We may never know what drove
a U.S. Army staff sergeant to head out into the Afghan night and allegedly
murder at least 16 civilians in their homes, among them nine children and three
women. The massacre near Belambai, in Kandahar , Afghanistan , has shocked the world and
intensified the calls for an end to the longest war in U.S. history.
The attack has been called tragic, which it surely is. But when Afghans attack U.S. forces,
they are called “terrorists.” That is, perhaps, the inconsistency at the core
of U.S.
policy, that democracy can be delivered through the barrel of a gun, that
terrorism can be fought by terrorizing a nation.
“I did it,” the alleged mass
murderer said as he returned to the forward operating base outside Kandahar , that southern
city called the “heartland of the Taliban.” He is said to have left the base at
3 a.m. and walked to three nearby homes, methodically killing those inside. One
farmer, Abdul Samad, was away at the time. His wife, four sons, and four
daughters were killed. Some of the victims had been stabbed, some set on fire.
Samad told The New York Times, “Our government told us to come back to the
village, and then they let the Americans kill us.”
In response, Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta rolled out a string of cliches, reminding us that “war
is hell.” Panetta visited Camp Leatherneck in Helmand province, near Kandahar , this week on a
previously scheduled trip that coincidentally fell days after the massacre. The
200 Marines invited to hear him speak were forced to leave their weapons
outside the tent. NBC News reported that such instructions were “highly
unusual,” as Marines are said to always have weapons on hand in a war zone.
Earlier, upon his arrival, a stolen truck raced across the landing strip toward
his plane, and the driver leapt out of the cab, on fire, in an apparent attack.
The violence doesn’t just
happen in the war zone. Back in the U.S. , the wounds of war are
manifesting in increasingly cruel ways.
The 38-year-old staff
sergeant who allegedly committed the massacre was from Joint Base Lewis-McChord
(JBLM), a sprawling military facility near Tacoma , Wash. ,
that has been described by Stars and Stripes newspaper as “the most troubled
base in the military” and, more recently, as “on the brink.” 2011 marked a
record for soldier suicides there. The base also was the home for the “kill
team.”
The Seattle Times reported
earlier this month that 285 patients at JBLM’s Madigan Army Medical Center had
their post-traumatic stress disorder diagnoses inexplicably reversed by a
forensic psychiatric screening team. The reversals are now under investigation
due to concerns they were partly motivated by a desire to avoid paying those
who qualify for medical benefits.
Kevin Baker was also a staff
sergeant in the U.S. Army, stationed at Fort Lewis .
After two deployments to Iraq ,
he refused a third after being denied a PTSD diagnosis. He began organizing to
bring the troops home. He told me: “If a soldier is wounded on a battlefield in
combat, and they’re bleeding to death, and an officer orders that person to not
receive medical attention, costing that servicemember their life, that officer
would be found guilty of dereliction of duty and possibly murder. But when that
happens in the U.S., when that happens for soldiers that are going to seek
help, and officers are ordering not a clear diagnosis for PTSD and essentially
denying them that metaphoric tourniquet, real psychological help, and the
soldier ends up suffering internally to the point of taking their own life or
somebody else’s life, then these officers and this military and the Pentagon
has to be held responsible for these atrocities.”
While too late to save Abdul
Samad’s family, Baker’s group, March Forward!—along with Iraq Veterans Against
the War’s “Operation Recovery,” which seeks to ban the deployment of troops
already suffering from PTSD—may well help end the disastrous, terrorizing
occupation of Afghanistan.
Read more on PTSD in our soldiers HERE
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