
More of Peter Turnley’s photos from the first Gulf War are available here at the Digital Journalist. Turnley posted his photo essay on that website in 2002. Many of the photos in it were never picked up and printed by the press during Operation Desert Storm. Of the photos Turnley writes:
"I came across another scene on an obscure road further north and to the east where, in the middle of the desert, I found a convoy of lorries transporting Iraqi soldiers back to Baghdad, where clearly massive fire power had been dropped and everyone in sight had been carbonized. Most of the photographs I made of this scene have never been published anywhere and this has always troubled me. As we approach the distinct possibility of another war, a thought comes to mind. The photographs that I made do not, in themselves, represent any personal political judgment or point of view with respect to the politics and the right or wrong of the first Gulf War. What they do represent is a part of a more accurate picture of what really does happen in war. I feel it is important and that citizens have the right to see these images."


I once saw a picture like this. though this picture is dark and mysterious it also shows the oppression that is the American goverment over the destroyed corpse of an innocent and weaker country.
Comment by DAB — June 19, 2008 @ 8:12 am