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Born at the Crest of the Empire

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Charlie don't surf

Some members of Kilo company are the individuals being investigated for the murder of civilians. Several of the officers in the group had been relieved of command for acts said to have nothing to do with the killing in Haditha. How much do you want to bet they were relieved for for all this?

Something went seriously wrong in the leadership of the Marines.
(NewsWeek)The Marines know how to get psyched up for a big fight. In November 2004, before the Battle of Fallujah, the Third Battalion, First Marines, better known as the "3/1" or "Thundering Third," held a chariot race. Horses had been confiscated from suspected insurgents, and charioteers were urged to go all-out. The men of Kilo Company—honored to be first into the city on the day of the battle—wore togas and cardboard helmets, and hoisted a shield emblazoned with a large K. As speakers blasted a heavy-metal song, "Cum On Feel the Noize," the warriors of Kilo Company carried a homemade mace, and a ball-and-chain studded with M-16 bullets. A company captain intoned a line from a scene in the movie "Gladiator," in which the Romans prepare to slaughter the barbarians: "What you do here echoes in eternity."

Now, I don't know about you, but to me this echoes Apocalypse Now more than Gladiator. Robert Duvall as Lt. Colonel Kilgore leading the 82nd Airborne attack to the Ride of the Valkyrie. "You either surf or fight."

More: This is a really weird article. It is almost apologist for the killings in Haditha, "The 24 Iraqis killed at Haditha are a fraction of the 300-plus lined up and murdered at My Lai in 1968, just as the roughly 2,500 U.S. soldiers who have perished so far in Iraq pales against the 58,000 dead in Vietnam." Yet at the same time, it includes quotes like this one.
To fight boredom and disgust, said Clif Hicks, who had left a tank squadron at Camp Slayer in Baghdad, soldiers popped Benzhexol, five pills at time. Normally used to treat Parkinson's disease, the drug is a strong hallucinogenic when abused. "People were taking steroids, Valium, hooked on painkillers, drinking. They'd go on raids and patrols totally stoned." Hicks, who volunteered at the age of 17, said, "We're killing the wrong people all the time, and mostly by accident. One guy in my squadron ran over a family with his tank."

Hicks's own revulsion peaked while he was on patrol in January 2004. He came upon a bloody scene in a Baghdad housing project, where some soldiers had mistaken celebratory shots fired at a wedding for an attack, returning heavy fire and killing a young girl. "I looked in the door and she was dead, shot through the neck, Mom there, Grandma there, all losing it. Then I started thinking, this is really f---ed up, this is horribly wrong." Hicks stopped taking his malaria pills, hoping he'd get sick and shipped out. He says that infantry soldiers sometimes stick their legs out of the Humvee under sniper fire, hoping to get a nonlethal wound.


More and more like Vietnam.

2 Comments:

  • Sounds like a press release that's designed to soften the blow. I wonder if the report is going to admit to outright murder.

    By Blogger Unknown, at 10:37 PM  

  • From the worried comments of the military guys paid by the networks, I think it will.

    Mike

    By Blogger mikevotes, at 10:43 PM  

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