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To: pissant; sinkspur

After the abduction, torture and killing of two U.S. soldiers and the slaying of a third in Yousifiya, near Mahmoudiya, in June, Watt decided to come forward. The military is investigating whether the assault on the three U.S. troops was in retaliation for the slayings in Mahmoudiya.

"We'd come through hell with each other, and there were a lot of good men who died, and this happened, for what?" Watt testified. Reporting the killings, he said, "had to be done."

Watt reported his suspicions to a combat stress team in Mahmoudiya. His superiors "were extremely skeptical" about the allegations, he said.

Watt also testified that before the slayings in Mahmoudiya, he had heard Green say, "I want to kill and hurt a lot of Iraqis." When questioned by defense lawyers, Watt reiterated, "I believe that he wanted to hurt Iraqis."

16 posted on 08/08/2006 10:13:17 AM PDT by TexKat
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To: tobyhill

Two soldiers' accounts

Monday's testimony focused on statements Barker and Cortez gave to investigators, in which both soldiers described the day of the alleged attack.

According to their statements, the soldiers were drinking whiskey, playing cards and hitting golf balls when Green brought up the idea of going to a house near the checkpoint where they were stationed to rape the girl. Barker described Green as very persistent, Bierce testified.

The statements said the five soldiers -- Green, Cortez, Barker, Spielman and Howard -- then changed into dark clothing and covered their faces before going to the house. According to Barker, Howard was the lookout and was given a radio to use if anyone approached, Bierce said.

The four remaining soldiers then entered the home, at which point the statements from Barker and Cortez about what happened diverge, according to Monday's testimony.

Barker told investigators that Cortez pushed the 14-year-old girl to the floor and made "thrusting motions" as Barker held down her hands, then they switched positions, Bierce said. Sometime during the assault, Barker said he heard gunshots come from the bedroom, where the girl's parents and sister had been taken, and an agitated Green emerged and said he had killed them, Bierce said.

According to Barker, Green then put down the AK-47 he had been carrying and raped the girl, while Cortez held her down, and then picked up the gun and shot her several times, Bierce said. Green then went into the kitchen and, when he returned, said he had opened the propane tank and they needed to get out of the house because it was about to explode, Bierce said.

However, in his statement to CID investigators, Cortez denied raping the girl, although he admitted holding her down while Barker raped her, Special Agent Gary Griesmyer testified.

Under questioning, Griesmyer testified there was no evidence Spielman raped or murdered anyone in the house. Special Agent Michael Hood also said Spielman passed a polygraph test, in which he denied shooting or raping anyone.

However, in his statement to investigators, Barker put Spielman at the scene and said Spielman grabbed the 5-year-old girl outside the house and took her inside, Bierce said.

After the alleged attack, Barker also said the soldiers gave Spielman their clothes to burn and that he threw the AK-47 in a canal, Bierce said.

U.S. soldier testifies of his investigation

Also testifying Monday was a soldier in the same platoon as the accused men, Pfc. Justin Watt, who said he began trying to find out what happened at Mahmoudiya after Yribe confided to him that Green had told Yribe about the rape and killings.

"I wanted to see if I could confirm my suspicions that there were more people involved," Watt said. "I believed there were American forces involved."

Watt said when he asked Howard about what happened, Howard revealed the plan to rape the girl and that his role was to be the lookout.

"(Howard) let me know that he ended up seeing a Humvee and calling them back frantically," Watt testified. Howard also told him that when the other soldiers returned from the house, "Their clothes were covered in blood," Watt said.

Watt said after piecing together the details about what happened, he reported his suspicions to a combat stress team.

"If you have the power to make something right, you should do it," Watt said. "Investigation is not my job. But if something went down -- something terrible like that -- then it's my obligation to come forward."

However, Watt also described the conditions at Mahmoudiya as a "suck fest," testifying that the soldiers were living in the basement of a "dilapidated, abandoned water treatment facility" and had gone 30 days without a shower. He also said the ongoing violence, including the deaths of two soldiers in their unit shortly before the slayings of the Iraqi family, had affected everyone.

"I was going to get a memorial tattoo of all the guys (who were killed), but there's not enough room on my arm," Watt said.

http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/08/07/iraq.familyslain/


19 posted on 08/08/2006 10:25:18 AM PDT by TexKat
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