By James Cogan
21 December 2019
21 December 2019
Former special forces soldier
Ben Roberts-Smith, who was awarded the military’s highest honour, the Victoria
Cross, for his purported heroism in Afghanistan, is now known to be the subject
of two police investigations into allegations that he murdered Afghan
civilians.
According to reports this week
in the Sydney Morning Herald and the Melbourne Age, the police
inquiry centres on the death of an unarmed man with a prosthetic leg, who was
shot during an Australian operation in the village of Kakarak, in Afghanistan’s
Uruzgan province, in April 2009. At least three former soldiers have reportedly
agreed to testify that Roberts-Smith, a Special Air Service (SAS) corporal at
the time, executed the man.
The existence of the first
police investigation into Roberts-Smith was revealed in September on the
current affairs television program “60 Minutes.” It centres on an allegation
that, in September 2012, he kicked a handcuffed farmer named Ali Jan off a
ridge near the village of Darwan in Uruzgan and ordered a subordinate to shoot
him.
Roberts-Smith has emphatically
denied the allegations. When an account of the Darwan incident first surfaced
in 2018 in the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age, he immediately
launched a defamation suit that is still proceeding. As part of their defence,
the newspapers have claimed to have evidence that Mr Roberts-Smith participated
in six unlawful killings in Afghanistan.
The SAS, along with the
Commando regiment, was used for some of the most brutal aspects of the war,
particularly hunting down and capturing or killing alleged Taliban resistance
fighters in areas where they had overwhelming support among the local
population.
Roberts-Smith’s service record
testifies to the manner in which the Australian government relied on special
forces personnel as its main contribution to the US-led occupation of
Afghanistan. He was deployed on combat tours in 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010 and
2012. He was awarded the Victoria Cross for killing several Taliban fighters in
2010 in Kandahar province.
Under conditions in which they
were being repeatedly deployed to suppress the popular resistance, occupying
troops in Afghanistan and Iraq resorted to ever more ruthless and
indiscriminate methods. Evidence of war crimes committed by Australian forces,
as well as by their American, British and New Zealand counterparts, has emerged
repeatedly in recent years.
In 2015, information surfaced
that an SAS soldier had amputated the hands of three alleged insurgents whom
his unit had killed in 2013. The special forces claimed they had been advised
by the Australian Defence Force Investigative Service that such mutilations
were acceptable in order to secure fingerprints. The story was prominently
reported in part because one of the SAS officers, Andrew Hastie, had just
entered the federal parliament as a rising star of the right-wing faction of
the governing Liberal Party.
In response to swirling
rumours of even more serious incidents, the Special Forces Command initiated an
internal review. The allegations were reportedly so serious that the then Chief
of Army instructed the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Forces
(IGADF) to initiate a formal investigation, which began in May 2016.
While the military inquiry
took place behind closed doors, and Afghan veterans like Roberts-Smith were
being lauded as heroes during the centenary commemorations of World War I,
former and serving soldiers turned to the media to bring to the light of day
the nature of operations they had witnessed in Afghanistan.
In October 2016, army commando
Kevin Frost went public to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation with an
allegation that he had witnessed and taken part in covering up the murder of an
Afghan prisoner. Frost had testified to the military inquiry weeks earlier.
In July 2017, Australian
Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) reported allegations—which its journalists were
able to confirm with Afghan sources—that Australian special forces had shot an
unarmed teenage boy named Khan Mohammed in Kandahar province in 2012.
The same month, the ABC went
to air with a seven-part investigative series, titled the Afghan Files, which
was based on leaked Australian Defence Force documents. The leaks contained
internal reports of at least 10 occasions between 2005 and in 2013 in which
special forces personnel were accused of killing unarmed civilians. These
included the murder of Bismillah Azadi and his son Sadiqullah while they were
asleep in Uruzgan in September 2013. It also included extensive details of the
hand amputation incident and the bitter recriminations within the military over
which branch was responsible.
The political and military
establishment was furious about the leaks, launching a major investigation
seeking to prosecute Dan Oakes, one of the journalists responsible for the ABC
exposure. This culminated in unprecedented raids on the Sydney offices of the
ABC in June this year, in which federal police seized up to 100 computer files
relating to the Afghan Files. The day before, police raided the private home of
News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst over a separate leak that had revealed
intelligence agency plans to increase surveillance of Australian citizens.
More than three-and-a-half
years after the launch of the Inspector General investigation, it has not
produced a public report. The two police inquiries into Ben Roberts-Smith are
the only known moves toward any prosecutions.
Last week, Kevin Frost was
found dead from an apparent suicide. The incident he went public over in 2016
is among those shrouded in doubt as to whether anyone will ever be held to
account.
Glenn Kolomeitz, a lawyer who
has represented former soldiers who have testified to the IGADF investigation,
stated on December 19 that the protracted delay in any findings was taking a
toll on their mental health.
“None of the blokes I’ve
assisted have had any sort of follow-up enquiries and quite frankly Defence and
indeed the IGADF are fully aware that some of these guys are struggling,” he
told the ABC. “It’s undoubtedly a very complex inquiry.… The allegations arise
in an operational setting overseas which is still a war zone. But three years
is a long time in anyone’s books.”
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