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Afghan death toll mounts as US warplanes hit civilian targets
By Patrick Martin
23 October 2001
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As many as a hundred people were killed when US and British
warplanes bombed and destroyed a hospital in the western Afghan
city of Herat, the ruling Taliban government in Kabul claimed
Monday. The Pentagon did not initially deny the report, which
came after some of the heaviest air raids of the 16-day war, on
the night of October 21-22. Doctors, nurses and patients were
said to be among the dead.
Citing Taliban sources, the French news service Agence France
Presse reported that the hospital in Herat was full of staff and
patients when it was struck by a US bomb during an overnight raid
on the city. The casualties were very high, AFP said.
Earlier the Afghan news agency Bakhtar reported that US planes
bombed the Nawabad section of Herat, destroying five houses and
killing eight to ten people.
Another attack Sunday left 18 dead and 35 wounded in Tarin
Kot, capital of Uruzgan province north of Kandahar. Five separate
attacks took place, and two health clinics were hit in the town.
The civilian death toll now stands at more than 1,000, according
to reports issued by the Taliban government and verified at least
in part by journalists working inside the country. Anecdotal accounts
derived from interviews with Afghan refugees fleeing the war zone
into Pakistan also confirm the claims of heavy damage to civilian
targets and large loss of life.
The Washington Post, in two dispatches from its correspondent
in Quetta, Pakistan, reported a huge surge of refugees from southern
Afghanistan after the stepped up air strikes around Kandahar,
with more than 3,500 crossing the border October 18. The refugees
described widespread civilian casualties in Kandahar. The Post
account concluded:
As reports of civilian casualties and other mistakes
mount in Americas war in the skies over Afghanistan, a growing
number of Afghans from different backgrounds and political persuasions
are questioning whether the United States is conducting a war
against terrorism and Afghanistans ruling Taliban militia
or against the Afghan people.
Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef, told a press
conference in Islamabad Monday, It is now clear that American
planes are targeting the Afghan people. He pointed to the
remarkable series of mistakes by the US military,
which has hit a UN de-mining office, a Red Cross warehouse, a
World Food Program building and other clearly marked health care
and relief facilities, culminating in the destruction of the second
largest hospital in Herat, a large city near the border with Iran.
On October 17, six agencies called for a pause
in the US bombing, warning that about 400,000 Afghans would run
out of food within a month if aid deliveries are unable to proceed.
Unreported by either side in the war are the casualties among
Taliban soldiers, who are increasingly the focus of the US and
British attacks. There were intense air strikes against Taliban
positions defending the key northwest city of Mazar-e-Sharif,
and the first significant bombing of the major Taliban troop concentrations
north of Kabul.
A Taliban government spokesman said that there were indications
that US forces were using chemical and biological agents, with
many wounded people suffering apparent poisoning. Abdul Hanan
Himat of the Information Ministry told the British news service
Reuters, Today in my contact with doctors in Herat and Kandahar,
they told me that they have found signs that Americans are using
biological and chemical weapons in their attacks. The same
official told AFP, There are signs of intoxication and doctors
suspect that it may be because of chemical or biological weapons.
The Bush administration and the Pentagon, as they have since
the air war began, dismissed all Taliban claims of civilian casualties
as lies. There has been no official US estimate of civilian casualties,
other than a ludicrous claim by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
that there have been only four confirmed deathsthose of
four security guards killed when an American cruise missile slammed
into the office of UN mine-clearing group in Kabul.
Top military officers in command of the air war made little
attempt to disguise the savagery of the bombing campaign. Rear
Admiral Mark Fitzgerald, commander of the aircraft carrier Theodore
Roosevelt in the Arabian Sea, declared, Our strategy has
shifted from attacking operational targets such as airfields,
air defenses, communication nodes, to tactical targets such as
tanks and troops in the field that support the war-fighting capability.
We are striking targets. We are killing people on the ground.
Thats what war is all about.
There was incontrovertible evidence of errant US bombing Monday,
when four photographers for Western news services witnessed US
fighter jets drop two bombs on positions of the anti-Taliban Northern
Alliance. Two F-16s struck Northern Alliance observation posts,
and the opposition soldiers asked the journalists to call
the Americans and tell them they were making a mistake,
said one photographer. The four witnesses included three Americans,
one working for the New York Times, and a Spanish photographer
working for the New York-based Newsday.
The Pentagon flatly denied Taliban claims that two US helicopters
had been shot down in the course of the weekend raid by Special
Forces troops on targets in Kandahar, but admitted that one helicopter
had crashed in Pakistan, killing two soldiers and wounding three.
US officials called the crash accidental rather than due to enemy
fire.
As for the second helicopter, the Arab television station Al-Jazeera
showed film of wreckage found in the southern province of Helmand,
near the border with Pakistan. The debris included tires and a
chunk of metal stamped with the words Boeing and Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, the site of a major helicopter factory. One
chunk of metal was described by experts as the nosewheel of a
Ch-47 Chinook helicopter.
The Special Forces raid involved more than 100 US Army Rangers
and smaller numbers of Delta Force commandos who were dispatched
to the residence of Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar with instructions
to assassinate him. The Washington Post reported that President
Bush has signed a National Security Directive authorizing the
CIA to assassinate both Omar and Osama bin Laden, and authorizing
the agency to spend an additional $1 billion to carry out this
task.
More and bigger raids are expected. More than 2,000 US troops
are on the ground in Pakistan, according to press reports, deployed
in three airbases near the Afghanistan border. They are using
the airports of Jacobabad and Pasni as logistical bases and the
airport of Dalbandin, nearest to the border, as a forward operational
base.
See Also:
Civilian death toll mounts in Afghanistan
[19 October 2001]
Civilian casualties mount in Afghanistan
[13 October 2001]
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