Home  »  Afghanistan  »  Soldier Gives L.A. Times 18 Photos Of U.S. Troops Posing With Dead Taliban


Apr 18, 2012 9 Comments ›› Pat Dollard


A soldier from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division with the body of an Afghan terrorist killed while trying to plant a roadside bomb. The photo is one of 18 provided to The Times of U.S. soldiers posing with corpses.

Excerpted from The Los Angeles Times: The paratroopers had their assignment: Check out reports that Afghan police had recovered the mangled remains of an insurgent suicide bomber. Try to get iris scans and fingerprints for identification.

The 82nd Airborne Division soldiers arrived at the police station in Afghanistan’s Zabol province in February 2010. They inspected the body parts. Then the mission turned macabre: The paratroopers posed for photos next to Afghan police, grinning while some held — and others squatted beside — the corpse’s severed legs.

A few months later, the same platoon was dispatched to investigate the remains of three insurgents who Afghan police said had accidentally blown themselves up. After obtaining a few fingerprints, they posed next to the remains, again grinning and mugging for photographs.

Two soldiers posed holding a dead man’s hand with the middle finger raised. A soldier leaned over the bearded corpse while clutching the man’s hand. Someone placed an unofficial platoon patch reading “Zombie Hunter” next to other remains and took a picture.

The Army launched a criminal investigation after the Los Angeles Times showed officials copies of the photos, which recently were given to the paper by a soldier from the division.

“It is a violation of Army standards to pose with corpses for photographs outside of officially sanctioned purposes,” said George Wright, an Army spokesman. “Such actions fall short of what we expect of our uniformed service members in deployed areas.”

Wright said that after the investigation, the Army would “take appropriate action” against those involved. Most of the soldiers in the photos have been identified, said Lt. Col. Margaret Kageleiry, an Army spokeswoman.

The photos have emerged at a particularly sensitive moment for U.S.-Afghan relations. In January, a video appeared on the Internet showing four U.S. Marines urinating on Afghan corpses. In February, the inadvertent burning of copies of the Koran at a U.S. base triggered riots that left 30 dead and led to the deaths of six Americans. In March, a U.S. Army sergeant went on a nighttime shooting rampage in two Afghan villages, killing 17.

The soldier who provided The Times with a series of 18 photos of soldiers posing with corpses did so on condition of anonymity. He served in Afghanistan with the 82nd Airborne’s 4th Brigade Combat Team from Ft. Bragg, N.C. He said the photos point to a breakdown in leadership and discipline that he believed compromised the safety of the troops.

He expressed the hope that publication would help ensure that alleged security shortcomings at two U.S. bases in Afghanistan in 2010 were not repeated. The brigade, under new command but with some of the same paratroopers who served in 2010, began another tour in Afghanistan in February.

U.S. military officials asked The Times not to publish any of the pictures.

Times Editor Davan Maharaj said, “After careful consideration, we decided that publishing a small but representative selection of the photos would fulfill our obligation to readers to report vigorously and impartially on all aspects of the American mission in Afghanistan, including the allegation that the images reflect a breakdown in unit discipline that was endangering U.S. troops.”

The photos were taken during a yearlong deployment of the 3,500-member brigade, which lost 35 men during that time, according to icasualties.org, a website that tracks casualties. At least 23 were killed by homemade bombs or suicide bombers.

Suicide attacks on two bases of the brigade’s 1st Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment killed six U.S. soldiers and four Afghan interpreters. The platoon whose soldiers posed for the photos was part of the battalion.

The soldier who provided the photos, and two other former members of the battalion, said in separate interviews that they and others had complained of inadequate security at the two bases.

An Army investigation into a July 2010 suicide attack in Kandahar that killed four U.S. soldiers found that senior members of the battalion had complained about security. But it concluded that force protection measures were “reasonable and prudent” in the face of limited resources.

Virtually all of the men depicted in the photos had friends who were killed or wounded by homemade bombs or suicide attacks, according to the soldier who provided the images. One paratrooper on the mission wore a bracelet bearing the name of a fallen comrade.

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  • moriyah

    It’s war..

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/Z3TXGFZXNOZPLJJY7PNRF27GZ4 David

     That’s awesome !…i wanna do some of that cool  stuff..

  • http://twitter.com/dirtmodpatriot DIRTMOD PATRIOT

    cool

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_VPZXYCU6GM2A2JSG5S66SPYC3U TyS

    There is nothing wrong with displaying your prey like any other hunter would be proud of their trophy animal

  • . .

    Thanks to images like these the hate against americans is rising. The world could be a little more dangerous for US people.

  • CplUsmc

    I have countless pictures like this that I would never share with the press… idiot.

  • Gerkjob

    Trophies; no… reminders of what it takes to eliminate another; yes… GET IT DONE BOYEES.

  • Icorps1970

    More PC Bullshit on the part of higher command and the White House.
    I doubt the dead Taliban were concerned about their photos being taken.
    If I were in a position to do so I would love to nail pigs ear dog chews to their foreheads. Some units in VN used to attach business cards to VC/NVA so the survivors would surely know who they were being killed by. It was a “this is what happens if you screw with us” thing.
    After combat the enemy dead in not very important, other than its important that they be dead. Taking photos of the dead has been bad form since at least VN.  I would not want them myself. But some take photos…
    Stripping the dead for intelligence was the norm back in Northern I-Corps. Some got put in holes some got left where they died. Nobody cared if they were not going to cause a stink around a FSB or road.
    What possessed the guy to turn these photos over to a newspaper is beyond me. The guys in the photos need to look him up and kick his ass.
    War is a nasty affair where the rubber meets the road  (as opposed to the role played by higher command and the CIC) and judging people for actions when under extreme stress is BS. Shit happens. Morals get put on hold when killing people is your only source of satisfaction, aside from living to see the next sunrise. Its not like they were killing unarmed civilians.
    Given how our dead have been treated I see no reason to do more than tell people they should not do this sort of thing and taking photos of the dead is an Article 15.

  • Icorps1970

     They need a wrist slap and a scolding if still in. All the trigger pullers in the  combat zone should be issued some roofing nails and some pigs ear doggy chews for nailing to foreheads.
    But then I have a “Kill them all and God will take his own”  attitude about warfare.
    These guys screwed up but national investigation?
    PC Bullshit