Major Media has apparently been caught with yet another FAKE military 'massacre' on their sleazy hands!
The Majors must think that simply reporting "the facts" is much too boring for their audiences. Or, just maybe, the facts just don't quite fit into the message they are attempting to convey.
They have long since abandoned their traditional job of REPORTING the news... they are CREATING SpinNews to further their hidden agendas.
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Korean War 'Massacre' Story Not True
NewsMax,com Friday, May 12, 2000 7:56 p.m. EDT
A Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press story about a massacre of civilian refugees in the earliest day of the Korean War - which was picked up and spread by countless other media, provoking outrage here and in Korea - is not true, according to two hard-hitting investigative reports out today.
Both U.S. News & World Reportand the magazine Stars and Stripes launched investigations of the alleged massacre at the village of No Gun Ri and discovered that the story was so riddled with gaping holes - and that several key "witnesses" cited by AP were not even there - that its credibility is practically nil.
Published on Sept. 30, 1999, the AP story charged that in June 1950, when U.S. and South Korean forces were facing an onslaught by swiftly advancing North Korean troops, American soldiers acting on orders from their superior officers allegedly machine-gunned hundreds of helpless South Korean civilians huddled under a railroad bridge near No Gun Ri.
The shocking story reverberated around the world, sparked an official Army investigation of the alleged massacre and was reported in other publications and on television, many of which added new details from sources cited in the original report. NBC even had Tom Brokaw do a special segment on the story.
As with CNN's sensational Tailwind story that suggested American soldiers gassed Vietcong during the Vietnam War, most of the media swallowed the No Gun Ri massacre story without questioning it or even verifying accounts.
A Stars and Stripes investigation, however, uncovered startling new information - also uncovered by a wide-ranging investigative effort of U.S. News - that casts serious doubts about the massacre allegations and convincingly impeaches the credibility of several individuals identified by the Associated Press as key eyewitnesses. The U.S. News report is hitting newsstands this weekend.
According to Stars and Stripes, the AP report "quoted several former U.S. soldiers and South Korean survivors who said that members of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division, had fired on and killed several hundred South Korean civilians over a three-day period as they cowered inside a railroad-bridge culvert near No Gun Ri, about 30 miles east-southeast of the city of Taejon in southern South Korea."
But according to declassified Army war diaries and other documents obtained by Stars and Stripes from the National Archives and the National Personnel Records Center, the two eyewitnesses identified by the Associated Press were not with the battalion at the time the alleged shootings took place.
Moreover, the unit that allegedly committed the massacre over a three-day period was in the area for only a few hours, after which it fled in disarray.
Here is how the Stars and Stripes described the AP story: "The Associated Press report centered on three charges:
ú "That the American soldiers were ordered by their officers to open fire on all refugees attempting to cross the lines between the advancing North Korean army and the U.S. defenses.
ú "That the American soldiers ?directed the refugees into the bridge underpasses - and after dark opened fire on them from nearby machine-gun positions,? as the AP reported. The soldiers ?kept the refugees pinned under the bridge - and killed almost all of them.?
ú "The killings took place over the three-day period of July 26-28, 1950."
But the magazine?s investigation discovered that:
ú "The specific U.S. Army unit accused of carrying out the massacre of the civilians at No Gun Ri over the three-day period of July 26-28, 1950, was H Company of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment. A declassified war diary of the unit and the rest of the 2nd Battalion arrived by convoy near No Gun Ri the day after the 7th Cavalry Regiment's other two battalions had been attacked by the North Korean army units moving east from Taejon.
ú "The regimental war diaries and official U.S. Army history of the Korean War make no mention of the unit being dug in at No Gun Ri for three days, reporting only the evening march to the front lines at 6:50 p.m. and the panicked flight of the soldiers back down the valley about seven hours later. Later entries for July 27 and 28 indicate the entire regiment was in sporadic contact with the advancing North Korean army and directed both artillery and air strikes against the enemy while receiving direct tank fire and mortar fire and shifting its positions as the situation required.
ú "Daily and Flint - the former GIs the AP report identified as key eyewitnesses to the No Gun Ri incident - were not even in the area at the time of the alleged shootings, according to the Army documents. Information obtained by the Stars and Stripes undermines the credibility of these two key witnesses," the magazine reported. "A review of the Army war diaries and interviews with former 2nd Battalion members indicates that civilians were undoubtedly killed in the vicinity of No Gun Ri, but the cause was probably a combination of an earlier U.S. air raid in which civilians were accidentally strafed, heavy U.S. artillery fire in the valley and an ongoing practice by the North Korean invaders of driving mobs of civilian refugees ahead of their advancing units to confuse the American and South Korean defenders."
A review by U.S. News however, raises substantial doubts about the accuracy of the AP accounts of the so-called massacre.
"A dozen veterans were cited by the AP in its account, nine of whom were quoted," U.S. News said. "But military records and sources provide new evidence that three of the men quoted may not have been at No Gun Ri at the time of the alleged massacre. Five others, re-interviewed by U.S. News, do not support the thesis of the AP story. Of those, three said the statements they gave the wire service were misconstrued or taken out of context. A fourth veteran said there was some brief firing, possibly by a machine gun, and that there was not a large number of people in the culvert. The fifth vet said he fired his machine gun into the tunnel full of refugees but that no one ordered him to do so."
"These guys were inconsistent when we talked to them at the time," admitted Charles Hanley, one of the reporters on the AP team that conducted the investigation of No Gun Ri.
"They were all over the map ... but we have approaching 50 sources who confirm that a large number of civilians were killed by American forces at No Gun Ri."
In an AP statement released last week after a Web site for veterans named Stripes.com posted a story questioning the AP's reporting on No Gun Ri, the wire service issued a statement saying that "we continue to report developments in this story as vigorously as the original accounts."
But anyone reading the two reports cited here can reach no other conclusion that the original story is based on accounts by alleged eyewitness that are simply not credible.
The principal source for many of these stories was Edward Daily. In the AP story, he was quoted as saying: "On summer nights when the breeze is blowing, I can still hear their cries, the little kids screaming."
He added: "The command looked at it as getting rid of the problem in the easiest way. That was to shoot them in a group. Today," Daily concluded, "we all share a guilt feeling, something that remains with everyone."
But Army records show that Daily was not even there at No Gun Ri, nor was he a member of the 7th Cavalry.
"In a biographical note he prepared in conjunction with a history he published of the 7th Cavalry, Daily said he was a newly commissioned second lieutenant in H Company of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry, when his platoon was overrun by North Korean troops on Aug. 12, 1950, and he was taken prisoner. ?With the grace of God,? Daily wrote, ?[I] managed to escape from the enemy on Sept. 12, 1950, and was held captive only 32 days.?"
But documents from the Army's Personnel Records Center say that during the period cited by Daily, he was working as a mechanic with the Army's 27th Ordnance Maintenance Company. There is no record of Edward Daily's ever having been a prisoner of war. In addition, records show he was discharged from the Army as a sergeant, not as a captain as he had claimed.
"There are other apparent discrepancies in Daily's war record. He claims to hold the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation's second-highest award for valor; the Silver Star, and the Purple Heart. Army records again tell a different story. Daily was awarded the Korean Service Medal, the United Nations Service Medal, the Good Conduct Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation Badge, and the Meritorious Unit Emblem. Daily received no medals for valor or combat action, the records show. Hanley, the AP reporter, says, ?There are some suspect things about the medals.?"
Yet Daily was celebrated by the media, none of whom showed any doubts about him or his accounts of the so-called massacre.
"NBC's Dateline flew Daily to Korea to visit the No Gun Ri site," U.S.News recalled. "Daily told Tom Brokaw about receiving the order to fire on the refugees under the railroad trestle. "Just shoot them all," Daily quoted the order.
Brokaw: "You heard that order?"
Daily: "Yes, sir."
Brokaw: "Kill them all?"
Daily: "Yes, sir."
In February, the Washington Post Magazine put Daily's picture on the cover and said he "was in charge of the lone machine-gun post" on one side of the railroad culvert. The Los Angeles Times, Time, Newsweek and U.S. News all published stories citing Daily's account of No Gun Ri.
Moreover, when the AP broke the No Gun Ri story it generated enormous attention.
Defense Secretary William Cohen ordered the Army to investigate to "determine the full scope of the facts surrounding press reports of civilian deaths" at No Gun Ri.
The Army's inspector general launched an exhaustive investigation, which is still under way. And last month, the team of Associated Press reporters who broke the No Gun Ri story was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting, journalism's highest honor.
The story was a natural for today?s yuppified anti-military media, which showed no concern for the reputations of the heroic men who fought in those early days of the Korean conflict when vastly outnumbered American soldiers valiantly held on to a tiny perimeter around the southern tip of the Korean peninsula, until reinforcements could arrive and prevent the North Koreans from wiping out all resistance and conquering all of Korea.
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