Once again, the order to engage was granted before discussion of the RPG.
Once again, so what?
That item in the video could just as easily be a camera tripod.
The military report doesn't mention a camera tripod at the site.
But it does mention several RPGs and contain a photo of one lying right next to a camera on the ground.
By the way, I'd like to see your source for your claim that the RPGs were found in the van.
You can back that up, can't you?
Or were you just making things up, like Assange did?
The thing identified as an RPG aimed at the helicopter was a camera.
What a shame the *journalists* didn't notify the military that they were operating in the area. Might have saved their lives.
THe RPG's on the scene could have come from anywhere.
Yeah. Maybe Santa dropped them from his sleigh as it passed overhead.
Or perhaps they were planted by those nasty Americans. Right?
The rules of engagement don't say, "Kill anyone with an RPG."
The rules of engagement don't require RPGs be used before responding.
You literally can't pack more nonsense into a post than you just did.
You literally can't spin more than you have here, TraneWreck. You should learn to stop digging when you find yourself in hole.
Provide the rules of engagement
Sure thing.
Here were the ROEs in effect at the time of the engagement in 2007 (
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2007/jan/25/20070125-091730-8692r/ ):
(1) You must feel a direct threat to you or your team.
(2) You must clearly see a threat.
(3) That threat must be identified.
(4) The team leader must concur that there is an identified threat.
(5) The team leader must feel that the situation is one of life or death.
(6) There must be minimal or no collateral risk.
(7) Only then can the team leader clear the engagement.
Looks to me like the military followed every one of those rules in this case as detailed in the military's report (
http://www2.centcom.mil/sites/foia/...nd Brigade Combat Team 15-6 Investigation.pdf ) and as seen in the video of incident. Let's go over them:
(1) As indicated in both report and the video, US forces had been taking fire from the area and location where these insurgents were seen
all day. Thus, insurgents in the area posed a direct threat.
(2) The insurgents were clearly visible and clearly armed. Even YOU should be able to admit that given what the video shows.
(3) Given the ongoing combat in the area, the fact that Reuters had not told the military they had a camera crew there, the manner in which the group of men were armed, and their suspicious behavior, it was entirely reasonable to identify those people as "insurgents".
(4) The team leader concurred this was an identified threat. That's what the audio on the video proves.
(5) Armed insurgents 100 meters from US forces definitely posed a immediate threat to the life of our soldiers. An RPG a 100 meters from a HMMWV (which is what photos found in the camera showed) definitely posed a immediate threat to that vehicle.
(6) I see no one beside armed people or people that look like they might be armed in those camera frames. I see no innocent women and no children, nor shopkeepers. I see no photographers trying to identify themselves to the US forces. I only see people with AKs and RPGs behaving suspiciously and standing around behind a building waiting to, it appears, ambush American soldiers. Thus collateral risk would be minimal given the weaponry employed by the aircraft.
(7) And the team leader did not give the order to fire until all of the above was determined.
Later, I see an unmarked van also acting suspicious. Trying to load insurgents into it and escape. Again, seeing this, and following the ROE, US forces engage.
And finally, note that the report states (contrary to your earlier ... I think completely bogus ... claim) that the first elements of US infantry on the scene "discover two RPGs and an AK-47 or AKM
among the group of insurgents clustered near the wall (i.e., nowhere near where the van was disabled). In fact, the report states that "the body lying closest to the camera had an additional RPG round underneath it". The report also states that "as Bravo Company secured the scene, they continued to take small arms fire". So clearly, this was an area where *journalists* (and children) had no business being …. especially in the company of insurgents (and what else would people be who carried RPGs?). Hmmmmmm?
So there.
and we can go forward, otherwise you're just wasting everyone's time.
LOL! No, I think you're the one wasting everyone's time. And it must be upsetting to realize that everyone can now see it clear as day.
