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Los Angeles Times
14 March 2005

Extreme Cinema Verite
   GIs Shoot Iraq battle Footage and Edit it Into Music Videos
    Filled with Death and Destruction. And they Display their
   Work as Entertainment.

By Louise Roug, Times Staff Writer

BAQUBAH, Iraq � When Pfc. Chase McCollough went home on leave in November,
he brought a movie made by fellow soldiers in Iraq. On his first night
back at his parents' house in Texas, he showed the video to his fiancee,
family and friends.

This is what they saw: a handful of American soldiers filmed through the
green haze of night-vision goggles. Radio communication between two
soldiers crackles in the background before it's drowned out by a
heavy-metal soundtrack.

"Don't need your forgiveness," the song by the band Dope begins as images
unfurl: armed soldiers posing in front of Bradley fighting vehicles, two
women covered in black abayas walking along a dusty road, a blue-domed
mosque, a poster of radical cleric Muqtada Sadr. Then, to the fast, hard
beat of the music � "Die, don't need your resistance. Die, don't need your
prayers" � charred, decapitated and bloody corpses fill the screen.

"It's like a trophy, something to keep," McCullough, 20, said back at his
cramped living quarters at Camp Warhorse near Baqubah. "I was there. I did
this."

---------------------------------

Film cameras arrived at the front during World War II, but soldiers didn't
really document their own combat experience until the Vietnam War. (The
technology didn't lend itself to amateur moviemaking until the arrival of
the smaller Super 8 cameras.)

Today, video cameras are lightweight and digital technology has cut out
the need for processing. Having captured a firefight on video, a soldier
can create a movie and distribute it via e-mail, uncensored by the
military. With editing software such as Avid and access to Internet
connections on military bases here, U.S. soldiers are creating fast-paced,
MTV-style music videos using images from actual firefights and killings.

Troops often carry personal cameras and video equipment in battle. On
occasion, official military camera crews, known as "Combat Camera" units,
follow the troops on raids and patrol. Although the military uses that
footage for training and public affairs, it also finds its way to personal
computers and commercial websites.

The result: an abundance of photographs and video footage depicting
mutilation, death and destruction that soldiers collect and trade like
baseball cards.

"I have a lot of pictures of dead Iraqis � everybody does," said Spc. Jack
Benson, 22, also stationed near Baqubah. He has collected five videos by
other soldiers and is working on his own.

By adding music, soldiers create their own cinema verite of the conflict.
Although many are humorous or patriotic, others are gory, like
McCollough's favorite.

"It gets the point across," he said. "This isn't some jolly freakin'
peacekeeping mission."

Commanders have discretion to establish regulations concerning photography
on base, but common-sense rules apply, an Army spokesman said. Images that
threaten operational security � such as pictures of military installations
or equipment � are not allowed.

Before being deployed to Iraq, some Marines were told they could not take
pictures of detainees, dead or wounded Iraqis or American casualties. But
photographs and videos of dead and maimed Iraqis proliferate.

"It doesn't bother you so much taking pictures of the guy who was just
shooting at you," McCullough said. He added that he hadn't seen any
pictures of dead U.S. soldiers. "It's just a little too morbid, a little
too close to home."

On the bases where Benson and McCullough live, the Army regularly searches
soldiers' quarters for drugs, alcohol and pornography as part of what it
calls health and safety inspections. But searching personal laptops would
infringe on soldiers' privacy, said Capt. Douglas Moore, a judge advocate
general officer with the 3rd Brigade Combat Team at Warhorse. Besides, if
this brand of filmmaking breaks rules, they're of a different kind.

"It's in poor taste," Moore said, "kind of sick."

------------------------------------

McCullough was surprised that his favorite video was disturbing to his
loved ones back in Texas.

"You find out just how weird it is when you take it home," said
McCullough, whose screensaver is far more benign, showing him on his
wedding day.

Brandi McCullough, then his fiancee and now his wife, said she had walked
in as he was showing the videos to friends who were "whooping and
hollering."

The 18-year-old was shocked by images of "body parts missing, bombs going
off and people getting shot."

"They're terrifying," she said by phone from Texas. "Chase never talked
about anything over there, and I watch the news, but not all the time. I
didn't realize there was that much" violence.

She also wondered why anyone would record it.

"I thought it was odd � a home video," she said. "People getting shot and
someone sitting there with a camera."

McCullough said his father, a naval reserve captain, had told him, " 'You
know, this isn't normal.'

"They were pretty shocked," he said. "They didn't realize this is what we
see."

Daniel Nelson, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati
School of Medicine, said he understood the disconnect.

"I'm not surprised about this � it's a new consciousness that we're
beginning to see," he said, comparing the videos to the Abu Ghraib
prisoner abuse photographs. "What happens in this situation, the culture
is endorsing something that would be prohibited in another context
stateside."

What seems disrespectful or a trivialization is also a way for soldiers to
distance themselves from the trauma, he said, which says: "I don't want to
see what I've done or experienced as real."

The creation of videos resembles what Nelson has seen in his work with
traumatized children and Vietnam veterans, he said.

"How do we create the story about our lives?" he asked. "Part of the
healing process is for them to create a narrative, to organize an
emotional story that allows them to get a handle on it."

Thomas Doherty, chairman of the film studies program at Brandeis
University and author of "Projections of War: Hollywood, American Culture
and World War II," called the videos an authentic diary of the war.

"There's always the disconnect between the front-line soldier and the
sheltered home front," he said. "It's a World War II ethos: You don't
bring it home."

After watching the video, Doherty said, "Of course you're struck by the
gruesomeness of the carnage, but it's a wide range of images."

He went on to praise "the contra-punctual editing � the beat of the tune
and the flash of the images," calling it "a very slick piece of work."

"The MTV generation goes to war," he said. "They should enter it at
Sundance."

In another video, made by members of the Florida National Guard, soldiers
are shown kicking a wounded prisoner in the face and making the arm of a
corpse appear to wave. The DVD, which is called "Ramadi Madness," includes
sections with titles such as "Those Crafty Little Bastards" and "Another
Day, Another Mission, Another Scumbag," came to light in early March after
the American Civil Liberties Union obtained Army documents using the
Freedom of Information Act.

James Ross, senior legal advisor for Human Rights Watch, called it
"disturbing that soldiers are making videos like that." But he added, "It
doesn't mean that it's necessarily a violation of the Geneva Convention."

The Geneva Convention instructs that remains of deceased shall be
respected and not "exposed to public curiosity," Ross said. "It's not
putting heads on spikes and things like that. To argue you can't
photograph [a body] would be a bit of a stretch."

Several websites sell footage from the war.

"Militants fight in the streets of Baghdad, looting, lawlessness," is how
clips are advertised on efootage.com. A Las Vegas-based company,
Gotfootage.com, offers $50 and $100 clips that include older footage of
Saddam Hussein, Jessica Lynch, aerial bombardment and "sooooo many bombs."
The site also advertises video showing an Iraqi fuel truck being destroyed
by U.S. bombs during the invasion in March 2003.

Another website advertises, "GrouchyMedia.com is the place to find those
pump-you-up-to-kill-the-bad-guys videos everyone has been talking about."

Spc. Scott Schroder, a gunner with Task Force 2-63, wouldn't show what he
described as the "evil, nasty kill-videos," to his family.

"That's cool with the guys," he said. "I don't think my mom would care to
see any of these videos."

Another specialist, who wouldn't give his name, said the bloody videos
disgusted him.

"I wouldn't watch them, and the people I work with wouldn't watch them,"
said the specialist, stationed at a base near Mosul in northern Iraq. "I
don't think it's proper."

He compared the violent videos to those made by insurgents showing
beheadings.

"You bring yourself down to their level," he said. "Why would you do that?"

--------------------

A poster for the video game "Grand Theft Auto" is pinned to the door of
McCullough's room at Camp Warhorse.

Watching the home videos gives him a different perspective on combat, he
said. Details are missed in the heat of battle, and the military "could
use it as a tool, kind of like how they do it with high school football."

His roommate, 30-year-old Sgt. Benjamin Bronkema from Lafayette, Ind.,
said he was surprised no one had tried to sell the movies yet.

"If I had a copy of it, and MTV called, I'd sell it," he said. The videos
are no different than what's on screen at the cinema, showing glorified
violence, he added.

"It's no more graphic than 'Saving Private Ryan,' " he said. "To us, it's
no different than watching a movie."

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