The Crimes of SEAL Team 6
i think glenn greenwald is a belligerent ninny, but this is some very good reporting done by matthew cole. he outlines unreported atrocities and war crimes committed by navy SEALs including mutilations, killings of civilians and noncombatants (some that i would consider extrajudicial), a goddamn beheading, and a routine practice called "canoeing":
this was also done to bin laden despite being neutralized as a threat:
apparently a culture of silence and distrust of authority outside the SEALs, along with an unwillingness to hold people accountable and an air of superiority is what kept any SEALs from being punished:
i think the article does a good job of showing how a culture of silence combined with an aura of invincibility and the ability to operate at their own discretion with no oversight and punishment has created the perfect environment for war crimes. chillingly, it reminds me of american police forces with the same rhetoric and environment: create an exclusive culture (us vs them), paint people as "savages", and assume you have the ultimate moral authority to do whatever you want as long as you justify it.
it's a long read, but I hope you take the time. it's worth it.
i think glenn greenwald is a belligerent ninny, but this is some very good reporting done by matthew cole. he outlines unreported atrocities and war crimes committed by navy SEALs including mutilations, killings of civilians and noncombatants (some that i would consider extrajudicial), a goddamn beheading, and a routine practice called "canoeing":
Some of those photographs, especially those taken of casualties from 2005 through 2008, show deceased enemy combatants with their skulls split open by a rifle or pistol round at the upper forehead, exposing their brain matter. The foreign fighters who suffered these V-shaped wounds were either killed in battle and later shot at close range. Among members of SEAL Team 6, this practice of desecrating enemy casualties was called canoeing.
this was also done to bin laden despite being neutralized as a threat:
Red watched bin Laden fall. He later told his teammates that it was possible one arm was twitching reflexively as he died, but otherwise he was effectively dead and not a threat. The distinction was crucial.
...
ONeill and two or three more assaulters moved past Red into the bedroom as bin Laden lay on the ground. ONeill then fired two rounds. According to his own description, the first two rounds hit bin Ladens forehead. Then ONeill canoed bin Laden with a final shot.
...
The SEALs had been specifically asked to avoid shooting bin Laden in the face. ONeills decision to canoe the al Qaeda leader made him unrecognizable. A SEAL who spoke Arabic interviewed bin Ladens wives and daughters until he was able to get two positive identifications. ONeill later implied in the Esquire profile that he shot bin Laden because he wasnt sure Reds shots had hit the target. He also claimed that bin Laden had been standing when he fired and that a weapon was visible nearby. Yet immediately after the mission, ONeill described shooting bin Laden while he was on the floor. The two weapons found on the third floor were not discovered until the rooms were searched. Neither was loaded.
apparently a culture of silence and distrust of authority outside the SEALs, along with an unwillingness to hold people accountable and an air of superiority is what kept any SEALs from being punished:
You cant win an investigation on us, one former SEAL Team 6 leader told me. You dont whistleblow on the teams and when you win on the battlefield, you dont lose investigations.
After leaving the compound and returning to their base in Kandahar province, Vasely reported to Moore, his superior officer, that he believed he had witnessed a war crime, a mutilation. Vasely told Moore he wanted an investigation into the incident. Moore, sitting in his office in Virginia Beach, pressed Vasely: What had he actually seen? Was there another explanation?
Szymanski, according to these sources, was directed by Moore to make the episode disappear. Tim took a dive, said a former noncommissioned SEAL officer, and it was at Moores direction. Szymanski had known Slabinski for at least 15 years. They had bonded over Robertss death.
Although Blue Squadron had avoided criminal charges, their battlefield conduct continued to set off alarms within the command. Some SEAL Team 6 leaders were appalled by how easily Vasely and Szymanski had folded under Moores pressure.
i think the article does a good job of showing how a culture of silence combined with an aura of invincibility and the ability to operate at their own discretion with no oversight and punishment has created the perfect environment for war crimes. chillingly, it reminds me of american police forces with the same rhetoric and environment: create an exclusive culture (us vs them), paint people as "savages", and assume you have the ultimate moral authority to do whatever you want as long as you justify it.
it's a long read, but I hope you take the time. it's worth it.