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Italian Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu also visited Calipari's home on Friday, describing the agent as "the most true and human hero of this tormented story."Friday's shooting was a terrible tragedy; a good man was killed. But, despite the media's myopic focus on how this will affect Italy-U.S. relations or the overall strength of the shrinking "coalition," I'm just reminded once again of the utter injustice and arrogance associated with this entire occupation, the military checkpoints being one of its most dangerous aspects. Probably because in this instance a European was killed, the checkpoints are being scrutinized a little more now. And yet, they have always been a source of constant heartache for ordinary Iraqis since the occupation began nearly two years ago.
Calipari, who is about 50, was married and had a 19-year-old daughter and a 13-year-old son. He was a 20-year veteran of the police force, and before moving on to Italy's secret services he had headed the immigration office for Rome's police.
As an American journalist here, I have been through many checkpoints and have come close to being shot at several times myself. I look vaguely Middle Eastern, which perhaps makes my checkpoint experience a little closer to that of the typical Iraqi. Here's what it's like.The author goes on to recount her firsthand experience with the two-stage checkpoint complication. And not only that, but "under Saddam, idling was risky. This feeling is a holdover from the days of Saddam, when driving slowly past a government building or installation was considered suspicious behavior." Clearly, everything about the checkpoints increases the potential for disaster. The Iraqi civilians are confused and the troops are on edge. We can only speculate as to exactly why the troops fired at that family's car back in January; the military has kept the official 'rules of engagement' under which soldiers are to operate at all checkpoints classified. The parents who were driving cannot give us their perspective on what happened, because they were killed.
You're driving along and you see a couple of soldiers standing by the side of the road - but that's a pretty ubiquitous sight in Baghdad, so you don't think anything of it. Next thing you know, soldiers are screaming at you, pointing their rifles and swiveling tank guns in your direction, and you didn't even know it was a checkpoint.
If it's confusing for me - and I'm an American - what is it like for Iraqis who don't speak English?
In situations like this, I've often had Iraqi drivers who step on the gas. It's a natural reaction: Angry soldiers are screaming at you in a language you don't understand, and you think they're saying "get out of here," and you're terrified to boot, so you try to drive your way out...Another problem is that the US troops tend to have two-stage checkpoints. First there's a knot of Iraqi security forces standing by a sign that says, in Arabic and English, "Stop or you will be shot." Most of the time, the Iraqis will casually wave you through.
Your driver, who slowed down for the checkpoint, will accelerate to resume his normal speed. What he doesn't realize is that there's another, American checkpoint several hundred yards past the Iraqi checkpoint, and he's speeding toward it. Sometimes, he may even think that being waved through the first checkpoint means he's exempt from the second one (especially if he's not familiar with American checkpoint routines).
[Translated from Italian] We were on our way to the airport, and we thought we were finally safe, because the area where we were was under the control of the United States. We therefore thought we had escaped the gravest area and entered into a more friendly area, although I was still nervous as my hostage takers had warned me to be careful, because it was the Americans who did not want me to be free, and returned to Italy alive. I just took that as a last threat from my hostage takers and did not really take it seriously. But then suddenly we found ourselves under an immense amount of bullets, something terrible, without any warning, and we realized that nearby there was an American tank which was shooting at us.Sgrena has questioned whether she was deliberately targeted because the Italian government probably paid a significant ransom, in the millions of dollars, to the her kidnappers, the "Mujaheddin Without Borders." The U.S. and the military have made public their opposition to any negotiations or ransom-payments with hostage-takers.
Consider the events of April 8, 2003. Early that morning, Al Jazeera correspondent Tareq Ayyoub was reporting from the network's Baghdad bureau. He was providing an eyewitness account of a fierce battle between US and Iraqi forces along the banks of the Tigris. As he stood on the roof of the building, a US warplane swooped in and fired a rocket at Al Jazeera's office. Ayyoub was killed instantly. US Central Command released a statement claiming, "Coalition forces came under significant enemy fire from the building where the Al-Jazeera journalists were working." No evidence was ever produced to bolster this claim. Al Jazeera, which gave the US military its coordinates weeks before the invasion began, says it received assurances a day before Ayyoub's death that the network would not be attacked.Just because the military won't admit to repeatedly shooting journalists in Iraq doesn't mean it hasn't happened. If you're still not convinced that journalists have been deliberately targeted in the past, then try reading Steve Weissman's multi-part story about investigating the issue. I asked my journalism professor what he thought this past week, and he replied that it was obvious that journalists have become a legitimate target in Iraq for U.S. troops. He went on to say that the media industry will not complain too much because it derives its advertising revenue from the corporations with ties to Washington; witness Eason Jordan's recent resignation over the mere suggestion that journalists have been deliberately targeted during a public argument. The targeting itself is intended to intimidate journalists in Iraq from going out into the field and covering the carnage that comes with this war, all that "collateral damage" that the administration doesn't want you or me to see. Giuliana Sgrena was one such journalist, one who had written numerous graphic reports about civilian deaths in Fallujah for an Italian socialist newspaper that has long opposed the occupation. The shooting of her car at the checkpoint was designed to send a message: That she should not have been out in the field in Iraq covering the war, because 1) she was writing anti-war reports that "undermined" the occupation and 2) she ultimately caused the Italian government to negotiate with the "insurgents." The death of Calipari was probably an unintended side effect of the violent signal the military wanted to send. The war in Iraq, then, has also been and continues to be a literal war on independent and critical journalism, which makes it all the more egregious.At noon on April 8, a US Abrams tank fired at the Palestine Hotel, home and office to more than 100 unembedded international journalists operating in Baghdad at the time. The shell smashed into the fifteenth-floor Reuters office, killing two cameramen, Reuters's Taras Protsyuk and José Couso of Spain's Telecinco. The United States again claimed that its forces had come under enemy fire and were acting in self-defense. This claim was contradicted by scores of journalists who were in the hotel and by a French TV crew that filmed the attack. In its report on the incident, the Committee to Protect Journalists asserted that "Pentagon officials, as well as commanders on the ground in Baghdad, knew that the Palestine Hotel was full of international journalists."
The US military has yet to discipline a single soldier for the killing of a journalist in Iraq. While some incidents are classified as "ongoing investigation[s]," most have been labeled self-defense or mistakes. Some are even classified as "justified," like the killing of Reuters cameraman Mazen Dana, shot near Abu Ghraib prison when his camera was allegedly mistaken for a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. Also "justified" was the killing of Al Arabiya TV's Mazen al-Tumeizi, blown apart by a US missile as he reported on a burning US armored vehicle on Baghdad's Haifa Street.