Boy, this is a terrible story. Obviously Ayala was severely impacted by the incident, to do such a thing as shoot this combatant point blank to the head. I wasn’t there, nor will I judge. But you can see the kind of emotions this could have brought up–to see your comrade be purposely burned by some random individual in a village. I know I would be furious. But that gives no justification to be the judge and jury for such a horrific criminal act, by just killing the guy out right.
Although, Ayala could make the argument that he saw the guy move wrong, or reach for something, and that is why he fired. But still, if he purposely executed an unarmed individual, despite the horrible act this Afghani committed, then that is wrong.
All I have to say at this point is that Ayala is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. If he did in fact commit this act, then he should pay the price. I would hold that standard towards anyone in the military, law enforcement, and the security contracting community, and justice should be served.
On another note, this sounds like the Human Terrain Systems contract BAE has, where they use civilian anthropologists in military civilian affairs units out in the field. It is an initiative to better understand the villages, so the military forces know how to best work with them. And the reason we use anthropologists like this, is because the military cannot home grow that type of resource to meet the demands of the war effort. And that is where BAE stepped in, by filling that need. –Head Jundi
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Contractor Charged With Murder in Afghan’s Death
By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 20, 2008; B05
A defense contractor who once protected top foreign leaders was charged yesterday with second-degree murder in the shooting of an Afghan civilian who had attacked one of his colleagues with a flammable liquid during a routine patrol.
Don M. Ayala, 46, of New Orleans was charged in U.S. District Court in Alexandria in the Nov. 4 shooting. Court documents said he works in Afghanistan for Rockville-based BAE Systems, but he formerly provided personal security to the Iraqi prime minister and the Afghan president.
