WASHINGTON (AFP) - A US satellite reportedly recorded a checkpoint shooting
in Iraq last month, enabling investigators to reconstruct how fast a car
carrying a top Italian intelligence official and a freed hostage was traveling
when US troops opened fire.
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The report, which aired Thursday on CBS News, said US investigators concluded
from the recording that the car was traveling at a speed of more than 60
miles (96 km) per hour.
Giuliana Sgrena has said the car was traveling at a normal speed of about
30 miles an hour when the soldiers opened fired, wounding her and killing
Nicola Calipari, the Italian agent who had just secured her release from
a month's captivity.
US soldiers said at the time of the March 4 incident that the car approached
at a high rate of speed and that they fired only after it failed to respond
to hand signals, flashing bright lights and warning shots.
The conflicting accounts were among a number of differences that have prevented
US and Italian authorities from reaching agreement on what happened.
CBS, citing Pentagon officials, said the satellite recording enabled investigators
to reconstruct the event without having to rely on the eyewitness accounts.
It said the soldiers manning the checkpoint first spotted the Italian car
when it was 137 yards (meters) away. By the time they opened fire and brought
the car to a halt, it was 46 yards (meters) away. CBS said that happened
in less than three seconds, which meant the car had to be going over 60 miles
an hour.
CBS said Italian investigators refused to accept that the Americans were
justified in shooting so quickly, arguing among other things that the checkpoint
was not properly marked.