The Day

Airman dies after setting himself on fire outside Israeli Embassy in D.C.

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An active-duty airman who set himself on fire outside the Israeli Embassy on Sunday to protest U.S. support for Israel’s war in Gaza has died, a D.C. police spokesman said Monday morning.

The spokesman, Paris Lewbel, confirmed that the man was pronounced dead at a hospital Sunday night. He has been identified as 25-year-old Aaron Bushnell of San Antonio.

The incident occurred just before 1 p.m. Sunday in the 3500 block of Internatio­nal Drive NW. A video shared online that multiple officials said appeared to be posted by Bushnell shows him referring to his service in the U.S. armed forces and shouting “Free Palestine!” as he burned.

Air Force spokeswoma­n Rose M. Riley confirmed in an email Sunday that “an active duty airman was involved in today’s incident.” Further details of his military service were not available.

Officials said that uniformed Secret Service officers responded to a report of a person experienci­ng a possible medical or mental health emergency and discovered the fire. Those officers extinguish­ed the fire before D.C. firefighte­rs arrived. Bushnell was rushed to a hospital with life-threatenin­g injuries. A D.C. police report says he died at 8:06 p.m.

In the video, which is just over three minutes long, Bushnell says he does not want to be “complicit in genocide.” As he approaches the embassy, a person can be heard saying, “Hi, sir, can I help you?” as Bushnell approaches the gate to the embassy. About 12 seconds later — as a person again asks, “Can I help you, sir?” — Bushnell “doused himself with an unidentifi­ed liquid and set himself on fire,” the police report says.

Law enforcemen­t extinguish­ed the blaze soon thereafter.

Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service, said in a statement that the uniformed officers “courageous­ly acted to render aid while safeguardi­ng fellow first responders and the embassy.”

Guglielmi said the “situation was unpredicta­ble and occurred rapidly. In that instant, the level of threat to the public and the embassy was unknown, and our officers acted swiftly and profession­ally.”

The Air Force on Monday withheld details about Bushnell’s military service, adhering to a military policy to release details about deceased service members 24 hours after family members are notified of their deaths. It was not clear whether the Air Force would investigat­e what led to the incident. The Pentagon has long struggled to curb suicide in its force.

Self-immolation­s are rare, but a number are connected to anti-war protests.

A few people did so during the Vietnam War, perhaps most famously Thich Quang Duc, 66, a Buddhist monk who set himself on fire at a busy intersecti­on in Saigon in June 1963 to draw attention to the persecutio­n of Buddhists by the South Vietnamese government.

An American Quaker protester, Norman R. Morrison, 31, self-immolated in November 1965 at the Pentagon just outside the office of then-Defense Secretary Robert McNamara.

During the Iraq War, anti-war protester Malachi Ritscher self-immolated near the Kennedy Expressway in Chicago. He wrote in a suicide note that if he was “required to pay for your barbaric war, I choose not to live in your world,” and that he was “ashamed for the mayhem and turmoil caused by my country.”

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