Sex, Drugs, and Dead Soldiers
What U.S. Africa Command Doesn’t Want You to Know
By Nick Turse
April 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Tom
Dispatch" - " Six people lay lifeless in the filthy
brown water.It was 5:09 a.m. when their Toyota Land
Cruiser plunged off a bridge in the West African country of Mali. For about two
seconds, the SUV sailed through the air, pirouetting 180 degrees as it plunged
70 feet, crashing into the Niger River.
Three of the dead were American commandos. The driver, a
captain nicknamed “Whiskey Dan,” was the leader of a shadowy team of operatives
never profiled in the media and rarely
mentioned even in government publications. One of the passengers was from
an even more secretive unit whose work is often integral to Joint Special
Operations Command (JSOC), which conducts clandestine kill-and-capture missions
overseas. Three of the others weren’t military personnel at all or even
Americans. They were Moroccan women alternately described as barmaids or
"prostitutes."
The six deaths followed an April 2012 all-night bar crawl
through Mali’s capital, Bamako, according to a formerly classified report by
U.S. Army criminal investigators. From dinner and drinks at a restaurant called
Blah-Blah’s to more drinks at La Terrasse to yet more at Club XS and nightcaps
at Club Plaza, it was a rollicking swim through free-flowing vodka. And vodka
and Red Bull. And vodka and orange juice. And vanilla pomegranate vodka. And
Chivas Regal. And Jack Daniels. And Corona beer. And Castel beer. And don’t
forget B-52s, a drink generally made with Kahlúa, Grand Marnier, and Bailey’s
Irish Cream. The bar tab at Club Plaza alone was the equivalent of $350 in U.S.
dollars.
At about 5 a.m. on April 20th, the six piled into that Land
Cruiser, with
Captain Dan Utley behind the wheel, to head for another hotspot: Bamako By
Night. About eight minutes later, Utley called a woman on his cell phone to ask
if she was angry. He said he'd circle back and pick her up, but she told him not
to bother. Utley then handed the phone to Maria Laol, one of the Moroccan women.
“Don’t be upset. We’ll come back and get you,” she said. The woman on the other
end of the call then heard screaming before the line went dead.
A Command With Something to Hide
In the years since, U.S. Africa Command or AFRICOM, which is
responsible for military operations on that continent, has remained remarkably
silent about this shadowy incident in a country that had recently seen its
democratically elected president deposed in a coup led by an American-trained
officer, a country with which the U.S. had suspended military relations a month
earlier. It was, to say the least, strange. But it wasn’t the first time U.S.
military personnel died under murky circumstances in Africa, nor the first (or
last) time the specter of untoward behavior led to a criminal investigation. In
fact, as American military operations have ramped up across Africa, reaching a
record 674 missions in 2014, reports of excessive drinking, sex with
prostitutes, drug use, sexual assaults, and other forms of violence by AFRICOM
personnel have escalated, even though many of them have been kept under wraps
for weeks or months, sometimes even for years.
“Our military is built on a reputation of enduring core values
that are at the heart of our character,” Major (then Brigadier) General
Wayne Grigsby Jr., the
former chief of AFRICOM’s subordinate command, Combined Joint Task
Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA),
wrote in an address to troops last year. “Part of belonging to this elite
team is living by our core values and professionalism every day. Incorporating
those values into everything we do is called our profession of arms.”
But legal documents, Pentagon reports, and criminal
investigation files, many of them obtained by TomDispatch through
dozens of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and never before revealed,
demonstrate that AFRICOM personnel have all too regularly behaved in ways at
odds with those “core values.” The squeaky clean image the command projects
through news releases, official testimony before Congress, and mainstream media
articles -- often by cherry-picked
journalists who are
granted access to otherwise unavailable personnel and
locales -- doesn’t hold up to inspection.
“As a citizen and soldier, I appreciate how important it is to
have an informed public that helps to provide accountable governance and is also
important in the preservation of the trust between a military and a society and
nation it serves,” AFRICOM Commander General David Rodriguez
said at a press conference last year. Checking out these revelations of
misdeeds with AFRICOM’S media office to determine just how representative they
are, however, has proven impossible.
I made several hundred attempts to contact the command for
comment and clarification while this article was being researched and written,
but was consistently rebuffed. Dozens of phone calls to public affairs
personnel went unanswered and scores of email requests were ignored. At one
point, I called AFRICOM media chief Benjamin Benson 32 times on a single
business day from a phone that identified me by name. It rang and rang. He
never picked up. I then placed a call from a different number so my identity
would not be apparent. He answered on the second ring. After I identified
myself, he claimed the connection was bad and the line went dead. Follow-up
calls from the second number followed the same pattern -- a behavior repeated
day after day for weeks on end.
This
strategy, of course, mirrored the command’s consistent efforts to keep
embarrassing incidents quiet, concealing many of them and acknowledging others
only with the sparest of reports. The command, for example,
issued a five-sentence press release regarding those deaths in Bamako. They
provided neither the names of the Americans nor the identities of the “three
civilians” who perished with them. They failed to mention that the men were
with the Special Operations forces, noting only that the deceased were “U.S.
military members.” For months after the crash, the Pentagon kept secret the
name of Master Sergeant Trevor Bast, a communications technician with the
Intelligence and Security Command (whose personnel often work closely with JSOC)
-- until the information was
pried out by the Washington Post’s Craig Whitlock.
“It must be noted that the activities of U.S. military forces
in Mali have been very public,” Colonel Tom Davis of AFRICOM
told
TomDispatch in the wake of the deaths, without explaining why the commandos
were still in the country a month after the United States had
suspended military relations with Mali’s government. In the years since,
the command has released no additional information about the episode.
True to form, AFRICOM’s Benjamin Benson failed to respond to
requests for comment and clarification, but according to the final report on the
incident by Army criminal investigators (obtained by TomDispatch
through a FOIA request), the deaths of Utley, Bast, Sergeant First Class
Marciano Myrthil, and the three women “were accidental, however [Captain]
Utley’s actions were negligent resulting in the passengers' deaths.” A final
review by a staff judge advocate from Special Operations Command Africa found
that there was probable cause to conclude Utley was guilty of negligent
homicide.
AFRICOM’s Sex Crimes
The criminal investigation of the incident in Mali touched
upon relationships between U.S. military personnel and African “females.”
Indeed, the U.S. military has many regulations regarding
romantic attachments and
sexual activity. AFRICOM personnel have not always adhered to such
strictures and, in the course of my reporting, I asked Benson if the command has
had a problem with sexual misconduct. He never responded.
In recent years, allegations of widespread sex crimes have
dogged the U.S. military. A Pentagon survey
estimated that 26,000 members of the armed forces were sexually assaulted in
2012, though just one in 10 of those victims
reported the assaults. In 2013, the number of personnel reporting such
incidents
jumped by 50% to 5,518 and last year reached nearly 6,000. Given the gross
underreporting of sexual assaults, it’s impossible to know how many of these
crimes involved AFRICOM personnel, but documents examined by TomDispatch
suggests a problem does indeed exist.
In August 2011, for example, a Marine with Joint Enabling
Capabilities Command assigned to AFRICOM was staying at a hotel in Germany, the
site of the command’s headquarters. He began making random room-to-room calls
that were eventually traced. According to court martial documents examined by
TomDispatch, the recipient of one of them said the “subject matter of
the phone call essentially dealt with a solicitation for a sexual tryst.”
About a week after he began making the calls, the Marine, who
had previously been a consultant for the CIA, began chatting up a boy in the
hotel lounge. After learning that the youngster was 14 years old, “the
conversation turned to oral sex with men and the appellant asked [the teen] if
he had ever been interested in oral sex with men. He also told [the teen] that
if the appellant or any of his male friends were aroused, they would have oral
sex with one another,” according to legal documents. The boy attempted to
change the subject, but the Marine moved closer to him, began “rubbing his [own]
crotch area through his shorts,” and continued to talk to him “in graphic detail
about sexual matters and techniques” before the youngster left the lounge. The
Marine was later court-martialed for his actions and convicted of making a false
official statement, as well as "engaging in indecent liberty with a child" --
that is,
engaging in an act meant to arouse or gratify sexual desire while in a
child’s presence.
That same year, according to a Pentagon report, a
noncommissioned officer committed a sexual assault on a female subordinate at an
unnamed U.S. base in Djibouti (presumably Camp Lemonnier, the headquarters of
Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa). “Subject grabbed victim's head and
forced her to continue having sexual intercourse with him,” the report says. He
received a nonjudicial punishment including a reduction in rank, a fine of
half-pay for two months, 45 days of restriction, and 45 days of extra duty. The
latter two punishments were later suspended and the perpetrator was, at the time
the report was prepared, “being processed for administrative separation.”
At an “unknown location” in Djibouti in 2011, an enlisted
woman reported being raped by a fellow service member “while on watch.”
According to a synopsis prepared by the Department of Defense, that man “was not
charged with any criminal violations in reference to the rape allegation against
him. Victim pled guilty to failure to obey a lawful order and false official
statement.”
In a third case in Djibouti, an enlisted woman reported
opening the door to her quarters only to be attacked. An unknown assailant
“placed his left hand over her mouth and placed his right hand under her shirt
and began to slide it up the side of her body.” All leads were later deemed
exhausted and no suspect was identified. According to Air Force documents
obtained by TomDispatch, allegations also surfaced concerning an
assault with intent to commit rape in Morocco, a forcible sodomy in Ethiopia,
and possession of child pornography in Djibouti, all in 2012.
On July 22nd of that year, a group of Americans
traveled to a private party in Djibouti attended by U.S. Ambassador Geeta
Pasi and Major General Ralph Baker, the
commander of a counterterrorism force in the Horn of Africa. Baker drank
heavily, according to an AFRICOM senior policy adviser who sat with him in the
backseat of a sport utility vehicle on the return trip to Camp Lemonnier. While
two military personnel, one of them an agent of the Naval Criminal Investigative
Service (NCIS), sat just a few feet away, Baker “forced his hand between [the
adviser’s] legs and attempted to touch her vagina against her will,” according
to a classified criminal investigation file obtained through the Freedom of
Information Act.
“I grabbed his hand and held it on the seat to try to prevent
him from putting his hand deeper between my legs,” she
told an investigator. “He responded by smiling at me and saying, ‘Cat got
your tongue?’ I was appalled about what he was doing to me and did not know what
to say.” She later reported the offense via the Department of Defense’s Sexual
Assault Hotline. According to a
report in the Washington Post, “Baker was given an administrative
punishment at the time of the incident as well as a letter of reprimand --
usually a career-ending punishment.” Demoted in rank to brigadier general, he
was allowed to quietly retire in September 2013.
A Pentagon report on sexual assault lists allegations of three
incidents in Djibouti in 2013 -- one act of “abusive
sexual contact” and two reports of “wrongful
sexual contact.” The report also details a case in which a member of the
U.S. military reported that she and a group of friends had been out eating and
drinking at a local establishment. Upon returning to her quarters at the base,
one of her male companions asked to enter her room and she gave him permission.
He then began to kiss her neck and shoulders. When she resisted, according to
the report, “he grabbed her shorts and began to kiss and lick her vagina.” That
man was later charged with rape, abusive sexual contact, and wrongful sexual
contact. He was tried and acquitted.
The Pentagon has yet to issue its 2014 report on sexual
assaults and AFRICOM has failed to release any statistics on its own, but given
that military personnel fail to
report most sexual crimes, whatever numbers may emerge will undoubtedly be
drastic undercounts.
Sex, Drugs, and Guns
On the morning of April 10, 2010, a Navy investigator walked
through the door of room 3092 at the Sarova Whitesands Beach Resort in Mombasa,
Kenya. Two empty wine bottles sat in the trash can. Another was on the floor.
There were remnants of feminine hygiene products on the bathroom countertop, Axe
body spray in an armoire, unopened condoms on a table, and inside a desk drawer,
a tan powder that he took to be “an illicit narcotic,” all of this according to
an official report by that NCIS agent obtained by TomDispatch through
the Freedom of Information Act.
Three days before, on April 7th, Sergeant
Roberto Diaz-Boria of the Puerto Rico Army National Guard had been staying
in this room. On leave from Manda Bay, Kenya -- home of Camp Simba, a hush-hush
military outpost in Africa -- he had come to Mombasa to kick back. That night,
along with a brother-in-arms, he ended up at Causerina, a nearby bar that locals
said was a hotspot for drugs and prostitution. Diaz-Boria left
Causerina with a “female companion,” according to official documents, paid the
requisite fee for such guests at the hotel, and took her to his room. By
morning, he was dead.
A news story released soon after by Combined Joint Task
Force-Horn of Africa stated that Diaz-Boria had died while “stationed” in
Mombasa. The cause of death, the article noted, was “under investigation.”
CJTF-HOA failed to respond to a request for additional information about the
case, but an Army investigation later determined that the sergeant “accidentally
died of multiple drug toxicity after drinking alcohol and using cocaine and
heroin.” Where he obtained the drugs was never determined, but according to the
summary of an interview with an NCIS agent, a close friend in his infantry unit
did say that there were “rumors within the battalion about the easy access to
very potent illegal narcotics in Manda Bay, Kenya.”
Kenya is hardly an anomaly. Criminal inquiries regarding
illicit drug use also took place in Ethiopia in 2012 and Burkina Faso in 2013,
while another investigation into distribution was conducted in Cameroon that
same year, according to Air Force records obtained by TomDispatch.
AFRICOM did not respond to questions concerning any of these investigations.
In late 2012, when I asked what U.S. personnel were up to in
Dire Dawa, Ethiopia, AFRICOM spokesman Eric Elliott replied that troops were
“supporting humanitarian activities in the area.” Indeed, official documents
and other sources
indicate
U.S.
personnel have been
carrying
out aid
activities in the region for years. But that wasn't all they were doing.
The Lonely Planet guide
says that the Samrat Hotel provides the best digs in town, with a “classy
lobby” and “a good nightclub and restaurant.” The one drawback: “stiff
mattresses.” That apparently didn’t affect the activities of at least nine of
19 U.S. military personnel from the 775th Engineer Detachment of the Tennessee
Army National Guard. After an unidentified “local national female” was seen
emerging from a “secured communications room” in the hotel, a preliminary
investigation was launched and found “military members of the unit allegedly
routinely solicited prostitutes in the lobby of the hotel and later brought the
prostitutes back to their assigned rooms or to the secured communications room,”
according to documents obtained via FOIA request. A later report by Army agents
determined that personnel from the 775th Engineer Detachment and the 415th Civil
Affairs Battalion “individually engaged in sexual acts in exchange for money” at
the hotel between July 1 and July 22, 2013. In the room of a staff sergeant,
investigators also found what appeared to be
khat, a popular local narcotic that offers a hyperactive high marked by
aggressiveness that ultimately leaves the user in a glassy-eyed daze.
A sworn statement by a medic who served in Dire Dawa that
month -- obtained by TomDispatch in a separate FOIA request -- paints a
picture of a debauched atmosphere of partying, local “girlfriends,” and a
variety of sex acts. “Originally, before we departed to Ethiopia, I grabbed
around 70 condoms. However, I was told that was not going to be enough,” said
the medic, noting that it was his job to carry medical supplies. Instead, he
brought 200. He confessed to obtaining a prostitute through the bartender at the
Samrat Hotel and admitted to engaging in sex acts with another woman who, he
said, later revealed herself to be a prostitute. He paid her the equivalent of
$60. Another service member showed him pictures of a “local national in his bed
in his hotel room,” the medic told the NCIS agent. He continued:
“I know this
girl is a prostitute because I pulled her from the club previously. The name of
the club was ‘The Pom-Pom’... I had hooked up with this girl before [redacted
name] so when he showed me the photo I recognized the girl. [Redacted name]
stated how she had a nice booty and was good in bed... I want to say that
[redacted name] told me he paid about 1,000 Birr (roughly $30 US dollars), but I
can’t recall exactly.”
Army investigation documents obtained by TomDispatch
also indicate similar extracurricular activities by members of the 607th Air
Control Squadron and the 422nd Communications Squadron in neighboring Djibouti.
An inquiry by Army criminal investigators determined that there was probable
cause to believe three noncommissioned officers “committed the offense of
patronizing a prostitute” at an “off-base residence” in June 2013.
AFRICOM failed to respond to repeated requests for comment on
or to provide further information about members of the command engaging in
illicit sex. It was similarly nonresponsive when it came to criminal inquests
into allegations of arson in South Africa, larceny in Burkina Faso, graft in
Algeria, and drunk and disorderly conduct in Nigeria, among other alleged
crimes. The command has kept quiet about violent incidents as well.
On April 19, 2013, for instance, something went terribly wrong
in Manda Bay, Kenya. A specialist with the Kentucky Army National Guard,
deployed at Camp Simba and reportedly upset by a posting he saw on Facebook, got
drunk on bourbon whiskey -- more than a fifth of
Jim Beam, according to
witnesses -- stole a 9mm pistol, and shot a superior officer. He would also
point the pistol at a staff sergeant and a master sergeant and then barricade
himself in his barracks room. A member of the Army’s Special Forces serving at
the base told an NCIS agent what he saw when the soldier emerged from his
quarters:
"He had a gun
in his hand and he was waving it around with the barrel level. He was saying
something to the effect of ‘Fuck you!’ or something like that. I heard the
[redacted] say something like ‘put the gun down!’ a couple of times and then the
[redacted] shot at the subject 2-3 times with his handgun."
The drunken soldier was hit once in the leg and later
surrendered. An investigation determined that the specialist had probably
committed a host of offenses under the Uniform Code of Military Justice,
including wrongful appropriation of government property, failure to obey an
order, and aggravated assault, although a charge of attempted murder was deemed
“unfounded.” The incident, detailed in previously classified documents, was
never made public.
General Malfeasance
AFRICOM has certainly had its troubles, starting at the top,
since it began overseeing the U.S. military
pivot to Africa. Its first chief, General William “Kip” Ward, who led the
fledgling command from 2007 until 2011, was demoted after a 2012 investigation
by the Department of Defense Inspector General’s office found he had committed a
raft of misdeeds, such as using taxpayer-funded military aircraft for personal
travel and spending lavishly on hotels.
During an 11-day trip to Washington, for example, he billed
the government $129,000 in expenses for his wife, 13 employees, and himself, but
conducted official business on just two of those days. According to the
Inspector General’s report, Ward also had AFRICOM personnel ferry his wife
around and run errands for the two of them, including shopping for “candy and
baby items, picking up flowers and books, delivering snacks, and acquiring
tickets to sporting events.” He even accepted “complimentary meals and Broadway
show tickets” from a “prohibited source with multiple [Department of Defense]
contracts.”
Ward was
ordered to repay the government $82,000 and busted down from four stars to
three, which will cost him about $30,000 yearly in retirement pay. He’ll now
only receive $208,802 annually. An AFRICOM webpage
devoted to the highlights of Ward’s career mentions nothing of his
transgressions, demotion, or punishment. The only clue to all of this is his
official photo. In it, he’s sporting four stars while his bio states that “Ward
retired at the rank of Lieutenant General in November 2012.”
Ward’s wasteful ways became major news, but the story of his
malfeasance has been the exception. For every SUV that plunged off a bridge or
general who was busted down for misbehavior, how many other AFRICOM sexual
assaults, shootings, and prostitution scandals remain unknown?
For years, as U.S. military personnel moved into Africa in
ever-increasing numbers, AFRICOM has effectively downplayed, disguised, or
covered-up almost every aspect of its operations, from the locations of its
troop deployments to those of its
expanding
string of
outposts. Not surprisingly, it’s done the same when it comes to misdeeds by
members of the command and continues to ignore questions surrounding crimes and
alleged misconduct by its personnel, refusing even to answer emails or phone
calls about them. With taxpayer money covering the salaries of lawbreakers and
the men and women who investigate them, with America’s sons dying after drink
and drug binges and its daughters assaulted and sexually abused while deployed,
the American people deserve answers when it comes to the conduct of U.S. forces
in Africa. Personally, I remain eager to hear AFRICOM’s side of the story,
should Benjamin Benson ever be in the mood to return my calls.
Nick Turse is the managing editor of
TomDispatch.com and a fellow at the Nation Institute. A 2014
Izzy Award and
American
Book Award winner for his book
Kill Anything That Moves, he has reported from the Middle East,
Southeast Asia, and Africa and his pieces have appeared in the New York
Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, and regularly at
TomDispatch. His latest book,
Tomorrow's Battlefield: U.S. Proxy Wars and Secret Ops in Africa,
has just been published.
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Copyright 2015 Nick Turse