The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 21, 2005, Page 3, Image 3
Muslim clerics outraged over report U.S. soldiers desecrated Taliban fighters’ bodies
Daniel Cooney
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KABUL, Afghanistan —
Islamic clerics expressed
outrage Thursday at television
footage that purportedly shows
U.S. soldiers burning the
bodies of two dead Taliban
fighters to taunt other militants
and warned of a possible
violent anti-American
backlash.
President Hamid Karzai
condemned the alleged
desecration and ordered an
inquiry. The operational
commander of the U.S.
military in Afghanistan, who
launched its own criminal
probe, said the alleged act, if
true, was “repugnant.”
Worried about the potential
for anti-American feelings over
the incident, the State
Department said it instructed
U.S. embassies around the
globe to tell local governments
that the reported abuse did not
reflect American values.
Cremating bodies is banned
under Islam, and one Muslim
leader in Afghanistan
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happen to American forces.
“Their future will be like the
Russians,” Zahidullah said.
In Washington, the U.S.
government also condemned
the alleged incident.
The allegation was “very
serious” and “very troubling,”
State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said. His
comment came after the
department said U.S.
embassies had been told to
inform foreigners that abuse of
remains “is not reflective of our
values.”
The report also generated
congressional debate with
Senate Republicans saying the
alleged U.S. troop participation
goes to the heart of why
Congress must pass legislation
to standardize techniques used
in the detention, interrogation
and prosecution of detainees in
the war on terrorism.
“This is a very, very serious
problem,” said Sen. John
Warner, R-Va., and the
chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee. He said
the situation raises a question
that must be answered: “What
was the command and control
that allowed this situation to
happen?”
The move suggested U.S.
worries about an anti-American
uproar like Afghan riots in May
that erupted after Newsweek
said U.S. soldiers at the
Guantanamo Bay detention
facility desecrated Islam’s holy
book, the Quran. Newsweek
later retracted the story.
The alleged body burning
comes as the U.S. military is
struggling to bolster its image
in Afghanistan amid charges by
Karzai of heavy-handed tactics
in fighting the Taliban.
Australia’s SBS television
network broadcast the video
purportedly showing soldiers
burning the bodies of two
suspected Taliban fighters in
hills outside Gonbaz village in
the southern Shah Wali Kot
district — an area plagued by
Taliban activity and considered
by the local security forces as
too dangerous to venture into
unless accompanied by U.S.
troops.
Viewers of the footage saw a
group of about five troops in
light-colored military fatigues,,
which did not have any
distinguishing marks, standing
near to a bonfire in.which two
bodies were laid side by side.
The flames obscured the view
of the bodies, making it
impossible to tell if the
remains were of Taliban
fighters.
The network said the video
was taken by a freelance
journalist, Stephen Dupont.
Dupont, who told The
Associated Press that he was
embedded with the Army’s
173rd Airborne Brigade, said
the burnings happened Oct. 1.
He told SBS that soldiers in a
U.S. Army psychological
operations unit later broadcast
taunting messages targeting the
village, which was believed to
be harboring Taliban fighters.
“They deliberately wanted to
incite that much anger from the
Taliban so the Taliban could
attack them. ... That’s the only
way they can find them,”
Dupont said.
The video did not show
those messages being broadcast,
although it showed some
military vehicles fitted with
speakers and playing loud
music.
According to a transcript
released by SBS, the messages
called the Taliban “cowardly
dogs.”'
“You are too scared to come
down and retrieve their
bodies,” said one message,
according to the transcript.
Dupont told the AP the
messages were broadcast in the
local dialect but were translated
into English for him by
members of the Army unit. He
declined to provide further
information.
The U.S. military said the
Army Criminal Investigation
Command was looking into the
matter,
“This alleged action is
repugnant to our common
values,” Maj. Gen. Jason
Kamiya said from the U.S. base
at Bagram. “This command
takes all allegations of
misconduct or inappropriate
behavior seriously and has
directed an investigation into
circumstances surrounding this
allegation.”
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compared the video to
photographs of U.S. troops
abusing prisoners at Iraq’s Abu
Ghraib prison.
“Abu Ghraib ruined the
reputation of the Americans in
Iraq and to me this is even
worse,” said Faiz Mohammed, a
top cleric in northern Kunduz
province. “This is against Islam.
Afghans will be shocked by this
news. It is so humiliating.
There will be very, very
dangerous consequences from
this.”
Anger also was evident in the
streets.
“If they continue to carry out
such actions against us, our
people will change their policy
and react with the same policy
against them,” said
Mehrajuddin, a resident of
Kabul, who like many Afghans
uses only one name.
Another man in the capital,
Zahidullah, said the reported
abuse was like atrocities
committed by Soviet troops,
who were driven out of
Afghanistan in 1989 after a
decade of occupation. He
warned that the same could