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APF Reporter Vol.20 #3 Index Home

What Bodies?
by Patrick J. Sloyan

Leon Daniel, as did others who reported from Vietnam during the 1960s, knew
about war and death. So he was puzzled by the lack of corpses at the tip of
the Neutral Zone between Saudi Arabia and Iraq on Feb. 25, 1991. Clearly
there had been plenty of killing. The 1st Infantry Division (Mechanized) had
smashed through the defensive front-line of Saddam Hussein's army the day
before, Feb. 24, the opening of the Desert Storm ground war to retake
Kuwait. Daniel, representing United Press International, was part of a press
pool held back from witnessing the assault on 8,000 Iraqi defenders. "They
wouldn't let us see anything," said Daniel, who had seen about everything as
a combat correspondent.

 A destroyed Iraqi tank rests near a series of oil well fires during the
Gulf War on March 9, 1991 in northern Kuwait. Hundreds of fires burned out
of control, casting a pall of toxic smoke over the Emirate and raising
health and environmental concerns.
(AP Photo/David Longstreath)

The artillery barrage alone was enough to cause a slaughter. A 30-minute
bombardment by howitzers and multiple-launch rockets scattering thousands of
tiny bomblets preceded the attack by 8,400 American soldiers riding in 3,000
M1A2 Abrams main battle tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles, Humvees, armored
personnel carriers and other vehicles.

It wasn't until late in the afternoon of Feb. 25 that the press pool was
permitted to see where the attack occurred. There were groups of Iraqi
prisoners. About 2,000 had surrendered. But there were no bodies, no stench
of feces that hovers on a battlefield, no blood stains, no bits of human
beings. "You get a little firefight in Vietnam and the bodies would be
stacked up like cordwood," Daniel said. Finally, Daniel found the Division
public affairs officer, an Army major.

"Where the hell are all the bodies?" Daniel said.

"What bodies?" the officer replied.

Daniel and the rest of the world would not find out until months later why
the dead had vanished. Thousands of Iraqi soldiers, some of them alive and
firing their weapons from World War I-style trenches, were buried by plows
mounted on Abrams main battle tanks. The Abrams flanked the trench lines so
that tons of sand from the plow spoil funneled into the trenches. Just
behind the tanks, actually straddling the trench line, came M2 Bradleys
pumping 7.62mm machine gun bullets into the Iraqi troops.

"I came through right after the lead company," said Army Col. Anthony
Moreno, who commanded the lead brigade during the 1st Mech's assault. "What
you saw was a bunch of buried trenches with people's arms and land things
sticking out of them. For all I know, we could have killed thousands."

 Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf is shown at ease with his tank troops at
Operation Desert Storm in Saudi Arabia, January 12, 1991.
(AP Photo/Bob Daugherty)

A thinner line of trenches on Moreno's left flank was attacked by the 1st
Brigade commanded by Col. Lon Maggart. He estimated his troops buried about
650 Iraqi soldiers. Darkness halted the attack on the Iraqi trench line. By
the next day, the 3rd Brigade joined in the grisly innovation. "A lot of
people were killed,"' said Col. David Weisman, the unit commander.

One reason there was no trace of what happened in the Neutral Zone on those
two days were the ACEs. It stands for Armored Combat Earth movers and they
came behind the armored burial brigade leveling the ground and smoothing
away projecting Iraqi arms, legs and equipment.

PFC Joe Queen of the 1st Engineers was impervious to small arms fire inside
the cockpit of the massive earth mover. He remained cool and professional as
he smoothed away all signs of the carnage. Queen won the Bronze Star for his
efforts. "A lot of guys were seared," Queen said, "but I enjoyed it." Col.
Moreno estimated more than 70 miles of trenches and earthen bunkers were
attacked, filled in and smoothed over on Feb. 24-25.

What happened at the Neutral Zone that day has become a metaphor for the
conduct of modern warfare. While political leaders bask in voter approval
for destroying designated enemies, they are increasingly determined to mask
the reality of warfare that causes voters to recoil. There was no more
sophisticated practitioner of this art of bloodless warfare than President
George H. W. Bush. As a Navy pilot during World War II, Bush knew the ugly
side of war. He once recounted how a sailor wandered into an aircraft
propeller on their carrier in the South Pacific. The chief petty officer in
charge of the flight deck called for brooms to sweep the man's guts
overboard. "I can still hear him," Bush said of the chief's orders. "I have
seen the hideous face of war."

Bush was badly stung by the reality of warfare while president. After the
1989 American invasion of Panama - where reporters were also blocked from
witnessing a short-lived slaughter in Panama City - Bush held a White House
news conference to boast about the dramatic assault on the Central American
leader, Gen. Manuel Noriega. Bush was chipper and wisecracking with
reporters when two major networks shifted coverage to the arrival ceremony
for American soldiers killed in Panama at the Air Force Base in Dover, Del.
Millions of viewers watched as the network television screens were split:
Bush bantering with the press while flag-draped coffers were carried off Air
Force planes by honor guards. Dover was the military mortuary for troops
killed while serving abroad. On Bush's orders, the Pentagon banned future
news coverage of honor guard ceremonies for the dead. The ban was continued
by President Bill Clinton.

Shortly after Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990, Bush summoned battlefield
commanders to Camp David, Md., for a council of war. Army Gen. H. Norman
Schwarzkopf, chief of Central Command with military responsibility for the
Persian Gulf region, flew from Tampa, Fla. He and Central Command's air
boss, Air Force Lt. Gen. Charles Homer, were flown from Andrews Air Force
Base, Md., by helicopter to the retreat in the Catoctin Mountains near
Thurmont, Md. Homer said golf carts took them to the president's cabin. Bush
was wearing a windbreaker.

"The president was very concerned about casualties," Homer recalled. "Not
just our casualties but Iraqi casualties. He was very emphatic. He wanted
casualties minimized on both sides. He went around the room and asked each
military commander if his orders were understood. We all said we would do
our best."

According to Homer, he took a number of steps to limit the use of
anti-personnel bombs used during more than 30 days of air attacks on Iraqi
army positions. Schwarzkopf's psychological warfare experts littered Iraqi
troops with leaflets that warned of imminent attacks by B52 Strategic
Bombers. Arabic warnings told troops to avoid sleeping in tanks or near
artillery positions which were prime targets for 400 sorties by allied
aircraft attacking day and night.

"We could have killed many more with cluster munitions," Homer said of
bomblets that create lethal minefields around troop emplacements once they
are dropped by aircraft.

 Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, left, Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell,
center, and Desert Storm Commander Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf wave from the
reviewing stand after they led a ticker tape parade through the streets of
New York, June 10, 1991.
(AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)

But Bush's Camp David orders were also translated into minimizing the
perception - if not the reality - of Desert Storm casualties. The
president's point man for controlling these perceptions was Dick Cheney,
Secretary of Defense. And, to Cheney, that meant controlling the press which
he saw as a collective voice that portrayed the Pentagon as a can't do
agency that wasted too much money and routinely failed in its mission. "I
did not look on the press as an asset," Cheney said in an interview after
Desert Storm. He was interviewed by authors of a Freedom Forum book,
"America's Team - The Odd Couple," which explored the relationship between
the media and the Defense Department. To Cheney, containing the military was
his way of protecting the Pentagon's credibility. "Frankly, I looked on it
as a problem to be managed," Cheney said of the media.

This management had two key ingredients: control the flow of information
through high level briefings while impeding reporters such as Leon Daniel.
According to Cheney, he and Army Gen. Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, orchestrated the briefings because "the information
function was extraordinarily important. I did not have a lot of confidence
that I could leave that to the press." The relentless appetite of
broadcasting networks made Pentagon control a simple matter. Virtually every
U.S. weapon system is monitored by television cameras either on board
warplanes and helicopters or hand-held by military cameramen or individual
soldiers. This "gun camera" footage may be released or withheld depending on
the decisions of political bosses of the military. So when the air war began
in January 1991, the media was fed carefully selected footage by Schwarzkopf
in Saudi Arabia and Powell in Washington, DC. Most of it was downright
misleading.

Briefings by Schwarzkopf and other military officers mostly featured laser
guided or television guided missiles and bombs. But of all the tons of high
explosives dropped during more than a month of night and day air attacks,
only six per cent were smart bombs. The vast majority were controlled by
gravity, usually dropped from above 15,000 feet - 35,000 feet for U.S. heavy
bombers - where winds can dramatically affect accuracy. And there never was
any footage of B-52 bomber strikes that carpeted Iraqi troop positions.
Films of Tomahawk cruise missiles being launched by U.S. Navy ships in the
Persian Gulf were almost daily fare from the military. Years later, the Navy
would concede these subsonic jets with 2,000 pound warheads had limited
success. These missiles are guided by on-board computers that match
pre-recorded terrain maps, shifting left or right as landmarks are spotted.
But the faceless desert offered few waypoints and most Tomahawks wandered
off, just as the French Legion's lost platoon did in the Sahara. The only
reliable landmark turned out to be the Tigris River and Tomahawks were
programmed to use it as a road to Baghdad and other targets. But Iraqi
antiaircraft gunners quickly blanketed the riverside. The slow moving
Tomahawks were easy targets. Pentagon claims of 98 per cent success for
Tomahawks during the war later dwindled to less than 10 per cent
effectiveness by the Navy in 1999.

Just as distorted were Schwarzkopf's claims of destruction of Iraqi Scud
missiles. After the war, studies by Army and Pentagon think tanks could not
identify a single successful interception of a Scud warhead by the U.S.
Army's Patriot antimissile system. U.S. Air Force attacks on Scud launch
sites were portrayed as successful by Schwarzkopf. The Air Force had filled
the night sky with F-15E bombers with radars and infrared systems that could
turn night into day. Targets were attacked with laser guided warheads. In
one briefing in Riyadh, Schwarzkopf showed F15E footage of what he said was
a Scud missile launcher being destroyed. Later, it turned out that the
suspected Scud system was in fact an oil truck. A year after Desert Storm,
the official Air Force study concluded that not a single Scud launcher was
destroyed during the war. The study said Iraq ended the conflict with as
many Scud launchers as it had when the conflict began.

 Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Gen. Colin Powell, with President Bush at
his side, addresses reporters May 23, 1991 in the White House Rose Garden
after the President announced that he was reappointing Powell to a second
term. Bush praised Powell for his advice and leadership in the war against
Iraq and the invasion of Panama.
(AP Photo/Marcy Nighswander)

In manipulating the first and often most lasting perception of Desert Storm,
the Bush administration produced not a single picture or video of anyone
being killed. This sanitized, bloodless presentation by military briefers
left the world presuming Desert Storm was a war without death. That image
was reinforced by limitations imposed on reporters on the battlefield. Under
rules developed by Cheney and Powell, journalists were not allowed to move
without military escorts. All interviews had to be monitored by military
public affairs escorts. Every line of copy, every still photograph, every
strip of film had to be approved - censored - before being filed. And these
rules were ruthlessly enforced.

When a Scud missile eventually hit American troops during the ground war,
reporters raced to the scene. The 1,000 pound warhead landed on a makeshift
barracks for Pennsylvania national guard troops near the Saudi seaport of
Dahran. Scott Applewhite, a photographer for the Associated Press, was one
of the first on the scene. There were more than 25 dead bodies and 70 badly
wounded. As Applewhite photographed the carnage, he was approached by U.S.
Military Police who ordered him to leave. He produced credentials that
entitled him to be there. But the soldiers punched Applewhite, handcuffed
him and ripped the film from his cameras. More than 70 reporters were
arrested, detained, threatened at gunpoint and literally chased from the
frontlines when they attempted to defy Pentagon rules. Army public affairs
officers made nightly visits to hotels and restaurants in Hafir al Batin, a
Saudi town on the Iraq border. Reporters and photographers usually bolted
from the dinner table. Slower ones were arrested.

Journalists such as Applewhite, who played by the rules, fared no better.
More than 150 reporters who participated in the Pentagon pool system failed
to produce a single eyewitness account of the clash between 300,000 allied
troops and an estimated 300,000 Iraqi troops. There was not one photograph,
not a strip of film by pool members of a dead body - American or Iraqi. Even
if they had recorded the reality of the battlefield, it was unlikely it
would have been filed by the military-controlled distribution system. As the
ground war began, Cheney declared a press blackout, effectively blocking
distribution of battlefield press reports. While Cheney's action was
challenged by Marlin Fitzwater, the White House press secretary, the ban
remained in effect. Most news accounts were delayed for days, long enough to
make them worthless to their editors.

Accounts of Iraqi troops escaping from Kuwait - the carnage on the Highway
of Death - were recorded by journalists operating outside the pool system.

Schwarzkopf repeatedly brushed off questions about the Iraqi death toll when
the ground war ended in early March. Not until 2000, during a television
broadcast, would he estimate Iraq losses in the "tens of thousands." The
only precise estimate came from Cheney. In a formal report to Congress,
Cheney said U.S. soldiers found only 457 Iraqi bodies on the battlefield.

To Cheney, who helped Bush's approval rating soar off the charts during
Desert Storm, the press coverage had been flawless. "The best-covered war
ever," Cheney said. "The American people saw up close with their own eyes
through the magic of television what the U.S. military was capable of
doing."

�2002 Patrick J. Sloyan

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Patrick J. Sloyan, a senior reporter for Newsday, is investigating the media
and the military.

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