'Something Was Not Right': Cameraman Goes Public on Video Footage of Marines

‘Something Was Not Right’: Cameraman Goes Public on Video Footage of Marines

uploaded 24 Nov 2004

The unarmed Iraqi prisoner killed by a US marine during the battle of Fallujah made no movements apart from breathing before he was shot dead, the NBC journalist who filmed the incident said yesterday.

In a new and wrenching account of the episode inside a mosque on 13 November, the journalist Kevin Sites also indicated that at least two, possibly three other wounded prisoners left behind by the marines on 12 November were shot by another unit the following day.

The incident, shown on TV around the world, has created dismay and indignation, especially in the Arab world. The marine in question has been taken off active duty while the case is investigated by the US military.

Sites presents his story of what happened as “An Open Letter to the Devil Dogs of the 3.1”. He said that upon his return to the mosque on 13 November, he saw “the same black plastic body bags containing the remains of the 10 insurgents killed the day before”. He added: “More surprising, I see the same five men that were wounded from Friday as well. It appears that one of them is now dead and three are bleeding to death from new gunshot wounds. The fifth is partially covered by a blanket and is in the same place and condition he was in on Friday, near a column.”

Sites said he looked closely at both the dead and the wounded, but there seemed to be no weapons. He then told a marine lieutenant that three were wounded the previous day.

At that point, however, one of the marines claimed that one of the wounded was pretending to be dead. Sites then saw the marine aim at the man. There were “no sudden movements, no reaching or lunging”, but "he pulls the trigger. There is a small splatter against the back wall and the man’s leg slumps down. “Well, he’s dead now,” says another marine in the background.

The NBC journalist stressed he had been extra-careful to present a balanced picture, saying that as an experienced war reporter he was well aware that dead and wounded insurgents could be booby-trapped.

“No one, especially someone like me, who has lived in a war zone, would deny that a soldier or marine could legitimately err on the side of caution under those circumstances,” he writes, addressing the marines. “War is about killing your enemy before he kills you. I can’t know what was in the mind of that marine. He is the only one who does.”

But Sites added: “As an experienced war correspondent, who was aware of possible mitigating circumstances, it appeared to me very plainly that something was not right. I was not watching from a hundred feet away. I was in the same room. Aside from breathing, I did not observe any movement.”

A moment later, the marine who fired the shot became aware that Mr Sites was in the room. “He came up to me and said: ‘I didn’t know sir - I didn’t know.’ The anger that seemed present just moments before turned to fear and dread.”

Mr Sites said he wrestled with whether to broadcast the tape, or destroy it, but decided that “hiding [the incident] wouldn’t make it go away.”

There had been other people in the room and what happened was bound to come out, he concluded.

Source: Independent

Read it from his blog

This is one incident caught on film in fallujah.

The amerikkkan terrorists in Iraq blocked all journalists except there own hand picked lackeys what they term embedded (which is another word for amerikkan propoganda only please!)

They prevented doctors from reporting what was going on taking them prisoner, they blocked of electricity, water starving the residents!

How many hundreds of crimes do you think they committed without the world watching.

after the abuse, rape and torture in Abu gharib you can only wonder at what sickness the amerikkkans inflicted on the civillians of fallujah!

we live like dogs

*"And indeed we did send messengers before you, Oh Muhammad (saw) to their own peoples. They came to them with clear proofs, then, We took vengeance o_n those who commit crimes and (as for) the believers it was incumbent upon Us to help (them)" [TMQ Ar-Rum: 47]. *

I notice a man with one leg sitting near the mosque, nodding while he smokes his cigarette while Mohammad continues. "I would like to ask the whole world: why is this? I tell the presidents of the Arab and Muslim countries to wake up! Wake up please! We are being killed, we are refugees from our houses, our children have nothing, not even shoes to wear! Wake up! Wake up! Stop being traitors! Be human beings and not the dummies of the Americans!"

He is weeping even more when he adds, "I left Fallujah yesterday and I am handicapped. I asked God to save us, but our house was bombed and I lost everything."

As Mohammad no longer speaks, a 40-year-old refugee, Khalil, speaks up. "When the Americans come to our city, we refuse to accept any foreigner coming to invade us. We accept the INGs but not the Americans. Nobody has seen any Zarqawi. If the Americans don't come in our city, who do Fallujans attack? Fallujans don't attack other Iraqis. Fallujans only attack the American troops when they come inside or near our city."

Rather than weeping like so many others I interviewed, Khalil is raging. His sadness is being covered with anger. "If we have a government, the government should solve the suffering of the people. Our government does not do this; instead they are always attacking us, our government is a dummy government. They are not here to help us. The ministers of defense and interior are speaking that we are their family, so why do they collapse our houses on our heads? Why do they kill all of us?"

But then tears find his eyes, and while pointing to several small children nearby, he says, "Eid is over. Ramadan is over – and the kids are remaining without even a smile. They have nothing and nowhere to go. We used to take them to parks to amuse them, but now we don't even have a house for them."

He continues pointing at the children, along with some women nearby, "What about the children? What did they do? What about the women? I can't describe the situation in Fallujah and the condition of the people. Fallujah is suffering too much, it is almost gone now."

He then explains, "We got some supplies from the good people of Baghdad, and some volunteer doctors came on their own with some medicines, but they ran out daily because conditions are so bad. We saw nothing from the Ministry of Health – no medicines or doctors or anything."

He says those who left Fallujah did not think they would be gone so long, so they brought only their summer clothes. Now it is quite cold at night, down to 10 degrees C (50 degrees F) at night and windy much of the time. Khalil adds, "We need more clothes. It's a disaster we are living in here at this camp. We are living like dogs, and the kids do not have enough clothes."

As of today, a spokesman for the Iraqi Red Crescent told me none of their relief teams had been allowed into Fallujah, and the military said it would be at least two more weeks before any refugees would be allowed into their city.

Source: AntiWar.com

i take it thats settled then. The guy didnt move at all. The six pages of 'US marine kill wounded prisoner' all clarified in one post. Thanks kevin. i believe the marine should be given capital punishment, or handed over to the fallujans to deal with him like they do with everyone else.

Straight from the horse's mouth.

Where are the defenders now? Just like their soldiers, the American posters here conveniently disappear when their fairytale theories blow up in their face,.

:( my gosh..