http://www.collateralmurder.com/
It's all rather simple - in 2007 two Reuters employees were killed in Baghdad. Nobody really knew why - the US military killed them, but the situations surrounding it were such that it got nicely covered up, as the US military seems to be pretty damn competent at doing these days. Eventually, somebody somewhere got ahold of the video feed from an Apache helicopter that was involved in the 'skirmish'. By 'skirmish', I mean cold blooded murder of about a dozen civilians, and the severe wounding of two children. Yeah, children.
So what happened? Apparently, the people recruited for the US army these days are so uttely incompetent that they cannot determine the different between a camera, and an AK-47. Nor between bare hands, and an AK-47. Nor between a camera, and a Rocket Propelled Grenade. So, thinking that unarmed civilians, and two unarmed Reuters employees were carrying weapons, the US military gave a green light to the Apache gunner, who must honestly be deemed Trigger-Happy. There is a point in the film where he is seen urging one of the injured Reuters employees to pick up a weapon so he can shoot him. Anyways, so most people were killed pretty instantly, there was one person who remained alive, as stated above. He crawls away, and reaches the pavement, all the time being urged to go for a weapon. Then, a little van comes upon the area, the driver stops, and he and the passenger go to help the injured man.
Whatever happened to removing war wounded from battle? Let alone removing civilians from the battlefield. That died out in the history books it seems, because this was reason enough for the Apache to open fire again. This time, killing the injured man, along with the two people who had gone to his aid. The cannon also tore the little van to pieces. Inside were two children, who can be seen to poke their heads out of the van. You'd have to be blind to miss it. And yet the cocky, arrogant man behind the gun of the Apache failed to see them, whether it be bloodlust or otherwise. This, this is what you get for throwing 18-year olds behind the gun of an Apache. It's a slaughter. They don't know why they're there - hell I'd bet half don't care - they just want to kill some terrorists. .
People could defend this on the grounds of it being war. Of it being a mistake. Of it being their own fault for being in a warzone. Of it being the fault of the family of the children fr bringing them into there (as pointed out by a US soldier). So tell me why it was covered up, if it was a mistake, or a legitimate act of self defence. Tell me why the ground forces entering the area managed to run over two bodies. Tell me why the seriously injured children were refused access to proper medical facilities at the nearby American base, and were instead left with the Iraqi police to deal with. Tell me why the pilots fired on unarmed personnel who at worse, were removing an injured man from the scene. Tell me why they lied and said they detected small arms fire from AK-47s.
And tell me where all of those identified weapons were? Cameras are capable of producing images that bring down governments, but I would hardly class that as a reason as to why photographers should be shot. I leave you with this image from the Vietnam War. It was another war America could never win.

Edited by AJ, 06 April 2010 - 23:56.