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slvrbugjim
20th March 2012, 12:53 PM
Rape And Murder In Afghanistan
By Stephen Lendman
3-18-12
http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2012/03/rape-and-murder-in-afghanistan.html


On March 11, up to 20 US forces murdered 16 Afghan men, women, and nine children, aged two to 12. Children were massacred while they slept. Two women were also raped before soldiers killed them.

Major media scoundrels whitewashed the crimes by shamelessly blaming one soldier to absolve others, and most of all, higher-ups responsible for permitting a culture that condones and encourages them.

A transparent March 11 Pentagon Secretary of Defense Panetta statement said the following:

"Today I spoke to President Karzai to offer my deepest condolences and profound regret for the tragic incident in Kandahar province that resulted in the loss of life and injuries to innocent Afghan civilians, including women and children."

“A full investigation is already underway. A suspect is in custody, and I gave President Karzai my assurances that we will bring those responsible to justice. We will spare no effort in getting the facts as quickly as possible, and we will hold any perpetrator who is responsible for this violence fully accountable under the law."

“I condemn such violence and am shocked and saddened that a U.S. service member is alleged to be involved, clearly acting outside his chain of command. I told President Karzai that the American people share the outrage felt by President Karzai and his fellow citizens.
This tragic incident does not reflect the commitment of the U.S. military to protect the Afghan people and help build a strong and stable Afghanistan."

“As we mourn today with the Afghan people, we are steadfast in our resolve to work hand in hand with our Afghan partners to accomplish the missions and goals on which we have been working together for so long."

"This terrible incident does not reflect our shared values or the progress we have made together. As I told President Karzai, I am fully committed to ensuring that our cooperation continues. It is essential to forging a more peaceful future for the citizens of both our nations."

Like similar Pentagon, White House, and other official statements, Panetta's words ring hollow. They also reflected damage control cover-up, not only of a crime too grave to ignore, but just the latest in a systematic ongoing pattern wherever America shows up.

Like others, this one included rape and murder. According to Pajhwok Afghan News:

"A parliamentary probe team on Thursday said up to 20 American troops were involved in Sunday’s killing of 16 civilians in southern Kandahar province."

It spent two days interviewing surviving family members, witnesses, and tribal elders. They also gathered evidence where killings took place.

Two groups of US soldiers were involved. Attacks occurred in separate villages one and a half kilometers apart.

"We are convinced that one soldier cannot kill so many people in two villages within one hour at the same time."

Most victims were women and children. Parliamentarian Hamidzai Lali demanded that the UN and international community ensure those responsible are prosecuted in Afghanistan.

Lali said the Wolesi Jirga, Afghanistan's lower House of the People, won't stay silent until prosecutions occur, adding:

"If the international community does not play its role in punishing the perpetrators, the Wolesi Jirga would declare foreign troops as occupying forces, like the Russians."

Soldiers Committed Rape and Murder

On March 18, India's Siasat Daily headlined, "US Forces raped two Afghan women," saying:

The Afghan probe team said US soldiers systematically went from house to house in two villages, raped two women before murdering them, and at least 14 others.
Some victim bodies were then set ablaze.

On March 17, Russia Today called the Kandahar massacre "preplanned" murder, according to Afghan Army Chief of Staff Lt. General Sher Mohammad Karimi.

He and President Karzai said multiple assailants were involved. They also stressed that US commanders stonewalled Afghan demands to interrogate those responsible and hold them accountable locally.

Surviving family members and witnesses said assailants had air support. Helicopters brought them in and remained overhead during the carnage.

Kandahar Massacre Reflects Earlier Ones

Analyst Rick Rozoff called the incident "particularly egregious" because of its "cold-blooded, calculated" nature. It evoked echoes of past ones like Vietnam's My Lai, Iraq's Haditha, and two Fallujah slaughter incidents in April/May 2004, then in genocidal numbers in November/December.

Survivors and witnesses confirmed industrial scale mass murder. Children saw parents shot. Adults lost spouses and children. Homes and stores were looted.

Thousands of others were destroyed. A government committee found 26,000 houses damaged and another 3,000 completely demolished. They included 70 mosques, 50 schools, and Fallujah's power plant. The city depended on it for electricity, 50% of its drinking water distribution, and 70% of its sewer system.

Overall, indiscriminate slaughter, destruction, and environmental contamination occurred. It was followed by looting, mass arrests, torture, and deaths from ill treatment and disease. A cancer epidemic followed and numerous previously unknown or rarely seen illnesses, severe congenital malformations, and more.

Since 2001, millions of Afghans and Iraqis died. Libya's enduring its own nightmare. Syria and Iran are next. American wars show no mercy.

Rape as a Weapon of War

In all US war theaters, slaughter, sadism, and other atrocities are institutionalized. Rape becomes a weapon of war. On June 19, 2008, the Security Council agreed, adopting Resolution 1820.

It demanded an "immediate and complete halt to acts of sexual violence against civilians in conflict zones." It said:

“women and girls are particularly targeted by the use of sexual violence, including as a tactic of war to humiliate, dominate, instil fear in, disperse and/or forcibly relocate civilian members of a community or ethnic group.”

These offenses also "constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity or a constitutive act with respect to genocide."

Former United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Manifred Nowak said rape constitutes torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment used as a weapon of war to inflict greater pain and suffering.

Author Slavenka Drakulic described it as "slow murder." The Nuremberg Tribunal called it a crime against humanity.

Nothing, however, stops it, and UN resolutions fall woefully short. The latest Afghan rape and multiple murder atrocity reflects countless others. It's because US soldiers are trained to be violent in war theaters and show no mercy. Anything goes and does. Women and young girls are especially vulnerable.

In May 2009, Britain's Daily Telegraph said former US General Antonio Taguba said the Obama administration sought to suppress images of US soldiers raping and sodomizing Iraqi prisoners.

He called photos he saw explosive, saying they "show torture, abuse, rape and every indecency. The mere description of these pictures is horrendous enough. Take my word for it."

These and similar incidents aren't isolated. Nor are a few "bad apples" alone involved. They're widespread, tolerated, and sanctioned up to the highest government, military, and intelligence levels in all US war theaters.

Victims are helpless targets, including young girls and boys sodomized with phosphorescent tubes, clubs, wire, and other implements to inflict pain.

Instead of holding those responsible accountable, Obama suppressed their crimes. As a result, they continue. The latest Afghan victims represent a drop in the ocean. International and US law principles are ignored. Atrocities follow others repeatedly.

Wars reflect more than hell. They manifest generations of condoned US barbarity. It's been institutionalized to permit wanton rape, sodomy, torture, sadism, murder, and virtually all other imaginable atrocities with impunity.

America the beautiful is an illusion only young children and fools believe. Ugly war theater wickedness reveals its true dark side. Its victims attest to how monstrous.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.

http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/

Eyebone
20th March 2012, 03:05 PM
Ask the "afganies" what the going rate is for a White woman kidnapped from eastern Europe and sold to their "moola" is.

slvrbugjim
20th March 2012, 03:24 PM
The bodies were burned in an attempt to get rid of dna after the rapes. One was a little girl.

At least 20 US soldiers took part, 2 separate squads of 10, with air support. They were in fact flown back to the base afterwards. It appears that some of the higher ups were in fact aware of all of this and turned a blind eye.

Serpo
20th March 2012, 06:51 PM
US soldier 'can't recall' Afghan massacre
http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image/images/afp/photo_1332198418650-1-0_0.jpg (http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image_lightbox/images/afp/photo_1332198418650-1-0_0.jpg?1332287321) Staff Sergeant Robert Bales (R) is shown at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin, California, in this photo taken in August 2011 courtesy of the Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System (DVIDS). Bales is likely to be formally charged in the next few days with the shooting deaths of 16 Afghan villagers.

http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image/images/afp/photo_1332210126250-1-0.jpg (http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image_lightbox/images/afp/photo_1332210126250-1-0.jpg?1332287321) US soldiers keep watch at the entrance of a military base near Alkozai village following the shooting of Afghan civilians allegedly by a rogue US soldier, Kandahar province on March 11, 2012.

http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image/images/afp/photo_1332209760729-1-0.jpg (http://www.france24.com/en/files/imagecache/aef_ct_wire_image_lightbox/images/afp/photo_1332209760729-1-0.jpg?1332287321) Afghan men gather for at a mosque in Alkozai village, Kandahar province on March 13, 2012. Gunmen attacked an Afghan memorial service for 16 villagers allegedly killed by a US soldier.


AFP - The US soldier accused of killing 16 Afghan villagers does not remember the incident, his lawyer said Monday, but the Pentagon has announced that he could be charged within days.
Staff Sergeant Robert Bales -- who prosecutors say returned to his base and turned himself in after the shooting rampage could face the death penalty if convicted, according to US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.
The 38-year-old trooper's civilian attorney told CBS that the suspect cannot recall much about the deaths, which have plunged US-Afghan relations to a new low and was soon followed by the Taliban breaking off possible peace talks.
"He has an early memory of that evening and he has a later memory... but he doesn't have memory of the evening in between," John Henry Browne told CBS News after meeting Bales for the first time at Fort Leavenworth military prison in Kansas.
Bales, a decorated veteran who did three tours in Iraq before deploying to Afghanistan in December, is accused of leaving his base in Kandahar province on the night of March 11 and going house to house to kill the villagers, including nine children.
He also allegedly set fire to several of his victims.
A US Army official told AFP that charges in relation to the killing will likely be announced by the American military in Afghanistan "within the next few days."
Under the US military justice system, prosecutors draft charges to be filed against an accused soldier, then present them to his unit commander, who must then decide whether there is enough evidence to believe a crime was committed.
Bales was sent to a military base in Kuwait in the wake of the killings but was then transferred to Fort Leavenworth, where he is being kept in an isolation cell, according to military officials.
Browne, who spoke with Bales for several hours, told CBS his client would not put forward an insanity defense in any proceedings, but could pursue the case on the grounds of "diminished capacity" due to an emotional breakdown.
"He's fixated on the troops left on the ground and what they're accusing him of and how that might have negative ramifications on his friends and compatriots," Browne said, describing Bales as being in shock.
"And he's concerned that there would be retaliation that would be caused by what people think he's done."
Bales also denied reports that he was drunk at the time of the attacks, according to Browne.
"He said he had a couple sips of something but he didn't have a full drink," the lawyer said, adding that Bales is anxious to speak with his family.
Browne said last week that Bales had recently been under stress, which was heightened when he witnessed a fellow soldier seriously wounded by stepping on a mine.
The US media reported that Bales, who in addition to Browne also has a military lawyer, and his wife were enduring financial problems.
The non-commissioned officer joined the army two months after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and on a fourth hijacked airliner that crashed in a field in rural Pennsylvania.
"He will be treated exactly the same as anybody else at the Midwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility," Fort Leavenworth public information officer Jeff Wingo told AFP. "He's considered innocent until proven guilty."
Before trial, Bales must appear at an "Article 32" -- a preliminary hearing at which prosecutors argue for a court-martial.


http://www.france24.com/en/20120320-us-soldier-cant-recall-afghan-massacre

Serpo
20th March 2012, 06:54 PM
Lawyer holds 'emotional' meeting with soldier accused of killing 16 Afghans, Robert Bales



From: AP
March 20, 2012 8:37AM








A LAWYER who is defending a US army sergeant suspected of killing 16 Afghans, including nine children, has met the soldier for the first time, for a conversation the attorney described as emotional.

Lawyer John Henry Browne said he met for more than three hours with Robert Bales, who is being held in an isolated cell at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
"What's going on on the ground in Afghanistan, you read about it, I read about it, but it's totally different when you hear about it from somebody who's been there," Mr Browne said by telephone during a lunch break. "It's just really emotional."
Sergeant Bales has not been charged yet in the March 11 shootings, which have endangered relations between the US and Afghanistan and threatened to upend American policy over the decade-old war. Formal charges are expected to be filed within a week.









Post spokeswoman Rebecca Steed said earlier that Sgt Bales would be able to meet Browne in what is described as a privileged visit. Along with medical visits, such meetings are generally more private than others conducted in the prison.
Sgt Bales is "already being integrated into the normal pre-trial confinement routine", Ms Steed said.
That includes recreation, meals and cleaning the area where he is being housed.
Ms Steed says once his meetings with his lawyer are complete later in the week, Sgt Bales will resume the normal integration process.
His day begins at 5am, with a meal at 5.15. Then it's back to his cell and then to any scheduled meetings with medical, dental or mental health professionals. This is the time he also would be meeting with Browne.
People in pre-trial confinement eat separately from the general population for all meals in the same dining hall. Sgt Bales is being held in an area with about a dozen other service members who are awaiting the legal process, Ms Steed said.
Among those being held at Fort Leavenworth are Private Bradley Manning, charged in the WikiLeaks case, and Sergeant John Russell, who faces charges in the shooting deaths of five service members at a combat stress clinic in Baghdad.
If the case goes to court, the trial will be held in the United States, said a legal expert with the US military familiar with the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the case.
That expert said charges were still being decided and that the location for any trial had not yet been determined. If the suspect is brought to trial, it is possible that Afghan witnesses and victims would be flown to the United States to participate, he said.
Military officials have said that Sgt Bales, after drinking on a southern Afghanistan base, crept away on March 11 to two villages overnight, shooting his victims and setting many of them on fire. Nine of the 16 killed were children and 11 belonged to one family.
Court records and interviews in recent days have revealed that Bales had a string of commendations for good conduct after four tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. But he also faced a number of troubles in recent years: a Florida investment job went sour, his Seattle-area home was condemned as he struggled to make payments on another, and he failed to get a recent promotion.
Mr Browne said Sgt Bales had clarified one story: It was two days before the Afghan shootings when one of Sgt Bales' friends, another soldier, had his leg blown off by a roadside bomb. Mr Browne said Sgt Bales didn't witness the explosion but saw the aftermath.
The details of the blast could not be immediately confirmed.
Mr Browne, 65, has represented clients ranging from serial killer Ted Bundy to Colton Harris-Moore, known as the "Barefoot Bandit". He has said he has handled only three or four military cases. Sgt Bales will also have at least one military lawyer


http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/lawyer-holds-emotional-meeting-with-soldier-accused-of-killing-16-afghans-robert-bales/story-e6frg6so-1226304784368

General of Darkness
20th March 2012, 06:56 PM
Ask the "afganies" what the going rate is for a White woman kidnapped from eastern Europe and sold to their "moola" is.

Excellent point. Also as the filthy jews in Irahell who's in their brothels. War is coming, one way, or another.

Glass
20th March 2012, 07:22 PM
I'd suggest this was a drug test. DARPA have been working on a death/muder/kill drug which enables a souldier to committ imoral acts without memory or associated guilt issues. Sounds like it is working well.

mick silver
20th March 2012, 07:54 PM
thye train the guy to do this so why bitch now about what you told him to do . brain washing run deep in the army

slvrbugjim
21st March 2012, 10:01 AM
The point here is that all other news outlets outside of the US are reporting that up to 20 soldiers were involved in the attacks. I think that for one guy to do this, rape burn and kill in 2 separate villages and virtually the same time is impossible. This was not one guy that just went crazy. This is the Pentagon and the media throwing out there the tried and true story of a lone nut guy that just went nuts. I call BS on the official cover story.

MAGNES
21st March 2012, 12:58 PM
Good article, has a lot of historical points, there is a history to
this type of behavior and it is far too common. Many of the killings
do not get reported the same way, they have been killing innocent people
regularly in Afghanistan, with CIA drones, bombing them, they just issue an apology,
then NATO soldiers go out and get attacked, they create the insurgency
by their very presence, US MIL has admitted there is less than 100 " alquada "
in Afghanistan, so who are they fighting ? Gotta keep that heroin flowing
to their distributors in Europe, the Albanians, the majority goes there.
related post and related links, remember McChrystal
http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?59833-Breaking-News-France-Toulouse-Shootings-Police-after-Mohammed&p=526645&viewfull=1#post526645

midnight rambler
21st March 2012, 04:57 PM
Worse than the Soviets?? Or about the same?? ???

slvrbugjim
21st March 2012, 09:18 PM
Yes, not sure where the outrage is here, or is not, but the troops were up to 20 in number, raped and killed women and children, on female child of 12 was raped and burned, with air cover. It was an operation. These people will be wanting our head on a stake, now more than ever. This will galvanize them against us more than anything that has happened in 11 years, mission accomplished.