From the Los Angeles Times
Verified Civilian Slayings
Nick Turse, Deborah Nelson and Janet Lundblad
August 6, 2006
Decades-old Pentagon records show that Army criminal
investigators substantiated seven massacres of Vietnamese and Cambodian
civilians by U.S. soldiers — in addition to the notorious 1968 My Lai
massacre.
Here are summaries of three of those incidents, drawn
from files of the Vietnam War Crimes Working Group.
--
Sept. 29, 1969
E Company, 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry, 196th Light Infantry Brigade,
23rd Infantry Division
Members
of a reconnaissance platoon swept through the Que Son Valley, burning
homes, slaughtering animals and clearing civilians. They killed an
unarmed boy standing outside a cluster of huts and fired into one of
the dwellings, killing three women and three or four children,
according to an investigative report. The soldiers then executed an
elderly woman and a baby.
The unit reported the victims as enemy killed in action.
In
the next few days, members of the platoon raped a woman and a young
girl and executed civilian detainees, investigators determined.
Pvt.
Davey V. Hoag said he reported the killings to an officer but was
ignored. Two and a half years later, he gave information to Army
investigators at Ft. Lewis, Wash.
"The other guys wouldn't
listen when I tried to stop them from shooting everything," Hoag said
in a sworn statement. Other soldiers corroborated his account.
The
investigation found sufficient evidence to charge seven soldiers with
murder, rape or dereliction of duty. By then, at least four had left
the service, and the Army declined to pursue charges against them.
A
private still on active duty was charged with two counts of murder. He
denied killing civilians. His commanding general, Maj. Gen. Robert C.
Hixon, withdrew the charges, citing insufficient evidence, and gave the
private an undesirable discharge.
Investigators said the
evidence also supported a dereliction of duty charge against the
platoon leader for failing to report the civilian deaths. The platoon
leader said he had not heard about the deaths or any other war crimes
by his soldiers. His commander decided against disciplinary action,
citing insufficient evidence.
--
March 16, 1968
B Company, 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry, 23rd Infantry Division
On
the same day as the massacre at My Lai, soldiers from the same division
killed an undetermined number of women and children in neighboring My
Khe.
Witnesses told investigators that soldiers tossed grenades
into shelters and shot women and children as they ran for cover or
tried to flee. Over the next three days, members of the unit burned
three sub-hamlets to the ground and tortured detainees with electric
shocks, records say.
Officially, the unit said it killed 39
enemy combatants but recovered no weapons and suffered no casualties.
Official South Vietnamese sources put the death toll at 80 to 90
noncombatants. Evidence of the killings surfaced during the My Lai
inquiry, and the Army launched an investigation.
Platoon leader
Lt. Thomas K. Willingham told an investigator that his troops had come
under enemy fire and that he knew of no "unnecessary killings." He was
charged with murder, but the charges were dropped on the advice of Army
legal officers, who cited uncooperative witnesses and contradictory
testimony. Other suspects had left the service and charges were not
pursued.
A separate inquiry found a soldier had executed a boy
during the assault on My Khe. The soldier, who had left the service,
was not charged.
--
May 18, 1971
Troop A, 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division
A
U.S. helicopter "hunter-killer" team attacked a village in Cambodia
with rockets and machine-gun fire, killing eight civilians, including
two children, and wounding 15.
The team reported that they saw
what appeared to be flashes of automatic weapons fire and "a number of
motorcycles and bicycles" that looked like an enemy convoy. An Army
investigation, however, found no reasonable basis for the attack.
After
the assault, a U.S. captain landed with a platoon of South Vietnamese
troops but "did not search bunkers for enemy forces," according to an
investigative summary. "Nor were enemy weapons or other war materiel
found."
The troops provided no medical treatment to the
wounded and made off with "large quantities of civilian property,
including tobacco, poultry, and radios, and the US cpt returned to the
aircraft with a motorcycle."
The captain gave the motorcycle
to his squadron commander, and "the incident was neither properly
investigated or reported initially."
A captain, a major and a lieutenant colonel received letters of
reprimand. No one was prosecuted, according to Army records.
— Nick Turse, Deborah Nelson and Janet Lundblad