[Mb-civic] CBC News - MARINE DEATHS PROMPT NEW CALLS FOR U.S. TO
LEAVE IRAQ
CBC News Online
nwonline at toronto.cbc.ca
Thu Aug 4 16:09:29 PDT 2005
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The following is a news item posted on CBC NEWS ONLINE
at http://www.cbc.ca/news
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MARINE DEATHS PROMPT NEW CALLS FOR U.S. TO LEAVE IRAQ
WebPosted Thu Aug 4 18:13:01 2005
--- At least four more U.S. soldiers and marines have been killed in Iraq
as one of deadliest violent upsurges of the war continues.
Those killed Thursday include three soldiers killed by a roadside
bomb in Baghdad and a marine shot in Ramadi. That brings to 24
the number of marines killed in just three days.
Nineteen of the marines are from the same unit, the Third
Battalion, 25th Marines, based in the Cleveland, Ohio suburb of
Brook Park.
President George W. Bush has called the deaths a grim reminder
that the country is still at war. While in Brook Part, the deaths
are the subject of a growing debate over whether it is time to
bring the troops home.
Paul Montgomery had two sons in the U.S. Marine Corps. Both
signed up in the wake of Sept. 11. Now one is on his way home for
the funeral of his older brother.
Lance Cpl. Brian Montgomery, 26, was one of five local marines
killed in an ambush in Iraq on Monday. Fourteen more dies in an
attack on Wednesday.
Paul Montgomery tries to explain why his son died.
"My son died doing something he believed so deeply in," he said
through tears and grief. "I can't tell you how proud he was of
his uniform, and his flag, and his country."
Montgomery says his son knew what he was doing. "This isn't
Vietnam. This is a war that we are winning. And we have to
realize that if we don't fight it there, there will be terrorists
back here again, doing the same thing they did on Sept. 11."
But some believe it is time for the U.S. to pull out of Iraq.
Larry Oldcorn, a Vietnam veteran who carries the scars of his war
service on his arms and face, says the fighting in Iraq has gone
on long enough.
"Bring them home. Let them people fight their own war over there.
This is turning out to be just another Vietnam," says Oldcorn. He
calls it 'George's War.'
Brook Park has become a flashpoint for the debate over American
involvement in Iraq. When the town's mayor has suggested in
interviews that so many deaths in one week could have an effect
on the community's feelings about the war, it drew the ire of
syndicated national call-in talk shows.
Paul Montgomery bristles when he hears talk that it's time to get
out of Iraq. "They're going to have to realize, if we pull out of
Iraq, if we let those people sort it out on their own, the
terrorists have won, and soon they're going to be over here."
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