The "Good" War
It is certainly unpatriotic to suggest that our "exceptional" Nation would condone and encourage the sexual abuse of children by our noble partners in the struggle against Terrorist Extremism just as it would be to imply that we would deliberately bomb Hospitals, First Responders, and Civilians or support a systematic campaign by our upstanding and virtuous allies to do so.
I would never do something like that.
Navy analysis found that a Marine’s case would draw attention to Afghan ‘sex slaves’
By Dan Lamothe, Washington Post
September 1, 2016
Last fall, the Navy Department had a controversial disciplinary case before it: Maj. Jason C. Brezler had been asked by Marine colleagues to submit all the information he had about an influential Afghan police chief suspected of abusing children. Brezler sent a classified document in response over an unclassified Yahoo email server, and he self-reported the mistake soon after. But the Marine Corps recommended that he be discharged for mishandling classified material.
The Navy Department, which oversees the Marine Corps, had the ability to uphold or overturn the decision. However, rather than just looking at the merits of the case, Navy officials also assessed that holding new hearings on the case would renew attention on the scandal surrounding child sex abuse in Afghanistan, according to military documents newly disclosed in federal court.
The documents, filed Tuesday in a lawsuit by Brezler against the Navy Department and Marine Corps, also show that Marine and Navy officials in Afghanistan were aware in 2012 of allegations of abuse against children by the Afghan police chief but that the chief was allowed to keep his position in Helmand province anyway. This became a major issue after a teenage boy who worked for the chief — and allegedly was abused by him — opened fire on a U.S. base Aug. 10, 2012, killing three Marines and badly wounding a fourth.
The five-page legal review, written last October by Lt. Cmdr. Nicholas Kassotis for Vice Adm. James W. Crawford III, the judge advocate general of the Navy, recommended that the Marine Corps’ actions against Brezler be upheld. Calling for a new administrative review, known as a Board of Inquiry, would delay actions in the case another six to nine months and possibly increase attention on the case, “especially in the aftermath of significant media attention to the allegations regarding the practice of keeping personal sex slaves in Afghanistan,” Kassotis wrote. A month later in November, acting assistant Navy secretary Scott Lutterloh upheld the Marine Corps’ decision.
...
Brezler’s attorney, Michael J. Bowe, said Wednesday in an email that his client is entitled to a “real review” of his case — “not a whitewash designed to avoid uncomfortable press stories about child rape by our ‘partners’ in Afghanistan.“Our service members deserve better,” he added.
A spokesman for Hunter, Joe Kasper, said that the Navy Department is “right to be worried about granting Brezler a new, impartial review of his case” because it “can’t sustain a case based on the facts and the moral imperative” that prompted Brezler to send the warning to other Marines that landed him in legal trouble.
...
Acting Defense Undersecretary Brian P. McKeon, said in a letter to Hunter last month that Gen. John “Mick” Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, reaffirmed in May “tactical guidance” for U.S. troops that directs them to report potential instances of sex abuse to their commanders.“General Nicholson also issued a specific human rights policy directing further education of U.S. and coalition military personnel on their responsibilities to report human rights violations,” McKeon wrote.
The Marines killed by the police chief’s servant were Staff Sgt. Scott Dickinson, Cpl. Richard Rivera Jr. and Lance Cpl. Gregory Buckley. A fourth Marine suffered five gunshot wounds but survived. The teenager who killed them has been identified by the Marine Corps as Ainuddin Khudairaham. He is said to have bragged about the attack afterward, boasting “I just did jihad.”
A 300-page, declassified copy of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) probe of Brezler’s case filed this week as part of his lawsuit said that an officer in Afghanistan, Capt. Brian Donlon, sought information about Sarwar Jan because he recalled being told that he was “a bad guy who raped and tortured the people.” The police chief and Brezler had encountered each other previously in another part of Helmand province, Now Zad district, and Brezler had helped get him removed from his job.
Donlon did not open the file Brezler attached to an email sent from the United States and reported his violation, Donlon told investigators afterward. Donlon sent an email to Brezler informing him the document he sent was classified, and then both Marines reported it to their respective commanding officers.
This is not true. If it were true the United States, particularly the Navy, would be engaged in reprehensible conduct. Since the United States and its Navy cannot engage in reprehensible conduct it therefore must not be true.
This is called proof by falsification and is perfectly logical.
(Of course it's cross posted from The Stars Hollow Gazette and DocuDharma)
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Comments
Vent Hole
Exceptionallism,
how's that work again?
Riiiiggght, the same way as accountability, and transparency. . . fuck.
Thanks, ek. Talk about having to take one for the team.
Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .
Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .
If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march
9/11/2001 is a day
the oligarchy celebrate as Mission Accomplished. Or, at the least, the day that set in motion all the tools they needed to accomplish their mission. G. Dubya, Vader and Rummy were more than willing to give them their tools, leading off with the creation of Homeland Security. Any of you dirty hippie mofos want to mess with us we'll just sic Homeland Security on your asses, lock your asses up. Nine Eleven was and still is the oligarchy's wet dream, their Christmas day.
the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.
I read this before.
Disgusting. I was also reading that the real horrors of Abu_Ghraib are soon to be released and published by Seymour Hersh. Child rape by Americans in front of mothers.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
I had to go back and check the date of this....
I distinctly remember something along these lines happening early in the "war" years. Although, come to thing about it, that may have been someone in our "hired army" instead of our soldiers. And it wasn't contained in an email. The guy took it directly to the commander and was told basically to mind his own business, if I'm remembering correctly. I believe the movie "The Kite Runner" was based on the incident. There's been so much horror over the past 15 years, it's hard to keep track of who and when. Unfortunately, the "what" I can't seem to forget.
BTW... did you catch the other part of this story? They were going to kick him out for sending Classified over an unsecure network? THIS is what happens all the time to the "little people"... in stark contrast to big shots like Hillary and Petraus, et. al.
... BTW... did you catch the
It was the first thing that struck me, as well as the fact that whistle-blowers revealing abuses/corruption are targeted, rather than the perps - often by the perps.
Maybe if he claimed 'personal convenience' and memory loss, he could be the next Dem Presidential candidate? Wait, no, he's just one of the poors...
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.