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US War in Afghanistan
Open-ended US bombing campaign results in further Afghan casualties
By Peter Symonds
4 January 2002
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Amid a rising toll of civilian casualties, pressure is mounting
on the newly-installed interim Afghan administration, led by chairman
Hamid Karzai, to call for an end to US bombing.
In the latest incident last weekend, more than 100 people,
including women and children, are reported to have died in an
attack on the village of Qalaye Niazi in Paktia province, just
north of the provincial capital of Gardez. The US insisted that
the attack was targetted against a compound housing members of
the former Taliban regime and Osama bin Ladens Al Qaeda
network.
But angry locals have dismissed the US claims. Haji Saifullah,
head of the areas tribal council, told the Reuters
news agency that the raid had killed 107 people, all of whom were
civilians and not members of the Taliban or Al Qaeda. The
attacks must end. The Americans should stop bombing, he
said. A Reuters cameraman verified seeing huge bomb craters
in the stricken village and scraps of flesh, pools of blood and
clumps of what appeared to be human hair in the rubble.
Janat Gul, a villager, told the press that 24 members of his
family had been killed. Describing the raid as a terrible mistake,
he said: There are no Al Qaeda or Taliban people here. People
are very upset about what is going on. At the village cemetery,
residents pointed out a fresh grave where 50 of the victims had
been buried. They said that the remainder of those killed belonged
to semi-nomadic families and their bodies had been returned to
the mountainous region of Khost.
An on-the-spot report by international aid workers cited in
the New York Times stated that the Taliban may have stashed
weapons in the area after fleeing Kabul in November. But they
had since moved on, leaving behind only unusable weaponry. The
air raids, carried out around 3am, lasted for two hours and flattened
five compounds. Villagers reported that after the first raid,
some survivors including women and children attempted to flee
but were tracked down by helicopter gunships and killed.
The villagers, mostly the relatives of the victims and
a number of other people from the neighbourhood were removing
the rubble, using spades and tractors, to pull out the dead bodies,
the report stated. It noted that so far locals had found the remains
of 17 men, 10 women and 25 children.
Initially, the US military flatly denied any civilian deaths.
A spokesman Commander Matthew Klee confirmed that two B-1B bombers
and a B-52 had struck a known Taliban and Al Qaeda leadership
compound not a village with precision guided munitions.
All the bombs struck the intended target. We struck what
we targetted and nothing else, he said.
Klee claimed that surface-to-air missiles had been fired in
the direction of the bombers and that secondary explosions had
been observed indicating the presence of munitions or a fuel dump.
But neither he nor other US spokesmen have offered any evidence
to substantiate their claims. The US military had not visited
the site and thus had no means of verifying who had been killed
by the bombs.
Another spokesman Major Bill Harrison tried a different tack.
It would be certainly a tragedy, he said, if the reports
of civilian deaths were true. But if innocent civilians were dead,
Harrison added, it would be the direct cause of them [the
Taliban] putting people at risk by living alongside civilians.
The stock-standard civilian shield line offers a blanket
exoneration for the US military without providing any explanation
as to how or why the target was selected or whether any consideration
at all was given to likely civilian casualties.
The air strike on Qalaye Niazi is the third incident in Paktia
province in which substantial civilian casualties have been reported.
On December 27, at least 40 people were killed in the village
of Naka when it was attacked by US B-52 bombers and an AC-130
gunship. Just a week before, a convoy of about 100 people was
attacked near the village of Asmani Kilai, killing over 60 people.
In both cases, locals strongly denied the presence of senior Taliban
or Al Qaeda figures.
At a press conference last week, Abdul Hakim Munib said that
the Paktia tribal council, which he heads, urges the interim
administration of Afghanistan and the world alliance against terrorism
to stop bombarding... Paktia. He said that 15 of those killed
in the convoy were tribal leaders from the Khost region of Paktia
who were en route to Kabul to witness the inauguration of the
new regime. These were all white-bearded tribal elders who
wanted to congratulate Karzai and were mistakenly bombed,
he said.
Last Friday Defence Minister General Mohammad Fahim said there
was no point in continuing the bombing as Al Qaeda and Taliban
forces were on the verge of being eliminated and bin Laden had
probably fled the country. A Defence Ministry spokesman Mohammad
Habeel was even more direct in issuing a demand for the bombing
to stop.
Washington, however, has emphatically rejected any limitation
on its military operations in Afghanistan. As the US commander
General Tommy Franks commented from President Bushs ranch:
We will not be pressed into doing something that does not
represent our national objectives, and we will take as long as
it takes. He said that he expected US forces to remain in
Afghanistan for quite a long period of time.
Pressure is mounting on Karzai, who has close ties to the US,
to call on Washington to halt its campaign. Last week he met with
one of the survivors of the bombed convoy. According to Paktia
tribal leader Munib, Karzai gave an undertaking that he would
press for an end to the US bombardment. But in an interview with
the New York Times on Tuesday, the Afghan head endorsed
the ongoing US military operations. We want to finish the
terrorists in Afghanistanwe want to finish them completely,
he said, adding the worthless proviso, But we must make
sure our civilians do not suffer.
Shifting loyalties
Just who are the targets of the US military is completely unclear.
Different accounts have emerged of the December 20 bombing of
the convoy that vary according to local loyalties and rivalries.
When he described the US attack as a mistake, Paktia leader Munib
was quite candid about his links to the Taliban. I myself
was a deputy minister for communications, border and transport
under the Taliban regime. They were with the Taliban. I was with
the Taliban. All the people you are seeing here were with the
Taliban.
Munibs involvement with the Taliban was not unusual.
After years of internal conflict, there was considerable sympathy,
though not necessarily active support, for the Taliban regime
among the Pashtun tribes of the area. Moreover, the rapid expansion
of the Taliban after its formation in 1994 was in part due to
large bribes paid to local tribal leaders and militia commanders,
who then became Taliban officials in their areas.
Now Munib and his supporters have seen which way the political
wind is blowing and have changed their allegiances accordingly,
as tribal leaders have often done in the past.
As an article in the New York Times noted: The
convoy that came under American attack may have contained some
former Taliban members, but it was clearly welcome in Kabul. When
it was rerouted along the way by what some here called a rival
tribal faction onto a dangerous back road, members of the convoy
tried to reach Mr Karzai for assurances they would not be bombed,
Mr Munib said. They also used their satellite phones to call American
officials, he said, although he did not know which officials.
Munib and others accuse a rival tribal leader Pacha Khan Zadran
of instigating the attack by informing US officials that the convoy
contained Taliban and Al Qaeda leaders. His brother Ammanulah
was one of the handpicked delegates to the UN-sponsored conference
on Afghanistan in Bonn and is now the minister for borders and
tribes in the new government. Pacha Khan is seeking to consolidate
his local control by gaining the post of governor of Paktia, Paktika
and Khost.
Pacha Khan denies having fed information to the US military,
but is quite open in the denunciation of his rivals. The opposition,
he said, were Al Qaeda supporters, adding that the leader of the
tribal council was the No 1 Al Qaeda supporter. They
are with Al Qaeda people in Gardez. They are Arabs and Chechens.
As far as he was concerned, America has not made any mistake
in its bombing. Clearly the Zadran brothers have worked
out that the surest way of dealing with their enemies in post-Taliban
Afghanistan is to denounce them as Al Qaeda people
and let the US military do the rest.
The US continued last week to baldly deny making any mistake
in bombing the convoy. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General
Richard Myers stated on December 28: We have nothing to
indicate anything other than what we said before, and that that
convoy was, again, leadership that was involved in this war on
terrorism. As well as exhibiting a callous disregard for
human life, Myerss statement raises a more fundamental issue.
Just who are the terrorists in a region where loyalties
are notoriously changeable and the subject of financial inducement?
Is every Pashtun leader and tribal chief who ever supported the
Taliban or held a minor post in their administration to be held
responsible for the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington?
If that were the case then the US-backed Karzai could just as
well be branded a terrorist for providing the Taliban with money
and arms in the early years of its rule.
The very looseness with which the term terrorist
is applied underscores its political purposeto provide the
pretext for the unrestricted operation of the US military in a
campaign which bears less and less relationship to even its own
stated aim of rooting out the Al Qaeda and Taliban
leadership. Even if bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar are
caught or killed, Washington can continue to use second or third
rank Taliban officials as the excuse for a continuing military
operation that is bound up with other objectives: US strategic
and economic aims in Central Asia and the Bush administrations
political needs at home.
Those who continue to bear the brunt of the US war on
terrorism are the scores of Afghans who are killed, maimed
or driven from their homes.
See Also:
As US bombs more civilian
targets, Bush insists Afghan war must go on
[29 December 2001]
Report estimates Afghan
deaths exceed Twin Towers figure
[22 December 2001]
More evidence of US
war crimes in Afghanistan: Taliban POWs suffocated inside cargo
containers
[13 December 2001]
Kandahar: the Talibans
last stronghold in Afghanistan falls
[11 December 2001]
As major powers
jockey over aid
Millions of Afghanis lack food, shelter and medicine
[7 December 2001]
US air strikes kill
hundreds of Afghan civilians
[4 December 2001]
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