Report 'clears US soldiers' over death of Italian agent
By John J. Lumpkin, AP

26 April 2005

A US military investigation into the death of an Italian intelligence
officer shot in Baghdad is expected to conclude that the American soldiers
generally followed instructions as they fired on the agent's approaching
car, says a senior US defence official.

But the probe into the 4 March shooting is expected to raise questions about
the rules of engagement given to US soldiers manning checkpoints in Iraq,
said the official. These instructions include descriptions of how much force
US soldiers are allowed to use against potential threats.

The US official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the report
has not been finished, did not clarify whether the soldiers involved in the
shooting would face some criticism for their performance. A conclusion that
they followed their orders, however, could make it less likely they would be
accused of having committed major errors.

While Italian officials participated in the US investigation, it is unclear
whether the Italians would endorse the report, the official said.

Italian news reports said they disagreed with the US findings. A US Embassy
spokesman in Rome, Ben Duffy, said: "We still hoping for a combined report."

If the Italians don't join, the report's credibility would be hurt in Italy,
a nation that sent 3,000 troops to Iraq after the US-led invasion.

The Italian officer, Nicola Calipari, was killed March 4 when US soldiers
fired on a car carrying him and two others as it approached the American
checkpoint. He died trying to shield a freed Italian hostage that he had
helped release from her insurgent captors.

>From the first hours after the shooting, Rome and Washington have differed
over what led to the killing. One news report in Italy on Monday said
Italian experts on a joint panel were refusing to sign off on the US
conclusions.

Italian state TV said both sides were trying to reconcile "contrasting
versions" of the shooting in final-hour mediation by Italian and US
investigators.

Calipari has been hailed as a national hero in Italy since he died March 4
as he tried to shield a freed Italian hostage he was accompanying to the
Iraqi capital's airport shortly after she was released by her kidnappers. He
was shot by US soldiers stationed at a temporary checkpoint on a road to
Baghdad airport.

Without citing sources, Rome daily Il Messaggero said the American
conclusions "exculpate from every accusation" the US soldiers.

Another Italian agent in the car, as well as the former hostage, journalist
Giuliana Sgrena, have insisted that the car wasn't speeding and that the
soldiers gave no warning. Washington has insisted the Italians' rented
Toyota Corolla was going too fast and that adequate warning was given to try
to make the car stop.

Two Italians - a diplomat and military official - were invited to join the
US probe.

"The checks and the interrogations carried out in nearly two months of work
didn't succeed in healing the clash on the key point of the affair: the
warnings given by the American military forces before shooting," Milan daily
Corriere della Sera said.

Both Corriere and Rome daily La Repubblica said Italy was deciding what line
to take in view of the differences.

But Rome daily Il Messaggero reported that the two Italian experts had
decided not to sign off on the conclusions.

The Italians "didn't accept any compromise and have abandoned the common
(working) table," Il Messaggero said.

Italian RAI state television said the report would be released on Tuesday or
Wednesday, and that both sides "are trying for mediation to reconcile the
contrasting versions" by the US and Italian investigators.


26 April 2005 12:22

C2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.




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