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The Story of Jessica Lynch What really happened in Nasiriyah.
the Weekly Standard ^ | April 24, 2007 | Richard S. Lowry

Posted on 04/25/2007 5:48:58 AM PDT by Kaslin

TODAY, THE HOUSE Committee on Oversight and Government Reform chaired by Henry Waxman (D-CA) conducted a hearing into "misleading military statements" that followed the death of Pat Tillman and the ordeal of Jessica Lynch. I cannot speak of the Pat Tillman incident, but I can speak to the story of Jessica Lynch.

I spent more than two years of my life studying the battle of An Nasiriyah. I read thousands of pages of government reports and personally interviewed nearly one-hundred of the participants of the battle, including four survivors of the 507th Maintenance Company's ambush, several Marines who came upon the scene of the ambush, a young Marine who worked in the regimental intelligence shop and was responsible for the safekeeping of Jessica's personal effects, and several of the soldiers, sailors, and Marines who were actually involved in her rescue. The results of my research were published last year in Marines in the Garden of Eden.

Following her rescue, unsubstantiated reports abounded, the media made a variety of assertions: Jessica Lynch was a pretty teenage girl who had been subjected to the ravages of an unjust war. She had been sent into battle with inadequate equipment and protection. After taking a wrong turn, Iraqis feigning surrender had ambushed her unit. Yet, she bravely fought off the enemy until she could resist no longer. Because of the incompetence of the leadership in Washington, D.C., she had been taken prisoner by evil Iraqis who did unspeakable things to her.

This was the type of story that had "legs." Every news producer in America salivated when they read the first copy. They knew that their ratings would skyrocket when the story of this fragile American girl was told. This was the type of story that would go down in history. There was only one problem--most of the story wasn't true.

The 507th Maintenance Company didn't simply make a wrong turn. Iraqis did not feign surrender. Lynch's unit had machine guns, rocket and grenade launchers and, while their M-16s were old, the reason most failed was that they were improperly maintained.

America's news media did not seem to care. They repeatedly ran every story they could about America's new princess-prisoner. At the same time, the U.S. military was trying to play down the story. They knew Jessica was being held captive and they immediately started plans for her rescue. Many Iraqis had come to Marines and embedded reporters to tell of a female soldier being held captive in a Nasiriyah hospital. Kerry Sanders of NBC was asked to not speak of Jessica's captivity. The commanders in the field feared that if word leaked of her captivity, she would be moved, or worse, before they could get to her.

Here is what really happened in Nasiriyah:

At midnight on March 22/23, the 1st Battalion of the 2nd Marine Regiment was preparing to move into Nasiriyah to secure the bridges over the Euphrates River and the Saddam Canal. They had stopped for a short rest only hours earlier at the intersection of Highway 1 (a major Iraqi highway) and a small two-lane road. This Cloverleaf was a modern freeway intersection with on and off ramps to/from the six-lane highway.

South of Nasiriyah, the U.S. Army was using Highway 1 as its ONLY supply route through Southern Iraq. Several Marines described the Highway as looking like I-95 on a Friday evening. The thoroughfare was jammed with thousands of supply vehicles. To the Marines' amazement, the Army vehicles all had their headlights on. In the Iraqi night, a stream of American vehicles could be seen off to the horizon.

The 507th Maintenance Company commander had accurate maps, a computer disk with his orders and more maps, and a handheld GPS device. He could plainly see the convoy on Highway 1. The 507th Maintenance Company was behind schedule and, by the time they reached the Cloverleaf, the Marines were moving up the two-lane road to assume their attack positions. The Marines were hoping for capitulation but expecting a fight.

Lynch's company commander led his vehicles through the intersection and raced past the heavily-armed Marine mechanized infantry battalion. He led his company up the deserted road, over a railroad bridge, which was defended by a company of dug-in Iraqi tanks, through an Iraqi military checkpoint, over the Euphrates River Bridge, through a four-kilometer stretch of the inner city of An Nasiriyah, over the Saddam Canal Bridge, through the northern outskirts of the city, past an abandoned military headquarters, and then past the operational military headquarters. Finally, he decided to turn around.

On his trip north, he had awakened every Iraqi with a gun. At that point, the sun was just starting to rise. The 507th's flight to safety was fraught with gunfire. The company commander got lost again and as his beleaguered convoy was forced to turn around a second time. The vehicle that Brandon Sloan and Sergeant Donald Walters were riding in got stuck in the sand. Sloan jumped from the vehicle into another truck; Walters began to lay down covering fire as his comrades turned their vehicles and fled to safety. In the confusion, Walters was left fifteen miles behind enemy lines.

Sergeant Donald Walters was the Real Hero

Walters resisted for as long as he could. He probably "fought to his last bullet." He was captured alive and taken to an Iraqi stronghold and later murdered. When I last spoke to my source, a criminal investigation was still under way. Our government was helping the Iraqis collect evidence against Walters' murderers in an ongoing effort to bring them to justice.

Meanwhile, the rapidly shrinking convoy raced south. Several kilometers south of the Euphrates River, Shoshana Johnson's flatbed semi-tractor trailer jackknifed and Lori Piestewa could not react fast enough. Her Humvee slammed into the rear of the jackknifed truck, instantly killing the company First Sergeant, Robert Dowdy. Lynch and the other two occupants in the trucks' bed (George Buggs and Edward Anguiano) were tossed about like rag dolls, and Piestewa was critically injured. She and Lynch were pulled from the vehicle and taken to the Tykar Military Hospital, which was only a kilometer or two from the scene of the crash. Piestewa succumbed to her wounds soon thereafter, leaving Lynch alone and near death.

As Jessica lay bleeding in the Iraqi hospital, the Marines were moving up the road to secure the same two bridges the 507th had first blundered over then fled back across. When the first Marine vehicles crested the Euphrates River Bridge, all hell broke lose. The Marines of 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment became heavily engaged with an ever-increasing enemy. They battled the Iraqis for the rest of the day, losing eighteen Marines during the fight. The battle was chaotic and communications were terrible. The Regimental and Brigade headquarters had extreme difficulty keeping up with the number of Marine casualties. At one point during the fighting, the Commanding General and the Regimental Commander thought that over one hundred Marines had been lost. By sunset, the Marines had achieved their objectives. The two bridges were in their control and still standing. There was little time to check on the 507th casualties and vehicles. The Marines had their hands full with sorting out their own casualty count.

During the battle, the 2nd Battalion of the 8th Marine Regiment had moved up behind 1/2 to secure the southern bridge over the Euphrates River. They were involved in skirmishes with the enemy all night and by morning Iraqi civilians were venturing up on the bridge to tell the Marines of a young female soldier being held captive in Nasiriyah's hospital. The Tykar military hospital was within eyesight of the bridge, just south of the river. So, the Marines turned their attention toward the hospital.

Shortly after sunrise, an Iraqi in a white lab coat came out of the hospital and asked to speak with the American commander. He gave 2/8's Fox Company commander a letter, which he said was from the head of the hospital. He told the Marine captain that they were treating patients and wanted nothing to do with the fight. As the morning progressed, more and more civilians came up to the Marines to tell them about Jessica's captivity.

Finally, a Marine infantry company was sent to search the hospital. As they approached, gunfire erupted. The hospital was an armed camp. The main buildings had sandbagged fighting positions on their roofs and fighters in nearly every window. A fighting trench completely surrounded the hospital. It took an entire Marine Infantry Battalion more than an hour to silence the Iraqi gunners and three more days to completely clear the hospital of the Iraqi fighters. As it turns out, it was Chemical Ali's headquarters, complete with hundreds of gas masks, protective chemical suits and even a torture chamber.

Some of Jessica's uniform was found in that hospital, along with pieces of other soldier's uniforms. More of Jessica's uniform and some of her personal effects were found hidden in a nearby farmhouse. Jessica had been at the Tykar Hospital, but she had been moved to the main hospital in downtown Nasiriyah sometime during the first day of fighting.

The story of the Marines' battle to secure Nasiriyah is an amazing saga that everyone should read. The battle was filled with individual acts of heroism. A Distinguished Flying Cross, two Navy Crosses, a handful of Silver Stars, and a larger handful of Bronze Stars were awarded for valor in the battle. Sergeant Donald Walters was awarded a Silver Star, as well. Donald was a sandy-haired young man. Some believe that it was an intercepted Iraqi radio report of his ordeal that was somehow attributed to Jessica Lynch, the only blonde female in the unit.

I do not recollect hearing an official military press release stating that Jessica "fought to the last bullet," but I do remember every news channel broadcasting the story day and night for at least a week. No one, absolutely no one, knew what happened to Jessica, for she was the only survivor of her vehicle and she lay close to death for a week in the Saddam Hospital in downtown Nasiriyah.

The military soon knew she was in the Saddam Hospital and quickly began planning her rescue from the center of a war-torn city. While the Special Forces planned the rescue, the 2nd Marine Regiment fought for days to secure the city. Fanatics continued to resist. At the same time, civilians continued to approach Marines and newsmen to tell of Jessica's captivity behind enemy lines.

The commanders of the rescue mission wanted no repeat of the failed attempt to rescue hostages in Iran. They would have been remiss had they not planned for every contingency. Remember, the Marines had fought a bloody battle to secure the Tykar Hospital and armed fanatics continued to roam the streets of southern Nasiriyah, attacking Marines at every opportunity.

Nasiriyah was a very dangerous place. So, a massive rescue operation was planned. If the Iraqis were setting a trap, the rescuers would be prepared. Their goal was to rescue a frightened nineteen-year-old soldier and bring her home safely. The rescue plan, diversion and all, was expertly executed. Lynch's shattered body was on a helicopter headed for much-need medical attention within seven minutes of the first American boots hitting the ground in the downtown hospital complex.

This was the first successful rescue of an American POW since WWII. It was precisely executed with not a single casualty inside the hospital, American or Iraqi. As it turns out, the last of the resistance had fled only hours before the rescue, but that doesn't change a thing. Weeks after the rescue, there were still armed Iraqis shooting at Marines. The rescue force needed to be prepared for a fight and they were. Apparently, some Iraqis complained that the rescue force yelled at them. I guess our troops should have been more polite.

It seems to me that Congressman Waxman and his committee should be investigating how the media perverted the story to build its ratings. It is appalling how little regard some of today's journalists have for the truth. CENTCOM immediately announced Jessica's rescue. It was good news. But, it was the American media that ran the 15-second video of her rescue over and over and over and over again. It was the American media that turned her rescue into a propaganda event. And they did it for the worst of reasons.

Richard S. Lowry is the author of Marines in the Garden of Eden. He is currently working on his next book, The Surge, which will tell of General Petraeus' attempt to win the peace in Iraq.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; US: District of Columbia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iraq; jessicalynch; lynch; nasiriyah; oif; womenincombat
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To: Kaslin

Whatever else Lowry has to say in this article, the fact that he can talk about the “real heroes” of this action without mention of Patrick Miller does not do much to lend credence to his claims to have studied this battle in great detail.


101 posted on 04/25/2007 12:52:34 PM PDT by 91B (God made man, Sam Colt made men equal)
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To: massgopguy

Maybe you’d prefer if she threw her medals back over the White House fence like Kerry did.


102 posted on 04/25/2007 2:35:50 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: gcruse
When FReepers said Lynch had no business on the battlefield because we didn’t relish the idea of her being sent into the combat zone for no reason to be raped without firing a shot, we were called traitors. Now the same people who said we were traitors and she was Rambo are calling her a traitor for exposing the truth.
103 posted on 04/25/2007 2:42:12 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: fight_truth_decay
when the real heroics of my fellow soldiers that day were, in fact, legendary. People like Lori Piestewa and First Sergeant Dowdy, who picked up fellow soldiers in harms way. Or people like Patrick Miller and Sergeant Donald Walters, who actually fought until the very end.”

What took her so long to say anything about this? I don't get her angle

104 posted on 04/25/2007 3:41:32 PM PDT by Lijahsbubbe (Ah don't feeeeel no ways taihrd.)
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To: HawaiianGecko
who the "they" were in her written testimony (ie: they mislead), she said it was the media. She also said she didn't believe there was any larger conspiracy beyond the media.

Why is she testifying before Congress then, if this was a media concoction. By appearing in this manner, it gives the impression that the government is responsible for it.

105 posted on 04/25/2007 3:48:10 PM PDT by Lijahsbubbe (Ah don't feeeeel no ways taihrd.)
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To: freema

Thanks for the ping.


106 posted on 04/25/2007 6:18:31 PM PDT by Marine_Uncle
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To: highlander_UW

“Waxman claimed the rescue was delayed so that the rescue could be filmed. Is there any evidence of that, or is he slandering the troops?”
___________________

Heard this on local talk radio today as well (stastion that carries Glenn BEck and Rush). No source, so they may be parroting Waxman.


107 posted on 04/25/2007 6:20:28 PM PDT by berstbubble
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To: cherry

But more important that Lori Ann didn’t have to go at all but went simply to be close and protect her friend, Jessica.


108 posted on 04/25/2007 6:50:37 PM PDT by Portcall24
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To: BurtSB
>>Pat brother is a radical leftist .
He rants regularly on left wing websites .
His parents have found a home there too.
Its sad and bizarre.<<

I recall a brother speaking at the Memorial Service for Pat Tillman, holding a Guinness in one hand while he slobberingly rattled on. The parents were a bit in the same vein.

It was bad form. But it was overlooked because, after all, it was California.

109 posted on 04/25/2007 8:15:17 PM PDT by mtntop3
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To: Kaslin
This “hearing” was nothing more than a planned denigration of the U. S. military as part of the Democrat’s ongoing campaign against Bush, Republicans and all conservatives.

The U. S. military has always been anathema to Democrats and their leftist bedfellows.

The present, and traitorous, denigration of the military is to slander the military leadership, thereby countering all positive statements on Iraq by our military.

Ergo Pelosi’s initial refusal to even go to hear Gen. Petraeus’s report.

110 posted on 04/25/2007 8:27:56 PM PDT by mtntop3
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To: berstbubble
Heard this on local talk radio today as well (stastion that carries Glenn BEck and Rush). No source, so they may be parroting Waxman.

Isn't that typical...one person slanders our troops and then the rest repeat it as if it's fact.

111 posted on 04/25/2007 9:34:06 PM PDT by highlander_UW (I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
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To: Kaslin

Of Idiots~!


112 posted on 04/26/2007 6:50:16 AM PDT by Piquaboy (22 year veteran of the Army, Air Force and Navy, Pray for all our military .)
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To: Kaslin

Hello all,

I was heartened to see such a lively discussion about my Weekly Standard op-ed piece. I decided to weigh into the discussion and answer a few comments.

First, Kaslin, Thanks for posting my article and thanks again for your kind words.

highlander_UW:

Jessica’s rescue involved hundreds of troops and it took several days to assemble the force and coordinate their efforts. Once the plan was developed, they actually conducted a dry run at Talil Air Base, south of Nasiriyah. Then, the rescue force needed to stage for the operation.

I doubt seriously that this op was delayed for lack of a cameraman. Those assets are embedded in the SF units and this type of op is routinely filmed (do you remember the night-vision film of the 82nd Airborne raid at the begining of the war in Afghanistan?).

All that being said: I have no evidence one way or the other on whether the op was delayed for lack of a cameraman.
One thing is sure, if they had gone a day earlier, there would have been a fight at the hospital.

RG Spinich:

Jessica was brought to the Tykar Military Hospital be Saddam Fedayeen, not the Iraqi Army.

Kerretarded

I wrote Marines in the Garden of Eden to tell the stories of brave soldiers, sailors and Marines, from Private Patrick Miller to Hospital Corpsman Luis Fonseca, Lance Corporal Donald Cline, Sergeant Donald Walters, Lieutenant James Reid, Captain Eric Garcia and Major Bill Peeples.

Miller probably saved Jessica and Shoshana Johnson’s life when he fought nearly to his last bullet. Fonseca threw his body over wounded Marines he was treating to protect them from mortar shrapnel. Cline died helping his fellow wounded Marines. Walters was left behind enemy lines, captured and murdered. Reid was seriously wounded three times in the battle and continued to fight.

Eric Garcia flew his CH-46 medevac helicopter into one of the hottest fire zones in the center of Nasiriyah to evacuate wounded Marines. Then he returned two more times to evacuate more Marines, still under fire. At least three of the Marines he evacuated would have died had it not been for his courage and dedication to duty. Eric was awarded a Distinguished Flying Cross for his actions.

Major Bill Peeples was a tank company commander. He charged forward in the early morning to rescue ten of the beleagured soldiers of the 507th Maintenance Company. Later that day, he responded to a call for assistance with a platoon of tanks (4) and won the raging battle at the Euphrates River Bridge. Then, he proceeded with his tank and his wingman to drive through Ambush Alley to relieve a Marine Company that was close to being overrun. Peeples’ and his wingman turned the battle north of the Saddam Canal with their two tanks.

Major Peeples was not done yet. He returned to Ambush Alley in his tank (with no additional support). He stopped his tank in front of a building in which a squad of Marines were stranded. He jumped from the safety of his M1, under continuous fire, and helped load wounded on to his tank. Then he drove the wounded to safety. Major Peeples was awarded a Silver Star, I personally believe he should have received the Medal of Honor.

Each of these men, and so many more that I cannot list them here, acted in the highest traditions of the U.S. Military during the battle for An Nasiriyah. I told their stories. I am proud to have had the opportunity to document their courage and committment.

ZULU:

Captain Troy King was the 507th Company commander. For several years he was relagated to training. The last I heard (at least a year ago) he was still a Captain and was preparing to return to Iraq. I tried to interview him for my book and he declined.

So, I will never really know his motivation. I believe he was just trying to catch up with the rest of his unit, so once he hit open road, he hauled ass. I don’t have a clue as to why he thought it would be okay to pass a Marine mechanized infantry battalion. They were riding in AMTRACs which look nothing like anything the Army has. He had to know he was going ahead of a combat unit. They had M1 tanks and tracks. I called it a thousand meter metal dragon.

The Marine battalion commander surmised that they followed his battalion through the cloverleaf and when the Marines pulled off the road, King just kept going. Only Captain King knows the answer to that question. Its sorta like why were Pat Tillman’s comrades shooting at him?


113 posted on 04/26/2007 7:07:02 AM PDT by RichardLowry
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.


114 posted on 04/26/2007 7:12:08 AM PDT by Mo1 ( http://www.gohunter08.com)
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To: 91B

I spent three years of my life researching and writing about the battle for An Nasiriyah. I read every after-action report. I visited the Marine Corps History archieves. I personally interviewed nearly one-hundred soldiers, sailors and Marines who were involved in the battle. That included four of the survivors of the 507th Maintenance Company ambush, three embedded reporters, the Commanding General of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, Colonels and Lance Corporals alike. I interviewed several members of Jessica’s rescue.

What, Sir, are your credentials?


115 posted on 04/26/2007 7:20:47 AM PDT by RichardLowry
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To: highlander_UW; RGSpincich; Kerretarded; ZULU

Ping to post #113.


116 posted on 04/26/2007 7:30:57 AM PDT by KS Flyover
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To: RichardLowry
Firstly, I'd like to thank you for taking time out of your schedule to respond to some of the posts regarding your op-ed piece.

Secondly, your response that there is no evidence that there was any delay of private Lynch's rescue to wait for a film crew confirms my suspicion that Waxman was slandering the troops extemporaneously. I'll refrain from commenting further as to my opinion of Waxman as I don't use that sort of language.

117 posted on 04/26/2007 8:26:04 AM PDT by highlander_UW (I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
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To: Kaslin

From the first hand interviews and descriptions that I have read about Pat, it sounds like he was so intent on getting into a firefight, he ran off half cocked up into the ravine where there was a wild firefight/ambush going on. It was almost dark and they couldn’t see well enough to identify who he was and one of the men returned fire thinking he was part of the ambush team. It was unfortunate what happened but not something you should get a silver star for. I saw this happen in Viet Nam several times where some one would run into the line of fire trying to get into the action and get shot either by NVA or our own guys. The Army probably didn’t want to tell this to his parents so they tried to cover and make it sound more heroric. That’s my take as a 2 tour twice wounded combat veteran on the Viet Nam War.


118 posted on 04/26/2007 8:29:23 AM PDT by Desparado
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To: KS Flyover; RichardLowry

KS,

Thanks for the ping!

Richard,

Thanks for the reply! Your initial article was amazing. The additional info you listed on each individual specifically in post #113 touched my soul. These are the brave Americans that “Senator” Reid continues to denigrate. I placed his title in quotations because, IMO, he is not a Senator of this great country. He has violated his oath.


119 posted on 04/26/2007 8:37:57 AM PDT by Eagle of Liberty (The United States of America is the only country strong enough to go it alone.)
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To: Kaslin
Politics During Wartime By MICHAEL DELONG Tampa, Fla. AS the deputy commander at United States Central Command from 2001 to 2003, I represented the military in dealing with politicians regarding the capture and rescue of Pfc. Jessica D. Lynch in Iraq, and thus I can speak with authority about what really happened after her maintenance convoy got lost near Nasiriya in 2003 and she was taken prisoner. I feel compelled to respond to accusations that have been made in recent days by several politicians. The initial reports from the field regarding Private Lynch stated that she had gone down fighting, had emptied her weapon and that her actions were heroic. Based on these reports, politicians from her home state, West Virginia, wanted the military to award her the Medal of Honor. Their request rose up the ladder until finally it reached me. But initial combat reports are often wrong. Time must always be taken to thoroughly investigate all claims. In the case of Private Lynch, additional time was needed, since she was suffering from combat shock and loss of memory; facts, therefore, had to be gathered from other sources. The military simply didn’t know at that point whether her actions merited a medal. This is why, when the request landed on my desk, I told the politicians that we’d need to wait. I made it clear that no one would be awarded anything until all of the evidence was reviewed. The politicians did not like this. They called repeatedly, through their Congressional liaison, and pressured us to recommend her for the medal, even before all the evidence had been analyzed. I would not relent and we had many heated discussions. The politicians repeatedly said that a medal would be good for women in the military; I responded that the paramount issue was finding out what had really happened. As it turned out, after a careful review of the facts, the military concluded that the initial reports were incorrect. Ballistic tests on Private Lynch’s weapon demonstrated that she had never fired; she had merely been a passenger in a vehicle that went astray, came under fire and crashed. Private Lynch was badly hurt, and in her condition, she could not fight back. Her actions were understandable and justifiable, but they could not be labeled heroic. (It’s important to make clear, too, that Private Lynch has never claimed to be a hero. As she told Congress earlier this week, the “story of the little girl Rambo from the hills who went down fighting” was not true.) Accusations that the military played up Private Lynch’s rescue for its own publicity purposes are also false. As someone who witnessed the operation from the planning to the execution, I can tell you it was one of the most spectacularly executed rescues I’ve seen in my 36-year career. Our receiving word of Private Lynch’s rescue — and subsequently, news of the rescue of the other prisoners — was a high point of the war for all of us at CentCom. None of us were in it for the publicity: we did it to save a comrade. Period. We never ordered the operation filmed — the troops who executed it decided to film it on their own. Ultimately, it was good that they did, not for publicity purposes, but because that film can now be used to train soldiers. A nation needs heroes. Hero-making in itself is not a bad thing. But hero-making without grounds is. In the case of Ms. Lynch, overzealous politicians and a frenzied press distorted facts. For these politicians to step forward now and accuse the military of capitalizing on the Jessica Lynch story is utter hypocrisy. Michael DeLong, a retired Marine lieutenant general, is the author, with Noah Lukeman, of “A General Speaks Out: The Truth About the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
120 posted on 04/28/2007 4:48:24 PM PDT by fontman
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