
Robert Beckhusen
The military waited six days before releasing the name of U.S. Army
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians earlier
this month. One of the reasons for the somewhat unusual delay: to give
the military enough time to erase the sergeant from the internet — or at
least try to.
That’s according to several Pentagon officials who spoke on the
condition of anonymity to McClatchy newspapers about the subject. The
scrubbed material included photographs of Bales from the military’s
official photo and video distribution website, along with quotes by the
38-year-old sergeant in the Joint Base Lewis-McChord newspaper regarding
a 2007 battle in Iraq “which depicts Bales and other soldiers in a glowing light.”
The sergeant’s wife, Karilyn Bales, and their two young children were also moved onto Lewis-McChord, reportedly for their protection. Her blog, titled “The Bales Family”
about her life as a mother and military spouse, was removed although
it’s not known how, precisely. The military’s reasoning for the
blackout: protecting the privacy of the accused and his family.