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19 May 2000
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=00051903.plt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


US Department of State
International Information Programs

Washington File
_________________________________

19 May 2000  

Barry McCaffrey, U.S. Army Comment on New Yorker Article

(Rebut allegations by Seymour Hersh) (1080)

General Barry R. McCaffrey (retired), director of the Office of
National Drug Control Policy, says author Seymour Hersh's article in
the May 22, 2000 issue of The New Yorker magazine is "nothing more
than a revisionist history" of the Gulf War.

"This article maligns the 26,000 men and women of the 24th Infantry
Division who in 100 hours advanced 413 kilometers, through elements of
seven heavily armed Iraqi divisions, in a maneuver that has been
described as 'the greatest cavalry charge in history,'" McCaffrey said
in a statement released May 15.

"Our overwhelming force kept American casualties to a minimum. Our
soldiers' discipline and compassion also minimized enemy casualties.
These men and women deserve our praise; instead, Hersh impugns them."

In a separate statement, the U.S. Army said, "No new issues appear to
have been raised in the story authored by Seymour Hersh....The Army
has confidence in the conduct and integrity of the soldiers of the
24th Infantry Division."

Following are the texts of the two statements:

(begin McCaffrey text)

Executive Office of the President
Office of National Drug Control Policy
Washington, DC

May 15, 2000

STATEMENT OF ONDCP DIRECTOR BARRY MCCAFFREY
CONCERNING THE NEW YORKER ARTICLE, "OVERWHELMING FORCE"

Washington, DC -- Today, General Barry R. McCaffrey (ret.), Director
of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, released this statement
concerning an article, "Overwhelming Force," by Mr. Seymour Hersh,
which appears in the May 22, 2000 edition of The New Yorker:

This article maligns the 26,000 men and women of the 24th Infantry
Division who in 100 hours advanced 413 kilometers, through elements of
7 heavily armed Iraqi divisions, in a maneuver that has been described
as "the greatest cavalry charge in history." Our overwhelming force
kept American casualties to a minimum. Our soldiers' discipline and
compassion also minimized enemy casualties. These men and women
deserve our praise; instead, Hersh impugns them.

Five months ago, Seymour Hersh began an inquiry apparently seeking to
attack the Administration's proposed counter-drug assistance package
for Colombia. However, the Gulf War allegations that he recycles were
long ago investigated and fully cleared -- a fact he is compelled to
acknowledge in the article.

The incidences Hersh recycles were the subject almost ten years ago of
no less than four complete investigations, including two which were
separate, independently-led and exhaustive -- one by the Army
Inspector General and the other by the Army's Criminal Investigation
Division. These events have also been the subject of a Congressional
hearing, hundreds of news media accounts, and several scholarly books.
In every instance, all of these investigations and analyses have
determined that these allegations were completely unfounded.

Hersh and The New Yorker devote 32 pages to these Gulf War
allegations. However, the record of the official investigations alone,
which are now almost a decade old, total over 2,100 pages -- based on
over 200-plus interviews ranging from privates to generals, analysis
of battlefield audio and video tapes, and countless hours of
underlying investigatory work. Hersh has found nothing new -- he
started from the same anonymous letter. His sources are almost without
exception the exact same people the official investigators spoke to
under penalty of perjury. And, he has looked at the same events.

The CID report specifically "substantiated that the [post-cease fire
Rumaylah] engagement was clearly provoked by the Iraqis and the
response of the 24th ID was [in accordance with] cease fire guidance
provided by ARCENT and the XVIII Airborne Corps." This report also
concluded that "(a)fter extensive interviews with personnel from
brigade and battalion commanders to privates, there was no evidence to
indicate that members of the [24th Infantry] killed or mistreated
[Iraqi prisoners of war]."

Over the past five months, I and the Office of National Drug Control
Policy have cooperated with The New Yorker. We have responded in
writing to Hersh's questions. I personally provided The New Yorker
with 32 pages of detailed answers to their questions -- including
sources, maps and notes. We have repeatedly offered to provide
information and speak on the record about the Colombia counter-drug
plan or other aspects of our National Drug Control Strategy. We have
encouraged others to cooperate with Hersh on the record. In order to
set the facts straight, we have brought individuals with actual
knowledge to the attention of The New Yorker.

Hersh's article is nothing more than a revisionist history of the war.
He, in effect, faults our troops for defeating the Iraqi threat with
so little loss of American lives. He faults the 24th Infantry's
leadership for using superior force. However, that force not only
saved American lives, but it shortened what could have otherwise been
a protracted struggle inflicting far more casualties on both sides.

Hersh has the safe luxury of armchair quarterbacking the every move of
the 24th Infantry during the Gulf War -- ten years after the fact. We
did not have that luxury. We were out there fighting the fourth
largest army in the world, which was armed with biological and
chemical weapons, and which had already invaded Kuwait and oppressed
the Kuwaiti people. Hersh says that the Iraqi forces at Rumaylah were
in "retreat." However, he wasn't the one watching a force spanning
five miles, made up of hundreds of Iraqi tanks, trucks, and armored
personnel carriers face him. The Iraqis fired on U.S. forces. The Army
investigations unequivocally concluded that the use of force in
response was justified.

I am proud that the 26,000 soldiers of the 24th Infantry Division
acted with such courage, professionalism, and compassion throughout
the Desert Storm Campaign.

(end McCaffrey text)

(begin U.S. Army text)

U.S. Army Statement on the New Yorker Magazine Article

"The Long Aftermath of a Short War"

The Army investigated allegations of wrong doing by elements of the
24th Infantry Division during the later stages of Operation Desert
Storm. Investigations were conducted by Army Criminal Investigation
Command and the Army Inspector General. No new issues appear to have
been raised in the story authored by Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker
Magazine and there is no need to reopen the Investigation. The Army
has confidence in the conduct and integrity of the Soldiers of the
24th Infantry Division.

(end U.S. Army text)

(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)