If you’ve not read this yet, you really must, it is unlikely we will know the a truthful and full picture of the Iraq war for many decades despite what casualty deniers wish to believe. You may also wish to read the BBC College of Journalism on reporting the military, which will help contextualise how easy it is for the govt to lie us into war.
RAF helicopter death revelation leads to secret Iraq detention camp: Death in RAF helicopter and secret prison camp in Iraq desert raises questions about legality of British and US operations
The certificate recorded Sabri’s cause of death as unknown. It also showed that the whereabouts of his grave, far from being uncertain, could be pinpointed precisely. The American officer who completed the certificate had gone to considerable lengths to ensure it could be found, beyond the airfield perimeter: “700m out front gate to first culvert, 191 degrees for 50m, next to grave with stacked stones in same location …”
But of greater significance was what the death certificate revealed about the location of the airfield. It showed that the 64 prisoners had not been flown to the prison camp at Umm Qasr at all. They had been taken an airfield codenamed H1, described on the certificate as the forward operating base of a US special forces unit known as Task Force-20. H1 was an airfield built next to an oil pipeline pumping station.
It was 350 miles north-west of Umm Qasr, in the middle of Iraq’s western desert, a vast and desolate expanse of sand and scree. The nearest settlement was many miles away: it is difficult to see how there could have been a “local imam” whose permission needed to be sought before exhumation, or how anyone in the vicinity who could pose “serious security concerns”.
The holding facility at H1 was not inspected by the Red Cross. Moreover, its existence was not disclosed to Lieutenant Colonel Mercer, the UK’s most senior army lawyer in Iraq at the time. Mercer says he was “extremely surprised” to learn of its existence.
He said: “This matter potentially raises very serious questions. Strenuous efforts were made at all times to ensure that all prisoners were accorded the full protection of the Geneva conventions and vigorous objections would have been raised if there was the slightest possibility of a breach of the conventions. It appears from the information disclosed that some prisoner operations were being conducted, deliberately or otherwise, outside of the chain of command.”
The holding facility appears effectively to have been a secret prison – a so-called black site. It is entirely possible, according to international law experts, that taking prisoners to H1 could amount to “unlawful deportation or transfer or unlawful confinement”, and that the prisoners were subjected to “enforced disappearances”, both of which are war crimes under the Rome statute of the international criminal court.
One former RAF Regiment trooper who was based at H1 for several months has described being involved in a number of similar missions in which prisoners were collected from coalition special forces. This always happened “under total darkness”, he says. On arrival at H1, the prisoners were handed on to people whom he describes as “other authorities”.
Could this explain why the police investigation into the alleged killing of Tariq Sabri ended with some of the most basic facts – such as his name and the the cause of his death – remaining unknown?


