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Photos emerge of US soldiers posing with maimed bodies of dead Afghan insur

Devil Soul

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Photos emerge of US soldiers posing with maimed bodies of dead Afghan insurgents
By Reuters
Published: April 18, 2012
366456-AfghaninsurgentUSsoldiermaimedbodypartsphotolatimes-1334763358-328-640x480.jpg

This screenshot of the LA Times website shows the story and part of a photograph where US soldiers posed with body parts of maimed dead Afghan insurgents. PHOTO: LA TIME SCREENSHOT

KABUL: Already tense US and NATO ties with Afghanistan were dealt another blow on Wednesday with photographs appearing in an American newspaper of US soldiers posing with the maimed bodies of dead Afghan insurgents.
Senior US officials and NATO’s top commander in the country, US General John Allen, moved quickly to condemn the pictures even before they were published by the Los Angeles Times, which received the photos from another soldier.
“The actions of the individuals photographed do not represent the policies of International Security Assistance Force or the US Army,” Allen said in a statement, adding an investigation into the incident was underway.
The appearance on the LA Times website of some of the 18 pictures, taken in 2010, comes at a sensitive time in US-Afghan relations, following release of a video in January that showed four US Marines urinating on Afghan insurgent corpses.
The inadvertent burning of copies of the Quran at a major NATO airbase also triggered a week of riots that left 30 dead and led to the deaths of six Americans.
And in March a US Army sergeant went on a nighttime shooting rampage in two southern Afghan villages, killing 17 civilians and prompting Afghan President Hamid Karzai to demand foreign soldiers confine themselves to major bases.
Taliban insurgents launched suicide attacks in Kabul and three other provinces at the weekend, claiming the assault was launched in retaliation for all three incidents.
In one of the pictures a paratrooper posed next to an unofficial patch placed beside a body that read “Zombie Hunter”, while in another soldiers posed with Afghan police holding the severed legs of an insurgent bombers.
Two soldiers in another frame held a dead insurgent’s hand with the middle finger raised.
The LA Times said the 82nd Airborne Division soldiers had been at a police station in Afghanistan’s Zabol province in February 2010, and revisited several months later. The pictures were taken on both occasions.
US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a statement released by departmental spokesman George Little that publication of the pictures could prompt further attacks against security forces ahead.
“The danger is that this material could be used by the enemy to incite violence against US and Afghan service members in Afghanistan,” Panetta said. “US forces in the country are taking security measures to guard against it.”
The US Ambassador in Afghanistan Ryan Crocker also condemned the photographs, calling the actions of the soldiers “morally repugnant” and saying they “dishonor the sacrifices of hundreds of thousands of US soldiers and civilians who have served with distinction in Afghanistan”.
The Times defended the distribution of the photos, which US military officials asked the Times not to publish.
“After careful consideration, we decided that publishing a small but representative selection of the photos would fulfill our obligation to readers to report vigorously and impartially on all aspects of the American mission in Afghanistan,” Times Editor Davan Maharaj said in the newspaper’s article.
The photos are likely to stir up more anti-Western sentiment in Afghanistan as NATO combat troops look to exit the country in 2014 and strengthen fragile security in the country.
Such incidents have complicated US efforts to negotiate a strategic partnership agreement to define its presence once most foreign combat troops pull out by the end of 2014.
 
Its shows moral values of american and nato soldier and showed their education level, humanity and discipline. Mind u this is not first such incident. Thousands happend like this before few have come up to media in iraq and aghanistan
Enemy is enemy but its act shows who is who
 
“The actions of the individuals photographed do not represent the policies of International Security Assistance Force or the US Army,”

These individuals seems to be majority in your terror squads :angry:
 
Centcom

Now look at what your scumy soldiers are up to. This is another act of gross negligence. God do you realize why you are so hated. You were quick to respond to Razpaks post on the other thread - lets see you justify your presence in Afghanistan. BTW dont use the old "its an isolated incident" - happens every other day Come on Centcom put a post up - just to show us how out of touch you are with reality....
 
Some of these American soldiers have psychological problems.
It's unforgivable...no doubt about this recent scandal, but all of us sitting here behind our computers, none of us have any experience out on the battlefield, fightning for survival and being in the midst of war. Except for some of the users on this PDF.

It takes its toll on alot of these young guys, I was disgusted at first, I still am, but there is no reason to shout hateful slogans at America.
These soldiers need help and guidance, I mean sh-t..who knows what some of us would have done, had we been in the same position.

I don't think there is such thing as a "morally correct" army, mistakes are bound to happen.

Nonetheless, this is very bad PR for the U.S. and doesn't do their image building any good with the Afghans. :coffee:
 
By these kinds of actions US only makes its stay much harder and brutal in Afghanistan for its own troops and even other allied soldiers have to pay for there activities. Most recent example was the French soldiers paying US forces debt
 
US soldiers individually represent American, everyone is now getting used with their crimes.
 
Terrible, the only positive thing out of the news, that it was taliban bombers body at least.
 
This is what I wrote to the NY Times Comments section about the story.

A different war, a different 'superpower' but the same country. Watch 'The Beast' (aka 'The Beast of War', I think) from the 80's. The ending (not going to spoil it too much), to paraphrase: "I tried, sir, but it is hard to be a good soldier in a rotten war.' That was said by a Soviet soldier to his commanding officer.
 

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