Protesters wearing pig masks, German Bundeswehr uniforms and covered in fake
blood stand next to a fake memorial to German Bundeswehr soldiers near the
German Ministry of Defense on September 8, 2009 in Berlin, Germany. Inside
the grounds of the Ministry German President Horst Koehler was to inaugurate
a real memorial to the approximately 3,000 German Bundeswehr soldiers who
have died in international deployments. The Bundeswehr's role in the ISAF
peacekeeping operation in Afghanistan has come under heavy domestic criticism
in recent days since the Bundeswehr-targeted attack on two stolen fuel trucks
near Kunduz that killed an estimated 125 people, many of them Taliban but
also at least some civilians. Getty
Afghan boys look at female U.S Marines from Delta Company of the 2nd Light
Armored Reconnaissance Battalion in a village near the town of Khan Neshin
in Rig district of Helmand province, southern Afghanistan September 8, 2009.
Reuters
An Afghan man holds up his clothes to show that he is not carrying explosives
after he was stopped by U.S. Marines from Delta Company of 2nd Light Armored
Reconnaissance Battalion patrolling near the town of Khan Neshin in Rig district
of Helmand province, southern Afghanistan September 8, 2009. Reuters
Roissy-en-France, Paris northern suburb, the coffin of a French soldier who
died after being wounded in a bomb attack in Afghanistan. Two French soldiers
died and eight others were wounded when a booby trap exploded against their
armoured personnel carrier as they carried out reconnaissance in Afghanistan.
The year 2009 has already been a record-breaking year for foreign soldiers
killed in Afghanistan since the US-led bid to oust the Taliban began following
the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Getty
German Chancellor Angela Merkel reacts, after she addressed the German parliament
Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2009. Chancellor Angela Merkel
on Tuesday pledged Germany's support for a thorough investigation of an airstrike
in Afghanistan that may have killed civilians, but said her government won't
accept premature judgments from critics at home or abroad. AP
Wounded Canadian Sapper Alexandre Beaudin-D'Anjou wipes away a tear as the
coffins of two of his comrades are carried past him during a repatriation
ceremony at Kandahar Air Field September 7, 2009. Beaudin-D'Anjou and two
others survived a roadside bomb attack that killed Maj. Yannick Pepin, 36,
and Cpl. Jean Francois Drouin, 31, when the blast flipped their armoured
vehicle southwest of Kandahar on Sunday, bringing to 129 the number of Canadian
soldiers who have died in Afghanistan since their mission began in 2002.
Pepin is the highest ranking member of the Canadian military to die in combat
in Afghanistan. Reuters
Canadian soldiers carry the casket of Maj. Yannick Pepin, 36, and Cpl. Jean
Francois Drouin, 31, who were both killed on Sunday by a roadside bomb, at
Kandahar Air Field September 7, 2009. Pepin, the highest ranking member of
the Canadian military to die in combat in Afghanistan, and Drouin were killed
when a powerful roadside bomb flipped their armoured vehicle southwest of
Kandahar on Sunday, bringing to 129 the number of Canadian soldiers who have
died in the country since their mission began in 2002. Reuters
A U.S Marine from Delta Company of the 2nd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion
stands outside his vehicle after patrol, near the town of Khan Neshin in
Rig district of Helmand province, southern Afghanistan September 7, 2009.
Reuters |
An Afghan man holds his clothes up to show that he's not wearing explosives
before U.S Marines from Delta Company of 2nd Light Armored Recon Battalion
search him for weapons near the town of Khan Neshin in Rig district of Helmand
province, southern Afghanistan September 6, 2009. Reuters
Inside the cargo hold of a special operations plane, a U.S Air Force captain
checks the load of supplies for a re-supply air drop to a Special Forces
fire base in Afghanistan Sunday, Sept. 6, 2009. AP
afpak-comms.htm Afpak Communications Eyeball September 6, 2009
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Angela Nolan, a medic, and crew chief, assigned to 1st
Battalion, 168th Aviation Regiment talks on the radio to pilots of an UH-60
Black Hawk helicopter, after completing a medical evacuation flight to Bagram
Airfield, Afghanistan, July 20, 2009. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Teddy
Wade/Released) Date Posted: 8/3/2009
U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class, Steve Larocque, Charlie Company, 3rd Squadron,
61st Cavalry Regiment, writes down a radio frequency used by the Taliban
as Interpreter Qarder Khatin, Observation Mentor Liaison Team, holds the
radio out which is used by Afghan National Police as a ANP Officer watches
at Nishagam, Afghanistan, July 15th, 2009. The ANP Officer sharing the
information claims to have heard the insurgents speak about the ambush that
happened the prior day which killed one US Soldier and wounded three right
after the attacks occurred. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Evan D. Marcy / Released)
Date Posted: 7/29/2009
U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Enrique Munoz, with Embedded Training Team
44, uses a radio to ensure air space is clear before artillery pieces are
fired at Forward Operating Base Kalagush, Afghanistan, July 10, 2009. Munoz
is working with the Afghan National Army and is training soldiers to use
field artillery guns. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Jennifer Cohen/Released) Date
Posted: 7/13/2009
U.S. Marines with 1st Squad, 3rd Platoon, Foxtrot Company, 2nd Battalion,
8th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3 use Husky tactical support
vehicles to find improvised explosive devices while on patrol in Afghanistan
July 2, 2009. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Joseph Breinlinger/Released)
Date Posted: 7/20/2009
U.S. Marines and Navy Seabees assigned to the Naval Mobile Construction Battalion
(NMCB) 5 convoy security element provide security March 30, 2009, at the
entry control point of a project in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan.
NMCB 5 is deployed to Afghanistan providing contingency construction support
to allies and the NATO International Security Assistance Force. (U.S. Navy
photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Patrick W. Mullen III/Released)
Date Posted: 4/10/2009
U.S. Army Spcs. Patrick Wilson, left, and Evaristo Garcia fire a 120 mm
high-explosive mortar round during a coordinated illumination exercise on
Forward Operating Base Mizan, Afghanistan, Sept. 2, 2009. Both Soldiers are
from Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment, U.S. Army Europe.
(DoD photo by Sgt. Kris Eglin, U.S. Army/Released) Date Posted: 9/4/2009 |
af-fun-news-02.htm
Afghanistan Military Sudden Death Account September 4, 2009
http://www.eandppub.com/2009/09/ap-photo-of-afghan-death-that-is-causing-controversy.html
UPDATE: AP Photo of Afghan Death That Is Causing Controversy
Photo of U.S. Marine, who later died on August 14, by Julie Jacobson, AP.
See stories here on media response, the original AP report, and more on media
using and refusing to run here. Secretary of Defense Gates has now sent a
formal protest to the AP, which said it would revisit the issue but declined
to withdraw the photo. By all accounts, relatively few news outlets have
decided to air the image. I have written about this general issue and
controversies for many years at E&P and in book. -- Greg Mitchell
Julie Jacobson, AP
This undated photo provided Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009 by the US Marine Corps
shows Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard, 21. Bernard was hit with a rocket propelled
grenade in a Taliban ambush Friday, Aug. 14, 2009 in the village of Dahaneh
in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan. He later died of his wounds.
In this photo taken Friday Aug. 14, 2009, U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard
of Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines, patrols on point through the
bazaar in the village of Dahaneh in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan.
Less than an hour later Bernard's squad was ambushed by Taliban fighters
waiting in a pomegranate grove. Bernard was hit with a rocket propelled grenade
and later died of his wounds. AP
U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Lawrence Nicholson, left, and 2nd MEB Sgt. Major Hooph
pay their respects to Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard during a memorial service
at a forward operating base with Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Regiment,
2nd MEB, 3rd MEF, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2009, in Now Zad in the Helmand Province
of Afghanistan. Bernard was mortally wounded during a Taliban ambush on Aug.
14. AP
This undated photo shows Associated Press photographer Julie Jacobson, center,
standing with unidentified members of the Afghan National Army. On Aug. 14,
2009, Jacobson was with a U.S. Marine patrol in southern Afghanistan when
it walked into a Taliban ambush. The clash resulted in the death of 21-year-old
Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard, hit in the legs by a rocket-propelled grenade.
From the reporting of Alfred de Montesquiou, the photos and written journal
kept by Julie Jacobson, and the TV images of cameraman Ken Teh, the AP has
compiled "Death of a Marine," a narrative of the clash, offering vivid insights
into how the battle was fought, and into Bernard's character and background.
AP |
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (L) and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen take questions from the news media during a
press conference at the Pentagon September 3, 2009 in Arlington, Virginia.
Gates addressed the eroding public support for the war in Afghanistan. He
stated, 'The nation has been at war for eight years. The fact that Americans
would be tired of having their sons and daughters at risk and in battle is
not surprising.' Getty
Military veterans dip their flags, as the coffin of Fusilier Simon Annis,
22, is carried into the church of St John the Baptist, during a funeral service
in Irlam, England, Thursday Sept. 3, 2009. Annis was killed by an explosion
in Sangin, Afghanistan on Aug. 16, while trying to save an injured comrade.
AP
Donna Axelson, second from the right, mother of fallen U.S. Navy Sonar Technician
2nd Class Matthew Axelson, a former SEAL, comforts her daughter-in-law, Maria
"Patsy" Axelson, during the Pacific Beacon unaccompanied personnel housing
dedication ceremony in San Diego, Calif., March 26, 2009. The buildings were
named in honor of three fallen SEALs; Axelson, Gunner's Mate 2nd Class Danny
Dietz, both killed during Operation Redwings in Afghanistan on June 28, 2005,
and Interior Communications Electrician 1st Class Thomas Retzer, killed in
Afghanistan, June 25, 2003, while supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.
Pacific Beacon is a privately owned community that features four 18-story
towers with 941 dual master suite apartments. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass
Communication Specialist 2nd Class Michelle Kapica/Released) Date Posted:
6/9/2009
U.S. Marine Corps troops in High-Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV)
of Weapons Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, conduct a mounted
patrol in the cold and snowy weather of the Khowst-Gardez Pass, Afghanistan,
in order to disrupt any enemy activity on Dec. 30, 2004. The Marines are
stuck in heavy snow and had to move on foot. These Marines are conducting
security and stabilization operations in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
(U.S. Marine Corps Photo by Cpl James L. Yarboro) (Released) Date Posted:
unknown
U.S. Marine Corps troops in High-Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWV)
of Weapons Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, conduct a mounted
patrol in the cold and snowy weather of the Khowst-Gardez Pass, Afghanistan,
in order to disrupt any enemy activity on Dec. 30, 2004. These Marines are
conducting security and stabilization operations in support of Operation
Enduring Freedom. (U.S. Marine Corps Photo by Cpl James L. Yarboro) (Released)
Date Posted: unknown
Sailors and Marines of the Navy and Marine Corps Intelligence Center (NMITC)
conduct training exercises in an area designed to simulate conditions in
Iraq and Afghanistan. The NMITC facility at Naval Air Station Oceana, Dam
Neck Annex, is designed to teach Sailors and Marines to use non-traditional
intelligence collection efforts to combat a non-traditional enemy. The facility
was dedicated to Gunnery Sgt. Ronald Eric Baum who was killed in Iraq, May
3, 2004. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jason
R. Zalasky (RELEASED). Date Posted: unknown
Soldiers from the US coalition forces patrol through the streets of Kabul
on September 3, 2009. More than 300 foreign troops have died in Afghanistan
so far this year, making it the deadliest to date. Most deaths this year
have been caused by IEDs, which also claim many civilian lives. Getty
US Army (USA) Soldiers and Afghanistan National Army (ANA) Soldiers meet
with local villagers in an effort to locate caves in the area of Sulamain
Khel, Afghanistan. Soldiers assigned to 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment,
3rd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (Assault) are operating 18-miles from
the Afghanistan and Pakistan border during Operation Apache Snow II, as part
of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM. Photographer's Name: SGT KEITH D. MCGREW,
USA Date Shot: 6/11/2002
Graphic shows monthly U.S. troop deaths in the Afghanistan war. AP
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Lt. Kimberly Smith conducts a patrol brief on Patrol
Base Jaker in the Nawa district of the Helmand province of Afghanistan Sept.
1, 2009, prior to a convoy. (DoD photo by Staff Sgt. William Greeson, U.S.
Marine Corps/Released) Date Posted: 9/3/2009
U.S. Marines with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment prepare
to go on a reconnaissance patrol in Nawa district, Helmand province, Afghanistan,
Aug. 29, 2009. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Phillip Elgie/Released)
Date Posted: 9/3/2009
U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Brett Greensage and Cpl. Mike Tiearney, with Alpha
Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, cross a river during a
reconnaissance patrol in Nawa district, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Aug.
29, 2009. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Phillip Elgie/Released)
Date Posted: 9/3/2009
Theresa Cunningham (left), the wife of US Air Force (USAF) Senior Airman
(SRA) Jason D. Cunningham, Pararescueman, 38th Rescue Squadron (RS), 347th
Rescue Wing (RW), Moody Air Force Base (AFB), Georgia (GA), hugs another
38th RS Pararescueman after the March 4, 2004, renaming ceremony dedicating
the SRA Jason D. Cunningham Airman Leadership School at Moody AFB in honor
of her husband who was killed on March 4, 2002, in Afghanistan while saving
the lives of ten other men participating in Operation ANACONDA which was
conducted during Operation ENDURING FREEDOM. SRA Cunningham was posthumously
awarded the Air Force Cross on September 13, 2002. Photographer's Name: TSGT
ROB JENSEN, USAFLocation: MOODY AFB Date Shot: 3/4/2004
Active duty personnel from McConnell AFB, Kansas arrive onboard a KC-10 Extender
from McGuire AFB, NJ to their deployed base in the Persian Gulf. They here
to help with the air war in Afghanistan during Operation ENDURING FREEDOM.
In response to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 at the New York
World Trade Center and the Pentagon, President George W. Bush initiated Operation
ENDURING FREEDOM in support of the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT), fighting
terrorism abroad. Photographer's Name: SSGT Michael Gaddis, USAF Location:
UNKNOWN Date Shot: 10/28/2001
In these May 28, 2009 photos provided by the U.S. Army, Pfc. Jordan M. Brochu
(L) and Spc. Jonathan D. Welch (R) are seen. According to the Department
of Defense, Brochu, 20, of Cumberland, Maine, and Welch, 19, of Yorba Linda,
Calif., died Aug. 31 in Shuyene Sufia, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when
enemy forces attacked their unit with an improvised explosive device.
U.S. Marines walk around a base in Helmand province, southern Afghanistan,
September 3, 2009. Reuters
U.S. Marines walk to enter a helicopter in front of a base in Helmand province,
southern Afghanistan, September 3, 2009. Reuters
Unidentified mourners file out of the North Fort Chapel following a ceremony
at Fort Lewis, Wash. on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2009 honoring the lives of Sgt.
Troy Orion Tom and Pfc. Jonathan C. Yanney, who died Aug. 18, 2009, when
their vehicle was struck by an IED in Afghanistan. AP
From left : International special envoys for Afghanistan and Pakistan, French
Thierry Mariani, US Richard Holbrooke and France's Foreign Affairs Minister
Bernard Kouchner, attend a press conference after their meeting on September
2, 2009 in Paris. Western troops cannot leave Afghanistan until the region
has been made secure, French Bernard Kouchner said after a meeting with
international envoys.'We want to bring our decisive support to the Afghan
population, with projects linked to agriculture, health, and education,'
Kouchner said after talks with US special envoy Richard Holbrooke and
counterparts from 25 other countries and organisations. Getty
Brooke Jenkins looks at her 10-week-old daughter, Reagan, as the casket holding
the body of her husband, U.S. Army Capt. Cory Jenkins, is carried at the
Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport in Mesa, Ariz. on Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2009.
Jenkins was killed by an IED after it struck his Stryker vehicile in southern
Afghanistan Aug. 25, 2009. AP
U.S. soldiers keep watch at the scene of a suicide bomb blast in Mehtar Lam,
east of Kabul, September 2, 2009. At least 23 people were killed in the suicide
bomb attack in eastern Afghanistan, said Sayed Ahmad Safi, a spokesman for
the governor of Laghman province, where the attack took place. Reuters
Widow Chelsey Pellerin, left with flag, and mother Melissa Farmer, right
with flag attend the burial service for Justin Pellerin at the state Veterans
Cemetery in Boscawen, N.H. , Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009. Pellerin of Concord,
an Army infantryman, died on Aug. 20 from injuries suffered in a roadside
bomb in Afghanistan. AP
An Army honor guard carries the ashes of Army Sgt. 1st Class Severin West
Summers III, of Bentonia, Miss. , at Arlington National Cemetery on Monday,
August 31, 2009 in Arlington, Va. Summers was killed in Afghanistan on Aug.
2, 2009. AP |