Whistle-blowing Web site Wiki-Leaks on Friday released nearly 400,000 classified US military files chronicling the Iraq war from 2004 through last year, the largest leak of its kind in US military history.
The documents are known at the Pentagon as “SIGACTs,” raw field reports chronicling “Significant Action” in the conflict as seen by US forces on the ground in Iraq.
According to an initial review of the documents and reports by other media that have had access to them for at least 10 weeks, the broad themes from the “Iraq war log” attracting the most attention are:
CIVILIAN DEATHS
WikiLeaks said the reports detailed 109,032 deaths in Iraq, composed of 66,081 “civilians,” 23,984 “enemy” (those labeled as insurgents); 15,196 “host nation” (Iraqi government forces) and 3,771 “friendly” (coalition forces). More than 15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents, the Guardian reported.
In February 2007, an Apache helicopter killed two Iraqis suspected of firing mortars even though they were trying to surrender. A military lawyer is quoted in one file saying: “They cannot surrender to aircraft and are still valid targets.” Other cases involved civilian killings at checkpoints.
PRISONER ABUSE
US authorities face accusations of failing to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse of Iraqi prisoners by Iraqi police and soldiers, including cases of rape and even murder that are detailed in the logs. WikiLeaks said there were also cases of abuse of prisoners in US custody, but media given advance access say those cases pale in comparison.
IRANIAN INFLUENCE
Military intelligence reports released by WikiLeaks detail previously well-known US concerns that Iranian agents had trained, armed and directed militants in Iraq.
In one document posted by the New York Times, the US military warned that a militia commander believed to be behind the deaths of US troops and the kidnapping of Iraqi government officials was trained by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
BLACKWATER
Britain’s Bureau of Investigative Journalism said it found documents detailing new cases of alleged wrongful killings of civilians involving a firm previously known as Blackwater. Blackwater, which has changed its name to Xe Services, saw its reputation badly damaged by a 2007 incident in which its security guards were involved in a shooting that killed 14 civilians.
US HIKERS
Documents in the WikiLeaks file show that US officials privately believed the three US hikers detained in Iran last year were on the Iraqi side of the border, not in Iran as Tehran contends. Iran is still holding two of them and the document said Tehran hoped to benefit from the incident by focusing the nation “on a perceived external threat rather than internal dissension.”
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