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28 Dec 2011 By Juan Cole More than six years after Staff Sergeant Frank
Wuterich led a squad of Marines into two Haditha, Iraq
homes and massacred two dozen civilians, the American
serviceman in charge has reached a plea deal. For nine counts of manslaughter, Wuterich will get
three months of confinement. Wuterich is the last of eight men tied to the
November 2005 killing that left 24 Iraqis dead,
including women, children and the elderly. It was
announced on Monday this week that he had reached a
plea with prosecutors during his military tribunal and
is now expected to be sentenced as early as Tuesday.
According to the Associated Press, Wuterich will face
a maximum of three months of confinement, the
forfeiture of two-thirds of his pay and a rank
demotion. Of the other seven Marines charged with the
now-notorious massacre, one was acquitted and six had
their charges dismissed. Wuterich's attorneys
have been confident throughout the ordeal that he
would see a similar outcome. "He's going to be
glad to have it over because he knows that he'll be
exonerated," lawyer Neal Puckett told National
Public Radio earlier this month. On November 19, 2005, Wuterich led a squad of men
into two separate homes in the town of Haditha and
opened fire on everyone in sight. Prosecutors say that
a roadside bomb exploded moments before the Marines
stormed the home, and were brought into hysterics by
seeing a fellow soldier die in the attack. In
response, they went on a rampage and for 45 minutes
raided the two homes and were never faced with
gunfire. Wuterich later said he instructed his team to
"shoot first and ask questions later." "My Marines responded to the threats they faced
in the manner that we all had been trained," he
explained to CBS' 60 Minutes in 2007. After the
roadside bomb was detonated, Wuterich said that, "My
responsibility as a squad leader is to make sure that
none of the rest of my guys died. And at that point,
we were still on the assault." Lt. Col. Joseph Kloppel, spokesman of the Camp
Pendleton marine Corps base near San Diego,
California, told the media on Monday that "By
pleading guilty to this charge, Staff Sergeant
Wuterich has accepted responsibility for his actions." |