Report On Haditha Condemns Marines
Signs of Misconduct Were Ignored, U.S. General Says
By
Josh White
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, April 21, 2007; A01
The Marine Corps
chain of command in Iraq ignored "obvious" signs of "serious
misconduct" in the 2005 slayings of two dozen civilians in Haditha,
and commanders fostered a climate that devalued the life of
innocent Iraqis to the point that their deaths were considered an
insignificant part of the war, according to an Army general's
investigation.
Maj. Gen. Eldon A.
Bargewell's 104-page report on Haditha is scathing in its
criticism of the Marines' actions, from the enlisted men who were
involved in the shootings on Nov. 19, 2005, to the two-star
general who commanded the 2nd Marine Division in Iraq at the time.
Bargewell's previously undisclosed report, obtained by The
Washington Post, found that officers may have willfully ignored
reports of the civilian deaths to protect themselves and their
units from blame. Though Bargewell found no specific coverup, he
concluded that there also was no interest at any level in
investigating allegations of a massacre.
"All levels of
command tended to view civilian casualties, even in significant
numbers, as routine and as the natural and intended result of
insurgent tactics," Bargewell wrote. He condemned that approach
because it could desensitize Marines to the welfare of
noncombatants. "Statements made by the chain of command during
interviews for this investigation, taken as a whole, suggest that
Iraqi civilian lives are not as important as U.S. lives, their
deaths are just the cost of doing business, and that the Marines
need to get 'the job done' no matter what it takes."
Bargewell's sharp
criticism of the Marine command appears to have been a
contributing factor in subsequent efforts by top leaders to ensure
that U.S. troops exercise appropriate restraint around civilians.
Lt. Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, who was the top field commander in
Iraq last year, and Gen. David H. Petraeus, now the top U.S.
commander there, have emphasized the importance of protecting the
civilian population in counterinsurgency operations and have
ordered aggressive investigations of alleged wrongdoing.
Though Bargewell
completed his secret report in June 2006, it has not been publicly
released because of ongoing criminal investigations of three
Marines on murder allegations and four Marine officers who
allegedly failed to look into the case. Bargewell's report, now
unclassified, focuses on the reporting of the incident and the
training and command climate within the Marine Corps leadership;
it does not address the actual incident in detail.
The investigation
began in March 2006 after an initial inquiry concluded that the
Marines did not intentionally kill civilians. Bargewell's team
interviewed Marines in Asad in western Iraq and in the United
States in April 2006. His final report was submitted to Chiarelli
on June 15, 2006.
A Marine Corps
spokesman declined to comment yesterday. Marine officials have
generally not discussed the incident because it is under
investigation.
In the Haditha
incident, which has become one of the most notorious alleged
atrocities of the Iraq war, Marines killed two dozen civilians
after a huge roadside bomb ripped through a Humvee in their
convoy, killing one Marine instantly and injuring two others. A
Naval Criminal Investigative Service report found that the Marines
then killed five unarmed civilians whom they ordered out of a car
-- one Marine alleged that another got down on one knee and shot
them one by one -- before storming several houses and killing
women and children, some of them still in their pajamas and lying
in bed.
The Marines have told
investigators that they believed they were taking small-arms fire
from the houses and that they were following their rules of
engagement when they threw grenades and then shot everyone inside.
Bargewell found that,
though the Marines were trained correctly, some "did not follow
proper house and room techniques" by not positively identifying
their targets. Lt. William T. Kallop, the only officer on the
scene at the time, ordered the attack on the houses and told
investigators that he did not believe the Marines did anything
wrong. Kallop received immunity this month and will probably
testify at the hearings for the other Marines.
The report notes
errors and oversights at all levels of the Marine command in Iraq.
Bargewell says that Marines at the squad level came up with a
false story; that Kilo Company officers and the commander of the
3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, passed along insufficient
information to the regimental commander; and that regimental
officers and officers at the 2nd Marine Division ignored signs of
a problem and believed the incident to be insignificant. He also
accuses the entire chain of failing to recognize the importance of
civilian deaths.
Of particular concern
to Bargewell was that nearly all Marines looked the other way when
confronted with early reports that many civilians had been shot in
fighting on the streets of Haditha after a roadside bomb killed a
member of their unit. His investigation found that Marines and
officers present that day immediately reported numerous civilian
deaths to superiors but that the reports were "untimely,
inaccurate and incomplete" -- failures he attributed to
"inattention and negligence, in certain cases willful negligence."
Then, no one asked
any further questions, Bargewell wrote, despite gruesome
photographs circulating among junior Marines that showed that
women and children had been killed in their beds. He cited several
opportunities to investigate that were not taken, such as when
more than $40,000 in condolence payments went to Iraqis after the
killings.
"I found that the
duty to inquire further was so obvious in this case that a
reasonable person with knowledge of these events would have
certainly made further inquiries," Bargewell wrote. "The most
remarkable aspect of the follow-on action with regard to the
civilian casualties from the 19 November 2005 Haditha incident was
the absence of virtually any kind of inquiry at any level of
command into the circumstances surrounding the deaths."
No one recommended an
investigation until a Time magazine reporter began asking
questions about the attack in January 2006. Maj. Gen. Richard A.
Huck, the division commander, dismissed the allegations as
insurgent propaganda, according to the report. The battalion
commander, Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani, also refused to investigate,
saying, "My marines are not murderers," according to two of his
top subordinates. Bargewell called this "an unwillingness,
bordering on denial," to examine an incident that could be harmful
to his unit.
Chessani's attorneys
have denied that he did anything wrong and have said that he
informed his commanders about the incident.
The regimental
commander, Col. Stephen Davis, was also not interested in
investigating, according to the report. "The RCT-2 Commander,
however, expressed only mild concern over the potential negative
ramifications of indiscriminate killing based on his stated view
that the Iraqis and insurgents respect strength and power over
righteousness," the report says.
None of Chessani's
superiors has been charged with a crime, but in addition to the
battalion commander, two captains and a lieutenant have been
charged with failing to investigate or with impeding the
investigation.
Bargewell found that
Huck's division staff viewed the allegations of inappropriate
killings as part of insurgent "information operations" and an
attempt to make the Marines look bad. He also noted a proclivity
among senior officers to look past such allegations even if there
was a chance they could be accurate. Bargewell called that
approach "myopic and overly simplistic" and said it produced a
tendency to judge credibility based on the source of the
information rather than on the facts.