Tribeca Diary: 'The Kill Team'
by Joel Arnold
April 24,
2013
Writer Joel Arnold is
surveying the scene at the Tribeca Film Festival, which runs in New York City
through April 28. He'll be filing occasional dispatches for Monkey See.
At Tribeca over the weekend, I was initially
reluctant to seek out The Kill Team, a documentary focused on American
soldiers charged in the 2010 murders of three Afghan civilians — this, after a
week when senseless violence felt especially close to home.
I was eventually persuaded to see it, though,
because it posed a question about someone trying to do good when he became
witness to such violence: How could a military whistle-blower morally right
enough to report the murder of innocents also be wrong enough to be charged
with the same crimes?
The Kill Team
- Director: Dan Krauss
- Genre: Documentary
- Running Time: 79 minutes
Not rated; violent images,
intense scenes and language
It's not the only question, or even the most
relevant one, when civilians die in cold blood, but it's the question that
drives this uneasy and essential exploration of mission drift, dehumanization
and abdicated responsibility.
Spc. Adam Winfield is the film's primary
subject, a skinny kid from Florida with a big heart and dreams — since he was
young — of following his dad's example and joining the Army. That's one version
of Adam, anyway, but one that appears only in photographs and in the tearful
accounts of Adam's parents, Emma and Christopher.
Facing military trial for his actions in May
2010 and charged with the premeditated murder of Mullah Adahdad, an unarmed
Afghan, the Adam onscreen is consumed with anxiety, his face grayed from
sleepless nights. He flatly admits to his depression, and if he had his way he
might barely defend the charge. But where Adam is defeated, his parents are outraged,
and a palpable sense of injustice pervades Adam's pretrial meetings. He
wouldn't be there if someone had listened to him months earlier.
Privileged with access to the other soldiers
in Adam's unit, director Dan Krauss conveys the anxious mindset of the newly
deployed in their own words. Video taken in Kandahar during Adam's deployment
shows them waiting around, talking about being bored, and going out on patrol
hoping for something to happen. Nothing much would, until they'd be attacked
and someone would be injured. Then it would all be over, and they'd be back to
waiting for an attack.
It just didn't live up to the hype, as one
specialist says.
That changed when their squad leader was hit
by an IED, and Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs took over. In January 2010, Christopher
received panicked communications from his son that things had gone wrong. Over
Facebook chat, Adam said they were murdering people. Gibbs, the new squad
leader, had introduced the unit to ways of getting kills — like planting found
weapons on the unarmed — and Adam's fellow soldiers, Andrew Holmes and Jeremy
Morlock, had put the tactics into practice.
In describing their kills, Morlock and Holmes
are less emotional, even willing to justify their actions. If Morlock's
detached description of how he staged the murder of 15-year-old Gul Mudin
doesn't disturb viewers, the photos they took of the body will.
Krauss captures Adam's isolation and his
parents' powerlessness in being able to help their son. In one harrowing scene,
Christopher wonders if he could have done more — he called agency after office
to report the incident, and he was ignored or told there was nothing that could
be done.
Then there's Emma, who wonders when Adam is
offered a plea deal of eight years what his options were — try to hold out, or
speak up, and to whom? Over months, Gibbs found more willing participants
interested in getting a kill. When it was clear Adam wasn't one of them, Gibbs
threatened him directly.
It might be his word against his commander's
and that of the 30 other soldiers. It might be his life. On that crucial day on
patrol with Morlock and Gibbs, when the two encountered Mullah Adahdad and
decided to get another kill, Adam says, he fired his gun away from the victim.
But he didn't stop his colleagues.
For their parts, Morlock and Holmes aren't on
camera to exonerate Adam. They voice feeling abandoned by a system that had
trained them to kill and punished them when they did. Even Spc. Justin Stoner,
whose report of an assault by Gibbs' cadre led to the investigation that outed
the unit, says he wished he hadn't snitched — the men were doing what they were
trained to do.
There are many parts of The Kill Team
that provoke outrage, and the film doesn't try to simplify the issue or assign
the kind of blame that might assure viewers these atrocities were the actions
of a few isolated individuals and not a foreseeable result of a systemic
problem.
The narrow focus on Adam's trial, though,
means Kill Team ultimately doesn't try to deliver a wider critique,
letting the most unsettling idea in the film be expressed implicitly: If it's
this simple for soldiers to go off-mission and perpetrate crimes without
notice, could it be happening elsewhere? The answer is probably yes.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2013/04/24/178659101/tribeca-diary-the-kill-team?ft=3&f=1045&sc=nl&cc=movn-20130426
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