The Corner

“Scott Thomas” and the Mass Grave

One thing I’m wondering about in the Scott Thomas story–besides all the other points people have raised–is this passage:

About six months into our deployment, we were assigned a new area to patrol, southwest of Baghdad. We spent a few weeks constructing a combat outpost, and, in the process, we did a lot of digging. At first, we found only household objects like silverware and cups. Then we dug deeper and found children’s clothes: sandals, sweatpants, sweaters. Like a strange archeological dig of the recent past, the deeper we went, the more personal the objects we discovered. And, eventually, we reached the bones. All children’s bones: tiny cracked tibias and shoulder blades. We found pieces of hands and fingers. We found skull fragments. No one cared to speculate what, exactly, had happened here, but it was clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort.

Then he goes on to say that a private took to wearing a child’s skull “like a crown.” But I wonder would we really build a combat outpost on top of a mass grave? Doesn’t that seem very, very strange?

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