A TIMES INVESTIGATION
Secrets in the Mountains of Afghanistan
The concealed deaths of two detainees at
Gardez paints a troubling picture of abuse by U.S. Special Forces units
there.
By Kevin Sack and Craig Pyes
Special to The Times
September 24, 2006
First of two parts
GARDEZ, Afghanistan — After completing their deployment to this
remote firebase, the Green Berets of ODA 2021 left for home covered in
glory.
The 10-member Special Forces team, part of the Alabama National
Guard, returned to their families in the spring of 2003 with tales to
tell of frenzied firefights and narrow escapes.
Its commander had nominated each of his men — as well as himself —
for medals for valor. The team's performance was heralded as evidence
that the Guard could play as equals with the regular Army in the war on
terrorism.
But the team also had come home with secrets.
Apparently unknown to Army officials, two detainees had died in
the team's custody in separate incidents during the unit's final month
in eastern Afghanistan. Several other detainees allege that they were
badly beaten or tortured while held at the base in Gardez.
One victim, an unarmed peasant, was shot to death while being held
for questioning after a fierce firefight. The other, an 18-year-old
Afghan army recruit, died after being interrogated at the firebase.
Descriptions of his injuries were consistent with severe beatings and
other abuse.
A member of the Special Forces team told The Times his unit held a
meeting after the teen's death to coordinate their stories should an
investigation arise.
"Everybody on the team had knowledge of it," the soldier said,
insisting on anonymity. "You just don't talk about that stuff in the
Special Forces community. What happens downrange stays downrange....
Nobody wants to get anybody in trouble. Just sit back, and hope it will
go away."
What distinguishes these two fatalities from scores of other
questionable deaths in U.S. custody is that they were successfully
concealed — not just from the American public but from the military's
chain of command and legal authorities.
The deaths came to light only after an investigation by The Times
and a nonprofit educational organization, the Crimes of War Project,
led the Army to open criminal inquiries on the incidents. Two years
later, the cases remain under investigation and no charges have been
filed.
The Times has since reviewed thousands of pages of internal
military records showing that prisoner abuse by Special Forces units
was more common in Afghanistan than previously acknowledged.
More than a year before the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal broke
in Iraq, top officers worried that harsh treatment and excessive
detentions could lead to criminal prosecutions.
In one November 2002 correspondence, a high-ranking Special
Operations official said military police were detecting "an extremely
high level of physical abuse" of detainees transferred from Special
Forces field bases to a prison in Bagram.
An operations officer with the Combined Joint Special Operations
Task Force, the command supervising Special Forces teams in
Afghanistan, complained in a memo that prisoners were being held for so
long without charges that it "may be implied as kidnapping, a federal
crime."
Early in 2003, the chief Special Forces intelligence officer in
Afghanistan warned in a note to the task force commander, Col. James G.
"Greg" Champion, and his top aides: "As you are all aware, alleged
assaults and kidnapping [have] been occurring for quite some time.
Again, I want to emphasize, this is not isolated."
The same officer reported another improper detention less than two
weeks later, notifying Champion's staff in a memo that reflected his
exasperation. "Today is Day 5 of this hostage crisis," wrote the
intelligence officer, Maj. David Davis. He said that such unauthorized
detentions amounted to "criminal conduct in my book."
There also were early warnings from outside sources about prisoner
mistreatment.
In a series of meetings that began in late 2002, officials with
the International Committee of the Red Cross told top U.S. commanders
in Afghanistan that they had fielded a rash of detainee abuse reports
involving at least five Special Forces firebases, according to
previously undisclosed military documents.
The Red Cross representatives protested that the bases had, in
effect, become short-term detention centers, without adequately trained
personnel or effective monitoring, said several U.S. officials with
knowledge of the meetings.
Most of the bases singled out by the agency were under the control
of National Guardsmen with the Alabama-based 20th Special Forces Group.
The compound at Gardez, then occupied by ODA 2021, was portrayed as one
of the worst. Detainees there alleged they were beaten, kicked, doused
with cold water and deprived of sleep for days at a time.
The Army declined to comment on the cases involving ODA 2021 or more
generally on allegations of detainee abuse.
Special Forces firebases in Afghanistan — often the first stop in
a detainee's journey to a holding facility and possibly on to the
prison at Guantanamo Bay — operated largely beyond the reach of human
rights monitors, journalists and, at times, the military chain of
command.
Because of their clandestine nature, Special Forces operations
have been a concern to some in Congress and the State Department who
worry that human rights violations could be occurring under a cloak of
secrecy.
The handling of detainees in Afghanistan became a murky area after
President Bush declared early in the war, launched in October 2001,
that the Geneva Convention would not be applied to Al Qaeda, and
Taliban captives would not be treated as prisoners of war. Instead,
detainees were to be treated "humanely," according to a February 2002
White House directive.
The internal military records show that although senior U.S.
commanders in Afghanistan issued warnings and distributed rules
consistent with the Army field manual and Geneva Convention, those
procedures were routinely ignored.
"You have so much freedom and authority over there," one member of
ODA 2021 said. "It kind of makes you feel like God when you're out
there in cowboy and Indian country."
The documents also show that in 2003 the leadership of ODA 2021
was repeatedly criticized by its superiors. One 20th Group officer said
the Gardez ODA (for Operational Detachment Alpha) was "the most
troubled" field team among nearly a dozen in Afghanistan. Another
senior officer expressed concern in a note that the team was gaining a
reputation as "a rogue unit."
That a small Special Forces detachment could be tied to two
detainee deaths and two apparent cover-ups in less than two weeks
reflected an almost perfect confluence of circumstances. They included
the personality of the team, the unaccountability of its leadership,
the evolution of U.S. policy on detentions, the failure of United
Nations officials to report abuses, and the complicity of Afghan
officials.
The story of the team's deployment, like the five-year American
campaign in Afghanistan itself, is a tale of high-stakes but often
conflicting goals. For the men of ODA 2021, it would be a place and
time in which questionable deaths and unquestionable daring were all
part of the same mission.
Hotel Gardez
The shooting war was supposedly over when about 300 National
Guardsmen of the 20th Group's 1st Battalion arrived in Afghanistan nine
months after U.S.-led coalition forces' December 2001 ouster of the
Taliban regime. Nonetheless, it was a dangerous and chaotic time.
Al Qaeda and the Taliban were in flight, but not vanquished. The
new government was trying to stand up, but it was still wobbly. And,
much like today, the U.S. military struggled to balance the sometimes
incompatible missions of combat and reconstruction.
As this latest rotation of U.S. Special Forces hit the ground,
much of the countryside remained beyond the control of the newly
installed government of interim President Hamid Karzai.
It would fall to Special Forces teams such as ODA 2021 to root out
Al Qaeda and Taliban stragglers and unearth caches of weapons. In
Paktia, the province that includes Gardez, the task was complicated by
byzantine local politics.
Tribal warlords and bandits had skirmished for centuries over the
inhospitable terrain along the porous border with Pakistan. They had
only been emboldened by the power vacuums and shifting alliances
created after the U.S.-led invasion.
As in centuries past, power and wealth in the region flowed to
those who controlled the trade routes. In 2002, that meant controlling
17 longtime checkpoints along about 50 miles of dusty mountain road
between the provincial capitals of Khowst and Gardez. Both of the
detainee deaths linked to ODA 2021 came as a consequence of efforts to
pacify that perilous route.
For the Americans, securing the checkpoints would help them detect
militants' movements and ensure the free passage of troops and
supplies. For the warlords, who were regularly accused of extorting
cash or produce from truck drivers, the checkpoints afforded a means to
pay and feed their militias.
The Green Berets were prepared to remove illegally operated
checkpoints by force, but Pentagon planners regarded the problem as a
local political dispute that should be handled by the Afghans. Besides,
the U.S. military was under pressure to move from combat operations to
a reconstruction phase aimed at winning hearts and minds.
The stakes could not have been higher for Col. Champion, commander
of the 20th Special Forces Group. Not only was the Army counting on his
National Guard troops to perform like active-duty professionals, but
Champion also had been placed in charge of the Combined Joint Special
Operations Task Force.
It was the first time since the Korean War that a National Guard
unit held command over all U.S. Special Forces in wartime. If Champion
succeeded, a general's star awaited his lapel.
The 20th, with about 1,600 members, is one of the Army's seven
active Special Forces groups, and one of only two consisting of
National Guard troops. ODA 2021 belonged to the 1st Battalion, based in
Huntsville, Ala., and its 10 members came from five Southern states.
Some were longtime friends and neighbors, like Sgt. 1st Class Dan
L. Smith, a world-class judo competitor who ran a gym outside
Nashville, and Sgt. 1st Class Scott Barkalow, a locomotive engineer.
Though many of the Guardsmen had drilled together for years, most would
be seeing their first combat.
The team leader, Capt. Michael M. May, 35, was a decorated
Kentucky state trooper who had a cop's respect for procedure and the
chain of command. A father of two, he was cautious and regarded the
Special Forces as ambassadors who were helping the Afghans reclaim
their country. Though some of his men were eager to round up bad guys,
May focused on the team's broader mission of training Afghan troops.
"I'm going to be the one to write the letter to your kids if you get
hurt or killed," he would tell his teammates.
Some clearly felt May was too passive, especially as conditions in
the area deteriorated. They "wanted [us] to grab our guns and drive out
the door and go do it," one team member recalled.
In Gardez, the dusty provincial capital nearly a mile and a half
above sea level, the ODA settled into an adobe fort the size of a
football field. They called it Hotel Gardez. It was surrounded by
25-foot mud walls and had an elevated latrine accessible only by ladder.
The region was endlessly brown, parched by drought. Being
stationed there, one U.S. soldier said, was like "living in a gravel
pit."
The fortress came under regular attack, most often by Taliban
loyalists lobbing missiles from a pair of nearby hilltops. One day, a
shell exploded in a cemetery behind the fort and the soldiers watched
dogs fight over the bones of unearthed remains.
Army regulations at the base were relaxed. The Guardsmen wore
bushy beards and civilian clothing, a look intended to ease their
approach to locals. They also adorned the grill of a red Toyota truck
with a James Brown doll, thrilling local children when, at the press of
a button, it sang out: "Whoa! I feel good!"
The Warlord
From their earliest days in Gardez, the members of ODA 2021
bristled at being kept on a short leash. They were particularly eager
to mount an offensive against their primary nemesis, a renegade warlord
named Pacha Khan Zadran.
In an assessment sent to headquarters shortly after its arrival,
the team's leaders labeled the warlord "a thug" and asked permission
"to take a much stronger stance" against him.
Pacha Khan was an imposing figure. With heavy eyebrows, a thick
dyed mustache and trademark bandolier, he resembled a Pashtun Pancho
Villa.
As the leader of the Zadran tribe, he commanded 300 to 600 armed
men and, with American backing, had helped fight the Taliban. He also
controlled various checkpoints along the Khowst road.
CIA and Special Forces operatives who dealt with Pacha Khan (or
PKZ, as they called him), described him as brutish, mercurial and
unstable. "I thought he was a windbag and a bully and just out for the
money," said one U.S. intelligence analyst.
But Pacha Khan's stature grew when he became one of the
signatories to the December 2001 Bonn agreement that formed the
transitional Afghan government. Karzai rewarded his support by naming
him governor of Paktia, then rescinded the decision after Afghan
military commanders in Gardez refused to cede power to the warlord.
Pacha Khan responded by furiously bombarding Gardez in the spring
of 2002. American forces were caught in the middle of the rocket
attacks and the policy confusion over how to deal with the warlord.
CIA operatives and Special Forces tacticians hatched a number of
plans to capture and imprison him, but senior officials in Washington
always resisted. The havoc he wrought was exactly the kind of
intra-Afghan dispute that the Defense Department insisted should be
dealt with by the Karzai government.
Denied its preferred option, the CIA tried intimidation. As Pacha
Khan was leaving a confrontational meeting at the Gardez firebase,
intelligence officials arranged for three jets to buzz the compound in
a display of American might. The low-level flyover sent the warlord
diving beneath his car, toppling his turban, according to a witness.
Then U.S. officials embraced a plan by Gen. Atiqullah Lodin, an
Afghan military commander, to pay Pacha Khan's checkpoint commanders to
defect to the government. Lodin said in an interview that the CIA put
up the cash. Military correspondence shows that the agency contributed
at least $100,000.
One who defected for dollars was the commander of the strategic
Sato Kandaw checkpoint, Ahmad Naseer, who told The Times the CIA gave
him $3,000 and a pickup truck. He said an agent photographed him
accepting the payoff.
By November, however, ODA 2021 had begun receiving reports that the
checkpoint shakedowns had resumed.
The team's patience was already wearing thin when, on the morning
of Nov. 27, 2002, a unit convoy was ambushed while passing through a
steep draw on the Khowst road. The soldiers had just picked up the 1st
Battalion commander, Lt. Col. Steven W. Duff, who was headed to Gardez
for a Thanksgiving visit despite warnings about security along the road.
"We told him if he wants to come see us, take a helicopter — don't
come down the Khowst road," a team member recalled. But Duff insisted.
As his red Toyota sped through the kill zone, a sniper round slammed
through Duff's left thigh.
Dan Smith and Sgt. 1st Class Jason Howard ran off the snipers, and
Duff was evacuated by helicopter. Indebted to the team, he recommended
Smith and Howard, the team's senior medic, for the Bronze Star.
The team took it personally that its battalion commander had been
wounded while in its care. After Pacha Khan quickly emerged as the
prime suspect, the ODA redoubled its efforts to have him listed as a
high-value target.
But the warlord was considered "a pseudo political figure" --
untouchable unless they could tie him to the Taliban or Al Qaeda,
according to an official of the Special Operations task force. If they
could, he wrote, "the ballgame changes completely."
He concluded: "We do not want to get in the middle of Afghan
politics, even if he is a shithead who deserves to spend a decade or
two at Gitmo."
'Smear Campaign'
Five days after Duff was shot, a commando task force made an
unexpected visit to the Gardez firebase in pursuit of a top-tier target
believed to be in the area.
The complex mission called for ODA 2021 to join the operation, but
no one had bothered to inform the team. The team's commander, Capt.
May, refused to go along because of inadequate planning, according to
several 20th Group officials and documents reviewed by The Times.
May's refusal infuriated the Delta Force officer in charge of the
commando task force, the officials said. A month later, on his way out
of the country, the officer delivered a four-page memo to Special
Operations officials, in effect accusing May of cowardice and
dereliction of duty.
At Champion's request, Duff looked into the accusations. Though he
ultimately dismissed them as unfounded and "a smear campaign," he
learned that many on May's team considered him a tentative leader, more
focused on bringing his men home alive than on attacking the enemy.
Duff reassigned May to the battalion's operations center in neighboring
Uzbekistan.
Though Duff insisted that the transfer was unrelated to the
criticism, May saw the reassignment as "a career-ending thing," said
one 20th Group colleague. "Mike was stressed about this," the colleague
said. He "was devastated."
In an interview, Duff said he had intended to transfer May anyway
to season him for promotion. May, who referred requests for an
interview to the 20th Group public affairs office, was in fact promoted
to major and given a company command after returning to the U.S.
May's removal heartened those on the team who wanted to conduct
more "posse operations" in the manner of the Army's Delta Force and the
Navy's SEALs.
"This was an aggressive, door-kicking bunch," said one 20th Group
official, "and Mike May was the control rod."
Bamian Mutiny
More than 100 miles to the northwest, in Bamian, another Green
Beret team was having its own leadership problems. For many in ODA
2015, Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth C. Waller, their team commander,
was too hungry for a fight and had a habit of planning risky
missions without their input.
Waller was not a weekend warrior but a full-time National
Guardsman. He worked at 20th Group headquarters in Birmingham and was
perceived by many to be Col. Champion's "golden child." He declined to
be interviewed for this article.
Late in November 2002, Waller's team discovered a large cache of
weapons in the nearby Kahmard Valley. They linked it to a warlord
suspected of supporting Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden.
Waller carried the news directly to Champion's command, bypassing
his 1st Battalion superiors. He argued for a full assault on the area,
peppering his entreaties with reminders of 9/11 and imploring
commanders to "think war."
His end runs, and his flamboyant prose, incensed Waller's
superiors at headquarters. They were so annoyed by his tendency to act
on his own that they marked his periodic sightings on a wall map,
calling the exercise "Where's Waller?"
The team leader had trouble within his own ranks as well. The
Bamian unit's senior noncommissioned officer, Master Sgt. Pasquale
"Jim" Russo, sent a defiant note to battalion officials in December
openly challenging Waller's proposal to raid an area that was thick
with enemy fighters. "I can't think of many more principles of combat
that we have not violated," Russo said of the plan.
The operation was temporarily scrubbed, redesigned and its planning
assigned to a different team.
Not long after Russo's complaint, a sizable contingent of the 2015
team let battalion leaders know they preferred not to serve under
Waller, several members said. It was an almost unthinkable act of
mutiny.
After Maj. Tony Wheeler, a top 1st Battalion official, arrived in
Bamian in early January to head the provincial reconstruction team
there, he reported to Duff that the trust between Waller and his men
had deteriorated beyond repair. "The team seems to see Ken as a loose
canon [sic] who might get them killed for no reason," he wrote.
Duff relieved Waller of his command in Bamian and ordered him to
Gardez as Capt. May's replacement. Champion signed off on the transfer.
However, Duff acknowledged making the decision over the warnings of his
own staff. His aides cautioned that Waller would be even less
controllable in Gardez and that inserting him into the conflict with
Pacha Khan might make things combustible.
"It was like throwing a match into gasoline," one Special Forces
official said.
Chaotic Mission
Back in Gardez, ODA 2021 was between commanders on the night of
Feb. 6, 2003, when the team set out on a "snatch mission." The plan was
to swoop into the nearby village of Neknam and seize two men suspected
of having ties to the Taliban.
The first was taken without incident. But before team members
could grab the second, they came under intense fire that left two
soldiers pinned against a wall. The team responded with small arms and
hand grenades.
Because the leaderless team had failed to file proper operational
plans, headquarters had no idea who was in command on the ground. To
those monitoring radio communications from the scene, it appeared that
U.S. forces might be attacking one another in the dark. That also made
it unsafe to call in airstrikes to help end the battle.
Both suspects were finally captured, but almost immediately the team
was blistered with high-level criticism.
"As you can imagine, this makes everyone in this unit look like
amateurs and incompetent as well," Lt. Col. Robert E. Biller, a top
Special Operations task force official, wrote to 20th Group
counterparts. Biller characterized the chaotic mission as a "goatscrew."
Col. Champion promptly confined the team to its base. Then he and
his staff set out to control the damage. Champion personally briefed
Lt. Gen. Dan McNeill, commander of U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan.
Champion's aides later reported he had succeeded in stressing the
intelligence value of the captured detainees rather than the team's
blunders.
"Things have died down," Maj. Jeff Pounding, a Special Operations
task force official, wrote to subordinates in the 1st Battalion the
following day. "We turned the emphasis of operation of a 'rogue team'
to a 'time-sensitive PUC operation.' " PUC, or "person under U.S.
control," was shorthand for detainee.
But the missteps continued. Two days after the raid, the team in
Gardez transferred two detainees to the Bagram Collection Point, a U.S.
holding facility. The detainees arrived "bagged," their mouths taped
and hoods secured around their necks, according to military documents.
"As you well know," Pounding wrote to battalion officials, "this
is a significant violation of the PUC handling procedures. Bagram
detention facility may be doing an investigation."
Red Cross Warnings
There should have been little confusion over detainee policy among
members of the 20th Special Forces Group. Champion had distributed the
Army's guidelines when the 20th deployed to Afghanistan, and they had
been reissued when reports of abuse first made their way to
headquarters.
Only detainees found to meet Pentagon criteria for prolonged
imprisonment, such as those with clear ties to Al Qaeda or the Taliban,
were to be transferred to Bagram. Fearing that innocents might wind up
at Guantanamo, Gen. McNeill had stressed to subordinates that he wanted
terrorists, not truck drivers and farmers, said a civilian military
advisor.
But it wasn't always easy for soldiers to tell the difference.
Given the constant threat of ambush, their instinct often was to detain
first and ask questions later. The Pentagon criteria provided plenty of
latitude, allowing the detention of any suspects "who pose a threat" or
"who may have intelligence value."
There was supposed to be a 96-hour limit on battlefield
detentions. Sometimes prisoner transfers to Bagram were delayed because
helicopters weren't available. But at other times, one 20th Group
official said, Special Forces teams extended their prisoners' stays in
hopes of extracting better intelligence.
State Department officials in Afghanistan said the teams seemed
not to care that their door-kicking roundups and prolonged detentions
might stoke local resentment even as the Army was trying to build
bridges.
"They felt ... there was carte blanche to carry out actions and
there would be little repercussion if they made tactical mistakes,"
said a State Department official who asked not to be named.
By the end of 2002, the Red Cross had relayed early complaints of
prisoner mistreatment to top U.S. military officials in Afghanistan. On
Jan. 10, 2003, officials of the organization met with Gen. McNeill's
staff, describing the 20th Group's firebases as some of the worst
offenders.
Two weeks after the Red Cross meeting in Afghanistan, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld convened a working group in Washington to
recommend whether the list of approved anti-terrorism interrogation
methods should be expanded. McNeill asked his various
intelligence-gathering units to assess the techniques that were in use
in Afghanistan.
Despite the Red Cross allegations, the 1st Battalion's chief
intelligence officer reported back that there were no problems. "I have
not witnessed any abuse or maltreatment of PUCs," Capt. Steven D. Perry
wrote. "When they detain a person, I have faith that it is for a very
good reason."
On Jan. 24, 2003, McNeill's command reported on its interrogation
techniques in a memo to the Pentagon. The list conformed to the Army
field manual's approved battlefield methods, but the memo also
requested approval of "more aggressive, creative and flexible
techniques."
The wish list included food deprivation for up to 24 hours,
sensory overload through loud music and extreme temperature changes and
the use of muzzled dogs to create "controlled fear." Some of the
requested procedures might need to be assessed for compliance with
Pentagon rules for humane treatment, the memo acknowledged.
However, according to the Red Cross, many of the more coercive
techniques were already being used at some of the firebases.
Blood and Grudge
ODA 2021's new commander took charge in Gardez on Feb. 7 as
recriminations were still flying from the "time-sensitive PUC
operation" in Neknam. For a team chafing at the second-guessing of its
missions, Ken Waller's arrival was a welcome relief.
"He wanted to be aggressive," said one team member. "We knew he had
problems with his other team, but he fit right in with us."
Another team member said Waller quickly won respect. "He seemed
very competent and certainly wasn't afraid in combat," he said. In
mid-February, only 12 days after he had taken command, Waller and his
team were returning from patrol along a road blanketed with 5 inches of
snow. The red Toyota — the same truck Duff had been shot in — rumbled
along in the middle of a five-vehicle convoy.
Staff Sgt. Mark "Marco" Deliz, a team engineer from Oneonta, Ala.,
tried to steer precisely through the tread marks carved by the two
vehicles ahead. But his front right tire strayed a few inches and hit a
land mine.
The explosion blew the truck 6 feet into the air, military reports
said. Watching in horror from the vehicle behind, Waller could not
imagine that anyone had survived.
With blood streaming down his face, Deliz stumbled out the
driver's door, brushing the remains of a foot from his lap. It belonged
to his teammate and passenger, Scott Barkalow, the 40-year-old
intelligence sergeant from Burns, Tenn.
Deliz determined that Barkalow was still alive and gestured for
someone to radio for a helicopter. Staff Sgt. Philip S. Abdow, a junior
medic who had joined the team six weeks earlier, wrapped what remained
of Barkalow's right leg.
After the unnerving incident, the medic accompanied Barkalow on
his helicopter evacuation. Abdow reportedly acted so frantically during
the flight, barking orders and cursing, that the copter crew later
complained to Special Operations officials.
He was recalled to battalion headquarters for evaluation before
being cleared to return to the field, according to a 20th Group officer
familiar with the incident. Abdow did not respond to requests for an
interview.
By several accounts, the attack had a profoundly sobering effect
on the team. Before the explosion, members had merely been frustrated
by political constraints on their activities. Now they shared
Barkalow's loss — and some nursed an abiding grudge.
"You get mad when you see your buddies blown up," one team member said.
"You stay pissed off about it."
kevin.sack@latimes.com
craig.pyes@latimes.com
Next: Detained, then dead.
About this series
"Firebase Gardez" examines the deployment to Afghanistan of a decorated
Alabama National Guard unit. It is the result of a yearlong
investigation in the U.S. and Afghanistan by Times staff writer Kevin
Sack and freelance investigative journalist Craig Pyes. It was written
by Sack.
Pyes, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and frequent contributor to
the newspaper, reported from Afghanistan jointly for The Times and the
Crimes of War Project, a Washington-based nonprofit that describes
itself as "a collaboration of journalists, lawyers and scholars
dedicated to raising public awareness of the laws of war." In 2004, the
group provided The Times with the first evidence of an unreported
Afghan death in U.S. custody and joined with the newspaper to
investigate further. That led to a military inquiry by the Army's
Criminal Investigation Command that continues today.
The Times reviewed thousands of pages of internal military
documents that include the period when a 10-member Special Forces
combat team called ODA 2021 (for Operational Detachment Alpha) was
assigned to the firebase at Gardez.
Every member of the team was contacted. Most declined to be
interviewed or referred reporters to public affairs officers. The Army
and all of its subordinate commands — the U.S. Central Command, U.S.
Special Operations Command, Army Special Forces Command, 20th Special
Forces Group and the Alabama National Guard — declined to comment.
Times researchers Nona Yates and Janet Lundblad contributed to these
reports.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times