|
WASHINGTON, May 30 (Xinhua) -- The White House on Tuesday promised to
publicize every detail of the investigation of the alleged killing of two dozens
of Iraqi civilians by U.S. Marines last November.
White House spokesman Tony Snow told a press briefing that the investigation is ongoing and he was assured by the Pentagon that all the details will be
made available to the public once the probe is completed.
He said U.S. President George W. Bush first became aware of theincident
when a Time magazine reporter asked about it earlier thisyear, prompting
national security adviser Stephen Hadley to brief the president on it.
However, Snow refused to give Bush's personal comments on it.
The bloody killing was first revealed by Time magazine in Marchand more
details have been coming out in many U.S. media reports since then.
According to the reports, the killings came after a roadside bomb rocked a
U.S. military convoy and killed a Marine in the western Iraqi city of Haditha on
Nov. 19 last year.
U.S. Marines then shot and killed five unarmed civilians in a taxi at the
scene and went into three homes and shot dead 19 more civilians.
The incident led to comparisons from U.S. commentators of the March 16,
1968, killing of over 500 unarmed civilians by U.S. troops in the Vietnamese
village of My Lai.
U.S. military officials said last week that murder charges could eventually
be brought against Marines for the bloody killings at Haditha.
However, they said it's still a month away before the conclusions could be
made on the investigation. Enditem
|