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An Army Special Forces A-Team may have been responsible, or at least complicit, in the torture, deaths and disappearances of 18 Afghan civilians in volatile Wardak province in late 2012 and early 2013, according to a report by Rolling Stone magazine. Under the headline “The A-Team Killings,” the article included interviews with witnesses, families of the victims and an Afghan interpreter for the Americans that added detail to the long-standing allegations threatening the continued U.S. presence in Afghanistan. As part of a five-month investigation of the Wardak incidents, Rolling Stone reporter Matthieu Aikins interviewed Zikria Kandahari, the interpreter, who has been jailed by the Afghans for his alleged involvement. Kandahari claimed that he was being framed by the Americans from Operational Detachment Alpha 3124, based in Fort Bragg, N.C., which operated in the Nerkh district of Wardak province.
Is it because stories of Taliban excesses don't sell magazines / newspapers or is it simply because there is a disproportionate number of self-haters in MSM - or is there another more subtle agenda being played out here?
In an interview[2] for The Sunday Telegraph, he told Defence Correspondent Sean Rayment:
The Americans had this catch-all approach to lifting suspects. The tactics were draconian and completely ineffective. The Americans were doing things like chucking farmers into Abu Ghraib or handing them over to the Iraqi authorities, knowing full well they were going to be tortured.
The Americans had a well-deserved reputation for being trigger happy. In the three months that I was in Iraq, the soldiers I served with never shot anybody. When you asked the Americans why they killed people, they would say 'we were up against the tough foreign fighters'. I didn't see any foreign fighters in the time I was over there.
I can remember coming in off one operation which took place outside Baghdad, where we had detained some civilians who were clearly not insurgents, they were innocent people. I couldn't understand why we had done this, so I said to my troop commander 'would we have behaved in the same way in the Balkans or Northern Ireland?' He shrugged his shoulders and said 'this is Iraq', and I thought 'and that makes it all right?'
As far as I was concerned that meant that because these people were a different colour or a different religion, they didn't count as much. You cannot invade a country pretending to promote democracy and behave like that.
As far as the Americans were concerned, the Iraqi people were sub-human, untermenschen. You could almost split the Americans into two groups: ones who were complete crusaders, intent on killing Iraqis, and the others who were in Iraq because the Army was going to pay their college fees. They had no understanding or interest in the Arab culture. The Americans would talk to the Iraqis as if they were stupid and these weren't isolated cases, this was from the top down. There might be one or two enlightened officers who understood the situation a bit better, but on the whole that was their general attitude. Their attitude fuelled the insurgency. I think the Iraqis detested them.
He is quoted in an article in The Scotsman as saying:
"I saw a lot of things in Baghdad that were illegal or just wrong. I knew, so others must have known, that this was not the way to conduct operations if you wanted to win the hearts and minds of the local population. . . and if you can't win the hearts and minds of the people, you can't win the war."[4]
tsingtao
it says ALLEGED!!!!
means no proof.
geeze!edit on 30391811730am2013 by tsingtao because: (no reason given)
budski
tsingtao
it says ALLEGED!!!!
means no proof.
geeze!edit on 30391811730am2013 by tsingtao because: (no reason given)
Alleged means nothing of the sort.
It's just a catchall phrase used by the media and lawyers for a variety of reasons.
It means it hasn't been proved in a court of law is all, which is completely different from "means no proof".
budski
tsingtao
it says ALLEGED!!!!
means no proof.
geeze!edit on 30391811730am2013 by tsingtao because: (no reason given)
Alleged means nothing of the sort.
It's just a catchall phrase used by the media and lawyers for a variety of reasons.
It means it hasn't been proved in a court of law is all, which is completely different from "means no proof".
Logarock
budski
tsingtao
it says ALLEGED!!!!
means no proof.
geeze!edit on 30391811730am2013 by tsingtao because: (no reason given)
Alleged means nothing of the sort.
It's just a catchall phrase used by the media and lawyers for a variety of reasons.
It means it hasn't been proved in a court of law is all, which is completely different from "means no proof".
Its becoming and has been another word for protecting sloppy journalism or flat out propaganda.
Logarock
reply to post by budski
One of the problems, maybe the primary problem, that reporting war crimes has fallen under is many believe anti-Americanism/whoever to be the driving force behind the reports. That there is hardly a war crime report that is not the product of some agenda. Its clear that war crime is often used as a prop to smear the entire effort.
But yes war crimes do occur.
In fact what does sell in the case of Nazi Germany for example is the depth of the horror and not any revelations about violations of stated high ground.
spooky24
The Army admitted nothing. They told their readers at military.com that a Rolling Stone reporter is asking questions about the incident. The Army will not answer or respond to the questions. Case Closed