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| U.S. PROBE CLEARS SOLDIERS IN DEADLY ATTACK ON BAGHDAD HOTEL | |
Aug. 13, 2003 | |
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An Online NewsHour Report |
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The probe focused on whether the crew of a U.S. tank acted properly
when it fired one 120-millimeter tank round into the 17th floor of the
Palestine Hotel, home base for nearly 100 journalists covering the battle
in Baghdad. American forces "properly fired upon a suspected enemy hunter/killer
team in a proportionate and justifiably measured response," according
to a statement issued from the U.S. Central Command, which oversees
coalition operations in Iraq. The tank round killed Taras Protsyuk, a 35-year-old Ukrainian cameraman
for Reuters, and José Couso, a 37-year-old Spanish cameraman
working for the television network Telecinco. The journalists had been
filming the fighting from the hotel balconies, witnesses reported. Three
other Reuters cameramen were wounded from the blast. The Central Command cited "the fierce enemy resistance" between
April 7-8 in that area of Baghdad, and said Iraqi forces were firing
"from the roofs and windows of surrounding buildings." "The enemy had repeatedly chosen to conduct its combat activities
from throughout the civilian areas of Baghdad," and utilized "the
Palestine Hotel and the areas immediately around it as a platform for
military operations," the military's statement said. Soldiers saw what they believed to be an enemy observer and sniper
on an upper-story balcony of the 18-story building, and "they also
witnessed flashes of light, consistent with enemy fire, coming from
the same general location as the building," according to the Central
Command statement. The soldiers then fired a single tank round at the building, and only
later learned the building was actually the Palestine Hotel and served
as the home base for many correspondents covering the war. U.S. Central Command concluded that the "activities on the balcony
of the Palestine Hotel were consistent with that of an enemy combatant"
and therefore U.S. forces acted in "self-defense." "Baghdad was a high intensity combat area and some journalists
had elected to remain there despite repeated warnings of the extreme
danger of doing so," according to a summary of the military's report. The Central Command, however, said "the United States has the
deepest sympathies for the families of those who were killed" and
called the journalists' deaths a tragedy. Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based media advocacy group, on Wednesday
rejected the U.S. military's conclusion that the U.S. forces were acting
in self-defense in firing on the Palestine Hotel. "All the facts at our disposal indicate exactly the opposite,
that there are no grounds for claiming self-defense, and saying this
is a lie," Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert Ménard
said. "These findings are the umpteenth U.S. military version of what
happened on 8 April and they all contradict each other," he said. On Wednesday, the Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based
media rights organization, said it was "troubled by the [U.S. military's]
results of the Palestine Hotel inquiry." "It is troubling that the results of the investigation..do not
address the central question of whether U.S. commanders were aware they
were firing on a hotel full of journalists," CPJ deputy director
Joel Simon said in a press release Wednesday. "We hope that the
full report deals with these issues and provides more specific information.
We call on the Pentagon to make the full report public." Last May, CPJ had conducted its own investigation of the incident and found no evidence that hostile fire was directed at American forces from the Palestine Hotel. The group's report concluded that the deaths of the two journalists could have been avoided because Pentagon officials and field commanders in Baghdad were aware of the hotel's location, and that it was full of journalists. |
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