In the south of Fallujah yesterday, U.S. Marines found the armless, legless body of a blonde woman, her throat slashed and her entrails cut out
Since 11-18-04
From:
Waspscpo@aol.com
Sent: Thursday, November 18, 2004 3:58 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Fw: REVIEW & OUTLOOK -Wall Street Journal 11/18/04
Subj: REVIEW & OUTLOOK -Wall Street Journal 11/18/04
Date: 11/18/2004 4:48:13 PM Eastern Standard Time
From: KHaynes888 To: KHaynes888 BCC: Waspscpo
Semper Fi
November 18, 2004; Page A18 Wall Street Journal
Some 40 Marines have just lost their lives cleaning out one of the world's worst
terror dens, in Fallujah, yet all the world wants to talk about is the NBC
videotape of a Marine shooting a prostrate Iraqi inside a mosque. Have we lost
all sense of moral proportion?
The al-Zarqawi TV network, also known as Al-Jazeera, has broadcast the tape to
the Arab world, and U.S. media have also played it up. The point seems to be to
conjure up images again of Abu Ghraib, further maligning the American purpose in
Iraq. Never mind that the pictures don't come close to telling us about the
context of the incident, much less what was on the mind of the soldier after
days of combat.
Put yourself in that Marine's boots. He and his mates have had to endure some of
the toughest infantry duty imaginable, house-to-house urban fighting against an
enemy that neither wears a uniform nor obeys any normal rules of war. Here is
how that enemy fights, according to an account in the Times of London:
"In the south of Fallujah yesterday, U.S. Marines found
the armless, legless body of a blonde woman, her throat slashed and her entrails
cut out. Benjamin Finnell, a hospital apprentice with the U.S. Navy
Corps, said that she had been dead for a while, but at that location for only a
day or two. The woman was wearing a blue dress; her face had been disfigured. It
was unclear if the remains were the body of the Irish-born aid worker Margaret
Hassan, 59, or of Teresa Borcz, 54, a Pole abducted two weeks ago. Both were
married to Iraqis and held Iraqi citizenship; both were kidnapped in Baghdad
last month."
When not disemboweling Iraqi women, these killers hide in mosques and hospitals,
booby-trap dead bodies, and open fire as they pretend to surrender. Their
snipers kill U.S. soldiers out of nowhere. According to one account, the Marine
in the videotape had seen a member of his unit killed by another insurgent
pretending to be dead. Who from the safety of his Manhattan sofa has standing to
judge what that Marine did in that mosque?
Beyond the one incident, think of what the Marine and Army units just
accomplished in Fallujah. In a single week, they killed as many as 1,200 of the
enemy and captured 1,000 more. They did this despite forfeiting the element of
surprise, so civilians could escape, and while taking precautions to protect
Iraqis that no doubt made their own mission more difficult and hazardous. And
they did all of this not for personal advantage, and certainly not to get rich,
but only out of a sense of duty to their comrades, their mission and their
country.
In a more grateful age, this would be hailed as one of the great battles in
Marine history -- with Guadalcanal, Peleliu, Hue City and the Chosin Reservoir.
We'd know the names of these military units, and of many of the soldiers too.
Instead, the name we know belongs to the NBC correspondent, Kevin Sites.
We suppose he was only doing his job, too. But that doesn't mean the rest of us
have to indulge in the moral abdication that would equate deliberate televised
beheadings of civilians with a Marine shooting a terrorist, who may or may not
have been armed, amid the ferocity of battle.