Three weeks after being shot by US forces in Iraq, veteran Italian 
war correspondent Giuliana Sgrena is released from a military 
hospital. New details are emerging about the killing of the Italian 
agent who saved her life. We speak with independent journalist Naomi 
Klein, who just returned from meeting with Sgrena in Rome.. 


Naomi Klein Reveals New Details About U.S. Military Shooting of 
Italian War Correspondent in Iraq 


Democaracy Now! 


Friday, March 25th, 2005 


Three weeks after being shot by US forces in Iraq, veteran Italian 
war correspondent Giuliana Sgrena is released from a military 
hospital. New details are emerging about the killing of the Italian 
agent who saved her life. We speak with independent journalist Naomi 
Klein, who just returned from meeting with Sgrena in Rome. [includes 
rush transcript] 


In Rome, journalist Giuliana Sgrena has been released from a military 
hospital where she was being treated for a gunshot wound she suffered 
when US forces shot up the car bringing her to freedom after a month 
being held hostage in Iraq. The head of Italy's Foreign Military 
Intelligence Nicola Calipari was killed in the attack when he 
shielded Sgrena from the bullets. 


Yesterday, Italian newspapers reported that the justice minister 
has asked U.S. authorities to release the car so it can be examined 
by Italian ballistics experts. The papers said the request came 
after the U.S. command in Iraq reportedly blocked two Italian 
policemen from examining the car. 


*Naomi Klein, award-winning journalist and author of "Fences and 
Windows: Dispatches From the Front Lines" of the "Globalization 
Debate and No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies." She just met 
with Giuliana Sgrena in Rome. 


RUSH TRANSCRIPT 


AMY GOODMAN: We're joined in Washington, D.C. by journalist Naomi 
Klein, who has just met with Giuliana Sgrena in Rome. Welcome to 
Democracy Now!, Naomi. 


NAOMI KLEIN: Thanks, Amy. 


AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what she told you? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Yeah. At first I want to say that I know Giuliana 
really would have liked to have been on the show herself to talk 
to your listeners and viewers, but one of the things that surprised 
me when I met with Giuliana is that she was quite a bit sicker than 
I think we have been led to believe. Her injuries were described 
as fairly minor; 


she was shot in the shoulder. But when I met with her, she was 
clearly very, very ill, and that's why she's not on the show this 
morning. She was fired on by a gun at the top of a tank, which means 
that the artillery was very, very large. It was a four-inch bullet 
that entered her body and broke apart. And it didn't just injure 
her shoulder, it punctured her lung. And her lung continues to fill 
with fluid, and there continues to be complications stemming from 
that fairly serious injury. 


So that was one of the details. 


She told me a lot about the incident that I had not fully understood 
from the reports in the press. One of the most  and at first, the 
other thing I want to be really clear about is that Giuliana is not 
saying that she's certain in any way that the attack on the car was 
intentional. She is simply saying that she has many, many unanswered 
questions, and there are many parts of her direct experience that 
simply don't coincide with the official U.S. version of the story. 
One of the things that we keep hearing is that she was fired on on 
the road to the airport, which is a notoriously dangerous road. In 
fact, it's often described as the most dangerous road in the world. 
So this is treated as a fairly common and understandable incident 
that there would be a shooting like this on that road. And I was 
on that road myself, and it is a really treacherous place with 
explosions going off all the time and a lot of checkpoints. What 
Giuliana told me that I had not realized before is that she wasn't 
on that road at all. She was on a completely different road that I 
actually didn't know existed. It's a secured road that you can only 
enter through the Green Zone and is reserved exclusively for 
ambassadors and top military officials. So, when Calipari, the 
Italian security intelligence officer, released her from captivity, 
they drove directly to the Green Zone, went through the elaborate 
checkpoint process which everyone must go through to enter the Green 
Zone, which involves checking in obviously with U.S. forces, and 
then they drove onto this secured road. And the other thing that 
Giuliana told me that she's quite frustrated about is the description 
of the vehicle that fired on her as being part of a checkpoint. She 
says it wasn't a checkpoint at all. It was simply a tank that was 
parked on the side of the road that opened fire on them. There was 
no process of trying to stop the car, she said, or any signals. 
>From her perspective, they were just -- it was just opening fire 
by a tank. The other thing she told me that was surprising to me 
was that they were fired on from behind. Because I think part of 
what we're hearing is that the U.S. 


soldiers opened fire on their car, because they didn't know who 
they were, and they were afraid. It was self-defense, they were 
afraid. The fear, of course, is that their car might blow up or 
that they might come under attack themselves. And what Giuliana 
Sgrena really stressed with me was that she -- the bullet that 
injured her so badly and that killed Calipari, came from behind, 
entered the back seat of the car. And the only person who was not 
severely injured in the car was the driver, and she said that this 
is because the shots weren't coming from the front or even from the 
side. They were coming from behind, i.e. they were driving away. 
So, the idea that this was an act of self-defense, I think becomes 
much more questionable. And that detail may explain why there's 
some reticence to give up the vehicle for inspection. Because if 
indeed the majority of the gunfire is coming from behind, then 
clearly, they were firing from -- they were firing at a car that 
was driving away from them. 


AMY GOODMAN: Now, can you talk about when Nicola Calipari arrived 
in Baghdad? For people who have not been following this story so 
much, the U.S. version of events of them driving to the airport 
very fast on a road with many checkpoints as you pointed out, not 
the secured road, that the U.S. soldiers fired into the air, tried 
to stop the vehicle, that they just kept on coming, and so eventually, 
they shot at them. Can you talk about how the Italian military 
intelligence official first came to Iraq? 


NAOMI KLEIN: My understanding is he came the day before, and that 
he had checked in. U.S. authorities were aware of his presence. 
There was some kind of a negotiation process, but these details 
actually haven't come to light. The details that led to the 
negotiation, if there was a ransom paid. We don't know those details 
yet. What Giuliana knows is simply what happened from the moment 
of her release to this day, and her description is that she didn't 
see any of those signals, and she really wants people to know that 
she was not on a road with any checkpoints, and in fact, she told 
me many times that Iraqis are not in any way able to access this 
road. It's not the road that we hear described so many times as 
being a road with roadside bombs going off all the time, with 
checkpoints that you have to pass through. It's a completely separate 
road, actually a Saddam-era road, it would seem, that allowed his 
vehicles to pass directly from the airport to his palace. And now 
that is the U.S. military base at the airport directly to the 
U.S.-controlled Green Zone and the U.S. Embassy. 


JUAN GONZALEZ: And Naomi, what did she tell you about Calipari? He 
was sitting in the car with her in the back, or what happened when 
the shooting began, and -- with him? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Yes. I mean, she feels a tremendous amount of guilt, 
as you can imagine, and one of the reasons why she feels so much 
guilt is that Calipari chose to sit with her in the back seat. There 
were only three of them in the vehicle. So, he could have sat in 
the front seat with the driver. But because she was so afraid and 
she had just emerged from this horrifying ordeal of being in captivity 
for a month, he told Giuliana, let's sit together in the back seat, 
and Ill tell you -- she said that he was telling her stories to try 
to reconnect her with her life, because she had been incredibly 
disoriented. One of the things that she has told me was most 
disorienting about her month in captivity was just that she didn't 
know what -- the difference between day and night. She didn't have 
control over the light switches, and because of Baghdads constant 
blackouts, the lights would go on and off at all hours, and she 
couldn't control the switches. So she really didn't know where she 
was. 


She says she has kind of a black hole of that month. She said one 
of the most terrifying things was that she would often hear U.S. 
helicopters over the house, and she was obviously very afraid that 
the house that she was in would come under fire, because obviously 
it was a resistance house. It was a resistance stronghold. So she 
had many reasons to fear. 


She was afraid of her captors. She was afraid of U.S. soldiers. And 
so, Calipari sat with her in the back seat, and he just told her 
stories about all of her friends, about her husband, about everyone 
who had been worried about her, about Italy, and that was the context 
in which he was killed. So it was his decision to sit with her in 
the back seat, and he was telling her these stories and reconnecting 
her with her past life, with her current life, when he died protecting 
her from a bullet. And she told me that that moment is really all 
she's able to remember vividly. That's the only moment that feels 
real to her is the moment of his death. In fact, her month in 
captivity, horrific as it was, she said feels like a far-away dream. 
All she can think about is the moment where he died really in her 
arms, protecting her. 


JUAN GONZALEZ: What about the driver of the car? Did she tell you 
anything about what happened with him, or did she recall that part? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Well, what she told me, and this is once -- an incident 
that I know that has been reported on in the Italian press, but not 
so much in the American press, is that after the shooting, she was 
very injured. They took her out of the car and lay her down, I think 
-- I don't know if they had a stretcher, but they -- she was being 
tended to, her wounds were being tended to. And the driver who was 
another intelligence officer called Italy and was on the phone, I 
think, with Berlusconi, she said, and he said, our car has just 
been fired on by 300 to 400 bullets. And as he was saying this, the 
U.S. soldiers ordered him to hang up the phone. So, but I asked her 
whether she had connected with him since the incident, and she said 
that she had not, with the driver. 


AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Naomi Klein, independent journalist, 
who just met with Giuliana Sgrena, saw her in her hospital room in 
Rome. I'm looking at Jeremy Scahill's piece in the most recent 
Indypendent called Checkpoint Killings Unchecked, that says the 
Italian government, a close ally of the Bush administration is 
disputing what the U.S. says. 


According to Italys foreign minister, Calipari arrived in Baghdad 
that Friday after making contact with the kidnappers. Calipari and 
a fellow agent checked in with U.S. authorities at the airport as 
well as the forces patrolling the area. The agents had been given 
security badges by the U.S. to allow them to travel freely in the 
country after picking up Sgrena from the abandoned vehicle where 
her kidnappers left her. They drove slowly to the airport, keeping 
the car lights on to help identify themselves at U.S. checkpoints. 
It says, news of Sgrena's release was already on the Reuters newswire 
and on Al-Jazeera. The mood in the car was one of celebration until 
the vehicle came under intense gunfire. So this is also not only 
what you and Giuliana Sgrena are saying, but quite something that 
one of Bush's closest allies to the top, Prime Minister Silvio 
Berlusconi is now refuting his ally's claims and also demanding an 
investigation that the U.S. is stopping at this point. Naomi? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Well, Berlusconi is facing elections at the beginning 
of April, which is partially why he needs to be seen to be taking 
somewhat of a tough line with the U.S. He doesn't -- he is not 
facing presidential elections. That doesn't come for another -- I 
think until 2007, but there are regional elections, and this was a 
national, obviously, a national incident, and he needed to be seen 
to be standing up to the U.S. in some way. But he's really been 
going back and forth, and this is another thing that Giuliana Sgrena 
was very frustrated about, because as we know she is very, very 
opposed and continues to be strongly opposed to the ongoing occupation 
of Iraq, believes that Italian and all, indeed, all foreign troops 
should withdraw. And in the one thing that she told me that was 
very moving was, she believes that her release really came as a 
result of anti-war organizing in Italy across incredible coalitions, 
and she said that she feels like her life is a testament to what 
people can do when they get organized, and when they work together. 
And she is frustrated that that same pressure forced Berlusconi to 
announce that Italian troops would be withdrawn in September, and 
she really felt that the left opposition parties should have really 
maintained pressure on Berlusconi to insist on Italian troop 
withdrawal now. But in fact, Berlusconi has been allowed to backpedal 
on this claim, and now he is saying he didn't really say that; they 
will withdraw when Iraqi security forces are strong enough. And of 
course, Iraqi security forces -- it's not a training problem, it's 
an occupation problem. The reason why Iraqi security forces are not 
strong enough is because they're being massacred, because they're 
seen as an extension of the occupation. They don't have independence. 
And the continued occupation is the greatest problem to Iraqi 
security independence. It is not helping. 


AMY GOODMAN: Naomi, we have to break. When we come back we will 
continue this discussion and also talk about Paul Wolfowitz to be 
President of the World Bank. 


[break] 


AMY GOODMAN: We continue with independent reporter, Naomi Klein. 
She just met with Giuliana Sgrena, who has just been released from 
a Rome hospital to her home though she is still very ill, dealing 
with having been shot on the way to the airport after her release 
by -- in Iraqi captivity. Naomi Klein, the news that the checkpoint 
-- that the road that they -- that Calipari was killed on, that she 
was driving on, Sgrena, when she was being driven to the airport, 
had been set up for that there had been a checkpoint set up for the 
trip of U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte to a dinner that night with 
General George Casey, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq to provide 
security. U.S. soldiers established mobile checkpoint, clusters of 
humvees armed with 50 caliber machine guns on top. It was one of 
the details that opened fire on the Italians' vehicle. Have you 
heard anything about this? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Well, this would support what Giuliana told me, which 
is that the road she was on was not the public road that other 
journalists have traveled on, and that contractors and so on travel 
on, the very dangerous road. It was a secured road reserved for top 
Embassy officials, like obviously like Negroponte. But one thing 
that's very clear is that if she is on this road, and the way she 
explains it, she had to go through a U.S. checkpoint in order to 
get into the Green Zone. 


You can only access this road through the Green Zone. It's very, 
very difficult to get into the Green Zone. When I tried to get into 
the Green Zone, I had to go through six checkpoints -- six different 
passport checks. So, the idea that the American military didn't 
know that they were on the road, that they -- that didn't know about 
their presence is impossible, if she was, in fact, on a road that 
emerged out of the Green Zone. And I think that the idea that there 
was a mobile checkpoint set up for Negroponte obviously supports 
this claim very strongly. What Giuliana was talking about was what 
she was -- the only thing she could figure out is that the people 
who they checked in with in the Green Zone, the U.S. soldiers they 
checked in with in the Green Zone in order to get in, didn't radio 
ahead to these mobile checkpoints and warn them that they were 
coming. And from her perspective, that could have either been a 
mistake, or it could have been some sort of act of vengeance and 
anger, you know, and we know that there's a lot of anger at the 
idea that Italians may be paying very large ransoms for the release 
of prisoners. She's not alleging some grand conspiracy. There could 
have just been a broken down communication. But the idea that they 
didn't know, I think, is impossible, if she was on this secured 
road, because it emerged out of the Green Zone and you cannot get 
into the grown zone without passing through a checkpoint. 


JUAN GONZALEZ: But even if there was broken down communication, it 
would seem that the issue of even just firing on a car that is 
moving away from you and is posing no threat to you on this secured 
road certainly raises questions of at least extreme negligence on 
the part of the U.S. 


soldiers. 


NAOMI KLEIN: I think so. And I think that the -- all of these details 
will obviously emerge from the investigation, and we'll be hearing 
it directly from Giuliana herself and presumably from the driver. 


AMY GOODMAN: Did Giuliana talk about her time in captivity and who 
held her, Naomi Klein? 


NAOMI KLEIN: Yes, she did. I mean, she talked about this incredible 
disorientation. I think -- I know that you have covered the case 
on your show, and you have really stressed the fact that Giuliana's 
experience is not at all unique from the perspective of Iraqis who 
are living in this sort of pincer of the fear of being caught in a 
bombing by the resistance or a fear of being shot by U.S. soldiers 
at a checkpoint, and this is an ongoing fear every time Iraqis leave 
their home, and we're only hearing about this because there was 
foreigner involved, because it was such a dramatic incident. But I 
think the other part of the story is the implications for journalists 
and for independent journalists, because Giuliana Sgrena is really 
a hero, and she is an incredibly committed war correspondent who 
has put herself in situations of tremendous risk around the world. 
She has been to Iraq many, many times. 


And she went back to Iraq after Simona Pari and Simona Torretta had 
been kidnapped and released. She told me she has met with the Simonas 
in her hospital room, as well as several other people who had been 
kidnapped. 


She referred to it as the ex-kidnapped club. And she went knowing 
these risks, but one thing she told me that I think is an issue 
that you have discussed often on the show is the implications for 
all of this, for whether independent journalists can do their job 
in Iraq. And coming from someone who has been willing to take such 
tremendous risks, she said she just cannot figure out how it's 
possible at this point. This is because the people who held her 
made it very clear to her that they don't want independent journalists 
working in Iraq talking to Iraqis. 


And this was really one of the most disturbing details and, I think, 
a very telling detail. She told them that that made them just like 
Bush, because the Bush administration has also made it clear that 
they don't want independent witnesses talking to Iraqis, counting 
the bodies, highlighting the civilian toll of the war, but there 
are also clearly some elements of the resistance that feel the same 
way, and this makes it very, very difficult for independent journalists 
to do their work. 


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