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US military reprisal in Afghanistan kills 17 civilians
By Peter Symonds
8 July 2005
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In what can only be regarded as a bloody act of revenge, the
US military last Sunday killed as many as 17 civilians in an air
raid on the remote village of Chechal in the northeast Afghan
province of Kunar.
The attack took place just five kilometres from where a US
Chinook helicopter was shot down, four days before, resulting
in the deaths of 16 US special forces personnelthe largest
single loss of American troops since the US-led invasion of the
country in 2001.
The US troops were sent to rescue a four-member reconnaissance
team of US Navy SEALs, which came under heavy attack from anti-US
fighters. One wounded team member was found on Saturday and the
bodies of two others were found on Monday. A massive operation
by US and Afghan government troops is still underway in the area
to find the remaining team member.
Few details are available of Sundays airstrike. Kunar
province governor Adadullah Wafa said an initial airstrike destroyed
a compound in Chechal. As villagers gathered to look at the damage,
the US warplane dropped a second bomb on the same target. According
to Wafa, the second explosion killed at least 17 civilians, including
women and children.
The US military has acknowledged that a B-52 bomber struck
the compound with guided bombs. Pentagon spokeswoman Lawrence
di Rita confirmed that civilians had died, but brushed off the
incident. It is obviously an unfortunate situation. It was
in the context of counter-terrorism operations... [T]hese things
do occur and we obviously regret when they do, she declared.
A US military statement claimed that the targetted compound
was the a known operating base for terrorist attacks
and a base for a medium-level terrorist leader, but
offered no evidence. It then implied that the dead were family
members of the terrorists and got what they deserved:
[W]hen enemy forces move their families into the locations
where they conduct terrorist operations, they put these innocent
civilians at risk.
While not usually confirming civilian deaths, such unsubstantiated
statements are the norm for the US military in Iraq, as well as
Afghanistan. As is the case in Chechal, they often fly in the
face of eyewitnesses. What is striking about this latest atrocity
is the timing: just days after the Chinook helicopter was shot
down, the US military hit back in a reprisal aimed as much at
the local population as the anti-US insurgents.
So blatant was the attack that Washingtons puppet regime
in Kabul, headed by President Hamid Karzai, was compelled to issue
a rare protest. Karzais spokesman Jawed Ludin declared on
Tuesday that the president was extremely saddened and disturbed
by the deaths in Kunar province and that under no circumstances
could such a toll be justified. We know terrorists kill
people, destroy mosques and schools but we should be careful not
to cause harm or to kill people. That is not acceptable,
he said.
Karzai is of course directly culpable. His administration,
which is dependent militarily and financially on Washington, has
given the US military carte blanche to operate throughout the
country. Most of the resulting civilian detentions, torture and
deaths are covered up. When incidents do come to light, as in
the case at Chechal, the Karzai administration steps in to try
to defuse local anger.
Ahmad Nader Nadery, a member of the Afghan Independent Human
Rights Commission, expressed the governments real concern.
After praising all the good work the Americans have done,
Nadery warned that killings, such as at Chechal, would damage
Americas image, and by implication that of the Karzai
administration, which faces parliamentary elections in September.
The latest expression of official indignation in Kabul follows
a well-worn pattern. In May, for instance, a media report provided
details of the systematic torture of Afghan detainees by US military
interrogators. Karzai, who was about to leave for a trip to the
US, declared that he was thoroughly shocked by the
revelations. He also announced that he would demand that no
operations inside Afghanistan should take place without the consultation
of the Afghan government. When Bush refused, Karzai said
no more. His latest promises to fully investigate the killings
in Chechal will undoubtedly go the same way.
Since 2001, US military operations have engendered hostility,
hatred and outright opposition among Afghans, particularly in
the Pashtun tribal areas in the east and south of the country.
Speaking to the New York Times last week, Sayed Asadullah
Hashimi, an assistant law professor, commented: Outside
Kabul, two-thirds of the people think that the Americans came
in to invade and occupy Afghanistan, and that is why day by day
the tension is growing. The mood is worsening.
While clearly supporting the US occupation, Jandad Spinghar,
head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, expressed
concern about the growing opposition. He told the newspaper: Three
years on, the people are still hoping that things are going to
work out, but they have become suspicious about why the Americans
came, and why the Americans are treating the local people badly.
This rising anti-US sentiment is being expressed in increasing
attacks on US and allied forces. In April, Lieutenant General
David Barno, former US military commander in Afghanistan, dismissed
the armed opposition as a small hardcore remnant of the
Taliban. Since then, however, fighting has intensified dramatically.
The US military has suffered more 45 deaths in the last three
months and claims to have killed more than 450 enemy
fighters.
The air attack on the village of Chechal demonstrates that
the Pentagon is responding to the military challenge in Afghanistan,
in the same way that it has in Iraq: through repression, round-ups
and reprisals aimed at terrorising the Afghan population into
submission.
See Also:
Helicopter downing highlights upsurge
in Afghan armed resistance
[4 July 2005]
Increasing attacks on US and
allies in Afghanistan
[23 June 2005]
Afghan president feigns outrage
over latest US torture revelations
[24 May 2005]
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