When Saddam Hussein’s statue toppled down in Firdos Square in downtown Baghdad in April 9, 2003, the image of an American flag covering the face of Hussein’s statue was seared into the mind of every person impacted from the Iraq War, including the owner of that flag. That American flag belonged to a U.S. Marine, Lt. Tim McLaughlin, who has since stowed it away in a safe deposit box in a New Hampshire bank for fear that the flag would be used as war propaganda.
Before the 10-year anniversary approached, the National Marine Corps Museum in Quantico, Va., called McLaughlin and asked him for the flag, hoping to display it in an exhibition. But McLaughlin never returned the museum’s calls and kept the flag for himself.
Former Lt. Tim McLaughlin joined msnbc’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell to talk about how his flag came to cover the toppled leader’s statue.
“When we arrived in the square, Firdos Square, the company commander said, ‘Hey Mac, we’re not getting shot at. Let’s get a picture of your flag. And what I think I didn’t perceive at the time is that the world’s media was filming that for the rest of the world to see it. So from my point of view, it’s just my flag that I took a picture of. It’s not a burden or a trophy, but at the same time, I understand that the world saw it and it’s laden with symbolism.”
Not knowing that by lending his commander the flag that it would become a piece of history, McLaughlin brought it with him to Iraq to take a photo of it in a foreign country. But McLaughlin discovered a few weeks later that his flag had gone viral, after photographic images of an American flag covering Hussein’s face were on the covers of newspapers and magazines worldwide.
Since 2003, McLaughlin has become more aware of the significance attached to his flag, and has understood that the flag represents the mismanaged invasion and occupation of a war that dragged on for a decade. But McLaughlin said on msnbc that the flag was never intended for such a purpose.
“In years since, I’ve understood that the world has lots of opinions about that, and that’s fine. And that’s part of why I keep it to myself, because it was never intended to foster a conversation about ‘Is it an occupation?’ ‘Should it or shouldn’t it have been done?’ It’s the Marine Corps. The Marine Corps loves its flag, we love our country, and when you ask young men and women to go invade a country, we don’t think of it from a political point of view, we think about it as doing what our country has asked us to do and the country is reflected in my American flag,” he said.








