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Rumsfeld in Mazar-i-Sharif
A war criminal visits the scene of the crime
By Kate Randall
10 December 2003
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Donald Rumsfeld rode into Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan
last Thursday as part of his fourth trip to the war-torn country
since the fall of the Taliban regime. The US defense secretarys
35-vehicle cavalcade rode into the desert town on a dusty highway
alongside donkey carts and bicycles to meet up with two Afghan
warlords for a two-hour visit.
Rumsfelds appearance in Mazar-i-Sharif recalls one of
the most gruesome episodes in the Bush administrations war
on Afghanistan. It was here in late November 2001 that the US
military led and orchestrated, with the assistance of Uzbek warlord
Abdul Rashid Dostum and his forces, the massacre of hundreds of
Taliban soldiers following the fall of Konduz to the Northern
Alliance.
The slaughter at the Qala-i-Janghi prison fortress was authorized
at the highest levels of the White House and the US military.
The six-day siege on the compound involved pounding US air strikes
and the execution-style killings of prisoners shot with their
hands tied behind their backs. Icy water was pumped into the prison,
drowning and freezing to death those prisoners who had not been
killed. By the time it was over, more than 400 were dead; perhaps
as many as 800. Only an estimated 80 prisoners survived the attack.
US forces were also on the scene when another group of Taliban
prisoners who had surrendered in Konduz, estimated at more than
1,000, were loaded at the Qala Zeini fort into sealed cargo containerswithout
air or waterand left to die of asphyxiation and dehydration
during the two- to three-day journey to Sheberghan prison, also
near Mazar-i-Sharif. Their bodies were dumped and buried in a
mass grave at Dashi-e-Leili, west of Sheberghan.
That these atrocities occurred is not in doubt. They have been
the subject of documentaries that include live footage and the
statements of eyewitnesses. [See CNN
documentary on Mazar-i-Sharif prison revolt: film footage documents
US war crimes and Afghan
MassacreConvoy of Death available on video: Film exposing
Pentagon war crimes premieres in US]
In the early days of the Afghan invasion, White House spokesmen
repeatedly equated all foreign Taliban fighters with Al Qaeda,
branding them as illegal combatants who were not protected
under the Geneva Conventions. This policy continues to this day
with the US imprisonment of hundreds of alleged terrorists
in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the majority of them picked up in Afghanistan.
The US rejected efforts to negotiate a surrender in which Taliban
soldiers would be allowed to give up their arms and go home, crossing
borders to other countries, insisting that all foreign Taliban
had to be imprisoned or killed. Rumsfeld himself made repeated
statements calling for the killing or imprisonment of all captured
foreign Taliban in Afghanistan. In the week preceding the massacre
at Qala-i-Janghi, the defense secretary told reporters that he
hoped what he referred to as Al Qaeda forces would either
be killed or taken prisoner.
Those killed in the US-led slaughter were mostly Pakistanis,
Chechens, Arabs and other non-Afghans who surrendered in Kunduz,
on November 24, 2001, to the Northern Alliance. The Geneva Conventions
expressly prohibit discrimination against POWs on the basis of
race, nationality or religion. Following exposure of the bloody
events in Mazar-i-Sharif, Amnesty International and Human Rights
Watch called for an inquiry, and were joined by the UNs
High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson.
The US and British governments have consistently rejected all
such appeals, and no international judicial body has called for
an investigation or prosecution of those responsible. The US media,
which paid only passing notice at the time to the slaughter of
more than 1,000 prisoners of war in direct contravention of international
law, fell silent in the immediate aftermath of the events. Similarly,
Donald Rumsfelds recent visit to Mazar-i-Sharif has not
served as the occasion for journalists to recall the grisly episode.
However, Rumsfelds appearance in the town where the Bush
administration and US military oversaw the illegal slaughter does
indeed constitute the visit of a war criminal to the scene of
the crimea crime for which no member of the Bush war cabal
has been brought to justice.
Rumsfeld came to Mazar-i-Sharif to meet with Rashid Dostum
and another warlord, General Ustad Mahammad Atta. Dostum and Atta
joined forces to assist in the capture of Konduz on November 13,
2001, but their forces have since vied for control of northern
Afghanistan, both politically and militarily. The provisional
government of US-installed President Hamid Karzai controls a limited
area around Kabul, in the south of the country. The US has called
on the Afghan warlords to surrender their heavy weapons, and Rumsfeld
received lukewarm assurances from Dostum and Atta in response
to his request for this at their meeting.
In recent weeks the US has launched an intensified crackdown
aimed at countering resistance faced by the occupation force in
Afghanistan, which includes 11,500 US troops and 5,700 NATO peacekeepers
in Kabul. A US air strike last Saturday 100 miles southeast of
Kabulaimed at assassinating a former Taliban officialclaimed
the lives of nine children playing on a field.
Secretary Rumsfeld took the occasion of his visit to Mazar-i-Sharif,
two years after the city fell to the US-sponsored Northern Alliance,
to issue a further death threat to the Taliban, commenting, There
is no doubt that those who have been defeated and removed would
like to come back, but they will not have the opportunity: to
the extent that they assemble in anything more than ones or twos,
theyll be killed or captured.
The US has pursued a similar policy in its illegal war and
occupation of Iraq, targeting former Baath Party leaders for assassination,
and carrying out indiscriminate raids and bombings of alleged
Saddam Hussein strongholds, claiming the lives of civilians in
the process.
See Also:
Newsweek exposé
of war crimes in Afghanistan whitewashes US role
[4 September 2002]
Afghan war documentary
charges US with mass killings of POWs
Showings in Europe spark demands for war crimes probe
[17 June 2002]
After US massacre
of Taliban POWs: the stench of death and more media lies
[29 November 2001]
US atrocity against
Taliban POWs: Whatever happened to the Geneva Convention?
[28 November 2001]
US war crime in Afghanistan:
Hundreds of prisoners of war slaughtered at Mazar-i-Sharif
[27 November 2001]
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