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US military kills 11 civilians in ongoing war in Afghanistan
By Ben Nichols and Peter Symonds
12 April 2003
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More than a year after the fall of the Taliban regime, American
forces and their Afghan allies are waging a brutal, little-reported
war aimed at stamping out opposition to the US-installed regime
in Kabul.
Occasionally, the fighting hits the international news. On
Wednesday, US military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Douglas Lefforge
announced that a US warplane had killed 11 civiliansseven
women and four menwhen a 1,000-pound laser guided bomb missed
its target and hit a house. Another man was injured.
Lefforge described the deaths as a tragic incident
but provided no explanation as to how or why a precision bomb
should hit a house, rather than enemy fighters. He indicated that
the matter would be investigated. Previous US investigations of
similar incidents in Afghanistan have invariably exonerated
American forces.
In most cases, the US military has blamed the victims, claiming
them to be Taliban or Al Qaeda fighters
or supporters. But on this occasion, as Afghan Interior Minister
Ali Jalali explained: The American response was very rapid
because their mistake was very clear. They hit a family compound.
The Governor of Paktika Province, Mohammed Ali Jalai, reacted
angrily: We condemn these killings. They were neither Al
Qaeda nor Taliban. There were only innocent civilians. We have
told them [the Americans] repeatedly that they need to try to
be precise when they target something.
The bombing took place near the town of Shkin, some 200km south
of Kabul and close to the border with Pakistan. On Tuesday night,
a small group of enemy forces attacked an Afghan military
checkpoint providing security for a nearby US base, wounding four
Afghan soldiers. In the ensuing pursuit, two US Harrier jets were
called in to bomb the fleeing fighters. One unleashed the missile
that hit the compound.
The latest civilian deaths will inevitably provoke further
anti-US sentiment and fuel the armed resistance that has been
growing, particularly among Pashtun villagers in the east and
south. As Interior Minister Jalali noted: There is a lot
of trouble in this area. Thats why our forces and the US
forces maintain a strong presence there. They are regularly being
attacked.
Who is doing the attacking is unclear. The former Taliban leaders
have called for a holy war against US forces and their allies.
Former Afghan prime minister and Mujaheddin militia leader Gullbuddin
Hekmatyar and his Hezb-e-Islami party now appears to have joined
them.
But the opposition to the US occupation is far broader than
just the Taliban and Hezb-e-Islami forces. A year and a half of
ongoing US operations, house-to-house searches, arbitrary detentions
and the rising toll of civilian deaths have created deep resentment.
Added to that is the failure of the US or its allies in Kabul
to address any of the countrys immense social problems.
It is not surprising that there are a rising number of sporadic
guerrilla attacks.
The response of the US military has been to mount what in the
Vietnam War were known as search and destroy operations.
These are military sweeps of areas known to be hostile to the
Karzai government to kill or round up suspected opponents and
terrorise the population. And, as in Vietnam, the result is more
hostility and more attacks.
A recent article entitled The forgotten first stop in
the war on terror, on the Asia Times
website noted: In the past eight weeks, there have been
more than one rocket attack per day targetting coalition forces,
and 50 civilians and government soldiers have been killed or wounded
in insurgent violence in the south of the country... Under such
conditions it hardly seems accurate to refer to Afghanistan as
a post-conflict society.
Its author Mark Sedra confirmed that US military operations
were heightening hostility. By their heavy-handed tactics
in Pashtun areas of the country, US troops have alienated much
of the populace. In particular, their indiscriminate use of air
power, which has killed scores of civilians and their lack of
sensitivity to indigenous laws and customs have been viewed with
seething resentment. According to recent reports in the Afghan
press, US Special Forces, during routine sweeps of Afghan villages
searching for weapons and members of resistance groups, have physically
abused villagers, damaged personal property, and subjected women
to body searches, a major affront to a familys honour.
Over the last month alone, there have been at least three major
US military operations.
On March 20, Operation Valiant Strike was launched to search
caves and villages southeast of the city of Kandahar, involving
some 600 US and allied troops backed by helicopter gunships. According
to military spokesman Colonel King: There is probably the
potential for there to be 50 to 100 of the people you would classify
as enemy or people who support them in the area we are operating
in.
The scanty reports of its progress indicated sporadic fighting
as US forces were fired on by small arms and rockets. Six US troops
were killed when a helicopter crashed and several caches of arms
were found. A number of arrests were made. Although the US military
denied it, the operation, which the largest for over a year, appears
to have been aimed at preempting an expected upsurge of attacks
provoked by the US invasion of Iraq.
US military spokesmen played down the situation in Afghanistan
following the outbreak of war in Iraq but he did concede: I
think there probably was, at least in the first 24 hours, a flurry
of activity directed toward coalition forces, but it seems to
have gotten back pretty much to the status we had beforehand.
On March 28, a similar operation known as Desert Lion
was launched in Kohe Safi mountains in the northeast of the country.
The operation began with air strikes followed up with searches
by ground troops, who reportedly uncovered two caches of arms
and little else.
The third operation was underway last week in the Tor Ghar
mountain range in southeastern Afghanistan. Some 45 US Special
Forces troops and 250 Afghan soldiers caught up with an estimated
40 to 60 Taliban fighters on April 3. According to
US military spokesmen, Harrier jets, B-1 bombers, A-10 warplanes
and helicopter gunships pounded the area over a 14-hour period
using 35,000 pounds of ordinance. One fighter was killed, 11 were
captured and the rest escaped.
The military sweep followed the death of a Red Cross worker
Ricardo Munguia on March 27 near Kandahar. Munguia, an engineer
involved in developing water wells, was stopped while returning
to the city by car and summarily executed. Two days later an ambush
in neighbouring Helmand Province resulted in the deaths of two
US military personnel and the wounding of another and three Afghan
soldiers.
Kandahar governor Gul Afgha Shirzai reacted to Munguias
death by dispatching 1,000 troops across the area to hunt down
the killers. He also issuing a decree giving all former Taliban
supporters 10 days to leave the region if not vouched for by tribal
elders.
Shirzais spokesman Khalid Pashtoon pessimistically explained:
The last few weeks the situation in Kandahar was getting
worse day by day. The increase in violent incidents started about
five months ago, but became more common after [the start of] the
Iraq war.
The Bush administration has proclaimed Afghanistan to have
been a great success, dismissing suggestions that the US military
is becoming bogged down in a vicious war of attrition. But that
is exactly what is taking placewith disastrous consequences
for the Afghan people.
See Also:
Continuing civilian deaths
in US operations in Afghanistan
[19 March 2003]
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