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The Wounded Platoon - PBS Frontline

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BridgeTheGap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-11 11:10 AM
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The Wounded Platoon - PBS Frontline
On November 30, 2007, 24-year-old Kevin Shields went out drinking with three Army buddies from Fort Carson, Colo., a base on the outskirts of Colorado Springs. A few hours later, he was dead -- shot twice in the head at close range and left by the side of the road by his fellow soldiers. Shields' murder punctuated a string of violent attacks committed by the three, who are now serving time in prison for this and other crimes, and it contributed to a startling statistic: Since the Iraq war began, a total of 18 soldiers from Fort Carson have been charged with or convicted of murder, manslaughter or attempted murder committed at home in the United States, and 36 have committed suicide.

In The Wounded Platoon, FRONTLINE investigates a single Fort Carson platoon of infantrymen -- the 3rd Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry -- and finds, after a long journey, a group of young men changed by war and battling a range of psychiatric disorders that many blame for their violent and self-destructive behavior. Since returning from Iraq, three members of the 3rd Platoon have been convicted on murder or attempted murder charges; one has been jailed for drunk driving and another for assaulting his wife; and one has attempted suicide.

The FRONTLINE investigation also uncovers extraordinary footage from police interrogation tapes alleging that members of the platoon murdered unarmed Iraqis. "There's a whole bunch of people in the unit that killed people they weren't supposed to," according to Bruce Bastien, who, along with Louis Bressler and Kenny Eastridge, is now serving time for the murder of Kevin Shields. In a stunning confession recorded by police interviewers and shown for the first time on television, Bastien admits to his role in the murder of two U.S. soldiers and the stabbing of a young woman during a robbery in Colorado Springs -- and he makes claims about more murders committed in Iraq during the surge. "It's easy to get away with that kind of s*** over there. You can just do it and be like, 'Oh, he had a gun,' and nobody really looks into it. 'F*** it, it's just another dead Haji.'"

While the Army has concluded that there is no evidence to back up Bastien's allegations of soldiers killing innocent Iraqis, FRONTLINE also speaks with platoon member Jose Barco, who makes a similar claim. "We were pretty trigger-happy," he says of the soldiers' time in Iraq. "We'd open up on anything. We usually rolled three or four trucks, and if one of them got hit and there was any males around, we'd open up, and we'd shoot at them. ... They even didn't have to be armed."

Read more: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/woundedplatoon/view/#ixzz1YbViFCs0
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Arkansas Granny Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-11 11:19 AM
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1. Even more chilling than this confession was our government's way of
dealing with these men. They were totally expendable. The Army knew these men needed treatment for the invisible wounds they had suffered while serving in Iraq, but instead they just threw them away and covered it up. It's shameful.
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sam11111 Donating Member (638 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-11 11:20 AM
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2. distressing info nt
Nt.
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TheMadMonk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-11 03:12 PM
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3. Not good any way you look at it. However...
...exactly how do these numbers compare for similarly sized non-military populations, perhaps with a good spread of demographic pidgeonholing?

Not trying to downplay, just curious to know just how much worse than non-military life it really is. And whether other groups have it "just as bad".

There is also the tendency for the real screwups in the military to gravitate towards each other as a result of the more "in the know" officers handing off their worst performers to the less savy.

So also exactly how does this one exemplary platoon compare to others in the company? Far be it for me to suspect that the media might focus on the sensationalist atypical rather than the working norm.

That last paragraph is a whole different story, albeit a likely contributing factor, to the "back home crimes" at the heart of the main story. We all know it's happening, but so long as the official denials remain in place, on both sides of the aisle, it never bloody happened.
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