- Reaction score
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..and just the fact that a boatload of experienced, and inexperienced, people cannot come to a conclusion then I will always side with those 'in the show', ...........and not the naked cereal eaters.
Bruce Monkhouse said:Every war movie/ documentary I've ever seen [which is the extent of my experience under fire] seems to have casualties being pulled out while taking fire......
I am far out of date but don't "CasEvac people" need to be so marked?
Bruce Monkhouse said:... I will always side with those 'in the show'....
Petamocto said:I grant you that most of the time people "in the show" usually do the right thing, but they also commit war crimes like Auschwitz, My Lai, Abu Gharib, and Somalia as well.
It is one thing to give them the benefit of the doubt if there is just a situation in question (like the example of the ANP guy holding an RPG on a rooftop where of course that soldier would be justified), and another altogether to just blindly assume everything a soldier does overseas must be right.
Bruce Monkhouse said:I will always side with those 'in the show'
Bruce Monkhouse said:..and just the fact that a boatload of experienced, and inexperienced, people cannot come to a conclusion then
What was on the video? Here's a key bit from a sworn statement about that days firefights which might shed some light:
While team was providing security for H26 at the first engagement area H26 informed the team that they were recieving small arms fire from the S/SW and wanted to team to recon the area for AIF. CZ18 then located 5xAIF with AK-47's and 1xRPG. Team was given clearance to engage by H26. I then observed a child and some other noncombatants in the vicinity of the AIF so decided to hold off on the engagement until the non-combatants were clear. After the non-combatants were clear CZ18 the engaged the AIF with 20x30mm. There were 2 possible WIA and I observed the individuals run into a large multistory building. The team then searched the area for more AIF. CZ19 reported a red SUV that has possible AIF in it and team followed and observed the vehicle but could not get PID on any weapons. The team then returned to the engage
ment area.
This is not shown on the video, but the next segment in the statement is where the video seems to picks up -- the engagement of Mahdi Army terrorists holed up in a building with 3 hellfire missiles:
Upon arrivai I observed building was a 4 story building that looked abandoned and half finished and possibly still under construction. We then asked H26 for clearance to engage the building with hellfire missiles. H26 granted the team clearance to fire. The team proceeded to engage the building with 3 hellfire missiles. CZ18 fired 1xK2 and 1xN missiles. CZ19 fired 1xN missile. There were approximately 10 AIF KIA during this engagement. Team then did BHO with CZ03/04 because the team needed to refuel at the FARP.
When children were observed near AIF (anti-Iraqi Forces) they chose to hold fire --> Not shown on video.
A vehicle that might have carried AIF in it was not fired on --> Not shown on video.
tomahawk6 said:Lets see wasnt it Hizbollah that first used ambulances to ferry weapons and men about in Lebanon and I would suspect the same happened in Iraq. Thats a violation of the Geneva convention. So is fighting without uniforms. Killing prisoners is also a violation. Blowing up civilians is a violation of the Geneva Convention. When I grew up I was taught personal responsibility and I will bet everyone else here at army.ca was as well. You drive a van into a battle you risk getting killed. Ignore a checkpoint and you run the risk of getting killed. All this is in the context that a US convoy was being engaged by insurgents a short distance from this location. One of these days we will have munitions that can distinguish bad guys from civilians. Until then if you are going to play with fire dont cry when you get burnt.
Loachman said:Under the circumstances as depicted, and based upon personal experience, I do not believe that they would have to justify any of their actions in that engagement.
I would be surprised if anybody in their chain of command would have sought justification from them, or from anyone in any of the higher HQs viewing their video feed during the engagement, as a result of the engagement itself.
SigO said:The mis-use of ambulances by one group is no license to negate our responsibilities as soldiers under the Geneva Convention (which you quote, so I assume some level of familiarity with the document). To agree whole-heartedly with others in this thread, the first engagement can certainly be defended, but engaging those rendering aid, whether to an ally or an enemy, certainly contravenes our obligations under the LOAC and the Geneva Convention (particularly Article 12), as those individuals had been neutralized and were no longer posing a threat (hors de combat).
SigO said:That said, I think we have a professional responsibility to be critical of obvious breaches of the LOAC, and there are certainly a number of things that fall into that category here.
SigO said:Mistakes happen in the fog of war, but if we dismiss them outright, we miss a valuable introspective opportunity to evaluate our procedures and minimize collateral damage in the future.
SigO said:and doing so should in no way make the journalist a target.
SigO said:Interesting. Regardless of the results of whatever inquiry into this event was conducted, I believe that we have a professional responsibility to at least investigate.
SigO said:If this were a Canadian incident there is no doubt that the chain of command would ask questions (as they do in all such cases).
SigO said:We do investigations as the chain of command for a number of reasons: 1) to ensure we seize opportunities to improve TTPs; 2) to ensure that, should something like this become public, we can seize the initiative and situate the estimate with regards to public opinion; and 3) to ensure that no breaches of international law go unpunished.
SigO said:When we try and sweep critical incidents like this under the rug, we risk not only the injury of the incident itself, but also the subsequent negative optics in the court of public opinion where such actions may be viewed as a cover-up.
SigO said:our military Ethos places a great deal of responsibility on those who make life and death decisions, regardless of whether the object of those decisions is enemy, friendly or civilian.
Loachman said:The vehicle in question was not an ambulance. It was not marked as such. It was a type often used by insurgents, ie any civilian pattern vehicle.
If a Canadian LAV stops to render aid to a wounded Canadian soldier, it is neither more nor less an ambulance than that vehicle was. It is still a legal target, and neither more nor less than an unmarked vehicle clearly supporting insurgent activity in an area where engagements were ongoing.
Neither the vehicle struck nor the people in it enjoyed any special status or protection.