OF THE
TIMES

- The report found there was "credible information" that 39 Afghans were allegedly murdered by Australian special forces in 23 incidents. Two more were cruelly treated.
- The report redacts much detail about the individual incidents, but the defence force chief Angus Campbell said none of the alleged killings took place in the heat of the battle. Most are alleged to have occurred while the Afghan victims were detained or under Australian forces' control. None of the alleged victims were combatants.
- Brereton said the circumstances of each, were they to be eventually accepted by a jury, would constitute the war crime of murder, and recommended the investigation of criminal charges against 19 Australian service personnel.
- The report revealed an alleged practice known as "blooding", or initiation, of young special forces soldiers. It describes a process in which young special forces soldiers would be instructed by their patrol commander to execute a detainee to gain their first kill. Weapons or radios, known as "throwdowns", were allegedly placed on the body and a "cover story" was created to mask the crime and deflect any scrutiny. A culture of secrecy and cover-up pervaded the special forces. Campbell called blooding an "appalling practice".
- The report clearly shows complaints about the Australians' conduct were made, including by Afghan nationals and local human rights groups. They were ignored or dismissed as Taliban propaganda or attempts to secure compensation.
- Campbell apologised to the Afghan people, its leaders, and to the Australian people. He described the alleged conduct of the SAS soldiers as "shameful", "deeply disturbing" and "appalling". Brereton described it as "disgraceful and a profound betrayal" of all the Australian defence force stood for. He similarly described some of the alleged conduct as "possibly the most disgraceful episode in Australia's military history".
- Campbell announced the disbanding of the second squadron of the SAS. He also said he would recommended to the governor general that the group meritorious citation for special forces, given to personnel serving from 2007 onwards, be withdrawn.
- The Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison, called his counterpart in Afghanistan, president Ashraf Ghani, to express his "deepest sorrow" over the findings.
"The G20 group needs to continue efforts to find common approaches to reforming the World Trade Organization in accordance with modern challenges. It is impossible to achieve this goal without a stable, effective and multilateral trading system based on universal rules and principles, and there is no alternative to the World Trade Organization at the moment."Many global leaders have previously said that the Geneva-based body, which acts as an international arbiter for trading disputes, needs urgent changes and the issue has been on the agenda of multiple international meetings. After their virtual meeting earlier this week, the leaders of BRICS group nations, that apart from Russian includes Brazil, India, China and South Africa, also voiced support for WTO reform.
Comment: Kerry is projecting all of the lawlessness and chaos of his own party (and time working under Obama) on to Trump of course.
It was Kerry's party that supported the rioting and the looting we've seen in past months in the US. And it was under Kerry that the US-aided coup occurred in Ukraine, the US used ISIS as a proxy terror force in Iraq and Syria, and it was under Kerry that Libya was quite literally decimated by NATO's intervention Syria...
But, sure, go ahead and blame Trump for a "breach of law and order".