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Sunday, July 4, 2004 Marine colonel,
not Iraqis, spurred toppling of Saddam statue
By Los Angeles Times The
statue of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is pulled down in central Baghdad on April 9,
2003. WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Army's
internal study of the war in Iraq criticizes some
efforts by its own psychological operations (PSYOP)
units, but one spur-of-the-moment effort last year
produced the most memorable image of the invasion.
As the Iraqi regime was collapsing on April 9,
2003, U.S. Marines converged on Firdos Square in
central Baghdad, site of an enormous statue of
Saddam Hussein. It was a Marine colonel -- not
joyous Iraqi civilians, as was widely assumed from
the TV images -- who decided to topple the statue,
the Army report said. And it was a quick-thinking
Army PSYOP team that made it appear to be a
spontaneous Iraqi undertaking. After the colonel, who
was not named in the report, selected the statue
as a "target of opportunity," the PSYOP team
used loudspeakers to encourage Iraqi civilians
to assist, according to an account by a PSYOP
team member. But Marines had draped an American flag over the
statue's face. "God bless them, but we were
thinking from PSYOP school that this was just bad
news," the PSYOP member wrote in the report. "We
didn't want to look like an occupation force, and
some of the Iraqis were saying, 'No, we want an
Iraqi flag!' " Someone produced an Iraqi flag, and a PSYOP
sergeant quickly replaced the American flag.
Ultimately, a Marine recovery vehicle toppled the
statue with a chain, but the effort appeared to be
Iraqi-inspired because the PSYOP team had
managed to pack the vehicle
with cheering Iraqi children. also: Seattle
Times | Honolulu
Advertiser Copyright 2004 Los
Angeles Times -
Justifying
the deaths of thousands: Evening Standard
(London) and BBC published faked photo of
cheering crowds in Iraq
»»»»»
-
Michael
Murphy comments on the faked photograph in US
magazines and on the front page of the London
Evening Standard
|