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From
the BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk
Saving Private Lynch
story 'flawed'
May 15, 2003
Private Jessica Lynch
became an icon of the war, and the story of her capture by the Iraqis and her
rescue by US special forces became one of the great patriotic moments of the conflict.
But her story is one of
the most stunning pieces of news management ever conceived.
Private Lynch, a 19-year-old
army clerk from Palestine, West Virginia, was captured when her company took a
wrong turning just outside Nasiriya and was ambushed.
Nine of her comrades were
killed and Private Lynch was taken to the local hospital, which at the time was
swarming with Fedayeen. Eight days later US special forces stormed the hospital,
capturing the "dramatic" events on a night vision camera.
They were said to have
come under fire from inside and outside the building, but they made it to Lynch
and whisked her away by helicopter.
Reports claimed that she
had stab and bullet wounds and that she had been slapped about on her hospital
bed and interrogated.
But Iraqi doctors in
Nasiriya say they provided the best treatment they could for the soldier in the
midst of war. She was assigned the only specialist bed in the hospital and one
of only two nurses on the floor.
"I examined her, I saw
she had a broken arm, a broken thigh and a dislocated ankle," said Dr Harith a-Houssona,
who looked after her.
Jessica amnesia
"There was no [sign of]
shooting, no bullet inside her body, no stab wound - only road traffic accident.
They want to distort the picture. I don't know why they think there is some benefit
in saying she has a bullet injury."
Witnesses told us that
the special forces knew that the Iraqi military had fled a day before they swooped
on the hospital.
"We were surprised. Why
do this? There was no military, there were no soldiers in the hospital," said
Dr Anmar Uday, who worked at the hospital.
"It was like a Hollywood
film. They cried 'go, go, go', with guns and blanks without bullets, blanks and
the sound of explosions. They made a show for the American attack on the hospital
- action movies like Sylvester Stallone or Jackie Chan."
There was one more twist.
Two days before the snatch squad arrived, Harith had arranged to deliver Jessica
to the Americans in an ambulance.
But as the ambulance,
with Private Lynch inside, approached a checkpoint American troops opened fire,
forcing it to flee back to the hospital. The Americans had almost killed their
prize catch.
When footage of the rescue
was released, General Vincent Brooks, US spokesman in Doha, said: "Some brave
souls put their lives on the line to make this happen, loyal to a creed that they
know that they'll never leave a fallen comrade."
The American strategy
was to ensure the right television footage by using embedded reporters and images
from their own cameras, editing the film themselves.
The Pentagon had been
influenced by Hollywood producers of reality TV and action movies, notably the
man behind Black Hawk Down, Jerry Bruckheimer.
Bruckheimer advised the
Pentagon on the primetime television series "Profiles from the Front Line", that
followed US forces in Afghanistan in 2001. That approached was taken on and developed
on the field of battle in Iraq.
As for Private Lynch,
her status as cult hero is stronger than ever. Internet auction sites list Jessica
Lynch items, from an oil painting with an opening bid of $200 to a $5 "America
Loves Jessica Lynch" fridge magnet.
But doctors now say she
has no recollection of the whole episode and probably never will.
ENDS
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