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3 June 2006

Part 2: haditha2.htm

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/iraq_cia_2003.jpg

Haditha
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Captions by Associated Press
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An image from television shows Iman Walid Abdul-Hameed in footage shot in Haditha, Iraq, Friday June 2, 2006. Iman Walid Abdul-Hameed, a young girl who said she was in the house when the Haditha shootings occurred, said her brother and several other relatives had been killed and she demanded revenge. "We want the Americans to be hurt just like us," she told the cameraman.The military said Friday it will cooperate with the Iraqi government in its own investigation of Haditha and other incidents of alleged wrongdoing by U.S. troops. (AP Photo/APTV) ** TV OUT **

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** FILE ** This image taken from a videotape made by a Haditha, Iraq journalism student and obtained by Time Magazine via the Hammurabi Human Rights Group, shows a scene in what appears to be a morgue following an alleged fatal raid by United States forces which took place on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2005, in Haditha, Iraq. The U.S. military is bracing for a major scandal over the alleged killing of Iraqi civilians in Haditha - charges so serious that they could threaten President Bush's effort to rally support for an increasingly unpopular war. (AP Photo/Hammurabi Human Rights Group, File)

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This image is believed to have been taken a day or two after the Haditha incident, and was made available in Baghdad, Iraq,Friday, June 2, 2006, by lawyer Khaled Salem Rsayef, but was not taken by him. It purportedly shows the scene in one of the houses in Haditha, Iraq after two dozen civilian Iraqis were allegedly killed by U.S. Marines last November, which Rsayef said Friday was carried out by three or four Marines while about 20 more waited outside. EDS NOTE: Khaled Salem Rsayef, 40, is a lawyer representing several of the families and says he himself lost a sister, her husband, an aunt and her husband, and several cousins in the alleged massacre. (AP Photo)

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This image is believed to have been taken a day or two after the Haditha incident, and was made available in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, June 2, 2006, by lawyer Khaled Salem Rsayef, but was not taken by him. It purportedly shows the scene in one of the houses in Haditha, Iraq after two dozen civilian Iraqis were allegedly killed by U.S. Marines last November, which Rsayef said Friday was carried out by three or four Marines while about 20 more waited outside. EDS NOTE: Khaled Salem Rsayef, 40, is a lawyer representing several of the families and says he himself lost a sister, her husband, an aunt and her husband, and several cousins in the alleged massacre. (AP Photo)

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In this picture provided by the U.S. Army, Lance Cpl. Jeffery Wilson from 3rd Platoon, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, and soldiers of the Iraqi Security Forces take cover on the streets in Haditha, Iraq while in search of insurgents on Tuesday, Oct. 4 2005. Marines from the Kilo Company are under investigation in the killings of up to two dozen civilians in Haditha in Nov. 2005. The allegations threaten to undermine the military's efforts in Iraq. President Bush, struggling to sustain public support for the war, says he's troubled by the reports. (AP Photo/U.S. Army, Cpl Kevin N. McCall)

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This image is believed to have been taken a day or two after the Haditha incident, and was made available in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, June 2, 2006, by lawyer Khaled Salem Rsayef, but was not taken by him. It purportedly shows the scene in one of the houses in Haditha, Iraq after two dozen civilian Iraqis were allegedly killed by U.S. Marines last November, which Rsayef said Friday was carried out by three or four Marines while about 20 more waited outside. EDS NOTE: Khaled Salem Rsayef, 40, is a lawyer representing several of the families and says he himself lost a sister, her husband, an aunt and her husband, and several cousins in the alleged massacre. (AP Photo)

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Maj. Dana G. Hyatt is interviewed at his home in Colchester, Conn., Thursday, June 1, 2006. Hyatt, who led a liaison team to improve relations between soldiers and Haditha residents, delivered $38,000 in military-ordered reparations to families of 15 of the dead civilians in Haditha. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

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**FILE** American soldiers look over the remains of a home in My Lai, South Vietnam in this Jan. 8, 1970 file photo. The GIs are in a safe area marked off with white tape, having been swept for booby-traps that have already wounded five soldiers since the investigation of the killing of unarmed civilians by members of the U.S. Army; what would come to be called The My Lai Massacre, began. Nearly four decades later, the notorious name of that hamlet _ My Lai _ has been summoned from memory again, as the U.S. military investigates allegations of mass civilian killings by a group of Marines in the western Iraqi town of Haditha. (AP Photo/File)

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Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones is seen in this photo taken in February 2005. Briones and another Marine were severely traumatized after following orders to photograph corpses of unarmed Iraqi civilians whom members of their unit are suspected of killing, their families said Monday, May 29, 2006. The parents of Lance Cpl. Andrew Wright, 20, and Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones, 21, both members of a Marine unit based at Camp Pendleton, said their sons were sent into the western Iraqi city of Haditha to help remove the bodies of as many as two dozen men, women and children who were shot. (AP Photo/Hanford Sentinel)

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Marine Capt. James Kimber poses under the Oceanside Pier in Oceanside, Calif., near Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base Thursday, June 1, 2006. Kimber is one of three Marines whose names emerged amid a military criminal investigation into allegations that Marines shot and killed two dozen unarmed civilians in Haditha, Iraq. Kimber's attorney, Paul Hackett, says Kimber knew nothing of the deaths until after his unit returned from Iraq in March. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy)

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In this photo released by U.S. MArine Corps, marines survey a damaged bridge in Haditha, Iraq, Monday, May 1, 2006. Detachment One of the Camp Pendleton, California-based 3rd Civil Affairs Group, which is comprised of more than 30 Marines, works throughout Anbar Province with local government officials, sheikhs, mayors and other leaders to identify and jumpstart various reconstruction and quality of life projects designed to rebuild damaged infrastructure. (AP Photo/US Marine Corps, Sgt. Roe F. Seigle)

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In this photo made availabe by the U.S. Marine Corp on Saturday April 15, 2006, Marines from 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment patrol the streets of Haditha, in Anbar Province, Iraq April 1, 2006.(AP Photo/Sgt. Roe F. Single, U.S. Marine Corps)

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In this undated photo provided by the Terrazas family, Marine Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas is shown. Terrazas died in November after a roadside explosion in Haditha, Iraq. (AP Photo)

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Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas' aunt, Elizabeth Hance-Terrazas sits in the room where he lived at his grandparent's El Paso, Texas, home Tuesday, May 30, 2006. Terrazas' bedroom is nothing short of a shrine to the fallen Marine, who died in November after a roadside explosion in Haditha, Iraq. Exactly what happened that day in the deadly Anbar province remains unclear. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

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Marines from 3rd Platoon, Company K, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, and soldiers of the Iraqi Security Forces patrol the streets of Haditha, Iraq while in search of insurgents on Tuesday Oct. 4 2005.The U.S. military is waging two major offensives in Anbar, one at the Syrian border, the other around the town of Haditha, about 225 kilometers (140 miles) northwest of Baghdad to drive out al-Qaida in Iraq militants. Commanders are promising to finish the assaults in time for the voting to allow residents to go to the polls. (AP Photo/ Cpl Kevin N. McCall, US Army HO)

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In this photo made available by the US Marine Corps on Saturday April 15, 2006, Pfc. Christopher L. Vaden, a Marine rifleman with India Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, communicates with other Marines during a three-hour patrol in the streets of Haditha, Iraq, Saturday April 1, 2006. (AP Photo/Sgt. Roe F. Seigle, US Marine Corps)

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This undated family photo shows Sarah Dyer, left, now a senior at Princeton High School, on a Christmas morning with her brother , Christopher. Lance Cpl. Christopher Dyer, 19, was one of nine Marines from Columbus-based Lima Company killed in a roadside bombing on Aug. 3 near Haditha, Iraq. Sarah, now a high school senior, will head to basic training at Parris Island, S.C., on Jan. 22, 2006, but her time as a reservist could end early if she receives an appointment to West Point. (AP Photo/Family Photo via The Enquirer) **NO SALES**

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This photo provided by the Watts family, shows Marine Cpl. Justin J. Watts, of Crownsville, Md., in an undated photo. Watts, 20, died Saturday, Jan. 14, 2006, in Haditha, Iraq, from an apparent non-hostile gunshot wound, the Pentagon said Tuesday. His death is under investigation, the Department of Defense said in a news release. (AP Photo provided by the Watts family via Baltimore Sun) ** MAGS OUT, NO SALES, INTERNET OUT, TV OUT **

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A U.S. Marine smokes while sitting on an Iraqi's bed while another Marine holds up a doll found in a house in Parwana, near Haditha, Iraq, on Aug. 6, 2005. The Marines call it a necessary evil, taking over houses and buildings for military use. For the Iraqis who become unwilling hosts, it can be anything from a mild inconvenience to a disruption that tears apart lives. (AP Photo/Jacob Silberberg)

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Four-year-old Adnan Ezaldeen lies in his crib at the Air Force Theater Hospital in Balad, 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2005. It was midnight in late December, and more than a week had passed since insurgents had fired mortar rounds at U.S. troops in Parwana, just outside the restive city of Haditha, 140 miles northwest of Baghdad. The shells missed the Americans but landed near Adnan Ezaldeen's home as he showered in preparation for Friday morning prayers at his local mosque. They killed two of his sons, who were in the fourth and fifth grades, and hit his 4-year-old namesake son with shrapnel in the legs, liver and stomach. Minutes before he and he and his wounded son were whisked away to Balad in a U.S. helicopter, Ezaldeen saw the bodies of his two boys for the last time. He would miss their funerals to tend to his wounded boy. A child as young as Adnan is not unusual in the military hospital, which admits about 1,000 patients a month. In the three days before Christmas, the wounded arrivals included children, soldiers and contract workers.(AP Photo/Jacob Silberberg)

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U.S. Marine Cpl. Joseph Dudley of Los Gatos, California, right, and an unidentified Marine of the 3rd Battalion, 1st Regiment, nail a flier to a home that urges residents to vote in the upcoming constitution referendum in Haditha, Iraq, on Wednesday Oct. 12, 2005. Marines on patrols have distributed similar fliers and posted signs throughout the city since a U.S.-led offensive in the area last week. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)

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Iraqi men offer cigarettes to U.S. Marines after the Marines searched their house in Parwana, near Haditha, Iraq, on Aug. 6, 2005. The Marines call it a necessary evil , taking over houses and buildings for military use. For the Iraqis who become unwilling hosts, it can be anything from a mild inconvenience to a disruption that tears apart lives. (AP Photo/Jacob Silberberg)

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A U.S. Marine from the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment monitors a grove of palm trees and fields near the Euphrates River in Haditha, Iraq, on Friday Oct. 7, 2005. For some Marines in 3rd Battalion, 1st Regiment from Camp Pendleton, California, this hectic pace is how they prefer life. But for others, many on their third tour in Iraq in as many years, the demands of life these days in the overstretched U.S. military is just too much, regardless of the plum bonuses being dangled in front of them. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)

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An Iraqi farmer tells a U.S. Marine, left, and an Iraqi soldier, right, that he has no illegal weapons caches on his land in Haditha, Iraq, on Oct. 6, 2005, as his family listens around him. U.S. Marines and Iraqi troops searched for illegal weapons through palm tree groves and miles of fields as part of the latest operation in western Iraq to uproot insurgents. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)

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U.S. Marines and soldiers look at a large weapons cache that was discovered buried in the courtyard of a large Sunni mosque in Haditha, Iraq, on Oct. 6, 2005. Marines said a roadside bomb had struck a humvee near the mosque and trigger wires from the blast site led to the mosque, which contained several roadside bombs ready for use and dozens of grenades, explosives, and guns hidden near a shrine. No one was injured in the bombing. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)

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U.S. Marines and soldiers uncover roadside bombs hidden underneath a pile of boulders in the courtyard of a large Sunni mosque in Haditha, Iraq, on Thursday Oct. 6, 2005. Marines said a roadside bomb had struck a humvee near the mosque and trigger wires from the blast site led to the mosque, which also contained dozens of grenades, explosives, and guns hidden near a shrine. No one was injured in the bombing. (AP Photo/Antonio Castaneda)

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Battalion Commanding Officer Lt. Col. Robert R. Kosid and Battalion Sgt. Maj. Sgt. Maj. Bryan P. Ward from 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion patrol through a palm grove near the market in Barwana, Iraq, on Tuesday Oct. 4 2005.The U.S. military is waging two major offensives in Anbar, one at the Syrian border, the other around the town of Haditha, about 225 kilometers (140 miles) northwest of Baghdad to drive out al-Qaida in Iraq militants. Commanders are promising to finish the assaults in time for the voting to allow residents to go to the polls. (AP Photo/ Lance Cpl. Shane S. Keller, US Army HO)

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U.S. Maj. Gen. Charles H. Swannack Jr. visits the Iraqi hydro-electric power station in Haditha, 200 km (136 miles), northwest of Baghdad, in this Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2003 photo. Swannack is among a growing number of commanders who served under Donald Rumsfeld who say he has botched the Iraq operation, ignored the advice of his generals and should be replaced. Swannack told CNN on Thursday, April 13, 2006 that Rumsfeld micromanaged the war. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

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Marine Lance Cpl. Edward Schroeder, left, and Lance Cpl. Christopher Dyer, far right, and unidentified Marines patrol through the city of Kubaysah in 2005 in western Iraq. Dyer and Schroder, members of 1st Squad, 3rd Platoon, Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Regiment, were killed, along with nine other members of 1st Squad, in a roadside bombing near the city of Haditha on Aug. 3, 2005. This picture was provided by Capt. Christopher Toland, 3rd platoon commander. (AP Photo/Christopher Toland)

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A Marine watches over the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Timothy M. Bell Jr., 22, during public visitation at Lakota East High School in Liberty Township, Ohio, Saturday, Aug. 13, 2005. A slideshow plays pictures of Bell in the background. Bell, who was assigned to the Reserve's 3rd Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, died Aug. 3, when his vehicle was hit by an explosive during combat operations south of Haditha, Iraq. (AP Photo/The Journal-News, E.L. Hubbard)