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  • 22
    Jan
    2013
    7:35pm, EST

    Viral: Eerie photo of French soldier in Mali upsets military officials

    Issouf Sanogo / AFP - Getty Images

    A French soldier wearing a skeleton mask stands next to a tank in a street in Niono, Mali.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The image was taken innocently enough: A landing helicopter kicked up a dust storm as French soldiers moved toward Niono, in northern Mali, an area held by al-Qaida-linked militant groups.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The soldiers pulled on their goggles to protect their eyes from the dust. One soldier pulled up a black bandana -- with a white skeleton face printed on it -- over his nose. Behind him, light beamed through tree branches, creating an otherworldly image -- the soldier looked like a skeleton in French military fatigues. 

    Photographer Issouf Sanogo of the Agence France-Presse news agency and Yann Foreix of Le Parisien were drawn to the soldier, whom they photographed. The bandana is an accessory sold for fans of the violent military game “Call of Duty.” At first glance, the soldier bears eerie resemblance to the character Ghost from the video game.   


    Two days after the images were published in newspapers and news sites across Europe, French military officials have announced that they aren’t pleased with the image, according to newspaper Liberation in Paris.

    “This is unacceptable behavior,” said Col. Thierry Burkhard. “This image is not representative of action by France in Mali.”

    France has been moving into the northern region of Mali to wrestle control of the area from militants affiliated with al-Qaida. French Defense Minister Jean-Yves LeDrian said over the weekend that the goal is the "total reconquest of Mali," and that the French military would not "leave any pockets of resistance." Mali is a Muslim country; those in the north are viewed as religious extremists. 

    On the AFP blog, Sanogo, the photographer, said that nothing seemed too out of the ordinary about the image at the time.

    “It was evening. Rays of light filtered through the trees and the clouds were lifted by the helicopter. It was a pretty light. I saw the soldier wearing an odd bandana and I took the photo. At the moment I didn’t find it particularly extraordinary or shocking. The soldier wasn’t posing.”

    Sanogo added: “I don’t know who the soldier is, and I would have trouble recognizing him if I saw him again. I believe, and I hope, that it will be impossible to identify him.”  

    Military and video games have long mixed – the members of SEAL Team 6 were punished for their role in developing the video game "Medal of Honor." The U.S. Army created “America’s Army,” a series of video games to help with recruitment.

    But this image has a more chilling effect, somehow, perhaps because it signifies the conundrum of war: the liberating army as a symbol of freedom, but also of looming death.

    Related: Game originator Col. Casey Wardynski explains thinking behind video game

    Related: SEALs punished for role in developing Medal of Honor video game, official says 

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    826 comments

    Fake news....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, al-qaida, video-games, mali, call-of-duty
  • 17
    Jun
    2010
    2:06pm, EDT

    Adam Lau / AP

    Anthony Le, left, rides an escalator in his homemade "War Machine" costume outside of the E3 Expo, the premier North American trade show for the video game industry, Monday, June 14, 2010, in Los Angeles. Although he doesn't have a pass to the industry-only show, the fan drove 20 hours from Colorado to "be here in the spirit of video games."

    He's got game

    MIT Professor Henry Jenkins has an interesting article on some common myths about video games. In his introduction Jenkins writes, “A large gap exists between the public's perception of video games and what the research actually shows. The following is an attempt to separate fact from fiction.”

    4 comments

    i wish i was there, and in the costume its.........

    Show more
    Explore related topics: technology, video-games, featured, e3

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Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

Robert Hood

is a Supervising Producer, and he has worked at msnbc.com since 1996. Before coming to msnbc.com he was an instructor in the University of Missouri - Columbia Photojournalism program, and a newspaper photographer in Wyoming and Utah. He has also freelanced for The New York Times & The LA Times.

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