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Reporter remembers accused Haditha regiment

Group found mission ‘boring,’ restrained rage on other occasions

Image: Marine from 3rd Platoon
In this picture provided by the U.S. Army, Lance Cpl. Jeffery Wilson from 3rd Platoon, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, and soldiers of the Iraqi Security Forces take cover on the streets in Haditha, Iraq, while in search of insurgents on Oct. 4, 2005.
Kevin Mccall / AP file
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Reporter’s Notebook
By Antonio Castaneda
updated 9:15 p.m. ET May 31, 2006

Editor's Note: The writer, an Associated Press reporter, has been embedded with U.S. troops regularly since February 2005. He was with the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment last October, a month before the alleged massacre in Haditha. This is his account of the unit.

BAGHDAD, Iraq - They were one of the first Marine battalions to do a third tour in Iraq, a battle-hardened group of young men who seemed older than their years.

When I last saw the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, they were on yet another offensive, just landed in Haditha only 10 months after storming through Fallujah. In Haditha, they faced an unnervingly quiet city whose lazy, waving palm trees hid a resilient insurgency.

The Marines I observed were sharp, thoroughly searching homes as they swarmed Haditha’s streets. Their commanders gave thoughtful responses to my questions. The unit fired only a few shots as it retook the city in just a couple days.

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Now, a few of these Marines, from the battalion’s Kilo Company, are under investigation in the killings of up to two dozen civilians in Haditha. The allegations threaten to undermine the military’s efforts in Iraq. President Bush, struggling to sustain public support for the war, says he’s troubled by the reports.

Haditha mission ‘boring’
I spent about 10 days with the battalion, including three to four days with Kilo Company when the Marines transformed a commandeered school into their headquarters. I remember talking to Marines on foot patrols, stopping to interview them as they nailed up fliers urging Iraqis to vote in the constitutional referendum.

Residents didn’t seem overtly hostile to the American presence, which led some newcomers to mistake the place as an idle, carefree city.

Some Marines called their latest mission “boring” compared with the last assignment in Fallujah. But the wiser ones knew the insurgents would eventually fight back — and take a toll.

Iraq’s most wanted terror leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, once had a home in Haditha, commanders said.

Before the 3rd Battalion’s arrival, the lethality of Haditha already was clear. Over three days last August, 20 Marines from an Ohio-based reserve unit were killed, including several I had met on prior visits to the city. The local police force had deserted en masse after insurgents overran police headquarters.

For several months, Haditha was a no-man’s-land. There weren’t enough U.S. troops to patrol all the cities in the western desert, so Marines periodically swooped in to chase out insurgents, who would return later.

In between, insurgents had weeks and even months to set up traps and ambushes. Over 30 roadside bombs were found when I was in Haditha in October.

A select group
The battalion was remarkably open to the media, and the Marines seemed mature and self-confident. For several days, I slept on a crowded schoolroom floor alongside a company commander and several senior Marines. I sat in on meetings that most commanders would have barred me from.

At least two officers attended the U.S. Naval Academy, including one who was named a Marshall Scholar, and another well-spoken lieutenant in Kilo Company. They clearly were a select group, nurtured within the military’s finest institutions and trained to lead an important mission.

I remember 1st Lt. David Jackson, a fast-talking New Yorker, spewing a string of crisp directives into his headset and his platoon automatically reacting.

They also seemed sensitive to local concerns.


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