Post details: Ex-Marine Blasts Bush & War

09/10/04

Permalink 04:57:43 pm, Categories: news, chandra, 745 words   English (US)

Ex-Marine Blasts Bush & War

“There isn’t a waking moment when I don’t think about what we’ve done over there,” said ex-Marine Staff Sergeant Jimmy Massey, who was honorably discharged from Iraq last December after serving 12 years in the military.

The 32-year old North Carolina native visited New Haven, CT., last week as part of a series of speaking engagements, in hopes of revealing the facts about the U.S. led war in Iraq.

“A lot of people ask me why I’m speaking out,” said Massey to a group who had gathered inside a local church to hear his words. “I’ve been called a traitor, looking for fame—you name it. But, I’m doing this to heal myself and to help other Marines who feel the same way I do. I also believe U.S. taxpayers have a right to know what’s going on.”

Massey is one of a growing number of U.S. military personnel who have returned from Iraq disillusioned with the so-called Operation Iraqi Freedom. Massey holds President Bush personally responsible for the debacle, which has resulted in the deaths of more than 1,000 U.S. troops, 20,000 Iraqi civilians and an ever-growing number of civilian contractors.

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“The President of the United States is the one that authorized it,” said Massey, who served with the Third Battalion Seventh Marines Weapons Company Cap One, and was part of the initial invading force in Baghdad. “He’s the one that gave us the case to go to war and we went to war backing him. We were supposed to go there and set up a democracy but all we did was cause chaos and now they’re mad and they have a right to be.”

What specifically led to Massey’s change of heart was the Iraqi civilian casualties brought about by U.S. troops.

“We were getting intelligence reports from higher command saying that the Fedayeen and Republican Guards were trading in their uniforms for civilian clothes and mounting attacks against U.S. soldiers and Marines using guerrilla-style tactics and suicide bombings,” explained Massey. He added that anxiety from those reports, coupled with lack of sleep, was what triggered his platoon’s initial response, when civilian vehicles neared military checkpoints.

“We didn’t know who the enemy was, so when they didn’t heed our warning shot we were lighting them up— discharging our weapons into their vehicles,” he said.

Massey stated, when there was no fire returned, his troops searched the vehicles for weapons.

“There were none,” said Massey. “They were just scared civilians, trying to flee out of Baghdad.”

However, it was when a child died in his arms, that Massey began to completely reconsider the case for war.

“The father came up to us at a checkpoint with a young child and said that the bombs killed him,” said Massey. “The response I got from my command was—well better them than us and, sorry, but he’s just a casualty of war. But his father was standing there looking at me like—why did you kill my son?”

According to Massey, the invasion soon dissolved into chaos. In one occurrence, intelligence had identified a group as members of the Iraqi military. Massey’s platoon opened fire, massacring what turned out to be unarmed, peaceful demonstrators.

“I had several of my younger troops come to me in private and say that some of these incidents were affecting them,” confessed Massey. “I said—listen Double Dog, you’re here to do a job and provide democracy, not to play politician. Go back out there on the gun line and do your job.”

But, deep down, it was affecting Massey as well. Finally, he told his lieutenant the U.S. was committing genocide in Iraq. The lieutenant’s reaction was to report Massey to his commanding officer, who immediately ordered him stateside to receive psychological therapy.

“That’s when things really got ugly,” said Massey. “I had to hire a lawyer because the Marine Corps told me they were going to bring legal repercussions against me. Their main concern was whether or not I was a Conscientious Objector. I told them that I believed in war when it’s helpful for humanity, but I do not believe in killing innocent civilians. So, I said if they wanted to charge me for disagreeing with them about killing civilians, then I’d see them in court.”

People’s Weekly World: C.F. Niles; September, 2004

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