Still image made from a video posted on YouTube purports to show U.S. Marines urinating on the bodies of dead Taliban militants in Afghanistan.
CBS NEWS
A U.S. Marine was set to face court martial Wednesday for urinating
on the bodies of dead Taliban fighters in Afghanistan and then posing
for photos with the corpses.
Staff Sgt. Edward W. Deptola
is accused of the desecration of remains and posing for unofficial
photographs with human casualties. He also is accused of failing to
properly supervise junior Marines and not reporting the misconduct.
Deptola
and another Marine based at Camp LeJeune, N.C., were charged last year
after video surfaced showing four Marines in full combat gear urinating
on the bodies of three dead Afghans in July 2011. In the video, one of
the Marines looked down at the bodies and quipped, "Have a good day,
buddy."
As CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reported
after the video's disclosure last January, the Marines in the video were
members of a 1,000-man battalion that had completed a combat tour in
Afghanistan and returned to Camp Lejuene, where they apparently started
showing the video around as a war trophy.
Staff Sgt.
Joseph W. Chamblin pleaded guilty to similar charges last month.
Chamblin was sentenced to 30 days confinement, reduced in rank, fined
and ordered to forfeit part of his pay for six months. Three other
Marines were given administrative punishments for their roles in the
matter.
The
urination video surfaced amid a string of embarrassing episodes for
U.S. forces in Afghanistan. American troops were caught up in
controversies over burning Muslim holy books, posing for photos with
insurgents' bloodied remains and an alleged massacre of 16 Afghan
villagers by a soldier.
The Marine Corps said the
urination took place during a counterinsurgency operation in the Musa
Qala district of Helmand province, located in the south of the country.
After
the video garnered international attention on YouTube, senior military
officials sternly condemned the behavior of the Marines involved.
The
United States now has 66,000 troops in Afghanistan. The U.S. and its
NATO allies agreed in November 2010 that they would withdraw all their
combat troops by the end of 2014, but they haven't decided on the scope
of future missions in the country and the size of any residual force
remaining after that.