From the Los Angeles Times
Marines Getting a New Message
By Tony Perry and T. Christian Miller
Times Staff Writers
July 9, 2006
SAN DIEGO — Even before the investigation of the killing of 24
civilians in the Iraqi town of Haditha is complete, the Marine Corps
has taken action, stressing accountability and sternly reminding
officers that they must investigate all civilian deaths.
The
investigative report, by an Army general, will be highly critical of
officers for not investigating the Nov. 19 incident in which Marines
from Camp Pendleton allegedly stormed into houses and killed the
occupants after a roadside bombing killed a fellow Marine.
The
report will also recommend that the Marine Corps change its training to
remind troops that the rules for dealing with insurgencies are
different from those for classic battles such as the assault on Baghdad
in 2003 and the operations in the Sunni Triangle in 2004.
The Corps has anticipated the criticism, government officials close to
the inquiry say.
"The
word has gone out very clearly: When a civilian is killed, officers
need to know how and why, and they need to get that information to the
highest levels as quickly as possible," said an official who declined
to be identified.
Training at Camp Pendleton, Twentynine Palms
and other bases has been altered to emphasize restraint in the use of
deadly force when civilians are involved.
In late May, Marine
Commandant Gen. Michael Hagee went to Iraq to remind Marines of the
international rules of warfare that call for protection of
noncombatants.
And Lt. Gen. James N. Mattis, who led Marines
into Iraq in 2003 and during the April 2004 fight in Fallouja, recently
returned from an unpublicized two-week trip to Iraq to talk to Marines.
Bing West, a former assistant Defense secretary and author of
two books about the Marines in Iraq, said that Mattis had made it
"crystal clear": "If shot at from a crowd of civilians, a Marine is not
to fire back and endanger women and children."
Former Marine
Col. Thomas X. Hammes, an expert on insurgent warfare, said a lack of
accountability in cases involving the mistreatment of civilians by U.S.
personnel — particularly at the Abu Ghraib prison — helped fuel the
insurgency by creating a source of frustration among ordinary Iraqis.
He praised efforts to promote greater accountability among senior
officers, saying it would help fight the war in Iraq.
"To
date, we've been very, very poor at holding our people accountable,"
Hammes said. "Anything that … emphasizes the responsibility up the
chain of command is a positive step. It certainly will help our troops
on the ground."
The investigative report was done by Army Maj. Gen. Eldon Bargewell and
reviewed by Army Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli.
Chiarelli's
office said Friday that the report would next be sent to Army Gen.
George W. Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq. Finally, the report
will be sent to Marine Lt. Gen. John F. Sattler, commanding general of
the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton.
Sattler,
or his successor, will use that report, and an investigation by the
Naval Criminal Investigative Service, to determine whether any of a
dozen Marines with the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine
Division, should face criminal charges. Sattler is set to be relieved
this summer by Mattis.
Investigators have concluded that some of
the Marines should face murder charges and that the killings were
unprovoked and outside the international rules of warfare. Defense
attorneys insist that the Marines were acting within the rules of
engagement laid down by their officers.
The Army report is known
to be critical of top officers in the 2nd Marine Division for failing
to see "red flags" that should have made them question the report from
ground troops. The military began an investigation only after Time
magazine uncovered evidence disputing the Marines' original account of
the killings.
Although the troops are with the 1st Marine
Division based at Camp Pendleton, they were accountable to officers
with the 2nd Regiment of the 2nd Marine Division, based at Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
Two top officers in the chain of command during
the Haditha incident were replaced last month, though officials said
both changes had been scheduled before the controversy.
Maj.
Gen. Richard Huck, commanding officer of the 2nd Marine Division,
announced his retirement. And Col. Stephen Davis, commander of the
second 2nd Regiment, was replaced and reassigned.
After the
troops involved in the Haditha incident returned to Camp Pendleton, the
commanding general of the 1st Marine Division relieved the battalion
commander and company commander after losing "confidence in their
leadership."
Said one Marine officer with extensive experience
in Iraq, "No question, this hasn't been the Marine Corps' finest hour.
But I think everybody is locked on to seeing that it never happens
again."
Perry reported from San Diego and Miller from
Washington.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times