Gunmen shouting "God is Great!" dragged the burning body of what they said
was a U.S. pilot in a horrific video posted Wednesday on the Web by a new
al-Qaida-affiliated group that claimed it shot down an Apache helicopter last
weekend.
An Iraqi
policeman picks up still smoking schoolbooks at the scene of a
roadside bomb Wednesday April 5, 2006 in central Baghdad, Iraq. A
bomb explosion killed three people including two schoolboys and
injured eleven, as Iraqi politicians struggled to form a government.
[AP] | |
The U.S. military expressed outrage over the release of "such a despicable
video for public exposure" but said it had serious doubts that the footage was
authentic.
The AH-64D Apache Longbow attack helicopter was downed near Youssifiyah about
12 miles southwest of Baghdad on Saturday, killing the two pilots. A U.S.
statement said troops had recovered "all available remains" although "reports of
a Web site video suggest that terrorists removed part of a body from the crash
site."
The flaming wreckage of a helicopter could be seen clearly in the video,
including outlines of the aircraft's blades and jagged pieces of wreckage strewn
over a field.
The camera panned over bloodstained debris, then showed several men dragging
the burning body of a man across a field as they shouted "Allahu Akbar," or "God
is Great!" Voices could be heard in the background shouting "come, come, help me
carry it."
The body's face was not visible, but the camera zoomed in on what appeared to
be his waistline, which showed a scrap of underwear with the brand name "Hanes."
It appeared the man was wearing tattered digital camouflage fatigues, which are
worn by U.S. troops in Iraq.
The time stamp on the video which shows the minutes and seconds do not run
sequentially, and the scenes appear disjointed. The posting also included
bombing scenes filmed elsewhere, indicating the material had been edited as a
propaganda package.
Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, a spokesman for the command, said the wreckage shown
on the video "does appear to be an AH-64" but added that other helicopters of
that type have been lost.
"We have serious doubts about the authenticity of this video, a common tactic
we see terrorist groups use to keep the stories they want alive in the media,"
he said.
But in Alexandria, Va., Ben Venzke, head of IntelCenter, a defense contractor
which monitors militant statements, said it appeared on first viewing that the
tape was authentic. Although the date stamp on the video was Sunday, April 2, a
day after the crash, Venzke said the discrepancy could be simply a technical
error in the setting.
"Based on an initial review of the footage, it would seem to indicate the
downing of a helicopter and the removal of crew and passengers from the craft,"
he said. "On an initial review, it does appear to be what it purports to be."
He said the large amount of background chatter among those on the ground
suggested that "it was filmed closely after the downing of the helicopter as
opposed to something that was found later and staged."
It was the second Apache to crash in Iraq this year. On Jan 16, an AH-64
Apache conducting a combat air patrol went down in Mishada, north of Baghdad,
killing two soldiers. At least 12 Apaches have crashed since the beginning of
the war three years ago.
U.S. officials first reported Saturday that an American helicopter had
crashed that day about 5:30 p.m. during a combat patrol southwest of the capital
and that the status of the crew was unknown. Ordinarily, U.S. officials refrain
from reporting helicopter crashes until the status of the crew is clear to avoid
tipping off the insurgents that wounded survivors may be in the area.
Late the next day, the U.S. command confirmed that helicopter was an Apache
and that the two crew members were "presumed dead," suggesting the remains had
not been found. Later the same day, U.S. authorities said the bodies had been
recovered.
On Wednesday, the military identified the pilots killed as Capt. Timothy J.
Moshier, 25, of Albany, N.Y., and Chief Warrant Officer 3 Michael L. Hartwick,
of Orrick, Mo.
The video was e-mailed to reporters and posted on an Islamist Web site by the
Mujahedeen Shura Council, purportedly a new umbrella organization that includes
al-Qaida in Iraq and smaller insurgent groups. Formation of the group, announced
Jan. 21, was seen as a bid to consolidate various organizations that had been
operating independently since the insurgency erupted in 2003.
It was also seen as an effort by insurgents to lower the profile of al-Qaida
in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian, whose mass attacks against
Shiite civilians have tarnished the image of the insurgents among many Iraqis.
"We are outraged that anyone would create and publish such a despicable video
for public exposure," Lt. Col. Jonathan Withington, a U.S. spokesman, said. "The
terrorists continue to demonstrate their immoral disregard for human dignity and
life."