WASHINGTON â" Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta made a personal appeal to American troops Friday to refrain from misconduct -- a pointed response to the recent publication of images of soldiers urinating on corpses and posing with body parts, behavior that has complicated the war in Afghanistan.
In a speech at Fort Benning, Ga., Panetta was blunt in his assessment of the breakdown of discipline, saying these incidents âshow a lack of judgment, a lack of professionalism, and a lack of leadership.â
Panetta reminded troops that they are representing the American people and they must live up to strict military standards. âThese days, it takes only seconds for one picture to suddenly become an international headline,â the former California congressman said, standing in front of one of the most battle-hardened units in the Army, the âHammer brigadeâ of the 3rd Infantry Division.
âAnd those headlines can impact the mission weâre engaged in, they can put your fellow service members at risk, they can hurt morale, and they can damage our standing in the world,â he said.
Panettaâs admonition is part of a broader effort by military commanders to tighten discipline within the ranks of the Army and Marine Corps. It follows revelations of disturbing conduct by U.S. troops over the past four months that have inflamed emotions in Afghanistan, played into Taliban propaganda and strained relations with President Hamid Karzai.
Last month, The Times reported that soldiers serving with the 82nd Airborne Division in Afghanistan in 2010 posed with the body parts of slain enemies. The Times published a photograph showing soldiers standing with Afghan police who were holding the dismember ed legs of a suicide bomber and another showing a soldier with a dead insurgentâs hand on his shoulder. The images were part of 18 photographs provided to The Times by a soldier who served with the unit.
A month earlier, in February, U.S. troops mistakenly burned copies of the Koran at a base in Afghanistan, sparking violent protests in the country. In January, a video was made public that showed Marines urinating on the corpses of Afghan insurgents.
U.S. officials have publicly distanced themselves from the conduct and renounced the images. Panetta has said the individuals involved will be held accountable.
Panetta emphasized that the troubling incidents ârepresent a very, very small percentage of the great work that our men and women do every day across the world.â
âAnd they [the incidents] concern us because ou r enemies will seek to turn them in their favor, at the very moment when they are losing the wider war,â he said. Panetta said earlier during the speech: âThe Taliban have been weakened, their momentum has been broken.â
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Photos of U.S. soldiers posing with Afghan corpses prompt condemnation
brian.bennett@latimes.com
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