the former POW. A copy of the book was obtained by The New York Daily News on Wednesday.
Best selling author Rick Bragg tells Lynch's story for her, often using her own words. Thankfully, she has no memory of the rape.
"Jessi lost three hours," Bragg wrote. "She lost them in the snapping bones, in the crash of the Humvee, in the torment her enemies inflicted on her after she was pulled from it."
The scars on Lynch's battered body and the medical records indicate she was anally raped, and "fill in the blanks of what Jessi lived through on the morning of March 23, 2003," Bragg wrote.
"The records do not tell whether her captors assaulted her almost lifeless, broken body after she was lifted from the wreckage, or if they assaulted her and then broke her bones into splinters until she was almost dead."
The 207-page saga published by Knopf hits bookstores Tuesday, which is Veterans Day.
In it, America's most famous G.I. - for the first time since her dramatic rescue on April 1 - dispels some of the mystery surrounding the blistering battle that resulted in her capture, her treatment by the Iraqis in a hellish hospital, and the searing pain that is her constant companion.
A 20-year-old from the hollers of West Virginia, Lynch knew what could happen to her if she fell into Iraqi hands. A female pilot captured in the Persian Gulf War had been raped.
"Everyone knew what Saddam's soldiers did to women captives," Bragg wrote. "In (Lynch's) worst nightmares, she stood alone in that desert as the trucks of her own army pulled away."
The nightmare became real in the dusty and dangerous city of Nassiriyah, when Lynch's unit got separated from its convoy and was ambushed by Iraqi fighters.
Bragg, a former New York Times reporter who quit after admitting he had a legman do some of his reporting, gives a cinematic account of the desperate firefight that mortally wounded Lynch's Army buddy, Lori Piestewa, and 10 others in the convoy.
But while early Pentagon reports suggested the young Army private heroically resisted capture, Lynch told Bragg she never fired a shot, because her M-16 jammed. "I didn't kill nobody," she said.
Lynch also denied in the book claims by Iraqi lawyer Mohammed Odeh Al-Rehaief, who said he saw one of former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein's black-clad Fedayeen slap her as she lay in her hospital bed.
"Unless they hit me while I was asleep - and why do that?" she said.
Lynch described to Bragg how Iraqi doctors were branded "traitors" by Saddam's henchmen for helping her and how they tried to treat her wounds in a shattered hospital where painkillers were scarce. She said one nurse tried to ease her agony by singing to her.
"It was a pretty song," she said. "And I would sleep."
Lynch also confirmed reports in the book that Iraqi doctors tried to sneak her to safety in an ambulance but turned back when wary U.S. soldiers opened fire on them.
But eight days after she was captured, Lynch found herself face to face with a savior.
"Jessica Lynch," he said, "we're United States soldiers and we're here to protect you and take you home."
"I'm an American soldier, too," Lynch replied.
Lynch's painful recovery from an ordeal that left her barely able to walk, unable to use her right hand or control her bowels is vividly described. So, too, is Lynch's discomfort with the spotlight - and with being called a hero.
"I'm just a survivor," she said in the book. "When I think about it, it keeps me awake at night."
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© 2003, New York Daily News.
You haven't been around the women I've been around. I think they're cockier than ever. lol
What's different?
People like you show the mentality of the Lynch-bashers very well.
Calling Jessica whatever *itch means is really uncalled for. I too questioned if what the media was reporting last week that Jessica snubbed the man that helped to assist in her rescue was true or not. I wondered about it. But it is much more to this story than is known at this time. However none of this heroism stuff is Jessica's fault. She has stated that she is not a hero, only a survivor. She does not remember this Iraqi lawyer and who knows what is going on with him other than the soon to be Jessica movie is more about the him (the Iraqi lawyer)
Arab Lawyer Is Hero in 'Jessica Lynch'
By LYNN ELBER, AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - A pretty U.S. soldier captured while serving her country in the Iraq war. A daring rescue. One happy ending in a conflict that is far from resolved.
The decision to make a TV movie about Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch seems like a slam dunk, part of Hollywood's long-standing fascination with ripped-from-the-war stories and warriors.
But NBC's "Saving Jessica Lynch" turns out to be distinctive because it's less about Lynch than about the Iraqi man credited with helping the U.S. military find and retrieve her.
In this stereotype-busting saga (9 p.m. EST Sunday), the soldier is the hapless victim and an Arab a lawyer, to boot is the hero.
Unable to secure rights to Lynch's story, producer Dan Paulson relied on Mohammed al-Rehaief's newly published book, "Because Each Life Is Precious," about the rescue and his role in it.
"We have our first war movie from Iraq and it's not about the heroism of our soldiers who have actually displayed a great deal of heroism under incredibly trying circumstances but it's about the heroism of an Iraqi man," said social critic Neal Gabler.
"This is a kind of odd propaganda pitch by the American military," said Gabler, author of "Life the Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality."
But the producer says "Saving Jessica Lynch," which he calls as faithful a depiction of events as possible, is not intended as either an anti- or pro-war movie. The Department of Defense (news - web sites) cooperated in the project but had no script control, Paulson said.
"We took great pains, forgive me for a tired phrase, for being fair and balanced. We really wanted to tell the story. We certainly did not propagandize," Paulson said.
Questions have been raised about the drama's accuracy, especially in light of conflicting accounts of Lynch's rescue and claims that the Pentagon hyped her story for maximum public relations value.
Lynch's forthcoming authorized biography, "I am a Soldier, Too: The Jessica Lynch Story," reportedly casts doubt on al-Rehaief's claims. According to ABC's Diane Sawyer, who interviewed Lynch, she has no memory of him at the hospital. (The book also says Lynch was raped by her Iraqi captors.)
There is some skepticism as well about the timing of the feel-good movie, airing as U.S. casualties in Iraq continue to mount.
It's not entirely flattering to the military. The drama shows miscalculations and errors, including a wrong turn that led Army supply clerk Lynch and her 507th Maintenance Company convoy into an ambush in southern Iraq.
In contrast to inaccurate early reports that had Lynch fighting her attackers in petite-blonde Rambo style and suffering knife and bullet wounds, the movie depicts a chaotic attack and truck crash leaving her badly injured and unable to resist. Eleven soldiers died.
Her rescue, conducted by combined U.S. military forces, is shown as neatly executed but with troops facing no opposition. Only compliant hospital personnel are on hand when the units swoop into the hospital.
But it's courage that "Saving Jessica Lynch" stresses the fortitude of Lynch, even as she's lying in pain and under guard and, most of all, al-Rehaief.
(The film gives scant attention to others in the 507th, including some who have drawn increasing praise for their bravery. They include Pfc. Patrick Miller, who an Army report says may have killed as many as nine Iraqis before being captured. Lynch, 20, continues to attract media interest: Her first interview, with Sawyer, airs Nov. 11, publication day for Lynch's book.)
Nicholas Guilak ("Devil Wears Black," "Homeland Security") stars as the lawyer, who's portrayed as risking all to alert the Army to Lynch's presence in the hospital where his wife worked. Iraqi doctors and nurses also are shown as sympathetic to the U.S. soldier, played by Laura Regan ("Someone Like You," "Unbreakable").
"I think people are going to be surprised when they see this film," Guilak said. "They're going to see an unexpected hero" coming from an oppressive, fearful society.
"People need to see these things," Guilak said.
"It was our intent to connect with the human side of these people, the Iraqi people" said Paulson. "Based on the facts, as we could determine them, there were people who wanted to save this young girl."
The film's willingness to show Arabs in a positive light was lauded by Hussam Ayloush, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Southern California.
"I think any programs that humanizes Iraqis and Muslims in general is welcomed by our community," Ayloush said. "This is the reality: Iraqi people are human beings who care about others."
A kind depiction of Iraqis also might help bolster American willingness to stay the postwar course, suggested Ayloush (whose group, he says, opposed unilateral action against Iraq).
"It's much more appealing to sell that we're helping people who deserve our help ... We've taken over their country and there is a (tendency) to humanize the people of that country to justify the human and material cost of being there," he said.
Other observers question whether "Saving Jessica Lynch" will have any meaningful impact on public opinion.
"It's much more difficult, it seems to me, to raise enthusiasm and patriotic fervor for an occupation than it is for victory," said Gabler. "What we've got now amounts to an occupation movie, not a war movie."
Lawrence H. Suid, author of "Guts and Glory: The Making of the American Military Image in Film," argues that the movie's timing "is all wrong, and the timing may never have been right."
"However positive it is, you can't hide the fact that every night on the news or every morning on the newspaper there are headlines another American, another two, another 10 have died," Suid said. __
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http://www.nbc.com
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EDITOR'S NOTE Lynn Elber can be reached at lelber"at"ap.org
I think I saw these kids come through all kinds of sand storms and on top of that I have been told that they had pieces of shits as their weapons. Just like there are some over there without proper vest protection gear.
Dittoes!
This young lady suffers atrocities at the hands of depraved Iraqis and all you can do is question her declining to meet this man for a quickie photo op? And call her a "itch? You can't understand why she may not want to see another Iraqi at this time? What type of human being are you?
I felt the same way when I first read it. I found it fascinating, sad, and enlightening. The good news though is that it appears Jessie is not going to let the feminist use her as a symbol. I'd be very proud of her if she says unequivocally that our current policies are wrong and women should not be put in combat situations. If she takes this stance, I'll start to call her a hero.
I agree with you. So far I have been very impressed with what I have heard Lynch say about her experience. And if she was brutally raped, I give her extra credit for saying so.
I hope she gets to be the teacher she always wanted to be.
I thought that you guys have been saying all along that it takes an action in battle to be a hero. You would call a person a hero for expressing an philisophical agenda? lol You people are inconsistent.
A teacher is what she should have been in the first place. I think people are beginning to realize how placing Jessica in that situation represents something troubling about us. The PC folks are going to have a fit because people are not going to be so tolerant of their agendas anymore once the read the truth about what Jessie experienced.
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