To read the tribute to SFC Marcus Muralles, please click here
Wednesday, January 26, 2005
This Would Almost Be Funny...
... if it wasn't for the fact that he wanted to kill people.
So, he wanted to martyr himself for the cause. Then what's the problem?virgins raisins?) By tricking him into this, they were going to deny him his "just rewards." I can see him being a little bitter about that. More than that, I think he's mad because the suicide bomb coordinators obviously didn't trust him to get the job done. They felt like they had to press the button themselves.
That's gotta hurt the pride a bit.
The young Saudi man told investigators this month that he wants revenge against the Iraqi terrorist network that sent him on the deadly mission that he survived.Poor guy, right? He was just an innocent pawn, right? He didn't want to join the insurgents, fighting against coalition forces, right? Uh, no...
Shaya's video statement describes the journey of a young man ready to die in his zeal to drive Americans from Arab lands.
Shaya says he left Saudi Arabia for Syria in late October, right after the start of the holy month of Ramadan. A smuggler he knew as Abu Mohammed took him over the border into Iraq and into the hands of other Islamic extremists who call themselves mujahedin, or holy warriors.... Shaya moved to Baghdad in December to prepare for his final mission, which he expected to be as the suicide pilot of a bomb-laden car.
So, he wanted to martyr himself for the cause. Then what's the problem?
But on Dec. 24, he was given a preliminary job of driving a butane-gas delivery truck that was rigged with bombs. It wasn't supposed to be a suicide mission.I still don't see the problem. He wanted to be a suicide bomber. They made him a suicide bomber. Everything is as it should be, right? Well, no.
“They asked me to take the truck near a concrete block barrier before turning to the right and leaving it there,” he says. “There, somebody will pick up the truck from you,” they told him.
“But they blew me up in the truck,” he says.
Shaya told the interrogators that he regretted his mission now.I'm not buying it. I think he regrets that he lived and got caught. There may be some anger towards the terror organization, on religious grounds. (I'm by no means an expert, but don't they have to do certain rituals before they go "boom" in order to guarantee receipt of the 72
“I want the Iraqi people to live in peace,” he says, and he can no longer support Osama bin Laden because “he is killing Muslims.”
As for the Zarqawi network that sent him on the mission that left him permanently disfigured and in prison, he says, “I want revenge for what they have done to me.”
That's gotta hurt the pride a bit.