A US sergeant on deployment in Afghanistan went on a civilian killing spree in a remote village in southern Afghanistan over the weekend, murdering 16 people — including nine children.
Of that 16, 11 bodies were gathered into a pile and set on fire by the man, including four girls who were under six years old. Five others were injured.
Apparently acting alone, the sergeant walked the few kilometres from his base to a village in the Panjwai district and then to nearby houses, where he broke into three homes and shot their occupants. The man was part of a village stabilisation operation, and previously served three military tours of Iraq. He arrived in Afghanistan last December and is married with two children, and allegedly recently suffered a nervous breakdown.
The attacks have further heightened tensions between US and Afghanistan officials, already strained after a decade of war.
“The devastating, unexplained attack deepened the sense of siege for Western personnel in this country, as denunciations brought a moment of unity to three major Afghan factions: civilians, insurgents and government officials,” say Taimoor Shah and Graham Bowley in The New York Times.
Afghanistan correspondents Sami Yousafzai and Ron Moreau reported in The Daily Beast on how locals reacted:
“Today, a group of village women gathered to weep at one home where four family members were gunned down. Outside, there were several quiet processions of grieving villagers and remembrances for the victims. Tribal and village leaders urged calm, and people in Panjwai largely heeded the call.”
After ten years of war, Afghans are accustomed to civilian killings and don’t react as violently as they recently did to news of the Koran being destroyed by US soldiers, Joshua Foust from the American Security Project think tank told the Global Post:
“‘Afghans protest when something is shocking and surprising,’ said Joshua Foust … ‘But this is something that they are used to and expect. They consider all civilian deaths criminal. This is just more of the same.’
It may seem counter-intuitive that Afghans will take to the streets, kill or injure themselves and damage their own property, to protest an insult to their religion, but maintain relative calm when their loved ones are killed.”
Al Jazeera interviewed a number of Afghan locals — including a cab driver, a former army colonel and a shopkeeper — for their take on the murders.
Battlefield stress could have triggered the sergeant’s killings, an unnamed army psychiatrist tells Time’s Mark Thompson.
“‘There’s a lot of death,’ says the Army psychiatrist, ‘and all the Americans there are under a lot of stress. The whole region — it’s the birthplace of the Taliban — is a very dangerous area,’ he adds. ‘If the soldier was going out on patrol, he probably was attacked pretty much every day. If he stayed on the FOB [Forward Operating Base], he was probably being shelled regularly.’ … Almost by definition, the Army doctor says, any American who left the confines of his post in the region in the middle of the night by himself was ‘crazy’.”
This event may just make the Taliban more powerful. Amin Saikal, director of the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at the Australian National University and the author of Modern Afghanistan, explains why in The Age:
“As the anti-US and anti-Karzai government feelings escalate, the more they will play into the hands of the Taliban and their supporters, most importantly Pakistan’s notorious military intelligence, ISI, to drive a hard bargain. The Taliban and ISI have never found the situation more conducive to their belief that the final victory is ultimately theirs. All they now need to do is await the substantial drawdown of foreign troops and further ineffectiveness and humiliation of the Karzai government. As one Taliban commander joked: ‘We have the time and the Americans have the watch.'”
Withdrawal of US troops by the end of 2014 remains the US’ Afghanistan strategy, but the timetable for withdrawal of US and allied troops will “certainly be a subject of discussion among heads of state at the NATO meeting in Chicago in May,” said White House spokesman Jay Carney.
The political implications aren’t just international. It could impact Barack Obama’s re-election campaign, since “… rising tensions could make Afghanistan a reelection liability by upending what until now has been more or less a pass for Obama,” says Howard LaFranchi in Christian Science Monitor. “While a majority of Americans have for the past couple of years said the 11-year-old war is not worth the price the country is paying, many Americans have also recently said the president is doing a ‘good or fair’ job of managing the war.”
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reacted to the news with revulsion: “This is terrible, awful –I can’t even imagine the impact on the families who were subject to this attack and the loss of children in this terrible incident,” said Clinton. “This is not who we are, and the United States is committed to seeing those responsible held accountable.”
The Afghanistan parliament called for a public trial in Afghanistan courts of the US sergeant, but the US government says it will trial him in a military court back home.
The news was greeted with horror by newspaper front pages from around the US:
Brave Orstralian soldiers, trusted allies, stay the course, blah blah blah.
After her unusually willing Howitzer assault on One K Rudd, you couldn’t rule out Gillard holding a khaki election next year. Remember, she whipped on the fatigues and flew to Afghanistan approximately 30 seconds after taking over as PM…
There is the same stink around this episode as there was of the Lt Calley and his brave men act of the My Lai massacre during the Vietnam War. Again the same excuses and revulsion being trotted out by the today’s incumbants of the same positions – nothing changes. Yes (as always promised in situations like this) there will be an enquiry which – given past form – will sink into oblivion over time; and yes the perpretrator will trot out stress and other mental excuses as to why he did the killings; and finally because of some those excuses he will probably be detained under house arrest at home in the US; and finally quietly let out. Sound familiar – this is what happened to Lt Calley incident – nothing changes. One can only hope that episode this is a good recruitment call by the coalition for killing Afghans for more Afghans to join Taliban, and drive out the “terrorist” coalition for killing Afghans and their appointed lackeys out of Afghanistan just like the North Vietnamese did before them. How history repeats itself! One does wonder however; if something similar happened to Australians again perpertrated by a stressed US soldier stationed in Darwin?
“The man was part of a village stabilisation operation, and previously served three military tours of Iraq. He arrived in Afghanistan last December and is married with two children, and *** allegedly recently suffered a nervous breakdown.***”
So WTF was he doing on the front line? Is the US Army that desperate for troops in Afghanistan? (Quite likely…) At the very least he should have been under close supervision.
“All they now need to do is await the substantial drawdown of foreign troops and further ineffectiveness and humiliation of the Karzai government. As one Taliban commander joked: ‘We have the time and the Americans have the watch.’”
Welcome to the reality of guerrilla warfare. All the guerrilla movement has to do is survive, make occasional hit and run attacks, and wait for the invader to get sick of continuing losses and not making any progress and go home. Qv Vietnam and Iraq for starters… Why the Americans of all people can’t get this into their thick heads is beyond me – the American War of Independence is a textbook example.
“The Afghanistan parliament called for a public trial in Afghanistan courts of the US sergeant, but the US government says it will trial him in a military court back home.”
So WTF are we trying to build, if this crime can’t be tried by the government of the country we’re supposed to be supporting?
“The news was greeted with horror by newspaper front pages from around the US…”
What’s so unusual about an American nutter going on a killing rampage with a gun? Just this one happened in Afghanistan.
“What are we fighting for
Don’t ask me I don’t give a damn
Next stop is (Afghanistan)”…
(With apologies to Country Joe and the Fish).
Not one soldier spent any real time in jail over the massacre of women and kids in Haditha, this man will be treated better than Bradley Manning and Julian Assange while the families will be paid off with blood money.
Killing civilians in their sleep – the latest act of one brave American soldier. The only brave ones in this entire conflict are Afghan civilians. They cop it and get killed by (1) the coalition for killing Afghans; (2) contrators to the coalition (nee well paid security mercenaries); (3) Taliban; (4)Afghan government forces; (5) warlords and any other main chancers that see profit in killing civilians i.e. those in a safe place well away from it all, playing computer games that effect drone attacks. May ISAF suffer many more casualties and get the message to F*ck-off and leave Afghanistan.