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Cryptome DVDs are offered by Cryptome. Donate $25 for two DVDs of the Cryptome 12-years collection of 46,000 files from June 1996 to June 2008 (~6.7 GB). Click Paypal or mail check/MO made out to John Young, 251 West 89th Street, New York, NY 10024. The collection includes all files of cryptome.org, jya.com, cartome.org, eyeball-series.org and iraq-kill-maim.org, and 23,000 (updated) pages of counter-intelligence dossiers declassified by the US Army Information and Security Command, dating from 1945 to 1985.The DVDs will be sent anywhere worldwide without extra cost. |
19 October 2006. Sniper kill videos from January 2006, grim, uncut, not like those sanitized for home viewing on CNN:
BSVHR Hi-Rez Baghdad Sniper Video (67MB) January 12, 2006 BSV Baghdad Sniper Video (24MB) January 11, 2006
15 January 2006
Part 2: http://cryptome.info/sk/sniper-kills2.htm
Captions by Associated Press | |
U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldiers take a sniper rifle away from the body of an insurgent killed in Mosul, Iraq Saturday, Feb. 19, 2005. U.S. and Iraqi troops had taken fire from his car, and Iraqi troops returned fire, causing multiple explosions due to a cache of rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons inside. Two other insurgents were wounded. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
U.S. Army surgeon Maj. Charlie Clark dresses the head of an American soldier after he reconstructing the soldier's entire face at the 31st Combat Support Hospital in the Green Zone of Baghdad, Iraq in the early hours of Monday, Nov. 8, 2004. The soldier had been shot in the face by an insurgent sniper.The hospital, considered the busiest American combat trauma hospital in the world, is preparing for the possibility heavy casualties in this week's expected military offensive on Fallujah.(AP Photo/John Moore) |
U.S. Army Spc. Dane O. Carver's casket is wheeled in the sanctuary at Calvary Church in Grand Rapids, Mich., at the beginning of his funeral Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006. Carver, of Freeport, Mich., was killed by a sniper in Iraq the day after Christmas. He was to be laid to rest at Forst Custer National Cemetery near Battle Creek following the funeral. (AP Photo/The Grand Rapids Press, Lance Wynn) |
In this undated photo provided by the U.S. Marine Corp Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, is shown. Stevens, 29, of Tomah, was killed in Fallujah, the Department of Defense said in a statement Saturday. The department said all 10 Marines were assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, based in Twentynine Palms, Calif. Stevens, who joined the Marines in June 1995 and was serving as a scout sniper, deployed to Iraq with his unit in July, the Marine Corps said. (AP Photo/U.S.M.C.). 11/10/2005 15:55:07 |
This is undated file photo provided by The State newspaper shows Sgt. Andrew Joseph Derrick, of Columbia, S.C. who was killed in Iraq Sept. 23, 2005. Derrick, 25, was patrolling with Iraqi police when he was hit by a sniper bullet, according to his family. (AP Photo/The Columbia State) |
**FILE** Paula Chapin, center, whose husband, Sgt. 1st Class Chris S. Chapin, 39, of Proctor, Vt., was killed last week by sniper fire in Iraq, cries as Vermont National Guard Maj. Gen. Martha Rainville, left, salutes after presenting Chapin the flag from her husband's casket during funeral services Friday, Sept. 2, 2005, in Rutland, Vt. Four Vermont National Guardsmen were killed in Iraq this year. (AP Photo/Alden Pellett). A SEPT. 2, 2005 FILE PHOTO |
Family and friends mourn Army Cpl. Lucas Allen Frantz during graveside services Thursday afternoon, Oct. 27, 2005, at the VFW Park in Tonganoxie, Kan. Frantz, and member of Alaska's 172nd Stryker Brigade, died Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2005, his 22nd birthday, after being shot by a sniper while on a routine military patrol in Mosul, Iraq. Shown, from left, are Frantz's mother, Lorrrie Vandruff; stepfather, Tim Vandruff, both of Rossville, Kan.; and his widow, Kelly Frantz. (AP Photo/Richard Gwin, Lawrence Journal-World) |
** ADVANCE FOR THURSDAY, DEC. 22 ** Mike Pattison, of Washington, Pa., is photographed between classes at Slippery Rock University in Slippery Rock, Pa., Thursday, Dec. 8, 2005. Pattison, a Pennsylvania National Guard cavalry scout, was wounded by a sniper's bullet on the right side of his face while serving in Iraq and is still recovering. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster) |
Walt Gaya reads "Oh Say, Can You Say?" to his children Corina, 4, right, and Julian, 2, at bedtime at their home in Olympia, Wash., Sept. 20, 2005. Gaya, an Army sniper who recently returned from a 10-month tour of duty in Iraq where he suffered an eye injury. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren) |
** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, OCT. 30 - FIFTH IN A SERIES OF FIVE PHOTOS BY WALT GAYA ** In this photograph taken by Army Sgt. Walt Gaya, a sniper who was wounded in Iraq and now hopes to become a photojournalist, U.S. Army Spc. Joseph Zavoznik, right, and Sgt. Scott Pullman, left, are shown keeping watch over the construction of a police station in Mozel, Iraq in April, 2005. (AP Photo/Courtesy Walt Gaya) |
Vermont Army National Guard Spc. Scott P. McLaughlin of Hardwick is shown in an undated photo submitted by the National Guard. McLaughlin was killed in Iraq after a sniper's bullet pierced the seams of his body armor Thursday, Sept. 22, 2005, said Maj. Gen. Martha Rainville. McLaughlin , 29, is survived by his wife, Nicole, and two children, ages 6 and 1. His death Thursday was the second this week of a Vermont guardsman. (AP Photo/National Guard) |
An American machine gunner on a combined patrol with Iraqi soldiers in Ramadi. "A patrol in Iraq is like walking the route of a beat cop in an American city, except for the minor additional danger of being shot by a sniper or blown up by a buried artillery shell," Rory Quinn writes. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Rory Quinn) |
New York City Police Officer James McNaughton is shown in this undated photo provided by the NYPD, Wednesday Aug. 3, 2005. McNaughton, the first member of the police force to be killed in action in Iraq, was serving in the Army Reserve and was killed by a sniper while guarding prisoners at a camp in Iraq, New York City officials said Wednesday. (AP Photo/New York City Police Department) |
In this undated photo released by the Coullard family, Marine reservist Sgt. David Coullard, 32, from East Hartford, Conn., is shown. Coullard was among six Marines killed in Iraq on Monday, family members said Wednesday. Coullard was a member of the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines based in Ohio. He and five others died northwest of Baghdad, Iraq, while on sniper duty on Monday. Fourteen other Marines from the same base were killed early Wednesday when their vehicle was hit by an improvised explosive device. (AP Photo/Coullard Family) |
This undated photo provided by family shows Pfc. Nils Thompson, of Confluence, Pa. Thompson, 19, was killed Thursday, Aug. 4, 2005, by a sniper in Mosul, Iraq, his family said. (AP Photo/Family via Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) |
This July 19, 2005 family photo shows Lance Cpl. Brian Montgomery of Willoughby, left, and Daniel Nathaniel "Nate" Deyarmin, Jr. of Tallmadge, in Iraq. The two Marine reservists based in Brook Park were killed Monday, Aug. 1, 2005, with four other members of their unit, while on sniper duty in Iraq. (AP Photo/Family Photo via Akron Beacon Journal) |
This Aug. 4, 2002, portrait taken at completion of basic training shows U.S. Army Spc. John Wayne Miller with Co. A, 224th Engineer Batalion of the Iowa Army National Guard. Miller of West Burlington, Iowa, was killed in Ramadiyah, Iraq by sniper fire on April 11, 2005.(AP Photo) |
In this undated photo provided by the Jaichner family, Thomas Jaichner, left, is shown in Iraq with an unidentified. person. Jaichner, a private security guard who grew up in Burlington County, has been killed by a sniper in Iraq. Jaichner, 33, was killed Tuesday, May 10, 2005, while on assignment guarding an American diplomat in Ramadi for Blackwater USA. Jaichner, who grew up in Bordentown, N.J., lived in California. (AP Photo/ Jaichner Family via The Times of Trenton, File) |
U.S. Marine Sgt. David Coullard, right, of East Hartford, Conn., is shown with another unidentified Marine in a photo sent to his mother July 30, 2005, taken somewhere just outside Baghdad. Coullard was a member of the 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines based in Ohio. He and five others died northwest of Baghdad while on sniper duty on Monday, Aug. 1, 2005. (AP Photo/Coullard Family) |
** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, MAY 8 ** A .50 caliber sniper rifle developed at Picatinny Arsenal in Rockaway Township, N.J., and being delivered to troops in the field, stands in front of one of the old headqauarters buildings at the base Wednesday, May 4, 2005. New Jersey officials hope the state's seven military installations will come out of the fifth base closing round this year with no injuries, but there's talk that two Army facilities, Fort Monmouth and Picatinny Arsenal, could be potential targets. (AP Photo/Warren Westura) |
The flag draped casket of Spc. John Miller, a soldier with Company A, 224th Engineer Battalion of the Iowa Army National Guard, is brought into Memorial Auditorium in Burlington, Iowa Wednesday, April 20, 2005. Miller, 21, from West Burlington, Iowa, was shot and killed by a sniper on April 12th near Ramidi, Iraq. He will be posthumously promoted to sergeant in a private ceremony. (AP Photo/The Hawk Eye, John Gaines) |
Maj. Richard Lipe, of Searcy, Ark., an operations officer in charge of a six-man team from the Camp Robinson-based National Guard Marksmanship Training Unit, hugs his wife, Marlene, after he and his team returned to Little Rock, Thursday, Feb. 10, 2005, from a tour of duty in Iraq. Lipe and his team provided sniper training to active duty soldiers on the ground in Iraq, including several members of Arkansas' 39th Brigade Combat Team. (AP Photo/Mike Wintroath) |
U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldiers search for an insurgent
sniper after taking fire on their patrol in Mosul, Iraq Friday, Feb. 4, 2005.
There were no casualties. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
A horse-drawn funeral carriage transports the body Arkansas National Guard Spc. Lyle Rymer to the grave during burial services Monday, Feb. 7, 2005, at Fort Smith National Cemetery in Fort Smith, Ark. Rymer was killed by a sniper on Jan. 28 in Iraq. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Steve Sisney) |
Jeff Hubbard, left, and his wife Peggy, front left, and other family watch Friday, Nov. 5, 2004, in Clovis, Calif., outside of the Buchanan High School football stadium during a pre-game ceremony honoring their son Lance Cpl. Jared Hubbard, 22, and Cpl. Jeremiah Baro, 21, both former high school wrestlers who were killed Thursday, Nov. 4, 2004 in Iraq. Hubbard and Baro were on their second tour in Iraq. They returned home briefly over the summer, then trained together as snipers before returning to the battlefield. (AP Photo/Fresno Bee, Tomas Ovalle) |
This undated family photo shows U.S. Army 1st Lt. Nainoa K. Hoe who was shot and killed by a sniper last weekend as he led a foot patrol through Mosul, according to his wife. (AP Photo/Family Photo via KGW-TV). 01/24/2005 15:51:35 |
This undated family photo shows U.S. Army Spc. Blain Matthew Ebert, 22, of Washtucna, Wash., who was slain by a sniper at a roadblock near Baghdad Nov. 21 2004. Ebert was a tank commander in the 4th Battalion, 5th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division, based in Fort Hood, Texas. Weeks after arriving in Iraq in March, Ebert asked people in his home town to send clothes and shoes for Iraqi children and they responded with box after box of clothing, candy and other goods. (AP Photo/Family photo via the Tri City Herald) |
A U.S. Marine sniper scans the surrounding neighborhood from inside a guard post in front of the Governorate for Al Anbar Province, in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 13, 2004. The Marines provide security for the building which is the seat of government for the province which stretches several hundred miles from the border with Syria in the west to beyond Fallujah in the east. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley) |
U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Spc. John Welch, left, lends his shoulder to a U.S. Army sniper, returning fire after taking insurgent sniper fire in Mosul, Iraq, Saturday, Dec. 4, 2004. On Friday, about 70 insurgents tried to ambush a U.S. patrol nearby, using roadside bombs, rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire. After regrouping, U.S. and Iraqi forces launched an assault, killing more than two dozen insurgents.(AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
This undated photo provided by the family shows Marine Cpl. Kirk Bosselmann, 21, a scout sniper who was killed Saturday, Nov. 27, 2004, in Iraq. The Pentagon released few details on his death, saying only that he died in ``hostile action'' in Iraq's Anbar province. (AP Photo/Family Photo via WTTG Fox 5) |
A happy face smiles back from the scope of a U.S. Army sniper's rifle, during a mission searching for insurgents in Mosul, Iraq, Monday, Nov. 22, 2004. U.S. and Iraqi forces in Mosul have been working put down an uprising launched by guerrillas who seized police stations and other sites. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
Members of Charlie Company of the First Marine Division, 8th Regiment, tend to a comrade wounded by sniper fire as they tried to advance on the Janabi Mosque in Fallujah, Iraq, Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2004. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Times, Luis Sinco) |
U.S. Marine Staff Sgt. Timothy LaSage of Milwaukee, WI, a sniper with the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment scans the horizon during a gun battle with insurgents in Ramadi, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2004. One Marine was killed and three others injured by a roadside bomb Sunday in Ramadi, and hospital officials said seven more people were killed and 11 injured in clashes between insurgents and U.S. forces. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
A U.S. Marine sniper from the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, searches for targets from a rooftop position in Ramadi, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2004. One Marine was killed and three others injured by a roadside bomb Sunday in Ramadi, and hospital officials said seven more people were killed and 11 injured in clashes between insurgents and U.S. forces. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
U.S. Marine snipers from the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment setup for a rooftop operation in Ramadi, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2004. One Marine was killed and three others injured by a roadside bomb Sunday in Ramadi, and hospital officials said seven more people were killed and 11 injured in clashes between insurgents and U.S. forces. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
U.S. Marine snipers from the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment operate on a rooftop in Ramadi, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 31, 2004. One Marine was killed and three others injured by a roadside bomb Sunday in Ramadi, and hospital officials said seven more people were killed and 11 injured in clashes between insurgents and U.S. forces. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Joselito O. Villanueva, 36, of Los Angeles, in this undated photo, died Monday,Sept. 27, 2004, when he was shot by a sniper in Balad, Iraq. He was assigned to 9th Engineer Battalion, 1st Infantry Division, Schweinfurt, Germany. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Times) |
An Iraqi woman watches while a U.S. Army soldier searches her car at a highway checkpoint near Ramadi, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 17, 2004. The car resembled one sought in connection with an insurgents sniper who recently killed two soldiers nearby. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) |
Army Sgt. Michael A. Uvanni, shown in this undated photo, was killed Friday, Oct. 1, 2004, in Samarra, Iraq. Uvanni, 27, was conducting combat operations and was shot by a sniper, according to the defense department. Uvanni was assigned to the Army National Guard's 2nd Battalion, 108th Infantry Regiment based in Morrisonville. (AP Photo/Rome Daily Sentinel) |
Cpl. Nick Romero carries his teammate Cpl. Eugenio Mendoza during the beginning of the stress fire portion of the 4th Annual International Sniper Competition at Fort Benning, Ga., Friday, Nov. 5, 2004. During this event, the 20 two-man teams began with the buddy carry, ran through an obstacle course, and then had a series of long distance shots to make on the range. The two are from the 101st Airborne from Fort Campbell, Ky. The events are designed to simulate combat scenarios in Afghanistan and Iraq.``It's good stuff we never thought about,'' said Mendoza, 27, a sniper with the Army's 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell, Ky. ``We're definitely going back and use what we've learned in these events.'' (AP Photo/Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, Mike Haskey) |
Aaron McAlister, from Maypearl Texas, left, and Chuck Ayars, from Nashville Tenn., right, both snipers with the U.S. Armys 1st Cavalry Division, 1st Brigade, 1-12 Cav. from Fort Hood Texas, take aim at a suspected enemy observer looking in at Camp Eagle from a neighborhood outside of Sadr City Iraq in Baghdad Monday Aug. 16, 2004. (AP Photo//David P. Gilkey, Pool) |
** FILE ** Army Pfc. Adam Harris shown in this undated photo was killed Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2004, after being shot by a sniper while on patrol in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, according to a release by the U.S. Department of Defense. Harris was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division at Fort Lewis, Wash. (AP Photo/Abilene Reporter-News) |
Abdullah Ahmed is treated by a doctor as a hospital guard watches in Mosul, Iraq, Thursday Sept. 9, 2004. According to those who brought Ahmed to the hospital, he was shot by an U.S. sniper at Tal Afar, a northern city near the border with Syria. The U.S. military said 57 insurgents were killed there in an operation intended to return the city 30 miles west of Mosul to control of the interim Iraqi government. At least a dozen civilians were also killed in the attack, Iraq's Interior Ministry said. (AP Photo/Mohammed Ibrahim) |
An American soldier reacts to the sounds of blasts as a sniper takes his position overlooking an area where Al Mahdi soldiers loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr clash with U.S. and Iraqi forces in the besieged city of Najaf, Iraq Friday Aug. 20, 2004. Militiamen loyal to al-Sadr on Friday removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed) |