The first story was shaky from the start, that Sgt. Robert Bales "snuck" off
a combat outpost into hostile, landmined territory in the middle of the night,
walked north a little over a half mile to a village, engaged in bloody murder,
then walked back that half mile, past the base, and another mile south, killed
more people, then snuck back onto the base unnoticed, all within an hour.
Sharp-eyed bloggers did the math and recalled from other reports than Bales has
part of a foot missing from a wound in Iraq, making the feat
all the more remarkable.
Two weeks later the Pentagon's story changed:
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who is suspected in the shooting deaths
this month of 17 Afghans, sneaked off his remote outpost twice during his
alleged 90-minute rampage in two Afghan villages, two senior U.S. officials told
CNN on Monday.
The officials said that, after the March 11 shootings in one village in
Kandahar province, Bales sneaked back onto his base. They said Bales was seen at
that point by fellow troops.
One official said investigators believe Bales told other soldiers he had just
killed military-aged Afghan men. The officials said they did not know whether
those troops told anyone else.
Then Bales sneaked out again and headed to the second village; he was
apprehended by a search party as he attempted to re-enter the combat outpost the
second time, the officials said.
Before this account, an Afghan guard was believed to have been the sole
person who saw Bales that night. The guard alerted U.S. troops on
base.
The
UK Guardian noted around the same time:
Members of the Afghan delegation investigating the killings said one
Afghan guard working from midnight to 2am saw a US soldier return to the base
around 1.30am. Another Afghan soldier who replaced the first and worked until
4am said he saw a US soldier leaving the base at 2.30am. It's unknown whether
the Afghan guards saw the same US soldier. If the gunman acted alone,
information from the Afghan guards would suggest that he returned to base in
between the shooting sprees.
Never mind that this leaves open the
question of whether security at a "hot" outpost is routinely left, in this era
of attacks coming from inside the wire, to purely indigenous guard, while US
troops sleep. Ho Chi Minh would have dreamed of this situation.
Jefferson Morely of Salon.com was the first reliable American
outlet to report President Karzai's, and the members of an Afghan Parliament
investigative team's, insistence that there was more than one shooter:
A group of Afghan parliamentary investigators has concluded that
Bales was part of a group of 15-20 soldiers. As Outlook Afghanistan reported
Monday, “The team spent two days in the province, interviewing the bereaved
families, tribal elders, survivors and collecting evidences at the site in
Panjwai district.” One of the parliamentarians told Pajhwok Afghan News that
investigators believed 15 to 20 American soldiers carried out the
killings.
The
Gulf Times reported the Afghan investigative team's findings
immediately after the shootings,
as did other outlets of the regional press:
“After our investigations, we came to know that the killings were
not carried out by one single soldier. More than a dozen soldiers went, killed
the villagers and then burnt the bodies,” lawmaker Naheem Lalai Hameedzai
claimed.....
“All the villagers that we talked to said there were 15 to 20 men (who) had
conducted a night raid operation in several areas in the village,” said
Hameedzai.
Disputing this is the governor of the province and
the local police chief. The provincial governor who upholds the one gunman
scenario says:
"It is time for Afghanistan to calm down and not let the insurgents
take advantage of this case. They want foreign troops to leave such areas like
this so they can hold those areas. We should be aware of their intentions and
try to help the government, not the insurgents."
The governor does
not say where in "try to help the government" the truth figures in.
Rueters did report, without delving further, a witness account of multiple
shooters. An Afghan witness told Reuters on the scene:
""They (Americans) poured chemicals over their dead bodies and
burned them," Samad told Reuters at the scene.
Neighbors said they had awoken to crackling gunfire from American soldiers,
who they described as laughing and drunk.
"They were all drunk and shooting all over the place," said neighbor Agha
Lala, who visited one of the homes where killings took
place.""
Now the first western reporter to gain access to child
witnesses in the shooting, which she say the military tried to block, gives
accounts of many men with "flashlights" on the ends of their rifles and on their
helmets.
As carried by MSNBC:
""the children told Hakim [Yalda Hakim, a journalist for SBS
Dateline in Australia] that other Americans were present during the rampage,
holding flashlights in the yard.
Noorbinak, 8, told Hakim that the shooter first shot her father’s dog. Then,
Noorbinak said in the video, he shot her father in the foot and dragged her
mother by the hair. When her father started screaming, he shot her father, the
child says. Then he turned the gun on Noorbinak and shot her in the leg.
“One man entered the room and the others were standing in the yard, holding
lights,” Noorbinak said in the video.
A brother of one victim told Hakim that his brother’s children mentioned more
than one soldier wearing a headlamp. They also had lights at the end of their
guns, he said.
“They don’t know whether there were 15 or 20, however many there were,” he
said in the video.
Army officials have repeatedly denied that others were involved in the
massacre, emphasizing that Bales acted alone."
The interesting
thing here is that Afghan children don't have videogames. They don't have TV. In
most parts of the country they don't even have electricity. So night-raid
equipment like weapons lights are not likely to arise from their imaginations.

From
SureFire catalog "Weapon Lights",
Hakim told MSNBC that the reason American investigators gave for trying to
prevent her from interviewing the children was that her questions could
"traumatize them."
Stop the presses. In this war of nightly drone attacks on compounds known to
have children present, in which hundreds if not thousands of children have been
killed, and night raids on such compounds, the interviews might "traumatize"
them. I am rarely at a loss for words. This is one of those times.
Salon.com's Morley reports "an unnamed senior U.S. official told the New York
Times. “When it all comes out, it will be a combination of stress, alcohol and
domestic issues,” leaving aside the question of how the senior official already
knows how it will all "come out."
Morley writes:
"The passing admission that two other soldiers face disciplinary
action for drinking with Bales on the night of the massacre might cast doubt on
the notion that no one else knew what Bales was going to do. Army spokeswoman
Lt. Col Amy Hannah said in telephone interview that she could not confirm the
Times’ account. “I am not aware of any releases of information” about other
soldiers facing disciplinary action, Hannah said. If the U.S. official’s remarks
to the Times were accurate, then the Army is refraining from disclosing how many
soldiers are under investigation.
Then there is conflicting eyewitness testimony. In this CNN video, one man
describes the actions of a group in carrying out the killings. “They took him my
uncle out of the room and shot him,” he says. “They came to this room and
martyred all the children.” But one boy seen on the tape says there was only a
single gunman. Still other witnesses pointed out a place outside the home, where
they said they found footprints of more than one U.S. soldier.
Journalists seeking to clarify the question have been thwarted. In
Afghanistan, Pajhaowk Afghan News reports that Lewis Boone, the public affairs
director for coalition forces, declined to answer questions about the massacre,
saying that a joint Afghan-ISAF team was investigating the killings. As the
Seattle Times noted yesterday, the Army has been struggling “to regulate
information on the Afghanistan suspect.”
The laugh for the day
in Morley's report comes when Ryan Evans, who worked with ISAF in Afghanistan
and is now a research fellow at the Center for National Policy in Washington,
said he thought “a cover up is very unlikely.” Now why would anyone think that,
after Lt. Col. Daniel Davis just told us in a
major report on Afghanistan that:
"We seem significantly challenged to tell the truth in almost any
situation."
And in a fascinating
McClatchy report, Karzai's lead investigator seems to differ
with the president's conclusion of more than one shooter, but then contradicts
himself.
KABUL, Afghanistan — The chief Afghan investigator in last month's
slayings of 17 civilians says there's strong evidence that only one killer was
involved, a view that puts him at odds with Afghanistan's president, Hamid
Karzai.
....
Afghan army chief Gen. Sher Mohammad Karimi, whom Karzai sent to Kandahar to
investigate the massacre, told McClatchy that two survivors he interviewed
offered credible accounts that the killings were the act of a lone person.
"They told me the same thing," Karimi said. "They both said there was (only)
one individual who came to their house."
....
At a meeting at the presidential palace with relatives of the victims days
after the massacre, Karzai openly questioned the U.S. account of a lone gunman.
The president pointed to one relative and said: "In his family, in four rooms
people were killed — children and women were killed — and then they were all
brought together in one room and then set on fire. That, one man cannot do."
Karimi said he returned to Kabul to deliver his interim report but the
villagers had spoken to Karzai before he did.
"And everybody said (to the president), 'Sir, it was not one person. ... How
can one guy shoot people in four rooms, kill them, then lift them, bring them to
one room and set them on fire?'"
Underscoring how the incident has become a political football, Karimi himself
appeared to parrot Karzai's line in an interview with an Australian television
program broadcast last week, in which he said, "I'm guessing — assumption — that
(the killer was) helped by somebody. One person or two
persons."
Karimi does not help his objectivity when he tells
McClatchy: "I hope it is proved that it is one guy."
How hard is it to sneak off a base? The NY Times tells us:
A Green Beret who has spent time in Panjwai in the past year said
the combat outpost would have been relatively small, protected by dirt-filled
containers known as Hesco barriers, with guard towers and perhaps a blimp with a
high-powered camera capable of capturing images more than a mile away. It would
have been difficult, but not impossible, for Sergeant Bales to slip away at
night unnoticed, as the Army says he did.
Okay. Not impossible. But
now it's twice.
As if this brew needs anymore spice, Bales' attorney claims the government is withholding evidence:
UPDATE: The attorney representing the American soldier accused of
slaughtering 17 Afghan civilians accused the U.S. government on Friday of
withholding evidence that would be crucial to his defense.
Speaking to the Associated Press, lawyer John Henry Browne detailed what he
said were numerous examples of the government going out of their way to "hide
evidence," including denying his team acccess to video allegedly taken from a
surveillance blimp showing Staff Sgt. Robert Bales on the night of the
killings.
Perhaps most damning of all, one might ask, isn't this
a simple matter of interviewing the many wounded witnesses? After all, we know
beyond doubt that they saw what happened first hand. But Bales' attorney Brown
issued the
following statement at the end of March:
"We are facing an almost complete information blackout from the
government, which is having a devastating effect on our ability to investigate
the charges preferred against our client," the defense team statement said.
"When we tried to interview the injured civilians being treated at
Kandahar Hospital we were denied access and told to coordinate with the
prosecution team. The next day the prosecution team interviewed the civilian
injured. We found out shortly after the prosecution interviews of the injured
civilians that the civilians were all released from the hospital and there was
no contact information for them," the statement
said.
The attorney says the witnesses are now likely
scattered to parts unknown.
Finally the Global Post, a project of long-time Boston Globe journalist
Charles Sennott, turns in a report which seems to attempt to discount the valule
of Afghan witness testimony, but in the end relates shocking and vivid detail from a child
witness:
Baran’s brother was killed in the shooting spree, but he didn’t see
the shooting happen. Baran said he told Karzai what his sister-in-law, who was
at the scene, had told him.
When GlobalPost asked Baran to speak directly with his sister-in-law, he
initially refused.
“You don’t need to talk her,” Baran said. “I did, and I can tell you the
story.”
Eventually Baran relented, allowing GlobalPost to interview her by phone.
Massouma, who lives in the neighboring village of Najiban, where 12 people
were killed, said she heard helicopters fly overhead as a uniformed soldier
entered her home. She said he flashed a “big, white light,” and yelled,
“Taliban! Taliban! Taliban!”
Massouma said the soldier shouted “walkie-talkie, walkie-talkie.” The rules
of engagement in hostile areas in Afghanistan permit US soldiers to shoot
Afghans holding walkie-talkies because they could be Taliban spotters.
“He had a radio antenna on his shoulder. He had a walkie-talkie himself, and
he was speaking into it,” she said.
BBC says
villagers say they heard helicopters in the night, explained by
"correspondents" in the same report by the fact that helicopters are heard often
in that part of the country. However helicopters in support of an operation
would be distinctly closer and louder than those passing by at altitude.
Some villagers say that helicopters were flying overhead as the
killings took place. Many locals appear to believe that they were in fact
supporting the operation rather than trying to stop the gunman.
But correspondents say helicopters are frequently heard overhead in parts of
the country.
Bales' testimony and behavior seem an intriguing
mix of admissions to guilt and a haplessness over what he has been involved in.
Reuters:
"Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales initially asserted that he had shot
several Afghan men outside a U.S. combat outpost in southern Afghanistan on
March 11 and did not mention that a dozen women and children were among the
dead, according to a senior U.S. official briefed on the case.
"He indicated to his buddies that he had taken out some military-aged males,"
the senior official said. Soldiers normally use that term to denote
insurgents.
But Bales' story soon broke down when commanders on the base learned details
of the pre-dawn shooting spree in which 16 Afghan civilians were killed in their
homes. At that point, the 38-year-old Army veteran was taken into custody. He
refused to talk further and soon asked for a lawyer, two officials
said."
Bales' wife has stood steadfastly by her husband, saying
that whatever he had done, he loved children and could never harm them.
Datline SBC interviews with child witnesses
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=v6BnRc11aug