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US soldier who killed Afghan civilians in their sleep gets his team of lawyers. (Updated) Printer friendly page Print This
By David Usborne
The Independent
Monday, Mar 19, 2012

Update: Since the original publication of this article we have received the following message from Dave Stratman, Editor of Boston-based, New Democracy World:

"Up to 20 US troops executed Panjwai massacre: probe --Lawmaker: Attack lasted one hour involving two groups of American soldiers in the middle of the night on Sunday 11 Mar 2012. 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. The team spent two days in the province, interviewing the bereaved families, tribal elders, survivors and collecting evidence at the site in Panjwai district. Hamidzai Lali, a probe delegation lawmaker, told Pajhwok Afghan News that their investigation showed there were 15 to 20 American soldiers who executed the brutal killings.


 

See: US Coverup. Probe Finds Not One - But up to 20 US Soldiers implicated in March 11 Panjwai massacre.
Editor's Comment
:
Staff Sergeant and member of a US Seal Team, Robert Bales now has a team of lawyers defending him in the U.S. after his methodical murder of 16 sleeping Afghan civilians, including 9 children and 3 women and wounded 5 others. Bales entered the homes of 3 Afghan homes at 3 a.m. on March 11 and began his rampage, riddling the bodies of his victims with bullets as they lay in their beds sleeping. He then put chemicals on some of the bodies and burned them. Haji Samad told AFP, "Eleven members of my family are dead. They are all dead."

Afghan police and residents gather around a van containing the bodies of some of the 9 children, 3 women and 4 civilian men murdered by Robert Bales in Afghanistan in the shooting. Photograph: I Sameem/EPA

In disbelief, two grief-stricken Afghan men look into the van where the body of a badly burned child lays, wrapped in a blue blanket (EPA)

The corporate media does its best to defend him too. Last week I watched CNN as they described him as a rogue soldier but conjectured about his mental condition and expressed more sympathy for Bales than his victims. CNN went on to say that Bales is not representative of the US military which they told their TV audience acts professionally and does a good job. One only has to review the last 10 bloody years of US soldiers killing civilian men, women and children in Afghanistan and Iraq to refute that lie. In this article, Dr. Stephen Xenakis a psychiatrist and retired brigadier general agrees:

“This is equivalent to what My Lai did to reveal all the problems with the conduct of the Vietnam War. The Army will want to say that soldiers who commit crimes are rogues, that they are individual, isolated cases. But they are not.”

Now the "Independent" tells us that he will meet with his team of lawyers for the first time and suggests that sympathy is in order because of Bale's financial, family and mental problems. What would be more in order if justice were truly served would be a team of US-paid, Taliban "lawyers" to prosecute Bales and those who trained and sent him there - at the site of his crime in Afghanistan. That may not be as far-fetched as one might think as we see the Taliban prosecuting the invader on its own terms, Karzai demanding that the US take its troops out of all rural areas and the US looking far too late for ways to save their face and ass on their way out.

- Les Blough, Editor


US soldier accused of Afghan massacre to meet
The Independent
by David Usborne

Robert Bales, the staff sergeant accused of massacring 16 Afghan civilians as they slept two Sundays ago, is set to meet his lawyers for the first time tonight, even as friends and relatives in US struggled to square what they thought they knew about him with the horror of the accusations levelled against him.

“It is too early to determine what factors may have played into this incident and the defence team looks forward to reviewing the evidence, examining all of Sergeant Bales’ medical and personnel records, and interviewing witnesses,” the defence lawyers said before meeting with their client, who is in solitary confinement at a military maximum security unit at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas.

The defence team, led by John Henry Browne, has pushed back against US military claims that Sergeant Bales, 38, had been drinking before the killings and that he had been under pressure from marital and financial difficulties at home. They have been depicting him as exhausted by four deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan and potentially suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD.

Among those who have followed bulletins about Sergeant Bales in disbelief is Michelle Caddell, 48, who knew him when he was growing up in Ohio. “I wanted to see, maybe, a different face,” she told the New York Times, “because that’s not our Bobby. Something horrible, horrible had to happen to him.”

Since the unveiling of his identity last Friday, a portrait has emerged of a man who was a popular school athlete in the Cincinnati suburbs, and whose adult life seems to have had its share of successes, military plaudits, setbacks and disappointments. Blemishes include a hit-and-run car accident attributed to drinking. There is also a misdemeanour charge on his record for assaulting a woman. He enlisted with weeks of 9/11.

Offering glimpses of his life in recent years has been a blog kept by his wife, Karilyn Bales, with whom he has two children. One of the last entries was made last March, when a hoped-for promotion for her husband which would have more pay and status did not come through. She wrote of her disappointment “after all of the work Bob has done and all the sacrifices he has made for his love of his country, family and friends”.

Formal charges against Sergeant Bales are likely to be announced in the coming week or so and military court martial is expected to follow, probably at Fort Lewis south of Tacoma, Washington, where he was based. Both prosecutors and the defence would also seek to fly in witnesses for the trial from Afghanistan. Though a death penalty if he is convicted of those charges is a possibility, experts say no soldier has been executed in the US since 1961.

The Bales case may come to symbolise a US military overstretched for most of the last ten years and under criticism for doing too little to screen soldiers for fitness, physical and mental, when they are deployed multiple times. After three tours in Iraq – tours that left him with two injuries - Sergeant Bales had begun training as a recruiter at Fort Lewis in hopes of avoiding further war zone service. However, he was assigned to a unit working treacherous forward duties in Afghanistan last year. He was loath to go.

“This is equivalent to what My Lai did to reveal all the problems with the conduct of the Vietnam War,” Dr. Stephen Xenakis a psychiatrist and retired brigadier general said. “The Army will want to say that soldiers who commit crimes are rogues, that they are individual, isolated cases. But they are not.”

Mr Browne denied his client was under financial pressure beyond anything that is commonplace for American families today. But records show that Sergeant Bales and his wife left one property near Tacoma after failing to keep up with payments and holding a bank debt of $195,000 that is now derelict and moving to another two-storey house that has now been put on the market for less than what they paid for it.

Source: The Independent

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