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Diane Dimond

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In Defense of the United States Military

Posted: 03/27/2012 2:32 pm

Whatever may have happened inside the head of Sgt. Robert Bales it does not define America, nor should it taint all the other U.S. soldiers still serving there.

The drumbeat has already started and I want it to stop.

The moment the horrific news that a U.S. soldier had allegedly gone on a rogue killing spree in the far away province of Kandahar, Afghanistan -- murdering 16 Afghan civilians, mostly women and children and then burning some of the bodies, America has been struggling to make sense of it. If the reports are true, what could have caused Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the married father of two, to commit such a heinous act of multiple murder?

In the days since we first heard the news I've lost track of how many times I've read or heard the sentiment that somehow the culture or conditions within our U.S. military made him do it. Or that the military "taught him to kill." Nonsense.

Look, war is hell and since America has now endured more than a decade of non-stop wars maybe it should come as no surprise that this has been the knee-jerk reaction -- blame the military. But that's a specious conclusion as we look for reasons why Sgt. Bales may have done the indefensible. The military doesn't create monsters. It welcomes and trains patriots willing to put their lives on the line in defense of our country and devises plans to carry out dangerous missions most of us can't even imagine.

More than half a million soldiers have served in Iraq and Afghanistan and unlike past conflicts they volunteered to be there. More than 50,000 of these loyal warriors have endured four or more deployments just like Sgt. Bales. But not one of those other soldiers went out in the dead of night and committed mass murder.

The military does not decide when our country goes into battle, it doesn't pick our enemies and it no longer drafts unwilling soldiers into its ranks. All the big decisions about war lay with the president and the United States Congress. The military simply follows the orders it gets from above. Is it a perfect institution? No. (I've been especially appalled at the way female soldiers have been treated.) But I'm at a loss to point out any government institution that is perfect.

I don't know what may have made this 38 year old veteran soldier do what he is alleged to have done -- and so far no one else does either. In fact, Sgt. Bales' defense attorney has said his client has no memory of any slaughter so we may never know what made this soldier act with such unconscionable viciousness.

I've read that before he enlisted Bales had several run-ins with the law including a DWI arrest, involvement in a hit-and-run accident and a misdemeanor assault charge. The most shocking behavior, to my mind, was the finding of an Ohio arbitration board that concluded Bales had bilked an elderly couple out of their entire life savings while working for a brokerage firm. The 70-something victims have said they have never received a penny of the 1.4 million dollars settlement Bales was ordered to pay them. Maybe joining the military shortly after the September 11th attacks was Bales' way of putting distance between himself and that obligation.

More recently Bales and his family had more money troubles. Their house in Tacoma, Washington went into foreclosure and he was upset, according to his wife, that he had been denied a promotion which would have brought in a few extra hundred dollars each month. Bales sustained a couple of combat injuries -- to his foot and a suspected traumatic brain injury but he was cleared for duty by military doctors.

I recite these facts to illustrate that despite all the kind things his relatives, friends and teachers are saying about him now one fact is clear: the troubles in Robert Bales life were self-inflicted and not created by the U.S. Military.

There seems to be no question that Bales is the prime suspect in these cold blooded murders and that he suffered or is still suffering from some massive mental break with reality. Whatever defense his attorney presents for him will likely be all about sparing a mentally sick man's life and not getting him acquitted of the charges.

As we watch the case against Sgt. Bales proceed consider this: His actions may have not only snuffed out the lives of 16 people they could also go to taint the entire United States military as well. If guilty Sgt. Bales left every other active duty U.S. soldier in that region with the extra daily burden of proving they are not vicious killers themselves. In that area of Afghanistan, where anti-American sentiment has palpably increased since the murders, Bales has literally helped paint a target on the back of his former comrades-in-arms.

This isn't the fault of the military. It will be up to a military tribunal to decide the facts but at this point it appears to have been a horrible crime of one man -- albeit a loving husband and father -- who had a history of making bad judgments. Whatever may have happened inside his head does not define the United States of America.

Diane Dimond may be reached through her web site: www.dianedimond.com . Her latest book, "Cirque Du Salahi" -- the inside and untold story of the so-called White House Gate Crashers -- is available through Amazon.com.

 
 
 

Follow Diane Dimond on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dianedimond

Whatever may have happened inside the head of Sgt. Robert Bales it does not define America, nor should it taint all the other U.S. soldiers still serving there. The drumbeat has already started and I...
Whatever may have happened inside the head of Sgt. Robert Bales it does not define America, nor should it taint all the other U.S. soldiers still serving there. The drumbeat has already started and I...
 
 
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slybarbara
Love or music and books
01:35 AM on 03/29/2012
Now that you've gotten that off your chest, taking up space the rest of us are not permitted to, perhaps you'll take your leave, without having convinced anyone of anything. Having told us what has been hashed over for weeks.
SlyBarbra
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slybarbara
Love or music and books
08:26 PM on 03/28/2012
The point is, dear, we shouldn't have a portion of a civil society so big, so heavily financed, that we have to train soldiers to kill, and that there WILL be a few loose cannon about, that with this training and with an attitude of disdain for those inferior to them, in their light, who thereby draw violence to themselves in a somewhat violent world, that If we just pulled back; let these people form their own society, stop finding enemies under every bush and stone, and defend our homeland Here and not "over there," there woud be fewer incidents, less pumped up, that this one, that didn't have to happen.
Slybarbara
09:10 AM on 03/28/2012
SSgt Bales is not to blame, if chain of command screwed up. They should have never let him deploy. He had a Traumatic brain injury and Post traumatic stress disorder, in no way is that cleared for duty. So what DR., and what Commander cleared him fit for duty? I do not condone what has happened. I have served in the Army as a Combat Medic and many of my friends have seen a lot. Not to mention how many of them have really bad PTSD. People need to look at his chain of command. Who in the world gave him live rounds for his weapon, since they knew he had issues?????
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slybarbara
Love or music and books
06:33 PM on 03/28/2012
He was cleared for duty by Army doctors. The claims of brain injury and PTSD could (or would not be) corroborated. All that Mr. Browne has left is the "mentally ill" defense. Then again; that should have been caught in pre-screening for Combat Duty. To my knowledge, there is no such screening anyway. And as to the "chain of command" being responsible, I might point out that the "chain of command" was not knowledgeable of a rogue soldier taking a moonlit walk, after hours. The fault here lays in that the base guards apparently were not trained to challenge anyone entering or leaving the base after hours. If he had been challenged, none of this would have happened. To be stopped would have caused him to have second thoughts.
Slybarbara
04:15 AM on 03/28/2012
Diane Diamond, Mam, have you ever been IN the military? i don't care if you went to a war area with them, I am asking if you have have been in a military uniform of any of the 4 branches? Cause I quote you with, "The military doesn't create monsters." , and I ask "How do you know if you've never walked in the shoes." I ask because I have served, and my job didn't even come close to gun fire, but it still turned people into monsters. Having to spend days at a time on a ship without leaving, while it is still in port - is really a monstrous act to a family in their eyes, and will turn people into monsters.
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Diane Dimond
Journalist/Author/Columnist- DianeDimond.com
02:57 PM on 03/29/2012
No,sir. I have never served in the military. I thank you wholeheartedly for your service. I'm sorry if it was a terrible experience for you. ~ DD
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
09:13 PM on 03/27/2012
There is no justification for Bales' actions. The only really important decision that's going to impact Bales from this point forward, is whether or not the military will be seeking the death penalty. Also, it might indirectly affect all the people responsible for approving his deployment. No punitive action against anyone, no damage award, can replace the lives of those lost to Bales' actions. But, they can work to try and prevent it from happening again, in a number of ways. How did Bales wander off post in the middle of the night, armed to the teeth? That's one good question, another good question is how he supposedly came back to the post, got more ammunition, and went out again, allegedly. Did he have help, tacit support for his actions from his chain of command, buddies? What exactly went on, here? There's about 1,000 questions about this entire situation. One of them would be: Why is the military still in Afghanistan?
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Diane Dimond
Journalist/Author/Columnist- DianeDimond.com
02:59 PM on 03/29/2012
Dear Reality:
I think your last question is one that millions of patriotic Americans are asking! Why the hell are we still in a country that clearly doesn't really want us there but needs our $$. Nation building never works in the long run - when will we ever learn?~DD
02:43 PM on 03/27/2012
The military should be tainted. It's called ''performance evaluation.''
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Diane Dimond
Journalist/Author/Columnist- DianeDimond.com
05:06 PM on 03/27/2012
We'll just disagree on this one, Eric14 ~ DD
08:03 PM on 03/27/2012
What of his medical care and treatment? It was the responsibility of the Medcom and BG Xenakis (Ret.) in an editorial in the Friday's Washington Post makes it clear DoD is not capable of discriminating between those capable of service and those that are not. While the military should not be indicted certainly Medcom and Tricare should.