Love the armchair generals ... I spent 16 long months in a combat zone and I'll tell you all this...It sucks no 2 ways about it.Let anyone of you spend day after day getting shot at sniped at, mortared, rocketed and IED'ed and tell me you wouldn't look at things differently. I have met very few that would say they went through their tours with the same attitude they had when they left. I for one sure don't. You spend 8 hours on a roof in 130 degree heat pinned down by a retard with a rifle taking pot shots at you and tell me that if you had the chance to put a bullet in his brain you would not take it. While it is no excuse because war in and of itself is an atrocity, the laws of war are very different and the morality on the battlefield is nothing like you have in your neighborhood at home. What you see as reprehensible may very well be nothing but a fact of life for the soldier on the battlefield. We have lawyers going over every incident that happens nowadays and it stinks. The laws that govern a society on a daily basis do not apply to the battlefield if they did then everyone with a gun would be tried as a criminal and we would all be in prison. Sorry if this seems like a rant but as someone who went to war one person and came back another it's hard to listen to folks second guess anything that they have not experienced themselves. It's even harder to take when you hear folks talk about it being wrong.
In the end was it right for those soldiers to do what they did, in a peaceful; society ofcourse not but on a battlefield yes. I looked at it this way I was gonna do whatever I had to do to get my young soldiers and myself back home to the people we loved and the lawyers be damned........
16 months straight? Ouch. I've heard that after six months you start to go crazy, is that true? However, there is a balance between letting US soldiers shooting anything that moves and completely neutering combat effectiveness. If we treat the Iraquis and Afghanistanis the same way the Taliban do- we may as well be the Taliban.
It's a battle for hearts, minds and infrastructure (schools, running water, electricity), and the strategy of "Grab them by the balls, their hearts and minds will follow" failed miserably in Vietnam. Look at the Long March, the retreating troops did not steal, rape or pillage (or at least did so far, far less). They were loved (in comparision to the previous Goumindang).
Think of it this way- you live in the Bronx. There is a gang (corresponding to the Taliban), and the police (corresponding to US forces). The gang steals, kills or maims anyone who gets in their way- but they get brownie points for being the home team. If the police do the same thing, only using modern weapons, the gang will be supported far more than the police. It's a simple question of survival.
However, I can't imagine what it must be like to be pinned down for hours, even days by just one guy with a rifle. Seeing bullets whiz through your buddies, hearing the screams by the medic's or corpsman's tent. It must change your thought process quite a bit.
-Penguin