Panetta: Death penalty possible in Afghan massacre
 
 
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20 June 2013 Thursday
 
 
 
 
 
 

Panetta: Death penalty possible in Afghan massacre

Secretary of Defense Panetta fields questions from the media on a flight to Kyrgystan regarding the American soldier who is accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians, most of them children on Sunday in southern Kandahar province. (Photo: AP)
13 March 2012 /REUTERS
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said on Monday that the death penalty could be sought over the massacre of 16 villagers in Afghanistan, which U.S. officials said they believe was the work of a rogue American soldier.

The shooting spree in the southern province of Kandahar, which killed mostly women and children, has triggered angry calls from Afghans for an immediate American exit from the country, as Washington tries to negotiate a long-term presence to keep it from sliding into chaos again.

Panetta, however, attempted to portray the shooting as an isolated event that would not alter plans for a gradual, orderly withdrawal of American combat forces by the end of 2014.

"War is hell. These kinds of events and incidents are going to take place, they've taken place in any war. They're terrible events. And this is not the first of those events, and it probably won't be the last," the defense secretary told reporters on a flight to Kyrgyzstan.

"But we cannot allow these events to undermine our strategy or the mission that we're involved in."

Panetta, answering questions for the first time about the shooting rampage, said U.S. officials were still uncertain about the motives behind it.

He said the goal was to try the case within the U.S. military justice system. Asked whether the death penalty could be considered in this case, Panetta replied: "My understanding is that in these instances that could be a consideration."

Panetta said of the soldier, whose name has not been made public: "He went out in the early morning and went to these homes and fired on these families. And then at some point after that, came back to the forward operating base and basically turned himself in, told individuals what had happened." These  were the preliminary findings of the investigation, he said.

Asked whether the soldier in fact confessed, Panetta said: "I suspect that that was the case."

While U.S. officials rushed to draw a line between the rogue shooting and the ongoing efforts of a U.S. force of around 90,000, the incident has infuriated Afghans already suspicious of a Western military presence now over a decade old.

Last month, the burning of copies of the Koran on a NATO military base triggered violent protests across the country and a spate of insider attacks against Western soldiers.

The string of incidents, which also included release of a video of Marines urinating on the corpses of Taliban fighters, appear to have raised questions about the U.S. strategy of training Afghan security forces to take over as NATO troops depart.

But Panetta said, "I think when you look at that larger picture, it does make clear that these kinds of events are isolated and don't represent what's really happening in Afghanistan."

 
COMMENTS
If the ISAF forces leave Afghanistan, it will be a horrible cocktail of taliban rule and a complete chaos similar to Somalia. The Afghans are going to suffer enormously, and the very worst it will be for the women.
Sad truth
These people have been taking care of their own problems for far longer than American History has been established, They (the Americans) should start taking care of their own society
Jeffrey Lee
Halis, executing this hillbilly ****** who murdered these people would be justice. Maybe it would infuriate Americans and cause a civil war in the US.
GeneralSherman
Sad truth, enough of your nonsense. There are hundreds of thousands of Afghans, possibly over a million, who would still be alive if not for the stupidity of the US. What "good" has the US brought to Afghanistan? It's in a worse state than when the US entered it.
GeneralSherman
I don't think the US can do that, unless they don't mind the country plummets into chaos and something a kind to civil war, just like in Somalia.
Halis
If the Afghan government requests US troops to leave, I think they should do so. It would be horrible for the Afghan people, but to stay in Afghanistan against their explicit request, will make the Americans situation unbearable. You can do 1000 good things, but if 1 thing go wrong, you get the enti...
Sad truth
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