U.S. Rep. Jack Murtha is confirming a report from Time magazine that American troops deliberately killed civilians in November.
From Salon:
In March, Time described an incident in the western Iraqi town of Haditha — the worst alleged case of U.S. troops deliberately killing civilians in Iraq. Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas, 20, was killed in the early morning of Nov. 19, 2005, by a roadside explosive device. In the hours that followed, Marines searched three houses, killing a total of 23 people. According to Time, the Marine Corps’ initial report claimed that 15 civilians had died in the same blast that killed Terrazas — and another eight insurgents were killed after a subsequent firefight with Marines.
But Murtha contended Wednesday that the military’s initial report was wrong. “There was no firefight,” he said. “There was no IED [improvised explosive device] that killed these people.”
Rep. Murtha contends that the soldiers overreacted due to stress and the pressures of a war that has gone on too long. He blames the Pentagon for “stretch(ing) soldiers too thin.”
“These guys are under tremendous strain — more strain than I can conceive of — and this strain has caused them to crack under situations like this,” Murtha said.
The psychological strain Murtha described has been well documented. Veterans describe the violence of war as having a numbing effect on soldiers, making it possible to carry out otherwise unthinkable acts. This is especially true when a
fellow soldier has been killed. “Once you reach that point, all sorts of restrictions you may place on yourself are removed,” says Rion Causey, a medic in the infamous Army platoon known as Tiger Force, which may have killed as many as several hundred unarmed civilians in the central highlands of South Vietnam in 1967. Causey did not participate in the atrocities.
Channel Surfing, The South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press