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So who really did save Private Jessica?
Times Online ^ | April 16, 2003 | Richard Lloyd Parry

Posted on 04/16/2003 12:00:55 AM PDT by anguish

So who really did save Private Jessica?

From Richard Lloyd Parry in al-Nasiriyah
Doctor claims that soldiers terrorised unarmed staff

THE rescue of Private Jessica Lynch, which inspired America during one of the most difficult periods of the war, was not the heroic Hollywood story told by the US military, but a staged operation that terrified patients and victimised the doctors who had struggled to save her life, according to Iraqi witnesses.

Doctors at al-Nasiriyah general hospital said that the airborne assault had met no resistance and was carried out a day after all the Iraqi forces and Baath leadership had fled the city.

Four doctors and two patients, one of whom was paralysed and on an intravenous drip, were bound and handcuffed as American soldiers rampaged through the wards, searching for departed members of the Saddam regime.

An ambulance driver who tried to carry Private Lynch to the American forces close to the city was shot at by US troops the day before their mission. Far from winning hearts and minds, the US operation has angered and hurt doctors who risked their lives treating both Private Lynch and Iraqi victims of the war. “What the Americans say is like the story of Sinbad the Sailor — it’s a myth,” said Harith al-Houssona, who saved Private Lynch’s life after she was brought to the hospital by Iraqi military intelligence.

“They said that there was no medical care in Iraq, and that there was a very strong defence of this hospital. But there was no one here apart from doctors and patients, and there was nobody to fire at them.”

Dr Harith was on duty when Private Lynch was brought to al-Nasiriyah general by Iraqi soldiers a few days after her capture on March 23. She was a member of a 15-member US Army maintenance company convoy that was ambushed after taking a wrong turn near the city.

At the time, she was suffering from a head injury, a broken leg and arm, a bullet wound to her leg, a pulmonary oedema and her breathing was failing. In a hospital inundated with war casualties with few drugs, her condition was stabilised and she regained consciousness.

“She was very frightened when she woke up,” Dr Harith, 24, a junior resident at the hospital, said. “She kept saying: ‘Please don’t hurt me, don’t touch me.’ I told her that she was safe, she was in a hospital and that I was a doctor, and I never hurt a patient.”

Private Lynch’s military guards would allow no other doctor to tend to her and Dr Harith formed a friendship with her. She talked to him about her family, including her arguments about money with her father, and about her boyfriend, a Hispanic soldier named Ruben.

Dr Harith went outside the hospital during the bombing to get supplies of Private Lynch’s favourite drink, orange juice, and struggled to persuade her to eat.

“I told her she needed to eat to recover, and I brought her crackers, but her stomach was upset. She said as a joke: ‘I want to be slim.’

“I see (many) patients, but she was special. She’s a very simple person, a soldier, not well-educated. But she was very, very nice, with a lovely face and blonde hair.”

The Iraqi intelligence officers told the hospital that Private Lynch would soon be transferred to Baghdad, a prospect that terrified her.

After her condition stabilised, they ordered Dr Harith to transfer Jessica to another hospital.

Instead he told the ambulance driver to deliver her to one of the American outposts that had already been established on the ouskirts of the city.

“But when he reached their checkpoint, the Americans fired at him,” he said.

On April 1 the local Baathists fled al-Nasiriyah for Baghdad and arrived at the hospital looking for their prize captive. Dr Harith moved her to another part of the hospital, and other doctors told the soldiers that he was away.

“They said that they thought Jessica had died, and they didn’t know where she was,” he said. In their haste and confusion the soldiers left, leaving behind only a few critically injured soldiers.

The American “rescue” operation came on the night of April 2. The hospital was bombarded and soldiers arrived in helicopters and, according to the hospital doctors, in tanks that pulled up outside the hospital.

Most of the doctors fled to the shelter of the radiology department on the first floor.

“We heard them firing and shouting: ‘Go! Go! Go! Go!’ ” Dr Harith said. One group of soldiers dug up the graves of dead US soldiers outside the hospital, while another interrogated doctors about Ali Hassan al-Majid, the senior Baath party figure known as Chemical Ali, who had never been seen there. A third group looked for Private Lynch.

US soldiers videotaped the rescue, but among the many scenes not shown to the press at US Central Command in Doha was one of four doctors who were handcuffed and interrogated, along with two civilian patients, one of whom was immobile and connected to a drip. “They were doctors, with stethoscopes round their necks,” Dr Harith said.

“Even in war, a doctor should not be treated like that.”

Unluckiest of all was Abdul Razaq, one of the hospital administrators, who took shelter from the bombardment in Private Lynch’s room, believing that he would be safe.

He was seized and taken with the US soldiers on their helicopter to their base, where he was held for three days in an open-air prison camp.

“When he left his skin was the colour of yours,” another doctor, Mahmud, said. “When he came back, he was black.”

Bizarrely, the rescuers cut open a special bed, designed for patients with bed sores, which had been provided for Private Lynch’s use.

“They took samples of sand out of it,” Dr Harith said. “It was the only bed like it that we have, the only one in the governorate.”

Today, the hospital struggles on without adequate supplies of drugs and without running water or mains electricity.

“There are two faces to Americans,” Dr Harith said. “One is freedom and democracy, and giving kids sweets. The other is killing and hating my people. So I am very confused. I feel sad because I will never see Jessica again, and I feel happy because she is happy and has gone back to her life. If I could speak to her I would say: ‘Congratulations!’”



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: antiamerican; antibush; barbrastreisand; blameamericafirst; clymer; hateamericafirst; iraq; jessicalynch; mediabias; propaganda; prosaddam; unamerican
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To: milemark
Yea--when I get shot I am sure I will demand that they will not cut off my clothes looking for entry wounds. The Iraqis must use those Star Trek medical scanners Bones McCoy uses.
41 posted on 04/19/2003 9:54:11 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro
Quote from article: "She was terrified. She had been brought in naked except for her military T-shirt."

Link to article: http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/04/16/wjess16.xml&sSheet=/news/2003/04/16/ixworld.html

I guess they only cut off your pants and underwear to check for bullet holes in Iraq, gunshot wounds to the upper body not being considered serious injuries.
42 posted on 04/20/2003 12:56:03 AM PDT by milemark
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To: milemark
Her legs were broken, no?
43 posted on 04/20/2003 1:03:44 AM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: milemark
From your link:

"She kept saying to me 'Don't touch me, please don't hurt me.' "

And she was brought in practically naked to the hospital. But Time Online wants us to believe it was the Americans who were "rampaging" and "being brutal."

What a joke. Shame on whoever wrote this garbage.

44 posted on 04/20/2003 1:07:30 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: anguish
After fake white flags and car suicide bombings the SpecOps were doing their jobs. This spin reminds me of one of Saddam's henchmen saying 'ambulance was fired upon and injured party was killed'-crap.

Sad, how --our media --produced propaganda from a dead regime, and all for what, their leftist politics as they can't STAND for this administration to do any good?

45 posted on 04/20/2003 1:16:01 AM PDT by TaRaRaBoomDeAyGoreLostToday!
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To: anguish

"I rescued her myself. First, I single-handedly
cured all her ailments, then I handed her over to
the retarded American mercenary infdels, when
they came to the hospital to surrender."
46 posted on 04/20/2003 1:37:30 AM PDT by EaglesUpForever (boycott france)
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To: Rastus
I am beginning to think that we may never know Pfc Lynch's version of how she sustained her injuries for the simple reason that she does not know. Her broken bones may have been sustained in the initial assault (there were reports from the other freed POWs of overturned humvees}. Plus, according to this article and as one might assume, she was unconcious for some time. Many people who undergo such massive trauma never remember what happened to them, which is actually a blessing.

As to the gunshot/no gunshot controversy, I've pretty much disgarded that issue as irrelevent. Given what we now know happened from the other freed POWs about that ferocious and one-sided firefight, it would hardly be a surprise if she were shot, but that the wound was hard to detect among her other injuries including broken skin due to broken bones, and in any event was not a big deal in comparison to her other wounds.

Maybe Pfc Lynch will speak out, but if she does not, if may not be that she is being coy, saving her story for a movie deal, or any such thing. More likely, she just does not remember, and that's probably for the best. Although at this point I don't see any evidence of torture, as opposed to rough handling, if she was tortured, I hope that she was unconcious and had no memory of that part most especially.
47 posted on 04/20/2003 2:40:39 AM PDT by Iwo Jima
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To: wku man
I don't put much stock in this article, but from my review of the film of the rescue, it seemed clear that there was no opposition. Plus we never heard any report of having found or killed any fedayen (darn). So my conclusion was that they had left, maybe because of the way that the war going, maybe because they heard that our guys were coming for them (wouldn't you vamoose, too)?

None of this detracts from the skill and bravery of our men and our joy at the safe recovery of Lynch, and our sad gratitude for the recovery of the bodies of our dead soldiers.
48 posted on 04/20/2003 2:51:03 AM PDT by Iwo Jima
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To: Destro
Her legs were broken, yes. And her arm. And a disk in her back. Her clothing being removed just for treating injuries seems inconsistent to me.
49 posted on 04/20/2003 3:12:56 AM PDT by milemark
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To: Iwo Jima
I still hate the tone of this. I think it's one story about what happened, manipulated (by one of Pravda's favorite "journalists") to make the US look as bad as possible.
50 posted on 04/20/2003 9:57:35 AM PDT by EaglesUpForever (boycott france)
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To: EaglesUpForever
I think that the doctor was probably misquoted and that his words were taken out of context to further a particular agenda. But I also think that the doctor simply does not understand how a raid like this goes down. Of course, he was treated as suspicious until proven innocent. He seems to have taken offense that he was treated as he was, but hey, there was no other choice. Nor was there time to give detailed information or an apology. So he got his feelings hurt. Too bad. Next time, we'll present our calling card and ask if the family are receiving visitors today (NOT).
51 posted on 04/20/2003 11:41:48 AM PDT by Iwo Jima
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To: anguish
“They were doctors, with stethoscopes round their necks,” Dr Harith said.
“Even in war, a doctor should not be treated like that.”

It is sad that the American soldiers had to be so suspicious. But given what they'd eincountered the previous couple of weeks; soldiers in civilian clothing firing at Coalition forces, Fedayeen in AMBULANCES firing on the soldiers. I don't blame them for being wary of someone claiming to be a doctor.

A desparate try to make Americans look bad in the aftermath of liberation.

52 posted on 04/20/2003 11:52:00 AM PDT by SuziQ
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To: SuziQ
Fedayeen in AMBULANCES firing on the soldiers

Good point. Saddam's tactics in this, and the tactics of visitors from Syria and elsewhere, were designed to maximize civilian casualties. It is amazing that our troops showed as much restraint as they did. If it had been an Iraqi raid on one of our hospitals, there would have been nobody living to tell about it.

53 posted on 04/20/2003 11:56:23 AM PDT by EaglesUpForever (boycott france)
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