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-- Americans shoot at the freed Italian reporter
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| Originally posted by Fir3start3r Good question. Maybe facts just aren't sensational enough... |
Well, the car certainly didn't get hit by 300 bullets, but it did get hit with several, two or three of which have penetrated the windshield. But then, automatic weapons aren't that precise, so when you're shooting at something that's, say, 100 meters away, most of your bullets will miss the target, especially if it's moving fast.
But that's totally irrelevant here. It doesn't really matter whether it was just one bullet or 300 bullets hitting the car. The problem is why the car got hit at all. Hopefully the investigation will answer that one, but it's obvious that someone screwed up big here.
The thing is, though, that we only heard about this incident because it was italians involved, and especially because one of them was a hostage newswriter. It makes you wonder how many such incidents happen on daily bases that we don't hear about at all. That number of Iraqi civilian casualties is constantly rising, yet the suicide bombings don't fully account for that number. It seems that many deaths are also a direct result of american shootouts. Personally, I can mostly understand those footsoldiers who do the actual accidental shootings, they're totally nervous because terrorists strike at them every day. Yet if I was an Iraqi, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have as much understanding for them, especially if they killed someone close to me. It's a sort of a feedback loop, whenever americans kill someone who's not a terrorist, that generates a few more terrorists. New terrorists make americans more nervous and more likely to shoot non terrorists. Overall, those damn Iraqis just can't realize the great prosperity that this invasion has brought them and instead of being happy more and more of them become terrorists.
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| Originally posted by DrUg_Tit0 The thing is, though, that we only heard about this incident because it was italians involved, and especially because one of them was a hostage newswriter. It makes you wonder how many such incidents happen on daily bases that we don't hear about at all. That number of Iraqi civilian casualties is constantly rising, yet the suicide bombings don't fully account for that number. It seems that many deaths are also a direct result of american shootouts. Personally, I can mostly understand those footsoldiers who do the actual accidental shootings, they're totally nervous because terrorists strike at them every day. Yet if I was an Iraqi, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have as much understanding for them, especially if they killed someone close to me. It's a sort of a feedback loop, whenever americans kill someone who's not a terrorist, that generates a few more terrorists. New terrorists make americans more nervous and more likely to shoot non terrorists. Overall, those damn Iraqis just can't realize the great prosperity that this invasion has brought them and instead of being happy more and more of them become terrorists. |
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| Originally posted by JM so what you're telling me, they wasted 399 bullets? only to think my taxpayer $$$ goes towards those wasted bullets. if they were trained how to shoot, it would have taken only 1 bullet... >JM< |
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| Originally posted by Greedy first off, if they wanted to kill the occupants of the car, they wouldve. I do believe that they shot at the engine block to disable the vehicle. Secondly, the italians were on their way to an airport to fly back to Italy. What makes one think that there wouldn't be soldiers and checkpoints surrounding it? Clearly, the Italians shouldve made a lil bit more effort to make everyone aware that they were coming. Lastly, when soldiers with guns tell me to stop, I stop. What makes them think that the soldiers would know that they dont have a bomb in the trunk. Its tragic that a hero lost his life, but in a region with suicide bombers, they shouldve thought twice about trying to drive up to the soldiers like James Bond. |
Alright, let's try and dispense with the American military version vs. the Sgrena version of events right now. This is no longer just Sgrena - this is the entire fucking Italian government now!. Berlusconi is outright calling the Americans fucking liars, which I realize is very difficult for some of you neocons here to grasp. I think occasionally our version of events over there in Iraq tend to be a bit stretched at times.
Emphasis mine throughout:
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| Italian Leader Says U.S. Knew of Rescue Plan Berlusconi Delineates Mission to Free Reporter By Alan Cooperman and Walter Pincus Washington Post Staff Writers Thursday, March 10, 2005; Page A12 ROME, March 9 -- U.S. military officials in Iraq had approved an Italian intelligence officer's mission to free a kidnapped journalist and were expecting their arrival at Baghdad's airport on Friday when U.S. soldiers opened fire on the Italians at a checkpoint, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said Wednesday. In a speech, Berlusconi provided new details of how the Italians worked over the past month to free journalist Giuliani Sgrena from her Iraqi kidnappers, only to have the effort end in the death of the Italian intelligence officer who arrived in Baghdad that day to receive her from her captors. The prime minister's remarks, building on a statement Tuesday by Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini, showed that his government is determined to challenge the U.S. version of the Italian's death, which has strained relations between the two countries. Though Berlusconi has come under growing domestic criticism for keeping 2,700 Italian troops in Iraq, his speech drew a standing ovation from opposition senators as well as members of his governing coalition. In the weeks after Sgrena was taken hostage in Baghdad on Feb. 4, Italian intelligence officers worked to identify the kidnappers, determine that she was still alive, locate her and negotiate her release. Along the way, Fini said, information was shared with the U.S. Embassy's hostage working group in Baghdad. Nicola Calipari, a senior intelligence officer familiar with working in Iraq, arrived with a colleague at Baghdad International Airport on Friday. Calipari spent 40 minutes contacting U.S. military authorities in charge of the airport to notify them of his mission and receive a safe-conduct document to move around the airport, according to the Italian leaders. Neither Berlusconi nor Fini explained how contact was made with the kidnappers or who they were. But by their account, the two operatives left the airport and, after a two-hour wait in a Toyota Corolla near the Mansour district of Baghdad, were approached by a green van and led through various parts of the city. At an unlit area, the van stopped, the driver pointed to an abandoned car and drove off. Sgrena was inside the car, dressed in black and blindfolded. Calipari put the journalist in the back seat of the car and, with his colleague driving, they headed toward the airport, where a plane was waiting to take them back to Italy. With the inside light on, Calipari sat alongside Sgrena and made phone calls to superiors to report his success. One was to an Italian official who was standing next to an American colonel at the airport, the prime minister said Wednesday, addressing the Italian Senate. Calipari "therefore warned the American military officials of their immediate arrival in the airport zone," Berlusconi said. "Only a frank and reciprocal recognition of final responsibility" will assuage Italians' anguish over the shooting, "which was so irrational to us," Berlusconi said. U.S. Army Gen. George W. Casey, the top American commander in Iraq, said Tuesday in Washington that he had been unaware on Friday that Italian officials had entered Iraq to rescue Sgrena and said he had heard nothing since to indicate the Italians had told U.S. forces of the car's route. |
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| In a statement after the shooting, the Army's 3rd Infantry Division said the Italians' car was "traveling at high speeds" and refused to halt at a checkpoint despite attempts by U.S. soldiers to warn the driver to stop "by hand and arm signals, flashing white lights, and firing warning shots in front of the car." |
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| Fini, citing testimony by the driver, also an intelligence officer, said Tuesday that the car was traveling at no more than 25 mph as the driver steered around concrete blocks. Fini said the driver was applying the brakes when the car was hit by gunfire that lasted 10 to 15 seconds. |
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| A Pentagon spokesman on Wednesday declined to comment on the Italian leaders' accounts on grounds that the matter is under investigation. "The information from the Italians will be considered as part of that investigation," he said. When Sgrena was seized, a radical Web site operated by the Islamic Jihad Organization asserted responsibility and gave Italy 72 hours to withdraw its troops from Iraq. It did not say what would happen to Sgrena if Italy did not comply. The Italians did not know who had seized the journalist. But channels were opened through a variety of sources, including religious organizations and friendly Arab governments, the Italian leaders said. They were seeking, among other things, assurances that the reporter was still alive. On Feb. 16, she was shown in a video sobbing and pleading for her life. The Italians saw the video as a response to their feelers and a sign of progress in identifying her captors. Berlusconi, like Fini, described the shooting as an accident. Italian newspapers have reported that a ransom of $6 million to $8 million was paid for Sgrena's release, but neither leader mentioned any payment. Pincus reported from Washington. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...l?nav=headlines |
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| "The mobile patrol was there to enhance security because Ambassador Negroponte was expected through," embassy spokesman Robert Callahan said, confirming a report that first appeared in the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. It was not known if Negroponte, who was nominated last month by President Bush to be the new director of national intelligence, passed through the checkpoint before the shooting. Senior U.S. officials usually travel by helicopter to avoid attacks in Iraq, but methods are varied so as not to be predictable. |
hehe good post opus, thanks 
This isn't looking good for the U.S. of A. New stuff just keeps coming out.
well according to La Republica, dated 11MAR05, we get some insight into the extent of what senior ground commanders, foreign and domestic, knew and did not know and what did not get turned over.
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| US unaware of details of Italian operation to free journalist in Iraq : report (AFP) 11 March 2005 ROME - The United States was only partially informed about an Italian intelligence operation to free journalist Giuliana Sgrena in Iraq, an Italian general said in a report quoted by La Repubblica newspaper Friday. General Mario Marioli, deputy commander of the US-led international coalition force in Iraq, had been asked to prepare an unspecified mission by Italy�s top intelligence officer in Iraq, Nicola Calipari, said the paper. The agent died under US fire near Baghdad airport on February 4, as he was escorting the freed Italian correspondent to safety. Quoting from a report by Marioli to magistrates investigating Calipari�s death, La Repubblica said the general provided documents for the intelligence officer and his aide to move around freely. But he did not know details of their operation in Baghdad, according to his report. Italian military intelligence informed him late on February 4 that Calipari and his aide would return to Baghdad airport in the company of �an Italian national without a coalition and airport pass�. It was not clear if Marioli knew at this stage that Sgrena was the unidentified passenger. Marioli was tasked with asking US military officials to grant access to the airport to an Italian national traveling with two officials already identified earlier in the day, said La Repubblica. �This was an exchange of information between the military,� said the paper. �Marioli had no contact with US intelligence officers.� �The US chain of command had only bits of information.... According to his report General Marioli could not give the Americans the make (a Toyota Corolla), the color (light grey), or the Iraqi license plate,� said La Repubblica quoting from the report. �He could not do so because he didn�t know and because any problem seemed to be resolved after the main checkpoint had been notified,� it added. The car carrying Sgrena and the Italian agents ran into a hail of gunfire by a US patrol around 700 meters (yards) from Baghdad airport, killing Calipari and wounding Sgrena and the other agent. The patrol had reportedly been tasked with securing the passage of US Ambassador to Iraq John Negroponte. |
then she says...
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| http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/story.jsp?story=619206 After the shooting, she said: "A soldier opened the door on the right-hand side. When he saw us, I had the impression that he was upset. I seem to remember him saying, 'Oh shit!' And when more turned up in an armoured car, I had the sensation that they were unhappy about what had happened." |
Obviously they didn't want to kill her. If they did, they would've done it there.
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| Originally posted by ierxium Obviously they didn't want to kill her. If they did, they would've done it there. |
Hmm, I've just read a new story from american soldiers. Now they say that the car with the italians slowed down and they started shooting at it because they were afraid it was going to stop and explode. It is also interesting to note that the italians were supposedly not warned that Negroponte was about to drive down the same road, as well as the american soldiers were not informed of the italian mission.
10-15 secs to fire 300-400 bullets?
bullshit...these guys aren't armed with gattling guns...
Lets do some basic math shall we?
A standard American Army issued M16 hold 20-30 rounds.
Given the rate of fire 650 - 750 rounds per minute (we'll use 700/min in this example) and 15 secs (benefit of the doubt) of hell unleashed, we can determine that from one gun that indeed it's possible that one gun can fire 175 rounds in 15 secs.
But wait!
Given that one M16 only has (again, benefit of the doubt given here) 30 rounds, the magazine would have be changed almost 6 times AND with bullets flying all within the 15 secs.
Even adding another one, two or even 3 soldiers to this sordid senario won't help.
I still stand with the known facts:
- that she's a known anti-Americanist even before she left her country.
- the car doesn't look anything like the story she's spinning.
- 300-400 bullets sounds more like someone who was scared shitless (and should have been) and embelished the story to make it more dramatic in true, journalistic style.
- the irony of the situation (where she obviously took at hit to the political ego) after going to Iraq and actually getting kidnapped...but hey....blame the Americans!
I knew something was off. The news said that she was shot at. Yet, the Italian government wasn't unbelievably pissed about it.
At that point I thought, hang on, they should be unbelievably pissed about this.
Re: Americans shoot at the freed Italian reporter
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| Originally posted by DrUg_Tit0 I mean, how stupid can you get? |
Opus good dissection of the US "story". As far as "we didn't know" alibi of the military and General, this is a classic tactic that I predicted would be used sooner or later. When in doubt plead ignorance. Recent examples:
- Rummy (who prides himself as a hands on details man) and the General in charge of Abu Ghraib just didn't know.
- Bush and the whole WMD fiasco.
- Enron CEO Ken Lay claims he was in the dark.
- Worldcom CEO Ebbers "Ebbers himself took the witness stand late in the trial, insisting that he was unfamiliar with the details of accounting and knew nothing about the fraud taking place on his watch."
- Survivor winner Richard Hatch pleading ignorance that he had to pay taxes on his winnings.
I could go on but nobody ever seems to know anything when the shit hits the fan. I doubt we will ever learn the true motives behind the killing.
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| Originally posted by Fir3start3r 10-15 secs to fire 300-400 bullets? bullshit...these guys aren't armed with gattling guns... Lets do some basic math shall we? A standard American Army issued M16 hold 20-30 rounds. Given the rate of fire 650 - 750 rounds per minute (we'll use 700/min in this example) and 15 secs (benefit of the doubt) of hell unleashed, we can determine that from one gun that indeed it's possible that one gun can fire 175 rounds in 15 secs. But wait! Given that one M16 only has (again, benefit of the doubt given here) 30 rounds, the magazine would have be changed almost 6 times AND with bullets flying all within the 15 secs. Even adding another one, two or even 3 soldiers to this sordid senario won't help. I still stand with the known facts: - that she's a known anti-Americanist even before she left her country. - the car doesn't look anything like the story she's spinning. - 300-400 bullets sounds more like someone who was scared shitless (and should have been) and embelished the story to make it more dramatic in true, journalistic style. - the irony of the situation (where she obviously took at hit to the political ego) after going to Iraq and actually getting kidnapped...but hey....blame the Americans! |
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| Originally posted by smokeape They were firing to stop the car traveling towards them at a high rate of speed ignoring all hand signals and warning shots just like a suicidal bomber would do. They fired enough rounds to stop the vehicle in its tracks and then some. Stupid f*cking Italians.... [[[smoke]]] |
Sorry to bring this up again, but I randomly stumbled across this ... here are the preliminary findings from the joint US-Italian investigation.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7491280
that sounds like a load of crock. another pathetic cover up.
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| Originally posted by shaolin_Z that sounds like a load of crock. another pathetic cover up. |
They talk about 4 seconds between the time the warning shots being fired and the time the troops let rip with the machine guns...and its dark...is 4 seconds enough time to even get your bearings as shots are being fired in the dark....i wouldnt have thought so...
People are dismissing the findings before they even have a chance to read its details? Sounds objective ...
What I'm curious about is what the surviving Italian agent had to say about the incident. I haven't read much corroboration of Sgrena's account. Well I'm sure his observations will be in the report whenever they publically release it.
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Italy agent death was 'accident' The US military has confirmed that it will not discipline soldiers who shot dead an Italian agent in Iraq as he escorted a freed hostage to safety. Nicola Calipari's death was mourned across Italy |
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