Calgary Herald

Soldier sentenced in Afghanista­n massacre

- GENE JOHNSON

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, WASH. — The U.S. soldier who massacred 16 Afghan civilians last year in one of the worst atrocities of the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars was sentenced Friday to life in prison with no chance of release — the most severe sentence possible, but one that left surviving victims and relatives of the dead deeply unsatisfie­d.

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, 40, who pleaded guilty in June in a deal to avoid the death penalty, showed no emotion as the verdict was announced at a military base south of Seattle.

Bales’ mother, sitting in the front row of the court, bowed her head, rocked in her seat, and wept as the sentence was read.

As the verdict was announced, an interprete­r flashed a thumbs-up sign to a row of Afghan villagers who were either injured or lost family members in the March 11, 2012 attacks.

The villagers, who travelled more than 11,000 kilometres to testify against Bales, spoke with reporters and asked through a translator what it would be like for someone to break into American homes and slaughter their families.

“We wanted this murderer to be executed, but we didn’t get our wish,” said Hajji Mohammad Wazir, who lost 11 family members, including his wife, mother and six of his seven children.

Bales, a father of two, never offered an explanatio­n for why he armed himself with a 9 mm pistol and an M-4 rifle and left his post on the killing mission, but he apologized on the witness stand Thursday and described the slaughter as an “act of cowardice.”

The six-member jury weighing whether he should be eligible for parole after 20 years took less than 90 minutes to decide the case in favour of prosecutor­s who described him as a “man of no moral compass.”

“In just a few short hours, Sgt. Bales wiped out generation­s,” Lt. Col. Jay Morse told the jury in his closing argument. “Sgt. Bales dares to ask you for mercy when he has shown none.”

A commanding general overseeing the court-martial has the option of reducing the sentence to life with the possibilit­y of parole.

Defence attorney Emma Scanlan begged the jurors in her closing to consider her client’s prior life and years of good military service, and suggested he snapped under the weight of his fourth combat deployment. She read from a letter Bales sent to his children 10 weeks before the killing: “The children here are a lot like you. They like to eat candy and play soccer. They all know me because I juggle rocks for them.”

“These aren’t the words of a coldbloode­d murderer,” Scanlan said.

She also read from a letter sent by a fellow soldier, a captain who said that Bales seemed to have trouble handling a decade of war and death: “The darkness that had been tugging at him for the last 10 years swallowed him whole.”

Prosecutor­s laying out the case for a life term, argued that Bales’ own “stomach-churning” words demonstrat­ed that he knew exactly what he was doing when he walked to the two nearby villages, shooting 22 people in all — 17 of them women and children, some of them as they screamed for help, others as they slept.

“My count is 20,” Bales told another soldier when he returned to the base.

Morse displayed a photograph of a girl’s bloodied corpse and described how Bales executed her where she should have felt safest — beside her father, who was also murdered.

Morse also played a surveillan­ce video of Bales returning to the base after the killings, marching with “the methodical, confident gait of a man who’s accomplish­ed his mission.”

Bales was under personal, financial and profession­al stress at the time. He had stopped paying the mortgage on one of his houses, was concerned about his wife’s spending and hadn’t received a promotion he wanted.

 ?? The Associated Press/files ?? Staff Sgt. Robert Bales who massacred 16 Afghan civilians in 2012 was sentenced to life in prison without a chance of parole.
The Associated Press/files Staff Sgt. Robert Bales who massacred 16 Afghan civilians in 2012 was sentenced to life in prison without a chance of parole.

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