Interactions limited to guards and chaplain for alleged Afghan shooter at Ft. Leavenworth

John Henry Browne, the lawyer for Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, questioned the military's case against his client. NBC's John Yang reports.

FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kan. – Wake up, 5 a.m.; breakfast, 5:15 a.m.; clean-up chores, 6:50 a.m. until 11:20 a.m., and so on until lights out at 10:05 p.m.

That’s Staff Sgt. Robert Bales’ daily routine in a medium/minimum security pre-trial detention facility in a remote corner of this sprawling 5,600-acre Army post. Bales is the American soldier accused of massacring 16 civilians in southern Afghanistan. His lawyer, John Henry Browne, says the 17-month-old facility is cleaner than many civilian prisons he’s seen.

For Bales, it’s a relatively lonely existence. He’s in a special cell by himself – solitary confinement – not the usual four-prisoner bays. He’s made use of the recreation facilities, according to prison officials, and has met with the prison chaplain, according to Browne.


Like all new inmates, he’s in a black-out period of about a week while he’s processed and classified – no access to phones or e-mail. Later he will have access to email, that will be monitored by authorities, but not Internet access, according to his lawyer. And he will be able to keep books, newspapers and magazines.

Browne says Army officials are working to make an exception for Bales so he may speak with his wife, Karilyn, by phone; their only contact since he was arrested March 12 was a 30-minute phone conversation when he was held in Kuwait. They are also arranging for Karilyn Bales to travel from Seattle to see her husband for the first time since he left for Afghanistan in December.

The 464-bed facility also houses military convicts sentenced to up to five years of imprisonment. But the two populations are kept apart, according to Browne, Bales’ interactions are currently limited to guards and the chaplain. 

John Henry Browne, the attorney for U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, speaks about the long and emotional first face-to-face meeting with his client.  NBC's John Yang reports.

Interestingly, the facility holds a few other noteworthy pre-trail detainees – including PFC Bradley Manning, accused of giving classified documents to Wikileaks. 

Browne, who’s previous clients include serial killer Ted Bundy, said his 11 hours with Bales were some of the most emotional he’s ever spent, as his client described his three deployments to Iraq and the three months in Afghanistan leading up to the shooting rampage.

“He's dragged pieces of bodies all over the place and had people shot out from right next to him,” Browne told NBC News. “Things that are hard to imagine.... If you saw the movie ‘The Hurt Locker,’ well, that's like a Disney movie compared to what he's gone through,” he said, referring to the Academy Award-winning film about a bomb disposal unit in Iraq.

Contrary to reports from villagers where the massacre took place, U.S. military officials say there is no evidence of an IED attack on Americans around the time of the shooting that killed 16 Afghan civilians. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

It was Browne and Bales’ first face-to-face meeting; all previous conversations were by phone. Bales’ first questions to him, according to Browne?  “‘How are the boys on the ground? How are my buddies? I'm really worried about them. I'm really worried that this allegation will make their lives more difficult.’” And all of the rest of the questions were about his family. Not once did he ask about his own plight, according to Browne.

“If I was in a life threatening situation, I would want him next to me,” Browne said. 

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Its my honest belief the US Military is to blame for so many back to back tours. The poor GI's are having nightmares, daily black thoughts, and unbelievable lives when they come home on leave. Wives that badger, harass their husbands that have to go back to daily grind of looking for terrorists in our behalf and our safety. They should two years between dangerous and hard tours of duty in war zones. Listen carefully for ten years we have been in three different wars and America, citizens go bout their daily lives without sacrifices. God Bless Our Military. Watch out for our troops, and make the government respect the grunts.

  • 29 votes
#1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:13 PM EDT

That would work if they could keep enough people in voluntarily. But not possible until they initiate a draft. There's just not enough people to spread out the tours like that. And not just getting people to stay. it's having to hold the manning levels to a set limit (that is constantly being reduced) and still having to fullfil the same ops tempo as if they were 100% manned.

  • 7 votes
#1.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:32 PM EDT

You must be a democrat - for some unknown reason they always want a draft. They would never go - but they want a draft. We don't need one. We just need to expand our military with volunteers. They are there. Volunteers fight better than draftees. The volunteers choose to be there.

  • 7 votes
#1.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:50 PM EDT

I think we need to stop butting our nose into the rest of the world's problems.

We need to get our guys out of these god forsaken countries and back home where they belong.

  • 28 votes
#1.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:04 PM EDT

Hello folks, the more information that comes out the more suspect I am of the entire story. The media is in full on demonizing mode of this guy. Afghan villagers where the murders took place and President Karzai are saying that more than one soldier was involved. They are saying it was a dozen to twenty soldiers. I don't know what the real truth is. What I do know is that we were lied to about the Jessica Lynch rescue and the Pat Tillman killing. It probably will be some time before the entire story comes out but I hope it will be the truth.

  • 15 votes
#1.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:12 PM EDT

Judge Bill- no its the political reps that are the problem. When Obama/the whitehouse in general are reviewing and playing statego with this war taking upwards of 8 months to approve a battle plan submitted by your general on the ground then you can only blame the people in office. Military wants a quick strike war, get in, do your business and get out. Hard to do that when everybody on the hill has an agenda....

  • 7 votes
#1.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:17 PM EDT

EWUSNRET - I don't see anywhere where Chef80 "wanted" a draft in that post. You must be a Republican due to your art of assumption and false reflection of what others have actually said.

  • 10 votes
#1.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:29 PM EDT

EWUSNRET.

We absolutely need the draft back. We have turned into a nation of Chicken Hawks starting wars at every opportunity - all the while knowing they, or their kids, won't have to go.

If the Chicken Hawks knew they were going, they would start thinking.

Secondly, we have been at war for a decade now. Who is really affected? ONLY those who volunteer.

The rest of us run around not even thinking about what we are doing.

  • 3 votes
#1.8 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:43 PM EDT

EWUSNRET, obviously, you have a military background. If the volunteer force is so great, why are we in a position to put guys like this one back in the zone over & over? How do you get more people to join up? I think as long as we are putting kids -- and many of our soldiers are practically that -- in harm's way on a constant basis, there should be a draft, for both men & women. I believe everyone in this country should have skin in the game, my family included, if we want to be in constant war status

.

  • 2 votes
#1.9 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:52 PM EDT

Well Id say a draft would be a horrible idea. I served 7 years active duty, and went on numerous deployments. Got out in 2006. Id say the lack of people joining has to do with the recruiters and partly on the laziness of basic training now. Back in 2008, i went in to join the reserves. The recruiter started the usual talk assuming I was going active again. I told him I wanted to join the reserves and his whole demeanor changed. Started treating me like a second class citizen, kinda irked me. He setup an appointment for me to comeback the next day. I showed up, he wasnt there, he went off with some new recruit to take care of him/her. After that I asked myself, "Do I really wanna deal with people like this again?" Answer was no. They would rather deal with fresh new recruits rather than decorated veterans it seems.

  • 4 votes
#1.10 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:12 PM EDT

Judge Bill, we have to get out of Afghanistan. Military commanders will never admit defeat, it's like Vietnam, Obama is like Johnson. Bring our troops home!

Sign and share the petition, send a message to Congress and President Obama.

http://www.change.org/petitions/bring-our-troops-home-from-afghanistan

Thanks for supporting our troops! They are willing to die to protect us. What are we willing to do to protect them from a misguided foreign policy?

  • 3 votes
#1.11 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:46 PM EDT

We should have never invaded Iraq and it has been time to bring our troops out Afganistan for awhile now. It is obvious by the present Iraq no one can change a culture so old & besides it is not the United States place to ocuupy & force democracy on others.

  • 2 votes
#1.12 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:50 PM EDT

Sorry...but you can't blame the military when the elected goverment gives them the missions and decides how big the Army can be. When Bill Clinton came into office there were 17 divisions. He took the "peace dividend" and left with 10 divisions.

  • 3 votes
#1.13 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:31 PM EDT

Freqn----you see how your post didn't come right under EWUS? He was replying to a different poster...the one with the reply button and if you had a clue instead of just to stick your foot in your mouth you would realize that his post makes absolute sense considering who and what he was replying to. But, then again I wouldn't expect you to know wtf you're talking about

    #1.14 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:51 PM EDT

    I was an RA (volunteer), am a Democrat and do think that one of the worst things we did was end the draft. We probably would never have gone to either Iraq or Afghanistan if the Bush and Cheney people needed to go. The mistake in the draft was all of the available deferments. No deferments, universal service, no bull@!$%# wars. Do you think that "Deferment Dick" would take a chance with his blood? Not on this planet.

    • 1 vote
    #1.15 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:53 PM EDT

    EWUSNRET

    I did not say(or otherwise insinuate) that i wanted the draft as it was pointed out by other posters. I simply stated that to prevent or cut down on multiple deployments bringing the draft back would give the military a "temporary" force to rotate through in conjunction with it's regular and reserve forces. I agree that draftees are worse than volunteers; but, you get what you pay for and if you are cycling a bunch of people through that won't stay in and retire then you end up with what they are trying to push for now. Congress sets active duty manning levels to account for budgeting and if they can create a "disposable" force (people that only serve one or two terms and get out instead of retiring) it saves them a bunch in the long run. Most people that get "cut" due to "over-manning" try and go guard or reserve to at least stay affiliated with the military and collect retirement.

    DarwinG

    Freqn does in fact state in the post that I didn't say that i wanted a draft. maybe read the post before YOU put foot in mouth.

      #1.16 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:01 PM EDT

      The new democratic budget proposal doesn't expand the military even voluntarily it cuts 100,000 troops. They will not have more time between tours but less under the democratic budget. They have been using the National Guard to maintain force commitments to Iraq and Afghanistan as it is. In 2009 they called up the 34th infantry entirely for the first time since Korea and sent them to Afghanistan. That for your information is the Guard units of Iowa and Nebraska. So even if they finish tours and go to the guard that doesn't insulate them from going back.

        #1.17 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:17 PM EDT

        We should cut military spending across the board. We should stop playing World Dominated by invading sovereign countries just because we can and by making up lame excuses and/or creating Boogie Men. We should bring our soldiers home from these ridiculously errant wars against some ambiguous enemy called "terrorism." We should take care of our homeland right here, at home. We should stop lining the pockets of war mongers, private war contractors, robber barons, oil barons and the like. Yes, there are some very, very, very bad people out there who don't like U.S. Whether or not they actually pulled off the 9-11 attack is still in question for many millions of Americans and non-Americans, however, and that is a fact. Another inconvenient fact: The events of 9/11 gave politicians a blank check to create some of the most Draconian freedom killing legislation in our country's history. We've seen an unprecedented change in our country's liberty landscape since that fateful day, and non of it is good. Here's a novel idea: Stop the wars and stop the madness!

        • 1 vote
        #1.18 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:40 PM EDT

        unfortunately that's the same "isolationism" idea that occurred between WWI and WWII. After that we promised never to not get involved in maintaining relative peace in the world and NATO and the UN were born <tada!> to run the worlds problems.

          #1.19 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:53 PM EDT

          Bring back to Draft to stop these four and five tours.

            #1.20 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:15 PM EDT

            I enlisted during the Vietnam conflict, got out after Desert Storm. I do believe we need a draft. The problem is, too many kids don't have the education needed for the military now, it is so high-tech. Yes, we need to get out of Afghanistan, we've lost the ability to maintain a mission that is acceptable. I had my share of "fun and games" during a variety of incidents during my many years, but nothing like what these guys are going through - the constant rotation into a combat zone and back out. Wrong way to fight a war. Rotate them in, then into a safe zone, but from wife and kids and into combat and back is bad for a person's mental state. Isolationism a la Ron Paul is dangerous, but so is this current idiocy. Obama asked during the primaries in 2008 what should a person do when the hole is too deep, and the answer was to stop digging. Well, nobody has stopped digging. The hole is too deep already!

              #1.21 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:29 PM EDT

              can someone explain to me again why we're writing sob stories disguised as "news" and making special exceptions for this guy to "see his family" when hes accused of heartlessly butchering several innocent families...? is this seriously how bad our ego problem has gotten here in the US?

              • 4 votes
              #1.22 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:30 PM EDT

              Your debate about voluntary military service vs. drafting all eligible is completely moot. The cuts to military spending have been rapidly employed and are already being seen. College educated, physically and mentally fit applicants are being turned away from the enlistment centers, because already, the personnel are not in the budget.....If the claim is that this tragedy happened because our cutbacks have already resulted in too few soldiers serving and hence being the victims of unrelieved violence over a dangerous period of time....then get ready for more of the same. Capitol Hill has a scapegoat in this poor guy. Nobody, collectively or individually, can go along randomly killing householders like that and possibly be in a normal state of mind and emotion.

                #1.23 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 8:36 AM EDT

                Sue, you are badly informed. You must get all your news from Fox Conseravtive Entertainment Faux News. The military strength is higher than it was in 2002--by about 150,000 and that does not include the plus ups in the reserve and national guard forces. The total defense budget has doubled. The problem is the force would have to increase by half yet again to reduce the rotations to the level that is accepatable. That would require a lot more revenue. Revenue that the Republicans oppose. They are the ones driving up the debt by not paying for the wars up front. They are the ones who scream and yell about defense budget cuts that are necessary to rein in spending and begin to reduce the debt. If they are unwilling to pay for wars and defense in general on top of what it takes just to maintain civil government then they should not be allowed to bankrupt America putting it on the national debt. We should not have our military forces deployed on the ground anywhere right now. There is no existential threat to our national security that requires their use. Bring them all home, including Korea and Europe. Reduce the active fore to what is needed to provide defense, not offensive opperations. America needs to stop starting wars. The only one benefitting from this are the rich who bankroll the military-industrial complex and never send their own off to war. Think Dick Cheney.

                • 1 vote
                #1.24 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 9:12 AM EDT
                Reply

                My heart goes out to this young man. What he did is inexcusable, but one has to wonder what his state of mind was at the time of his crime. It ticks me off that Pannetta and Clinton spout off about the death penalty when they do not know the facts. I question why we have not demanded that Hamid Karzai apologize for his military doing the same thing to our military personnel. They go into our bases and murder our soldiers and we hear nothing about how they are being charged or if they are charged at all. What is good for the goose is good for the gander. We should have told Karzai and Afghanistan good by when Karzai said that our apology was not acceptable. We need to get out of that country and let them fend for themselves. Like Iraq this is their civil war.

                • 16 votes
                #2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:28 PM EDT

                Susie Cue-4302731

                Does your heart always go out to serial killers? Do you feel the same for Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and David Berkowitz?

                My heart goes out to the people he murdered including innocent woman and children. That's just me.

                • 11 votes
                #2.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:53 PM EDT

                Susie Cue - Uh, that didn't work before - 9-11 was planned from there.

                • 1 vote
                #2.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:56 PM EDT

                Susie you are a terrorist sympathizer.... baaaaaaazing

                • 4 votes
                #2.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:59 PM EDT

                Susie - Couldn't agree more. Do not listen to these three, your comments were spot on.

                • 8 votes
                #2.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:14 PM EDT

                QC: THis is not the same as Ted Bundy, Jeffery Dahlmer. And 9-11 could happen again even if we stay in Afghan. He is a soldier that has been on too many tours, seen too much, and I don't hear Karzai blasting his troops to get the death penalty for killing our soldiers that are suppose to train them. We need to get out and stay out.

                • 5 votes
                #2.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:29 PM EDT

                QC Guy - The whole situation is bad. Have you ever served? Do you understand what three tours and a head injury can create for a person? He's not a serial killer. Check your definition. He should have never been sent there in the first place.

                • 7 votes
                #2.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:31 PM EDT

                No, he is not a serial killer.

                He is a mass murderer - of women and children.

                • 6 votes
                #2.7 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:44 PM EDT

                bFromNJ..Sad to say that I once lived in NJ when I see comments like yours. My father was almost killed by the Germans, my older brother and my cousin are Vietnam vets, my oldest brother was at the Bay of Pigs and my sister's fiance was killed in Vietnam, just to give you the right to call me a terrorist sympathizer, so if it makes you feel good have at it.

                EWUSNRET....What has the massacre of children and women have to do with 9/11 having been planned from there? Also voluntary armies never work. While I am against the draft, sometimes that is the only way we can get enough personnel to send to complete the war. I'm sorry if this upsets you sensiblilty, but that is the way the world is today.

                chuckzul and Been There... Thank you for your support.

                • 2 votes
                #2.8 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:46 PM EDT

                The afghans kill their own people every day with car bombs and suicide bombers they are the mass murderers of their own people. So why do they think since we where trying to help train their soldiers and stop the craziness that it might get to one of the troops that has seen too much. We need to get out now.

                • 1 vote
                #2.9 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:50 PM EDT

                Been There-406834 - I agree that we should not be there. I didn't want to send troops there in the first place for this type of mission. I especially did not want to send troops to Iraq. Did you support sending our troops there? When I voiced these opinions long ago, people suggested that I was not patriotic. Were you one of those people? If you supported going to war, do you now regret it?

                Also, he chose to join and unless he has no brain he should have know what that would entail. He also chose to re-enlist and make a career of the military. That is why he has been on 4 tours of duty in a war zone. He alone is responsible for that.

                There is no excuse for murdering civilian woman and children. Period.

                -----

                FreqnLoDown - I agree that the situation is bad. I also knew it would be bad for all involved if we waged these two wars. It seemed like common sense to me at the time. Did you think this would be a vacation for our troop?

                And no - I didn't server in the military. One does not need to serve in the military to understand the situation. And it doesn't make me any less patriotic.

                Maybe serial killer was not the best definition. How about "mass murderer of woman and children." Is that better for you? Does that give you a warm fuzzy feeling?

                • 2 votes
                #2.10 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:57 PM EDT

                Mostly good and valid points here, even if some seem to be contradictory. Nobody should serve as much or as hard duty as this soldier. Yes, Bush/Cheney are to blame. We do need to maintain a substantial force at the ready, but we also need lifers (volunteers) who will make it their career so expertise can be past down. A military career has to be attractive enough to bring them in. Maybe a different pay scale between volunteers and draftees would do it. We do need a draft, but not like the one we had in Viet Nam where only the poor had to go, and people like Bush got to stay home and party. All physically able-bodied men and women should be compelled to serve. No school exemptions. They can go to school in the military or after they get out on the GI Bill. Why should someone get to jumpstart their career while others are putting their lives on the line to keep them safe? All children of public servants should be compelled to serve on the front lines if they want to keep their jobs. No favoritism. That way politicians will really understand the sacrifices of the families that serve instead of just giving them lip service while they take camera-ops. How dare any president (Bush) send our citizens into harm's way while his own kids are partying and getting DUIs. Nobody should be considered for a public service job above dog catcher unless they have served in the military. A big Thank You to this hero, and a big Thank You to President Obama for getting us out of Iraq and for starting to process for getting us out of Afghanistan, although I wish he'd speed up the process. Afghanistan will revert to the heroine and terrorist producing dunghill it's always been the minute we leave, just as Iraq is doing. Wasting any more money and American lives there makes no sense. We killed Bin Laden and his hierarchy. Our job is done. Mission Accomplished (as opposed to when Bush photo-oped under that banner).

                • 2 votes
                #2.11 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:20 PM EDT

                @ Ed McT-2404427

                I have to agree with you on the draft. I think we should have one and it should have no exemptions. Everybody regardless of race or class should have to serve in the military if our leaders decide to send us to war. I also like your idea on the different pay rate based on whether you volunteered or were drafted.

                If people were to know that their own loved ones might die because of their support of a war, it will make them think twice. They might actually questions those claims of WMD or the costs to wage the war.

                Remember how the Bush administration claimed the war would cost $300 Billion and be paid for by oil revenue? They could not have been more wrong on this. These two wars will be costing us upwards of $4.7 Trillion. That is a shocking amount of money. I wonder if people knew the $300 Billion claim was a lie if they would have still supported the idea of going to war. If their sons and daughters lives were on the line, they sure as hell would have asked more questions.

                • 1 vote
                #2.12 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:51 PM EDT

                No I did not support either wars. No sense in trying to drag a country into the 16th Century - let alone 21st. We could have learned from the Russians not to go - but history repeats itself and we had to prove it to ourselves. But I have 2 kids that served in the army in Iraq. They don't come home the same but the Army gives them a PTSD stamp and sends them back. Go figure, I voted for Obama because he said he would get us out. And he would have left troops in Iraq if they gave them immunity but the Iraqies wouldn't so he brought them all home. It's all politics, smoke and mirrors for someone elses agenda.

                • 1 vote
                #2.13 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:53 PM EDT

                @ Susie, You can thank, on my behalf, all your family members who served the nation, I am truly grateful. However none of that has anything to do with the fact this guy is a terrorist, in fact with all that history in your family, you should be pretty upset at this stain on our armed forces. He is a terrorist, your heart "goes out to this young man" therefore you are Terrorist sympathizer!. Don't be sad for NJ we are doing great and we are glad you left, the last thing we need is terrorists and their sympathizers.

                • 1 vote
                #2.14 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:57 PM EDT

                FreqnLoDown

                QC Guy - The whole situation is bad. Have you ever served? Do you understand what three tours and a head injury can create for a person? He's not a serial killer. Check your definition. He should have never been sent there in the first place. Post 2.6

                Three tours is bad. The (closed) head injury makes things worse. Brain injury is very problematical, unstable, and 'connections' can cascade and 'make and break' like a pachinko ball. A person can do and/or say things which are out of character and have no memory of doing or saying those things. One can have memories of things which never occurred.

                Being in a constant combat situation-especially where one has no clear categorization of friend and foe-makes things even more difficult. Medical science is just beginning to scratch the surface of the brain and the diagnostic tools are well beyond crude. One can seem to stabilize only to deteriorate later. Critical knowledge can be there one moment and gone the next. It might be back again then gone again at odd intervals.

                There may be difficulty in personal analysis and one might think their at the peak of capability then something small tells them things are in fact opposite. Things would be easier if a person could 'step outside them-self' and observe.

                'Information overload' can render the brain's 'data crunching' ineffective to where things won't 'resolve'. The gentleman should have been removed from combat operations and reassigned. It can be a personal nightmare. In time, it might become clear a medical discharge with disability is the proper course of action. It all depends.

                • 3 votes
                #2.15 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:23 PM EDT

                I find it sickening that we have couch arm judges and jurors on here. This man has not yet been tried so you can not sit there and call him a mass murderer. I pray that none of you ever get accused of anything, guilt by public opinion is a bad thing.

                • 2 votes
                #2.16 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:15 PM EDT

                yes, we can all sympathise with this soldier's repeated tours of duty...a definite mistake to subject anyone to this treatment and policies must change

                but folks,

                did you note the financial mess he created long before he enlisted?...he left town by enlisting with the military before fixing that mess he helped to create...left a senior citizen victimized

                I think there is much more to this story than what we know right now...

                • 1 vote
                #2.17 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:09 PM EDT

                I know a lot of guys who join to escape problems they had at home. That doesn't make them crazy or killers. Stupid in the case of my friends joyriding in a chicken delight truck ( it looks like a chicken) But the case in point is not his financial problems and some of the later problems should have told a competent psychiatrist not to release him for combat duty. But the incident in Afghanistan and whether he was competent mentally at the time that should be the only question and we should wait for the trial just as Texans have been waiting 2 years for the trial of Major Hassan who killed our people and is going with an insanity defense.

                  #2.18 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:26 PM EDT

                  Perhaps, although I favor a draft, the correct answer to military service is the one proposed by the author Robert HeinLein. You may have seen the movie "Starship Troopers." The movie leaves out many important points, so I would strongly recommend the book. Military service creates a veteran. A veteran is one who has completed his service to his country. You must be a veteran to be a citizen. Residents are not citizens, but they have all rights except one. Only citizens can vote. Originally, voting was restricted to landowners, because landowners had a vested interest. Most Americans today are mules. They have no real vested interest. George Bernard Shaw, the playwright, said that when you rob Peter to pay Paul, Paul will always vote for you. Paul's interest is only in what Peter's loss provides him, However, if Peter is forced out of business because he is being constantly robbed, then Paul is going to lose all his goodies when his benefactor fails.

                  • 1 vote
                  #2.19 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:41 PM EDT
                  Reply

                  Sad...... The continuance of foreign occupations that will avail the United States nothing in the end......... except for more sons and daughters of America being used as pawns to help establish foreign oil rights and trade with those who only desire foreign monetary aid, weapons etc.... rubbish!

                  • 7 votes
                  Reply#3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:28 PM EDT

                  Go easy soldier..... I wonder if it was too much for him to accept that some kill indiscriminately such as an I.E.D, burning of the Qur'an or suicide bombings? I would have to walk a mile or so in his shoes to fully comprehend the unbridled rage this soldier demonstrated. Maybe all of us should be enraged that our leaders will continue sending America's sons and daughters needlessly to places that don't want our help but rather our money.

                  • 5 votes
                  #3.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:16 PM EDT

                  Blaming Bush/Cheney for Afghanistan is inappropriate-escalation of that conflict came about at the mandate of Obama's administration, and as such is his fiasco. Secondly, I am still waiting for one liberal to explain to me why being involved in Iraq was sooooo wrong, and why being involved in Afghanistan is a good thing. In other words, Iraq, because it was under the Bush/Cheney watch is by definition bad, but Afghanistan, while under Obama's watch is OK.....I fail to see the real difference in the two, and if Iraq was a war without purpose, then the Afgahnistan conflict which dates back at least 30 years and was abandoned by the former Soviet Union is even more useless.

                  • 1 vote
                  #3.2 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 8:44 AM EDT
                  Reply

                  What was that modo for the Clinton campaign? "No one left behind."

                  Well in this case Robert Bales should have been. There is no reason for him to be on U.S soil. He gave up his right as a Sergeant when he invaded those villages, and the Afghanis should have their way with him.

                  The rest of the U.S Military, they should be brought home immediately.

                  • 6 votes
                  Reply#4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:37 PM EDT

                  Finkleballs - The rest of the U.S. Military should be brought home immediately? Why not just dissolve the military? You can protect the United States by yourself. Jeeze!

                  • 4 votes
                  #4.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 12:54 PM EDT

                  Does that mean you would turn major Hassan over to Texas because 2 years ago Texans were looking for a rope and a convienent tree for him after he killled Texas citizens? Or is the killing of Texans by a muslim some how better than the killing of Afghans in a war zone. We have waited 2 years for justice from the military and so can you.

                  • 1 vote
                  #4.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:32 PM EDT
                  Reply

                  It sounds like there were several factors at work in addition to the main one (being on his fourth tour of combat). His family was having serious financial problems; he had not expected to be required to serve a fourth tour of combat; he was disappointed at not receiving a promotion in rank; he saw a friend of his loose a leg the day before the massacre.

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:00 PM EDT

                  You forgot the following he is also a dirty criminal and a low life. He abused a former girl friend and like any other dirty banker he robbed honest working people of their money: From other articles on this d-bag terrorist:

                  "The Washington Post reported Monday that Bales joined the military months after he was accused of financial fraud involving the retirement account of a client in Ohio. A ruling by a disciplinary board for brokers and brokerage houses found that Bales and the owner of the firm took part in unauthorized trading, the Post reported."

                  "An arbiter ordered Bales and the owner of the firm owner to pay the elderly man $1.4 million. The man told the Post he “never got a penny,” and Bales never attended an arbitration hearing in the case. "

                  He got probation for beating his ex girl friend.
                  He had a hit and run.

                  • 4 votes
                  #5.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:10 PM EDT

                  The press is just mudding the waters so we can keep the interest in staying in Afghanistan. We all did stupid things in our past, The retirement account was not his firm - he worked there, so who knows the whole story. He could have taken out bankruptcy and gotten rid of that debt - he didn't look like he has 1.4 million. Stop being a sheep for the press, he was 38 and we are all different as we age. Look at this crime - not his past - or look at his service record and military experience. Watch your friends leg get blown off and see what happens to your brain.

                  • 6 votes
                  #5.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:36 PM EDT

                  TexasArmadillo - Every mass murderer and serial killer has reasons and excuses for their actions. These reasons and excuses don't make their actions right, however.

                  • 4 votes
                  #5.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:05 PM EDT

                  And every mass murderer and killer deserves a trial. It just seems that all the people who were saying Texas shouldn't try major Hassan don't have the same care when the mass murderer isn't muslim. Most of you are hypocrites. Live by the rules you demand others live by. OC guy it did happen here in Texas two years ago but that soldier was a medical doctor psychiatrist no less who served no time in combat. So in June or july 2 years after the fact he goes to trial. Lets see how his insanity defense works.

                  • 1 vote
                  #5.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:42 PM EDT
                  Reply

                  I'm on the fence over this case. On one hand, I can't fathom the horrors he has experienced while serving our country...But on the other hand, he killed innocent people who were not a threat to him. This is not a black and white case. I feel sorry for all involved - his victims and their loved ones, his family and him.

                  • 6 votes
                  Reply#6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:04 PM EDT

                  You said it better than I did.

                    #6.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:50 PM EDT

                    CatChick74 & Susie Cue-4302731 - Experiencing horrors doesn't give you a free pass to do whatever you want - including murdering woman and children. Sounds crazy doesn't it?

                    Would you feel the same had he returned to the US after his 4th deployment and committed this atrocity at home? How you you feel if he slipped out of base at night, broke in a house near the base and murdered an entire American family? We we hear you supporting him and his actions online if that were the case?

                    What if that family was yours? Change anything for you?

                    Also, most child molesters were molested themselves as children. Does that mean they are not responsible for their actions?

                    • 4 votes
                    #6.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:13 PM EDT

                    QC Guy...if you read what I wrote you would know that I had found his actions inexcusable, that doesn't mean that I can't feel for him as well as his family and the families of his victims. I don't condone murder of any living person. Period. By the way (you should be careful what you ask for), my faher-in-law was murdered and they never found the person responsible. So I know of what I speak. And yes, like my mother-in-law did, I found it in my heart to forgive the person responsible. It takes a bigger person to forgive than to carry around the hate. Hate eats you up.

                      #6.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:27 PM EDT

                      He has been accused of he hasn't been convicted yet, and there are still many questions left unanswered.

                        #6.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:03 PM EDT

                        Spot on, QC Guy.

                        • 3 votes
                        #6.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:26 PM EDT

                        I don't feel sorry for this guy. He didn't need to kill innocent people - and children? When he has children of his own? And now he's worried about his buddies. He should be - they are definitely in more danger because of his actions. And since the French shooter now claims it was retaliation for the Afghanistan killings - then I hope Bales gets the news. What a selfish POS. Child killer.

                        • 1 vote
                        #6.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:38 PM EDT

                        The real tragedy here is that he recovers his normal sensibility, now that he is no longer exposed to the threat of daily violence and injury....and then he has to live with what he has done....And for any normal individual, this alone could be enough to drive you over the edge into insanity all by itself. I agree that the soldier and his family deserve prayers, because this horrific incident is just the beginning of the nightmare journey for them all.

                        • 1 vote
                        #6.7 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 8:48 AM EDT
                        Reply

                        Seeing is how there is no real evidence against him, at least as far as the public is concerned, he can't and shouldn't be convicted right now. The villagers that were interviewed even said there was more than one person. Why don't you all just save your hate filled comments for when we know exactly what really happened?

                        • 5 votes
                        Reply#7 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:08 PM EDT

                        Why? thousand sof foreign nationals have been tried and convicted in the kangeroo court of public opinion here in the US based on the word of thw US army...the army says this guy did it and that should be good enough right?

                        • 3 votes
                        #7.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:13 PM EDT

                        Rick, you do know you're an idiot, right?

                        • 3 votes
                        #7.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:16 PM EDT

                        No, that is not right. People deserve the right to a trial here. In case you are unaware that has been how the US has operated for a while now. Half the people commenting on here are more condemning of this soldier than the families of the people that he supposedly killed. They even say he didn't act alone. Why are we only interested in convicting this man instead of finding out if there was anyone else involved and what really happened?

                        • 3 votes
                        #7.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:32 PM EDT

                        The process is leading to a full trial with all the evidence. While it will be a public trial, I doubt they will let Rick in the door.

                        • 1 vote
                        #7.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:45 PM EDT

                        Mario 69.....I don't believe that the trial will be public. He will most likely be tried under the UCMJ and Rick would never be permitted to enter the base.

                        • 2 votes
                        #7.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:03 PM EDT
                        Reply

                        Why isn't this terrorist at gitmo for some waterboarding and other enhanced interogation techniques (love the spin on torture)...or is only terrorism when afghans kill americans?

                        • 8 votes
                        Reply#8 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:11 PM EDT

                        My biggest question is "Why is this guy in Levenworth". If the tables were turned and it was a foreign soldier doing this in the US, there is no way in hell he would have left the country of faced anything other than American justice. What he did was personal, and in no way related to a military mission. Bringing him back only tells foreign countries and our enemies that no matter what a US citizen does, they are above the law of the land their commit the crime on. As long as we continue behavoir like this, groups like the Taliban will continue to grow in numbers. We are feeding their cause by removing him from the clutches of the Afghani government. He is should be held acountable for his action to the people who his actions were against, plain and simple. We insist bringing terrorists that fight us in other countries back here for trial. How can we not be seen as hypocrites, monsters or simply bigotted towards Muslims?

                        • 11 votes
                        Reply#9 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:12 PM EDT

                        This a country soooo backwards it still beheads people, stones people, wemon have their noses and ears cut off by their husbands when they try to leave because of abuse. We should just get out of the country and protect our borders. No he shouldn't even be in jail, he should be in a hospital,

                        • 3 votes
                        #9.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:42 PM EDT

                        Been There-406834 Said: "No he shouldn't even be in jail, he should be in a hospital,"

                        Had he done this to your entire extended family would you still think he should be in a hospital?

                        • 4 votes
                        #9.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:18 PM EDT

                        Yep I would. I don't believe hurting someone will avenge what they did to me. You can not bring my child back, they are priceless. But we have too many veterans suffering and commiting crimes they don't even remember bring them home and get them help.

                        • 2 votes
                        #9.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:59 PM EDT

                        There are those who still believes in Justice and not letting this soldier be the sacrificed American for the Tilaban's hate filled propaganda. Just because some Officer in the Military or higher states a person is quilty does not mean it is the truth, it call covering your butt at all times. Still waiting for Physical evidence not just statements made by the enemy of our nation.

                        If he is guilty then may justice be served

                        • 2 votes
                        #9.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:12 PM EDT
                        Reply

                        OH GIVE ME A FRIGGEN BREAK YOU STUPID IDIOTS! Let the Guy see his wife,for god sakes! How stupid.What you think keeping the family away is going to punish this guy?HE HASN'T EVEN BEEN ON TRIAL YET.YA STUPID MORONS!

                        One more thing thing I'll throw in this Bon Fire! The ARMY is as Guilty as he is,if they hadn't ORDERED HIM over to Fing Afghanistan under the strain of 3 prior tours in Iraq,before that Stupid Move, WE WOULDN'T BE HAVING THIS PARTY RIGHT NOW, WOULD WE? You DUMB ASSES!You people make me SICK, you're the Pot Calling the Kettle Black! JUST STUPID!

                        • 8 votes
                        Reply#10 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:14 PM EDT

                        Right on Gloria, the so called military strategists and war councils should be the ones up front LEADING the troops not sitting on their behinds in nice safe offices

                          #10.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 10:29 PM EDT
                          Reply

                          I just can't believe all these people that are ready to hang this guy. This was his fourth deployment to a combat zone, he had been injured twice including a head injury, and people can't understand why he snapped. Nobody should be required to deploy into combat more than twice, and if that is not possible re-institute the draft. When all these war hawks have to start fighting their own wars we'll find out whether they're really worth fighting. What happened to all this support for our troops. People are amazing. Semper Fi.

                          • 7 votes
                          Reply#11 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:17 PM EDT

                          If we weren't in Afghanistan, this wouldn't have happened. Pure and simple. yes I know he had other problems, financial and otherwise, but you don't get to this point so easily while at home with your wife and kids instead of in a war zone that doesn't want us there and we have no interest in anymore. If anyone should get the blame for this on top of the soldier, it should be the commanders that want to keep us in the sand to nation build longer.

                          • 2 votes
                          Reply#12 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:20 PM EDT

                          A true Commander-in-Chief would stand behind his soldier. But we have the Community Organizer-in-Chief, that now is per-occupied with Electioneer-in-Chief duties. He is too busy to think about some staff sergeant who is to him no more than cannon fodder.

                          • 6 votes
                          Reply#13 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:22 PM EDT

                          IT was the firm he worked for that bilked the guys money. And nobody "flees" by joining the army. They are actually responsible for debts on their credit and will have money taken out to repay any debt. And - a lot of people lost their retirement a couple years ago. So I think the press is just trying to demonize the guy and scew the facts.

                          • 1 vote
                          #13.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:56 PM EDT

                          Bales would not have been able to "flee" to the Army if he had been guilty of the bilking of that couple. Anybody found guilty of civil charges is not acceptable to the military. If he had been accepted while owing money, all debts that he had outstanding would have been garnished from his pay.

                          • 2 votes
                          #13.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:20 PM EDT

                          @ Hugh Class +

                          Very well put. I am so sick and tired of hearing people talk about this guy like he was a "good guy" that did something out of character. He has a long history of being a horrible person. Good people don't steal from elderly couples. They don't get arrested for beating their girlfriends, and they aren't involved in hit and run accidents. These are all red flags and he should have been sent to jail a long time ago.

                          He is a horrible person that just happened to be in the military. If he was a civilian, he would be the guy we read about who decides to shoot up his work place because of "stress" or "financial problems."

                          His actions are not the actions of the military. He is a psychopathy and he needs to be treated as one. He is not worthy of the uniform he wore.

                          -----

                          @ Been There-406834

                          You need to read a little more about the swindling situation. He specifically was found responsible for stealing money from an elderly couple. Not the company he worked for.

                          • 4 votes
                          #13.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:31 PM EDT

                          So this is President Obama's fault for not "standing behind" his soldier? Are you that far off center that you shift the responsibility of a mass murderer of women and children to the President? Pretty good hater, Anonymous User. Drink some more of that Tea Party kool aid.

                          • 3 votes
                          #13.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:33 PM EDT

                          I blame obama because he promised we would be out of there. And now he is in office he just drags his feet.

                          • 3 votes
                          #13.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:11 PM EDT

                          A stockbroker in Columbus from 1996 to 2000, Bales and his partners were ordered to pay Gary Liebschner and his wife $1,274,000 in compensatory and punitive damages

                          Read more: #ixzz1pmRhZjk5

                          There is more to this story.

                          • 1 vote
                          #13.7 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:15 PM EDT
                          Reply

                          Thanks for the clean facility and thanks for giving an opportunity to his wife to see him. Thanks for the mercy and grace.

                          • 3 votes
                          Reply#14 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:38 PM EDT

                          In a life threatening situation I'd want him next to me too because if he were in front of me or behind me he'd probably shoot me.

                          • 5 votes
                          Reply#15 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:38 PM EDT

                          I love all the Republicans in here defending mass murderers of women and children. And before that this guy was a con artist who ripped off old people. Real salt of the earth.

                          I don't support the death penalty (because no nation that has ever used it has done so in an appropriate manner,) but if I did, this guy would be near the top of the list of those we'd like to see removed from the ecosystem.

                          • 2 votes
                          Reply#16 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:44 PM EDT

                          Then remove the Friggen Army right along with him! Nobody and I mean nobody who has an eighth of brain in their head, would of sent this walking time bomb,on another tour of duty RIGHT AFTER getting off 3 tours in Iraq! Having serious tramatic brain injury, and was mentally unbalanced! The FRIGGEN ARMY knew this, but no, some ass hole had to go put him on a list and sign his deployment orders.

                          I'm really getting sick of THIS LYNCH MOB POINTING THE FINGER AT THIS GUY AND NOT AT ARMY ALSO!

                          If you people are going to point a finger, and I don't condone what happened nor what he did,but I'll be dammed if only ONE PERSON IS GOING TO GET THE BLAME! The whole Friggen army and IT IDIOTS ARE TO BLAME ALSO FOR LETTING HIM GO THERE IN THE FIRST!

                          ENOUGH IS ENOUGH! For once let's just TELL THE DAM TRUTH SHALL WE?

                          • 8 votes
                          #16.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:56 PM EDT

                          Jonathan....you know for a fact that all the people defending the Sgt. are Republicans? How astute of you. I really think that people should get their facts straight before they spout off.

                          • 1 vote
                          #16.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:13 PM EDT

                          Gloria where in the hell, besides the media are you getting your stories, facts, lies??? He did not deploy one tour after another, good lord, you said you weren't in the Army, so please DO NOT state facts you don't know..1 tour, a rest tour, 2nd tour 2 rest tours, etc, and actually Afghanistan was his FIRST combat tour. He did not have a brain injury, was in a car accident a few months before he deployed and had a mild concussion. You say let's tell the DAMN truth, well YOU need to SHUT UP, because your spreading LIES!!!

                          Air Force Vet and mother of a FT Lewis Combat Soldier HOOAH!!!

                          • 3 votes
                          #16.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:44 PM EDT

                          A brain injury is a brain injury, regardless of where it was at. And 4 tours even with a rest? is too many when you see what these people do to each other and their buddies. I have 2 children who are combat soldiers, one came back fine, one has been diagnosed with Severe PTSD. So the "rest" tours aren't all their cracked up to be and he was told he wasn't going back then had to leave his family again.

                            #16.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:54 PM EDT

                            Listen up Steelermama! He had 3 tours in Iraq and he thought he was going back over seas,at least that's what these STUPID JACKASSES told him and Poof he's off to Afghanistan!

                            Which part of the equation of Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome,or a Traumatic Brain Injury don't you understand?

                            One more time madam,HE WAS A WALKING TIME BOMB AND THE ARMY DAM WELL KNEW IT! MOST SOLDIERS DON'T GO OUT AND KILL JUST BECAUSE!THERE'S SOMETHING RADICALLY WRONG WITH THEM,IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER!

                            • 1 vote
                            #16.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:40 PM EDT

                            So what qualifies you MS Gloria to talk so much smack??? Because bitch I understand more of the F--KING equation then you do, I'm a Vet and my son is a Combat Soldier...give me your call sign???

                              #16.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:45 PM EDT

                              Steelermama - you were an Air Force right? Not the same as foot soldier in Iraq or Afghanistan. You sound about my age - what war did you see someone blown apart? I have 2 combat soldiers for kids, I don't think you understand the equation because this is a different kind of war, one where you don't know if you can sleep at night. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the service to our Country but you don't know PTSD at all.

                                #16.7 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:23 PM EDT

                                I have a kid in the Active Army, was at Helmond Province, Camp Leatherneck, Scout, saw plenty, did plenty, buddies blown apart, dead, remembers plenty...nephew a marine, Iraq, a Purple Heart, PTSD, told me enough @!$%#, Gloria still hasn't answered because she does not know @!$%#, she's screaming with emotions...I'm emotional because I am a mom, but a veteran is a veteran, I didn't say combat.

                                  #16.8 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:33 PM EDT

                                  Don't make it more than your career was. We all have Vets in our families but until Iraq and 9/11 our generation didn't see a whole lot like what is going on in the middle east. You just get all emotional and every soldier has their own experience. The guy deserves a trial - fair punishment but also some help. I think he is just the start.

                                  • 1 vote
                                  #16.9 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:40 PM EDT

                                  Steelermama,you're talking about being emotional?Holy Crap your name calling SAYS IT ALL!

                                  By the way Sweety, my Husband was in the Army and he got shot up, and saw plenty of people die !When he went in, they use to tell him,don't get to close to anyone, because he may not be there the next day!So don't tell me about purple hearts and all the other medals!

                                  Some of the information you're ranting about is in the interview with the Guy's Lawyer.

                                  So I know a Veteran is a Veteran!

                                  Oh and one more thing sweety pie the head of the Army just announced that they are going to investigate the clowns in the Chain of Command that sent this Whack Job over to Afghanistan!

                                  So don't get your panties in a bunch, and calm down, it's better for your health!

                                  • 1 vote
                                  #16.10 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:44 PM EDT

                                  He suffered his head injury in Iraq in a vehicle roll over, and lost part of his foot in a seperate accident in Iraq

                                  • 3 votes
                                  #16.11 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:57 PM EDT
                                  Reply

                                  Janathan -

                                  This isn't an issue for party politics.

                                  • 1 vote
                                  Reply#17 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:48 PM EDT

                                  so he brutally murders 11 people in the middle of the night and sets them on fire...and he is in medium/minimum security prison..wow talk about a dammed double standard on how americans treat their own

                                  • 2 votes
                                  Reply#18 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:52 PM EDT

                                  He's in that medium/ minimum facility b/c he has yet to be convicted of a crime. Remember the presumption of innocence that we all try to bend our minds around?

                                    #18.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:35 PM EDT

                                    Odd how that presumption of innocence didnt apply to people held at Gitmo, eh?

                                    Justice, in US terms, has become a concept based on nationality. If you're not US, then justice isn't for you. If you're US, then how dare anyone treat you as guilty before trial.

                                    • 2 votes
                                    #18.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:19 PM EDT

                                    Well talk to Obama - he promised to close it when he got elected. I voted for him to fix this crap but it was all talk like most politicians.

                                    • 2 votes
                                    #18.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:25 PM EDT

                                    Dawn -

                                    He is in pre-trial confinement. Being not yet convicted, he is not yet being punished. You are WAY jumping the gun.

                                      #18.4 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 2:07 PM EDT
                                      Reply

                                      If in any fashion we justify this voluntary soldier behavior,we would justify the behavior of the SS in Poland,France,perhaps in Dachau,Treblinka. He has violated all ethical principles and duties of an occupying force soldier. He should be executed by firing squad,after determining that he commited the assassinations. Otherwise we are nothing but imperialistic barbarians.Are we going to let him off the hook like those soldiers that killed a whole family in Iraq and killed a 15 year all girl after she was raped? Are we going to be like General Sheridan that said:"A good indian is a dead indian"? We as citizens have a responsability before the world and before God to make sure that our armed forces behave in just civilized manner,otherwise we are plain powerful barbarians.

                                      • 2 votes
                                      Reply#19 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:59 PM EDT

                                      Sinuhe: While I agree with you to a large extent, I do not believe that this soldier is a "barbarian" by nature. I think the "powers that be" created a monster: We also have a responsibility to our men and women fighting in these extreme circumstances. (See my comment -- #20 -- for details.) Yes, Bales needs to be punished if he is guilty -- but the blame for this incident can be equally placed on the shoulders of the policymakers who sent a ticking timebomb back into the fray.

                                      • 1 vote
                                      #19.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:39 PM EDT
                                      Reply

                                      Why is anyone who has sustained "traumatic brain injury" (as has been said about Bales) being sent BACK out into battle conditions? That's a recipe for disaster, dontcha think? Whether he acted alone or not, he should not have been sent back into the trenches after that type of injury.

                                      • 3 votes
                                      Reply#20 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:27 PM EDT

                                      We have no definitive report on his head injury. There have been loose language reports that he had NO BRAIN injury, to he did have a brain injury. In short, we don't know. But please let's not jump into the same crap as with Lt. Calley at My Lai when he personally put women and children in a ditch and shot them while ordering his platoon to do likewise. Although he got a life sentence, appropriate for a mass murderer, the fools who "supported the war and supported the troops" kept pushing until he served less than four years and all of that under house arrest. Bull@!$%#: our entire nation of law is built upon Individual Responsibility. The murder of those Afgan women and children is not a crime committed by the Army or by the United States of America. If the evidence sustains the reporting and his admission that "he did it", then this SSgt is solely responsible as a murderer.

                                      • 2 votes
                                      #20.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:40 PM EDT

                                      I agree with what you're saying, believe me. I'm simply saying that (in my opinion) these sorts of incidents would happen less often if more attention were paid to treating those with brain injuries with a little more care and caution -- IF in fact that's a factor in this case.

                                        #20.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:19 PM EDT

                                        I have taken care of a man - my brother in law that had a closed brain injury. The part of his brain that was damaged was no bigger than the end of your thumb. But the location made it so he would get violent in a second. I took him to TIRR in Houston and they did the best that they could. He walked and talked like he was okay but was never the same.

                                        • 1 vote
                                        #20.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:31 PM EDT
                                        Reply

                                        But he did not suffer a brain injury, or anything "Traumatic"...he had a mild concussion from a car crash a few months before he deployed.

                                        • 1 vote
                                        Reply#21 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:38 PM EDT

                                        Yeah - seeing your friends leg blown off isn't traumatic. Being a sniper wouldn't affect you, And PTSD is a fairy tale.

                                        • 2 votes
                                        #21.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:02 PM EDT

                                        The term PTSD is loosely used and docs at Madigan where he and my son were treated is now under scrutiny, so I'd hold off on your fairy tale @!$%# scenario if I were you...not all snipers, special forces, rangers, seals, multiple tour combat vets go out and MURDER.

                                          #21.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:49 PM EDT

                                          No not all, but you can not lump them all together. Each has a different experience, witnesses different atrocities, etc. So just hold off until he is charged and has a trial.

                                            #21.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:27 PM EDT

                                            Again he had a rollover in Iraq, and lost part of a foot in a seperate incident

                                            • 1 vote
                                            #21.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:06 PM EDT
                                            Reply

                                            my 2 cents for what its worth. Most the people making post have never been to the middle east. If you had you would know that we (America) is never going to change it with money. We (America) have made a lot of people rich but the tribal areas still have goat, carts and firewood. They eat very little and just do not want to be invaded. It makes them very supicious. Thus, when the Taliban do something the locals side with them and fear them because they know what they will do to them if they rat out the bad guys. So when we question what this young Sgt. was thinking I can only assume (as you all do) he had enough of his fellow soliders being blown to bits and then the locals not knowing anything about it. Right! Take any neighborhood in America and do something like set off a bomb and blow a policeman's legs off and see if the neighbors don't have an idea who did it. I'm not saying what he did was right and he should be held accountable. However, before all those who like to comment and demean the Sgt because he was military should look at how many of their own countrymen the Taliban have killed with bombs and guns with not one person being held accountable.

                                            Last penny of thought. We would have more volunteers for the military except that the politicans have capped the total number of people who can serve in the military. There are plenty of volunteers. We just need to get the politicans to say we can have a fighting force of 1 million strong so we can get the right rotations set up.

                                            • 2 votes
                                            Reply#22 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:40 PM EDT

                                            Steelermama, although I read a different account -- that he was in a battle-related explosion -- my stance is that, if he did sustain any type of real brain injury (and I have seen for myself that just one concussion can cause life-altering damage), he should not have been sent back into battle conditiions. I am not saying that the guilty should not be punished and kept away from society.

                                            • 1 vote
                                            Reply#23 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:43 PM EDT

                                            I agree, but the majority of you are all READING accounts and WATCHING on TV, trying living here at Ft Lewis (Joint Base McChord) in Tacoma Washington, my son is stationed there.

                                              #23.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 4:52 PM EDT

                                              Steelermama -

                                              I've been there. It's about average for a military base.

                                                #23.2 - Thu Mar 22, 2012 2:09 PM EDT
                                                Reply

                                                Thanks to the typical america-centric coverage of the mainstream media, everybody knows the guys' name.

                                                I haven't heard any mention at all of the names of the 9 children he killed or the 3 women who were apparently also raped before being killed or of the 4 men either.

                                                It is quite evident that neither the western press nor the people are interested or care.

                                                • 1 vote
                                                Reply#24 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 2:57 PM EDT

                                                Do we hear the names of the people blown up everyday by a car bomb? Nope, becasue they commit these trocities everyday. I didn't hear the women were raped, probably came from the villagers themselves that say it was 20 soldiers. We just need to get out and let them finish killing each other.

                                                • 1 vote
                                                #24.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:06 PM EDT
                                                Reply

                                                For 4 tours of duty, give this man a medal , a life time pension and send him on his way.

                                                We are all wee wee-ed up over the death of 16 afgans and there is not one word anymore about the muslim that killed 13 of our finest.

                                                • 2 votes
                                                Reply#25 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:09 PM EDT

                                                Best comment yet!

                                                  #25.1 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:23 PM EDT

                                                  @ justBfair

                                                  The only metal he should be receiving is from a firing squad. Period.

                                                  • 4 votes
                                                  #25.2 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:26 PM EDT

                                                  Worst comment yet. Really, murder of 16 people, including nice kids, deserves a medal and pension? BS. That is not my America and shouldn't be yours either. And you have proved my point that I made here before, if this was a Muslim soldier killing nine American children you would be calling for blood. Your clear double standard is sickening and pathetic.

                                                  • 3 votes
                                                  #25.3 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:31 PM EDT

                                                  We should never have gone. This isn't about a Muslim or Christian or any other Religion. It's about being in a country that is stuck in a different century, kills it's own citizens with car bombs etc., THis is not just an American living in Afghanistan who killed a person. This is an Army - who has been in two wars for ten years. We should come home, they killed our soldiers that were trynig to help make their country better and they like the status quo they have.

                                                    #25.4 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 3:43 PM EDT

                                                    We are all wee wee-ed up over the death of 16 afgans and there is not one word anymore about the muslim that killed 13 of our finest.

                                                    Yeah, every time one of our guys gets killed the logical thing to do is to just find the nearest woman and child and shoot them in their sleep. Tit for tat, that's justice!

                                                    /sarcasm

                                                    Btw, I think what's most disturbing about your comment is you're basically saying you want a religious war.

                                                    Thanks but no thanks.

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    #25.5 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:12 PM EDT

                                                    All of you who are so upset about my comment, were you as upset when the muslim in Texas killed the 13 soldiers? We are in a he!! hole of a country that loves living in the very past.

                                                    They have no problem with one of their own packing up a automobile with explosives and putting off the bomb and killing countless men, women, and children, I think they just killed some today, and I am to be outraged that one of our soldiers, on his 4th tour got crazy and killed some afgans. You all say I should be outraged.

                                                    What I am outraged about is that those people have killed over 4000 of our finest soldiers/citizens, blown the arms and legs off thousands of others while we are trying to give them a better life and Karzai is worst of them all. We should have every soldier out of their immediately and let Karzai put his country together on his own. He deserves what ever he gets.

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    #25.6 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 7:18 PM EDT

                                                    They have no problem with one of their own packing up a automobile with explosives and putting off the bomb and killing countless men, women, and children

                                                    So we should stoop to their level? Is that what you're saying?

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    #25.7 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 7:39 PM EDT

                                                    I do not look at it that way. When someone blows up 50-60 people there, the people do not protest and burn Afgan flags and effigies of Karzai because they know it gets them nothing except maybe dead or time in prison. If some Afgans are killed by the American, they do all of the above because they know the disfuctional american government will give them cart loads of money.

                                                    enough said!

                                                      #25.8 - Wed Mar 21, 2012 10:25 PM EDT
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