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Τετάρτη 29 Σεπτεμβρίου 2010

'Death Squad' Killings: Soldier Blames Leader



'Death Squad' Killings: Soldier Blames Leader


A US soldier accused of being part of a "death squad" which randomly killed Afghan civilians for sport has appeared in court as videotape emerged of him blaming his superior for the atrocities.
The men are said to have shot their victims and then tried to cover their tracks by making it look like an attack was imminent.
Corporal Jeremy Morlock, 22, is among five members of the 5th Stryker Brigade who are charged with premeditated murder and conspiracy.
If found guilty of all the charges against him, he could face the death penalty.
Prosecutors also allege that members of the platoon mutilated Afghan corpses and even collected fingers and other body parts, and that some posed for photos with bodies.
Corporal Jeremy Morlock accused of being part of US 'death squad' in Afghanistan
Morlock's lawyers say his statements were made under the influence of drugs
As the case began at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Washington, a video of Morlock being interviewed by investigators was shown on US television.
In it he blamed his squad leader, Sergeant Calvin Gibbs, for the killings.
The other three suspected of involvement in the "death squad' are Specialist Adam Winfield, Specialist Michael Wagnon II and Private Andrew Holmes.
Morlock claimed Gibbs - the highest ranking soldier accused - planned "scenarios" during which they could kill civilians.

For example, Morlock said, if they came across someone in a village that had previously been flagged as having Taliban influence, they could throw a grenade at the civilian and claim they had been responding to a threat.
Morlock said: "He (Gibbs) just really doesn’t have any problems with ....killing these people. And so we identify a guy, Gibbs makes a comment, like, you know, you guys wanna wax this guy or what?
"He pulled out one of his grenades, an American grenade, you know, popped it, throws it, tells me where to go to whack this guy, kill this guy, kill this guy."
He claimed Gibbs carried a Russian grenade to leave next to the body to make it look like the soldiers were under attack.
He added: "Gibbs had pure hatred for all Afghanis and constantly referred to them as savages.
"Sometime after Christmas 2009, Gibbs gave me a (fragmentation) grenade and told me that if the situation presented itself that we should go ahead and run with the grenade scenario that he had briefed to us."
Afghan villagers
The soldiers are accused of killing Afghan civilians
A few weeks later, in January, the first of the killings was carried out, followed by one in February and one in early May. All were in Kandahar province.
In two of the slayings, grenades were thrown at the victims and they were shot, it is claimed. The third victim also was shot.
Morlock's lawyers are trying to suppress the statements, saying they were made when he was under the influence of prescription drugs, including muscle relaxants, sleeping pills and anti-nausea medicine for concussions.
At the time of his questioning in May, Morlock was being evacuated from Afghanistan for apparent traumatic brain injury.
"This lad was all juiced up and it was by Army doctors," said attorney Geoffrey Nathan.
Specialist Adam Winfield, Specialist Michael Wagnon, and Private 1st Class Andrew Holmes
(L-R) Winfield, Wagnon and Holmes are all accused
But Army Special Agent Anderson D Wagner testified that Morlock was articulate during the interviews and that his account was corroborated by others in the unit.
The hearing will determine whether the case proceeds to a court martial. More hearings are expected in the new few weeks for the other defendants.
Meanwhile, three Australian soldiers will face charges including manslaughter over a raid in Afghanistan that left five children dead, Australia's chief military prosecutor have said.
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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — It was difficult enough for the people of western Kandahar Province. They are beleaguered both by theTaliban, who control the roads, demand taxes and execute anyone suspected of disloyalty, and by the American military, who often show little regard for people and whose demands that locals stand up to the insurgents seem unreasonable.
Still, there was no reason to anticipate something far worse: American soldiers suspected of being a sadistic rogue band led by Sgt. Calvin Gibbs.
For Mullah Allah Dad, a poppy farmer and the mullah of a hamlet of just 15 homes in Kandahar Province, the end came quickly. He was sipping tea when he heard screams, and several of his children ran in. American soldiers in tanks were coming, they told him. Moments later, two young soldiers came in and grabbed him, his wife, Mora, said.
In a minute I heard shooting,” she said. “I saw my husband face down, and a black American stood next to him. Another soldier pushed me away. They pushed me back into the house and the interpreter made me go inside one of the rooms.
“Minutes after that I heard an explosion,” she said. “I rushed out of that inner room and out the gate and the translator was telling me to stop, but I did not pay any attention, and then I saw my husband, my husband was burning.”According to court papers filed by the military, Mullah Allah Dad, 45, of the Kalagi hamlet, was the third victim of soldiers who killed Afghan civilians for no apparent reason.
Five of the platoon soldiers have been charged in at least three murders, one of them Mullah Allah Dad’s, and seven other soldiers have been charged with crimes including assault, the use of hashish and attempts to impede the investigation.
The New York Times sent an emissary to Maiwand, the western district of Kandahar where the killings took place, to find the families of the three who were killed. Mullah Allah Dad’s family was afraid to come to the provincial capital to meet with a Times reporter because they feared that coalition troops might again attack them or that the Taliban would stop them. They agreed to come only as far as a nearby village that had cellphone coverage, and they were interviewed by phone.Mrs. Dad described how the soldiers searched the family’s house, apparently trying to justify the killing. “They tore and broke everything,” she said. “But they did not find a single bullet in my home.”
Later, Mrs. Dad’s father, Abdullah Jan, and two tribal elders listened in disbelief to an Afghan intelligence agent at the district governor’s office as he related his conversation with American soldiers when they handed over Mullah Allah Dad’s body.“He told me that the Americans claimed that Allah Dad had a grenade and was going to attack them, and then the grenade went off and he was killed,” said Mr. Jan. “I tried to explain his background, that he was a mullah in his village mosque, he had no link with the Taliban and he didn’t want one.“They put the grenade under his body,” he said.An hour later, Mr. Jan said, he picked up his son-in-law’s body and was shocked to find that it was wrapped in a black plastic bag. “It was treated like garbage,” he said.Just a mile or two from Kalagi, near the village of Karez, another man died in almost the same way.Gulbaddin, 37, was moving into his new home on a chilly January day when American soldiers came in several armored vehicles to the village, said Haji Abdul Qayoum, a neighbor and tribal elder there. “His son was crying, but the soldiers did not care,” he said. “He was shot right before his home and with his son there.”Mr. Qayoum, at the request of The New York Times, went to ask Gulbaddin’s father if he would discuss his son’s death. His response was the cry of every father who has lost his child.
“Don’t talk about my son,” said Gulbaddin’s father. “My mind is not ready even to hear his name. Even you mentioning his name makes me angry and puts my heart in pain. Please, please don’t hurt my heart.”
Local elders estimate that in the past eight months at least 42 civilians have been killed in Maiwand during American operations. The Taliban have also killed civilians in the district, but it is the 42 whose deaths are etched in local memory.“I am from the area, and my family has been living here for centuries,” said Haji Hayatullah, an elder from Maiwand District. “I know the people who are supporting the Taliban and the people who are not. But the Americans have killed many people who did not support the Taliban, which is painful for us and actually creates hatred toward Americans. And that is why there is little or no help to the Americans from the civilians here.”“For us, death is inevitable, but not in the way they have been killing.”The family of Mullah Allah Dad has received no apology and no compensation for his death, his father-in-law said.A spokeswoman for the Army, Maj. Kathleen Turner, said she could not answer any questions about the case because of the continuing investigation.
Taimoor Shah reported from Kandahar, and Alissa J. Rubin from Kabul, Afghanistan

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