Showing posts with label McChrystal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McChrystal. Show all posts

Thursday, March 25, 2010

One More Push for What in Afghanistan? And at what cost in lives?

Summary



Photo - Parents and villagers with the bodies of eight boys between 12 and 17 years old killed in a night raid on the village of Ghazi Khan by US and Afghan government forces

With civilians and soldiers continuing to die in the war in Afghanistan 9 years after it began we have to ask whether the huge cost in money and lives is necessary or worth it.

The war is clearly failing to either defeat the Taliban or prevent Al Qa’ida training. NATO and the Karzai government have never come close to controlling the whole of Afghanistan. Even if they did Al Qa’ida could still train in the US or Europe – as they did in US flight schools for the 9-11 attacks. US intelligence reports that 90% of the people we’re fighting in Afghanistan are not Taliban suggest NATO and Afghan army offensives (often by Tajiks and Uzbeks from Northern Afghanistan into Pashtun areas in Southern Afghanistan) are turning Afghans against the Karzai government, despite the vast majority of them opposing the Taliban.

Despite the Obama administration promising a new strategy to end to high numbers of civilian deaths caused by NATO airstrikes in Afghanistan after the Azizabad airstrikes in August 2008 they have continued – and again after the Bala Bolook strikes in May 2009 – and again after Kunduz in September 2009 – and during the Operation Moshtarak offensive in Helmand and airstrikes elsewhere in Afghanistan this year.

On top of this the new ‘counter-insurgency’ strategy is leading to an unknown but increasing number of civilian deaths in night raids (at least 98 in 2009) by US led Afghan Special Forces and militias. The evidence suggests the brutal methods of crushing all dissent by proxy native death squads which was developed in Guatemala and El Salvador and reproduced with the ‘Police Commandoes’ in Iraq is being used in slightly altered form in Afghanistan. It provides plausible deniability – especially when the tactic of summary execution results in innocent people being killed – as it did in the village of Ghazi Khan in December 2009 when 8 boys aged from 12 to 17 and 2 adults, all unarmed, were killed by men with no uniforms but night vision goggles and flying in helicopters to and from US held airfields and bases in Afghanistan.

As with air strikes there has been a pledge from US commanders to end unnecessary civilian deaths after every serious incident, but as with air strikes the deaths continue - in March 2010 5 civilians including two pregnant women, a teenage girl, the local police chief and the local attorney were killed along with 3 Taliban in another night raid

Since the stated aims for the war are clearly not being achieved and make no sense in any case when Al Qa’ida can operate in any country in the world, war or no war, the only possible benefits are control of an oil and gas export pipeline for resources from former Soviet republics such as Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan on a route not controlled by Russia or Iran; profits for arms companies; and having airfields and military bases on both the Iraqi and Afghan borders with Iran – which has the third largest proven oil reserves in the world after Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

If we want that oil and gas export route there’s a way to get it that’s cheaper in lives and cheaper in money – negotiate a peace deal of the kind UN envoys say they were close to before Pakistan’s intelligence services arrested Taliban leaders who were willing to negotiate – then pay the Afghan coalition government enough per barrel of oil or gas going through the pipelines to get a deal and fund reconstruction in Afghanistan. We could also help fund the construction of factories to use poppies to produce opiate based painkillers as an alternative and legal source of export income to the heroin that most poppy crops in Taliban and government held areas produce now.

The aim of building a pipeline may or may not be reconcilable with the aims of reducing poverty and promoting democracy and human rights, but the war is not an effective way to achieve either set of aims – one of the reasons being that it has increased poverty and hunger by making around 400, 000 Afghans homeless refugees in their own country.

The Germans were finally defeated in World War One because they thought one more really big offensive might win them the war – it lost them it, because in every offensive the attackers over-extended themselves and took massive casualties. The side that carries out the most attacks in Afghanistan will inevitably kill the most civilians and turn the most surviving relatives, friends and local tribes-people against people they see as invaders. The Taliban are already massively unpopular among Afghans. The best way to make the Taliban lose is to end all military offensives, all airstrikes and all drone strikes and focus on providing aid and jobs and education and reconstruction.


What are the Afghanistan war’s core aims? Is it achieving them? Are they achievable? Would it stop Al Qa’ida if they were?

There are a lot of problems with the war on Afghanistan. The first is that the publicly declared motives for US and NATO troops being in Afghanistan make no sense, especially after their presence there for 9 years has failed to achieve the publicly declared aims – suggesting those aims are unachievable. The second is that it’s unlikely that military force can ever prevent terrorism, rather than cause more of it – it’s like trying to put out a fire with a flame-thrower. The third is that US intelligence suggests most of the people NATO troops are fighting in Afghanistan are local tribes continuing their custom of resisting foreign invaders. That suggests that keeping troops there may be creating enemies for the Karzai government rather than strengthening it. Then there are the problems of failure by NATO governments to provide the funding they’d promised for reconstruction and development in Afghanistan.

NATO forces have now been in Afghanistan for almost 9 long years in which their soldiers, Afghan civilians, Taliban and Afghan police and soldiers have died by the thousand. Arguing that the war is about preventing Al Qa’ida or similar groups training in Afghanistan is even less convincing than it was after September 11th. At no point have NATO forces or the Afghan government controlled even the majority of Afghanistan. Even if they did, anyone could still train for anything in the mountains. Al Qa’ida and similar groups have meanwhile gained recruits through being able to point to non-Muslims occupying a Muslim country and killing Muslims. US intelligence assessments show the vast majority of the people we’re fighting aren’t even Taliban. Clearly the aim can’t be to prevent Afghan being a ‘safe haven for terrorists’ – it’ll be that no matter how long our troops stay and most of the 9-11 hijackers trained at flight schools in the US and Germany. Of course one major aim is to get an oil and gas export pipeline for former Soviet republics’ oil and gas that avoids being controlled by Iran or by Russia or former soviet Republics it still dominates like Ukraine, Georgia and Azerbaijan.


Civilian and military deaths caused by both sides in the war – is it necessary or worth it?

While the total number of civilians killed each year increased in 2008 compared to 2007 and in 2009 compared to 2008 according went down according to UNAMA it rose according to the Brookings Institution’s figures (see page 4 of this pdf). So far in the first months of2010 it’s fallen compared to the first months of 2009 - and on UNAMA figures the proportion of civilians killed by NATO and Afghan government forces (as opposed to their enemies) has been falling throughout 2008 and 2009 - and the Brookings Institution’s figures show the same for 2007 , 2008 and 2009. While that’s positive, it’s not likely to impress the relatives and friends of the dead much, nor can it be justified if the war isn’t both necessary and saving more lives than it’s costing. The latest UNAMA figures(see page 13 paragraph 54) suggest 68% of recorded civilian deaths in the first 6 months of 2009 were due to Taliban and other anti-NATO and anti-Karzai government forces’ use of IEDs and suicide bombings, some of which definitely targeted civilians, though others targeted NATO or Afghan army or police forces, with civilians as “collateral damage” much as in NATO air strikes aiming to kill Taliban. While this again suggests NATO and Afghan government forces are now killing less civilians than their enemies are it doesn’t make those deaths, or the deaths of NATO troops, a price that has to be paid if the entire war is un-necessary.

Most Afghans do oppose the Taliban and see Karzai’s government as legitimate (see polls on page 39 on this link), but then most of them oppose the actions of foreign forces in Afghanistan in offensives and airstrikes that kill civilians too (Karzai has demanded an end to night raids and air strikes). The latest NATO and Afghan Army offensive – Operation Moshtarak or ‘Together’ in Helmand in Southern Afghanistan was publicised in advance to allow civilians to leave the area, but many Afghans have no cars and no way to transport their food supplies and belongings – and Taliban IEDs set on all the roads to target the NATO advance made many of them scared to leave their homes.

As in every past offensive the NATO offensive also killed civilians. In this case, as in most cases, the deaths seem to have been accidental, but the predictable result of the use of airstrikes and artillery strikes. The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (which, despite it’s name, is actually appointed by the Afghan government, though fairly independent in its reports) said that 28 civilians, including 13 children were killed in the first twelve days of Operation Moshtarak and another 70 civilians wounded, 30 of them children. The AIHRC report added that:

“Witnesses suggested that the majority of the casualties were caused by PGF [pro-(Afghan) government forces] artillery and rocket fire.” though there were “numerous reports of Anti-Government Elements planting landmines in homes and residential areas, which pose a grave threat to civilians”.

That's only in that particular offensive though and according to The Afghanistan Conflict Monitor of Simon Fraser University in Australia:

“Estimates of the number of civilians killed vary widely and must be treated with caution. Systematic collection of civilian fatality data only began in 2007. The United Nations is creating a civilian casualty database, but is not publicly accessible. Periodic updates can be found in Reports of the Secretary-General on peace and security in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) is also collecting data, but the efforts of both agencies are hampered by insecurity and a lack of resources. As a result, figures released by these agencies likely represent a substantial undercount.

So that's almost certainly an under-estimate even for that offensive on its own.

As in previous offensives most of the Taliban in the area were aware the offensive was beginning and left before it. They may return after NATO forces have moved on - just as happened with Coalition offensives in Iraq – though NATO plan to hand over to Afghan army and police units to prevent this – one problem being that, as Craig Murray reports 60% of the Afghan army are Tajiks, who may not be trusted by the Pashtun majority in Southern Afghanistan (most Taliban being Pashtun). The other problem is that if 90% of the people NATO are fighting are just local tribes resisting foreign invasion (which may in their eyes include both NATO and non-Pashtun Afghan army units) this plan may just create more enemies than it defeats.

At the same time as Operation Moshtarak in Helmand in a different part of the country a NATO air-strike on a column of three mini-buses full of civilians killed 21 civilians and wounded
wounded 16 others
, including women and children. There were no Taliban present in any of the vehicles. 

These and many smaller scale incidents killing civilians follow repeated pledges from the Obama administration that everything would change from now on. This pledge was first made after the Azizabad airstrikes in August 2008, in which NATO forces assumed civilians fleeing many kilometres from fighting between NATO and Taliban forces were Taliban – and bombed them for hours on end, killing over a hundred. It was made again after the airstrikes on Bala Boluk in Farah province, which killed dozens, in May 2009; and again after the Kunduz airstrike, which again killed dozens, in September 2009. 

On top of this under Obama the use of unmanned drones to target Taliban in Pakistan has increased massively, with around one in three of the dead being civilians. 

How can Obama believe that using air-strikes that kill civilians is counter-productive and should end, while continuing those air-strikes and expanding the use of equally counter-productive strikes by unmanned drones?

NATO has moved from denying their airstrikes killed civilians and making up colourful stories about Taliban killing people with grenades and moving bodies around to look like airstrike victims (Defence Secretary Robert Gates’ initial line on Azizabad, till he was forced to admit it wasn’t true) to apologising for civilian deaths, as General Stanley McChrystal did for the more recent strikes, but how much will these apologies mean to Afghans while the deaths continue?


Night Raids and the El Salvador Option moving from Iraq to Afghanistan

Air strikes aren’t the only way NATO forces are killing civilians either. An investigation by George Soros’ Open Society Foundation found NATO and Afghan army ‘counter-insurgency’ units’ night raids on suspected insurgents houses in 2009 killed at least 98 civilians – and probably more. In the worst case, in a night raid on the village of Ghazi Khan in December, US led special forces killed a 12 year old boy, seven teenage boys and two adults according to investigations by the Times newspaper and the Afghan government. 

NATO initially claimed that the “joint coalition and Afghan security force” and that as they “entered the village they came under fire from several buildings and in returning fire killed nine individuals,”. NATO claimed all the dead were members of a cell making IED bombs to target NATO and Afghan forces. An investigation by officials from the Afghan government, NATO’s allies, found that most of the victims were shot where they lay in their beds, but some of the boys were handcuffed, moved, then shot dead, along with two adults shot when they came to see what was happening.  


When they finally admitted the victims were civilians “US forces stationed near by denied any knowledge or involvement. Nato’s top legal adviser told The Times that US forces were present but not leading the operation. Senior officers in Kabul hinted that the “trigger-pullers” were Afghan. One official said that the force was “non-military”.”. Afghan government officials said the raiding force had arrived and left by helicopter – and Afghan officials confirmed the raiding force had flown to and from airports in Afghanistan controlled by NATO, it seems unlikely that NATO would not be leading it – they don’t have lots of spare helicopters to loan. 

This may just be an attempt to deny responsibility for the mistaken summary killing of innocent people – or the “trigger pullers” may genuinely have been “non-military” and “Afghan” (though US trained and led and effectively US military controlled) like the been Paramilitary ‘police commandoes’ of the type trained for torture and summary execution of opponents of the US-backed government in Iraq by US officers. Or they may be some of the Afghan militia put on the Pentagon pay-roll under McChrystal’s plan. 

The Guardian reported in November 2009 that : 

“US special forces are supporting anti-Taliban militias in at least 14 areas of Afghanistan as part of a secretive programme...The Community Defence Initiative (CDI) is enthusiastically backed by Stanley McChrystal, the US general commanding Nato forces in Afghanistan, but details about the programme have been held back from non-US alliance members ...[It] involves US special forces embedding themselves with armed groups and even disgruntled insurgents who are then given training and support....

Another controversial aspect of the programme is the involvement of Arif Noorzai, an Afghan politician from Helmand who is widely distrusted by many members of the international community.

The plan represents a significant change in tack from a scheme promoted just last year by General McChrystal's predecessor, David McKiernan. The Afghan Public Protection Force (APPF) was piloted in Wardak province and involved the rigorous vetting of recruits who were then given basic training, a uniform and came under the authority of the Afghan police.

"McChrystal was always quite dismissive about APPF," a senior Nato official in Kabul said. "It was too resource-intensive and so slow we would have lost long before it had been spread to the whole country."

He added: "He wanted to move to a much more informal model, which is far less visible and unaccountable, using Noorzai to find people through his own networks and then simply paying out cash for them to defend their areas."

That “informal model” is likely to be basically the same model used in Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua – the ‘El Salvador Option’ that was also used in Iraq of paying and training native forces under US trainers and advisers who in reality bring them under US command but allow plausible deniability of responsibility for torture for deliberate and accidental killings of civilian and armed opponents of a US backed client government. This may be what McChrystal meant when he wrote that “we must conduct classic counter-insurgency operations”. 

In March 2010 another joint US/Afghan operation , once again claiming to target a cell making IEDs, killed 5 civilians in Paktia Province near Gardez, including two pregnant women, a teenage girl and two Afghan government officials, one being the head of the local police and loyal to Karzai. In another raid on the village of Karakhil in Wardak Province three civilians were killed along with three Taliban. In a raid on a village in Ghazni province in February both civilians and Taliban were also killed, but survivors pointed out that the villagers had had no option but to allow the Taliban to stay in their village if they didn’t want to be killed by them – and at least one villager whose wife and son were killed in the raid was so angry that they were considering joining the Taliban as a result. 

After initially claiming each operation had been a “joint” one between NATO and Afghan forces with all the dead being members of IED cells or Taliban, NATO officials subsequently admitted civilians had been killed and claimed that Afghan forces were responsible – though once again they arrived and left by helicopter and had night vision goggles. As helicopters are noisy and vulnerable to light weapons and missile launchers night raid forces like the one that raided Khazi Khan sometimes land 2 kilometres from their targets before proceeding on foot. As a result villagers and police had no idea who was raiding their villages - whether it was NATO, Afghan forces, Taliban or bandits - this may have been one of the causes of the civilian deaths in the Gardez raid, as the local police chief went out to confront the raiders armed with his gun.

Yet NATO officers had been telling journalists that the CIA or Special Forces who were “out of control” might be responsible. Then General Petraeus announced that as a result of the “botched operations” control of all US Special Forces units in Afghanistan “bar a handful” was being transferred to General McChrystal. If the units carrying out the “botched operations” really weren’t US led this would make no difference whatsoever. So obviously they were US led. 

As with air strikes a new pledge to ensure civilian deaths in night raids would end followed each major incident, but the deaths continue anyway.

As with US trained Iraqi government death squads in Iraq the attackers wore no uniforms or insignia – and this could well mean that many of the deaths classed by UNAMA and the Brookings Institution as being by ‘unknown’ forces are the victims of these militia and paramilitary ‘counter-terrorism’ units.

Prisons like Bagram air base, where it’s known detainees died under beatings, extreme cold, stress positions and sleep deprivation under Bush, have become the new Guantanamo Bay under Obama, with his administration’s lawyers arguing they can take people from anywhere in the world and hold them in US bases in Afghanistan indefinitely.

Afghan forces lack two things – enough pay to ensure more of them fight for the Taliban than for the government and sufficient equipment. NATO could give them both those things by withdrawing our forces, handing over the equipment and using the money saved to subsidise higher pay for the Afghan army and police – but then Karzai’s government would no longer be quite as dependent on them for power. To be fair NATO has provided funds to double the pay of the Afghan army and increase that of police. The question is how long that pay increase will last and whether it matches the pay offered by the Taliban. After most US forces left Iraq the US government quickly ended all payments to fund Iraqi ‘awakening’ militias. The unemployed militia-men protested and sectarian violence and bombings have increased again.

Another Alternative would be to move from a focus on the military to the economic. If 90% of NATO’s enemies in Afghanistan are created by the presence of its troops – and of Afghan army troops in areas outside those of their own tribes – then it would make more sense to withdraw the troops and focus the money saved on rebuilding the Afghan economy  - the most viable option being to build factories to process poppy crops into opiate based painkillers for use in the country and to create an export industry and an alternative to income from heroin (the commonest product produced from poppy crops in all of Afghanistan).


Can a war for an oil and gas export pipeline be reconciled with promoting womens’ rights, democracy and reducing poverty?

Can the war achieve either set of aims?

I would like to believe that our troops are being sent to war in order to promote democracy, human rights and an end to brutality towards and the repression of women. The lack of all these things in US and EU backed dictatorships like Saudi Arabia suggest otherwise though. These may well be just the justifications used to get public support for the war, just as the fear-mongering about Iraq’s WMD (ignoring our own nuclear deterrents) was used rather than the real motive – oil – as a justification for war on Iraq, because otherwise the public, congress and parliament would never have approved the war. NATO countries have also given up on even aiming for democracy in Afghanistan, saying they would accept ‘stable, moderate’ (i.e pro-NATO) government instead.

Of course one thing has changed between the Cold War and now – the official enemy are Islamic extremists rather than Communists – that’s the one hope that the ‘war on terror’ might actually protect womens’ rights – but half the Afghan government are former Mujahedin fundamentalists who are completely opposed to womens’ rights and whose forces have brutalised women continuously. NATO governments may blame Karzai for having these people in his government but in fact the US for most of its time in Afghanistan has provided more funding and arms to these ‘warlords’ than it has to the Karzai government – no doubt to keep Afghans divided and so easier to control. It’s also worth remembering that the US and British governments in the 80s lauded the Mujahedin (who were just as brutal towards women as the Taliban) as ‘freedom fighters’ against Communist totalitarianism. The Soviets committed plenty of war crimes and killed many thousands of civilians, but they and their Afghan Communist allies allowed women an education.

There’s an argument that we do need oil and gas supplies not subject to the Russian government shutting off the supply in winter if we upset them, but equally there’s an argument that our governments lying to their public and soldiers, or at the least not telling them the whole truth, about why troops are being sent to kill and die in Afghanistan, is not justifiable. Nor is the idea that if we need resources or export routes it’s fine to just kill people or back puppet governments or dictators till they give us them cheaply. The Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid in his book ‘Taliban’ showed that the US firm UNOCAL was in negotiations with the Taliban for a pipeline through Afghanistan in the early to mid 1990s. The Taliban demanded too high a price and the civil war didn’t end, so UNOCAL dropped the plan. That doesn’t mean that Pentagon and US Department of Energy planners will have dropped it as a long term aim, nor that all oil firms will have.

In the past long-running wars and foreign invasions (like that by the Soviet Union in the 80s) have not led to greater moderation but to more extremist groups dominating the country’s politics. War also destroyed the education system and the economy – and lack of education combined with dire poverty and unemployment produce extreme politics too (just look at the rise in Islamic fundamentalism and sectarianism in Iraq under sanctions from 1991 on compared to secularism and high education levels in the 80s when most of the world was funding Saddam’s war on Iran under Khomeini; or the rise in BNP  support in Blackburn or Burnley after the textile mills closed and moved to the third world).

Afghans suffer some of the worst poverty and hunger in the world – with 45% not getting enough to eat in 2007 - and that hasn’t been changing much in the last few years for most of them. One of the reasons is the continuing war, which doubled the number of homeless Afghan refugees in Afghanistan (‘internally displaced persons’) from 150,000 in May 2008 to over 275,000 by October 2009 (and the Afghan government puts the figure higher – at 413,000).

If there’s to be a pipeline Afghans deserve a share of the profits. The right thing to do is to negotiate a peace deal, pull out and negotiate a deal on a pipeline route with the new coalition Afghan government. No doubt it will be corrupt – no more corrupt than Karzai’s government or most ‘developed’ world governments’ foreign policies though. No doubt it will be full of warlords who are Islamic fundamentalists, and/or have blood on their hands and are guilty of torture, murder, massacres and human rights abuses. So does Karzai’s government – so do most of the governments and militaries in Afghanistan.  However we can have as much influence through placing conditions on foreign aid and trade deals as we have through troops on the ground – and it would be a lot less counter-productive and lead to far fewer deaths. Arms firms and companies with army supply contracts will be upset at reduced sales. The Taliban and other warlords will lament losing protection money that they’re currently being paid not to attack NATO supply convoys of fuel, food , body armour, arms and ammunition  (most supplies having to come by road through mountain passes from Pakistan). The new government and aid agencies will require money from NATO governments to keep flowing to feed Afghans who don’t have enough food and help rebuild the country’s agriculture and economy, even if some of that money continues to go missing.

A lot less people will die though. Aid workers would be able to get back to work, no longer risking being targeted because they’re seen as part of an invading force (just as they were able to under Taliban rule in the 90s, despite the Taliban’s brutality towards Afghans).

One UN envoy to Afghanistan said he was making good progress acting as a mediator in negotiations between Karzai’s government and Taliban leaders – until Pakistan’s ISI military intelligence arrested several of them under pressure from the US to ‘do more’. NATO trumpeted the capture of Mullah Omar’s second in command, but sceptics pointed out that Omar’s second in command Baradar was actually prepared to negotiate peace with NATO and Karzai, while Omar is not; so why did they capture the man who was willing to negotiate, but not hand over Omar himself, who was less willing to?

Perhaps because the Pakistani military still see Afghanistan as a ‘strategic buffer zone’ in case of war with India – and still see the Taliban in Afghanistan as a proxy force for Pakistani influence there, even as they fight the Pakistani version of the Taliban at US insistence.

The Obama administration often talks of using “all the tools at our disposal”, suggesting that military force and intelligence work can work alongside reconstruction, aid and peace negotiations to fight terrorism and ‘extremism’. The reality is that military force and intelligence actions undermine reconstruction, aid and peace negotiations. You don’t encourage a lasting peace deal by one side killing the other’s people. You don’t rebuild an economy through expanding the wars that destroyed it in the first place.

You do though perhaps attempt to install a client regime so you can have military bases on both sides of Iran (Iraq and Afghanistan), which has the next largest proven oil reserves in the world after Saudi Arabia (US allied dictatorship) and Iraq (US occupied – bases will stay with ‘trainers’ after combat troops withdraw) if you want to control the world’s oil and gas reserves and export routes. You might also keep a government in Afghanistan that’s weak and divided, because then it’s dependent on it’s foreign backers, who could switch their support to someone other than Karzai as PM. Then that government could be put under pressure to give oil companies from NATO governments a contract to build a pipeline in future, keeping out the competition from the Russians and the Chinese – much as has happened with oil contracts in Iraq. So do we want peace and reconstruction or just control of oil reserves, export routes and contracts going to our countries’ companies rather than our rivals? That is the real question in Afghanistan.

The talk of democracy, human rights and women’s’ rights is inspiring, but sadly there aren’t many NATO governments who actually promote it rather than just talking about it. Saudi Arabia’s dictatorial monarchy repress women brutally and torture and execute people without fair trial – and its only elections were of local officials who say they don’t even have the power to get bins emptied, yet they get plenty of support from NATO governments.

There may be people with an optimistic enough view of governments’ current foreign policies to believe that Afghanistan may be an exception – a case where promoting oil companies’ and governments’ aims and promoting democracy and human rights aren’t in conflict, but either way, continuing the war will achieve neither set of aims. An imperfect peace will be better for Afghans than endless war. With reconstruction it could give them a chance to have jobs and incomes and education that would give them a chance of eventually overcoming the influence of religious fundamentalists and warlords.

Of course we can keep trying with one more big military offensive; one more big push; just as both sides did in World War One. The Germans finally lost World War One due to one more push – their own big offensive which lost them so many troops they had to sue for peace on any terms. In a war for hearts and minds big military offensives will inevitably kill civilians; even if NATO forces weren’t involved they’d still involve Tajiks and Uzbeks invading the towns and villages of the Pashtun majority in the South – and so turn more people against the Karzai government who would otherwise have opposed the Taliban. No-one needs one more military push in Afghanistan – they need a huge push to provide them with food, an education, jobs and income. Most Afghans already hate the Taliban. Every person killed by the Taliban will turn more Afghans against them. We only need to do the opposite of the Taliban rather than turning Afghans against us too.


Sources – by section


Sources for ‘What are the Afghanistan war’s core aims? Is it achieving them? Are they achievable? Would it stop Al Qa’ida if they were?’

Boston Globe 09 Oct 2009 ‘Taliban not main Afghan enemy’, http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2009/10/09/most_insurgents_in_afghanistan_not_religiously_motivated_military_reports_say/?page=1

On Al Qa’ida training for 9-11 in the US see sources listed on this link http://inplaceoffear.blogspot.com/2008/11/they-didnt-even-try-to-keep-americans.html

On the plans for the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan pipeline see the sources on this link http://www.duncanmcfarlane.org/newgreatgame/


Sources for ‘Civilian and Military Deaths Caused by Both Sides’

Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission 23 Feb 2010 ‘ Press Release : 63 Civilians killed in Afghanistan in the last two weeks’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2010/Pre_23_Feb_2010.pdf

AP 22 Feb 2010 ‘Afghan Civilians Killed in NATO Airstrike’, http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/02/22/world/main6230215.shtml

AIHRC Press Release 14 Mar 2010 ‘ Kandahar attacks are crimes against humanity’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2010/Pre_14_Mar_2010.pdf

AIHRC Press Release 27 Feb 2010 ‘Attacks on civilians and civilian objects are against human rights and Islamic principles’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2010/Pre_27_Feb_2010.pdf

Human Rights Watch 14 Jan 2009 ‘Letter to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on US Airstrikes in Azizabad, Afghanistan’
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/01/14/letter-secretary-defense-robert-gates-us-airstrikes-azizabad-afghanistan

AIHRC Press Release 26 May 2009 ‘Balabolook Incident’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2009/pre_rel_balabluk_eng_26may2009.pdf

BBC News 16 Dec 2009 ‘German ministers face Kunduz air strike inquiry’,  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8415305.stm

Guardian 24 Jan 2009 ‘President orders air strikes on villages in tribal area’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/24/pakistan-barack-obama-air-strike

Reuters 12 Oct 2009 ‘ANALYSIS-Under Obama, drone attacks on the rise in Pakistan’,
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN11520882

Observer 5 July 2009 ‘Taliban kill two US soldiers in attack on base’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/05/soldiers-deaths-afghanistan-taliban (on Taliban withdrawing before NATO offensive in Helmand in July 2009)

New America Foundation 24 Feb 2010 ‘The Year of the Drone’, http://counterterrorism.newamerica.net/drones (from analysis of media reports of drone strikes in Pakistan the authors found around 32% of those killed were civilians)

Brookings Institution 22 Mar 2010 ‘Afghanistan Index’, polls on page 39, http://www.brookings.edu/foreign-policy/~/media/Files/Programs/FP/afghanistan%20index/index.pdf


Sources for ‘Night Raids , the El Salvador Option from Iraq to Afghanistan and Bagram as the new Guantanamo’

Observer 28 Feb 2010 ‘Nato draws up payout tariffs for Afghan civilian deaths’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/feb/28/coalition-payouts-afghan-civilian-casualties

Open Society Institute ‘Strangers at the Door – Night raids by international forces lose hearts and minds in Afghanistan’, http://www.soros.org/initiatives/cep/articles_publications/publications/afghan-night-raids-20100222/a-afghan-night-raids-20100222.pdf

Times 31 Dec 2009 ‘Western troops accused of executing 10 Afghan civilians, including children’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article6971638.ece

AP 21 Jan 2010 ‘AP Exclusive: US to Tighten Rules on Afghan Raids’, http://abcnews.go.com/International/wirestory?id=9620447&page=1

Times 25 Feb 2010 ‘Assault force killed family by mistake in raid, claims Afghan father’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7040216.ece

Times 26 Feb 2010 ‘Hunt down the spy behind deaths of our children, say Afghan night raid survivors’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7041941.ece

AP 05 Mar 2010 ‘NATO details Afghan night raid policy’, http://www.sfexaminer.com/world/nato-troops-must-bring-afghan-troops-with-them-on-night-raids-a-new-directive-says-86553107.html

Times 08 Mar 2010 ‘Karzai offers families ‘blood money’ for sons killed in raid’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7052982.ece

Times 13 Mar 2010 ‘Nato ‘covered up’ botched night raid in Afghanistan that killed five’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7060395.ece


Times 14 Mar 2010 ‘Afghan family killed as special forces defy night raid ban’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7061069.ece

Scotsman 17 Mar 2010 ‘Nato special forces 'reined in' after spate of civilian deaths’, http://news.scotsman.com/afghanistan/Nato-special-forces-39reined-in39.6157285.jp

Guardian 22 Nov 2009 ‘US pours millions into anti-Taliban militias in Afghanistan’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/22/us-anti-taliban-militias-afghanistan

Times 22 Mar 2010 ‘Bagram prison in Afghanistan may become the new Guantánamo’, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article7070460.ece

Andrew Sullivan ‘Who Is Stanley McChrystal?’, http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/05/who-is-stanley-mcchrystal.html

NYT 19 Mar 2006 ‘In Secret Unit's 'Black Room,' a Grim Portrait of U.S. Abuse’, http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/19/international/middleeast/19abuse.html?_r=1

Human Rights Watch 22 July 2006 ‘"No Blood, No Foul" - Soldiers' Accounts of Detainee Abuse in Iraq’ – Section I – Task force 20/121/6-26/145 Camp Nama, Baghdad, http://www.hrw.org/en/node/11282/section/1

Rethink Afghanistan 02 Jun 2009 ‘Will the Senate Ask McChrystal About Torture Under His Command?’, http://rethinkafghanistan.com/blog/?p=416


Sources for ‘Can the war achieve either set of aims?’

AIHRC Press Release 9 Dec 2009 ‘People are concerned about the continuity of their life and are suffering from extreme poverty’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2009/Pre_social_eco_9_Dec_2009.pdf

Brookings Institution 22 Mar 2010 ‘Afghanistan Index’, Page 33, Figure 3.12 Poverty levels, http://www.brookings.edu/foreign-policy/~/media/Files/Programs/FP/afghanistan%20index/index.pdf

Brookings Institution 22 Mar 2010 ‘Afghanistan Index’, page 21, Figure 1.37 ‘Estimated number of internally displaced persons’,http://www.brookings.edu/foreign-policy/~/media/Files/Programs/FP/afghanistan%20index/index.pdf

UNOCHA IRIN news 4 Jan 2010 ‘AFGHANISTAN: More IDPs than previously thought – government’, http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=87626

Guardian 18 Mar 2010 ‘Pakistan arrests put stop to Taliban talks – UN envoy’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/18/pakistan-arrests-taliban-un-envoy

Independent 17 Feb 2010 ‘'Second-in-command' to Mullah Omar captured’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/secondincommand-to-mullah-omar-captured-1901749.html

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Winning the War for Hearts and Minds

Lack of money is the root of all evil

George Bernard Shaw


He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight”

Sun Tzu, The Art of War




There's a lot of talk of “a war for hearts and minds”, as there was in the Vietnam war, but, as in Vietnam and El Salvador, far more money and effort  is being spent blowing peoples’ hearts and minds out of their bodies and creating grief, rage and a desire for revenge in the hearts and minds of survivors than is spent on providing enough money to buy food to feed hearts and minds, clothing to cover them, medical care to keep them healthy or an education that gives them more than one extreme interpretation of a single book (the Quran) (1).

A “war for hearts and minds” may sound noble and idealistic. In fact in reality such wars by US forces from Vietnam to El Salvador, Nicaragua and Iraq have involved terrorism of a kind that even the Taliban or Al Qa’ida could not match for brutality. In Vietnam  the US ‘Phoenix programme” involved the torture and murder of vast numbers of civilians suspected of being “Communist sympathisers” (2). In El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala US military trainers like General Simeon Trombitas and Major James Steele trained right-wing militaries in how to break the will not only of armed guerrillas but trade unionists and school teachers by a campaign of massacres of entire villages involving torture, rape and murder. One favourite technique was to cut the foetus from the belly of a pregnant woman in front of everyone, then kill mother and child. The same men were training Iraqi ‘security forces’ in the same methods in Iraq from 2005 to 2009 – and probably still are, if they’ve not been moved to Afghanistan already (3), (4).

So the phrase “a war for hearts and minds”, as it’s used by the US government and its allies, is just Orwellian doublespeak; Like “counter terrorism” it means a war to instil terror and fear in the hearts and minds of anyone who might dissents from total domination of their country by those who collaborate with foreign firms and governments to rob them in return for a share of the loot. Some British officers also privately admit it can simply mean propaganda.

Airstrikes, suicide bombings and torture and murder by the Taliban and US and Afghan government forces, terrible as they are, are not the only killers in Afghanistan or Pakistan though. Cold and hunger, diseases caused by lack of clean water and a lack of medical treatment have killed many times more. During the 2001 invasion the airstrikes made aid truck drivers refuse to cross the border from Pakistan, out of fear of being bombed the way Kosovan Albanian refugees were in 1999 in Kosovo, mistaken for tanks and APCs by pilots ordered to bomb from high altitude to avoid any possible anti-aircraft systems. Their fears were well grounded – US planes repeatedly bombed the International Red Cross headquarters in Kabul, despite its roof being clearly marked with a giant red cross (5) – (10).

As a result by January 2002 hundreds of refugees were dying every night of exposure and hunger in the Maslakh refugee camp near Herat alone (11). In refugee camps and villages across the country desperate people ate grass to try to survive the withdrawal of aid workers due to a war begun in the middle of a famine in winter(12) – (15). At the same time US airstrikes and missile strikes killed more civilians in Afghanistan than died in New York on September 11th (16) – (22).

The Bush administration and the Pentagon made a great show of dropping food aid by parachute (which according to Medicins Sans Frontiers and others was far too little and much of it wrapped in the same yellow packaging as cluster bombs they dropped simultaneously, resulting in many deaths among children picking them up) (23) – (24).

The Taliban’s Afghan rivals of the ‘Northern Alliance’ meanwhile robbed many Pashtun civilians of the last of their food, using accusations that they were Taliban as an excuse (25).

You may think that this is the past, but nothing much has changed, except that starvation is increased by both airstrikes and Taliban suicide bombings and hijackings these days, as a result of NATO forcing aid workers to join military reconstruction teams, making them into Taliban targets.

NATO governments still haven’t provided most of the aid they promised. Hunger, cold and lack of medical attention remain killers on a scale at least as great as NATO offensives or Taliban suicide bombings in Afghanistan and there has been very little in the way of reconstruction. This is often blamed on insurgents, like the similar situation in Iraq. Take a look at New Orleans though, where there is no insurgency, and you’ll see there’s no reconstruction there either – unless you count locking people out of their public housing before demolishing it to let developers build flats to rent to the wealthy – something the poor of Kabul have also seen done by the Karzai government and the warlords allied to NATO, who demolished the homes of the poor with their inhabitants still in them to make way for luxury residences for government ministers (26) – (30).

“Reconstruction” is mostly simply a euphemism for theft. Much of the 'aid' pledged is never delivered, while 40% goes to firms from the donor country. The top management in the reconstruction consortia do well from it, so do major shareholders and some consultants. Ordinary Afghans and Iraqis see little or none of it. British and American forces don’t even get the armour and armoured vehicles available. Afghan army and police units are using equipment from the 1960s and 1970s.

There are exceptions, but they are the minority.

Petraeus’ supposedly brilliant “troop surge” in Iraq has not ended the civil war there because there is no military solution to problems caused by poverty, hunger, lack of education and a cycle of revenge creating sectarian kidnappings, murders and bombings. As in Afghanistan hunger, poverty and disease have been increased for Iraqis as a result of the corruption of the occupying governments and the new government they’ve installed.

By 2008 Iraqis were on a quarter of the food rations they received under Saddam Hussein and sanctions, many reduced to searching rubbish bins for food, like many of the people of the Phillipines, El Salvador and Nicaragua – whose hunger was similarly the result of brutal US military-led campaigns for “democracy”. Some of the continuing “insurgent” bombings in Iraq look suspiciously like those carried out by the CIA in Guatemala in the 1950s to justify a US backed military coup there. According to Professor Greg Grandin, they often made claims of responsibility for bombings and other attacks on behalf of non-existent terrorist groups they had invented like the ‘Organisation of Militant Godless’ – echoed by the many ‘previously unheard of’ groups claiming responsibility for bombings today (31).

A real war for Hearts and Minds can only be won by those who fire the least bullets and explode the least bombs; by the side who kill the fewest people and so create the fewest enemies seeking vengeance on them, whether as a result of airstrikes or suicide bombings or torture or summary ‘execution’. It will be won by the side that kills the least mothers, fathers, children, uncles, cousins, grandparents, lovers, neighbours and friends. It will be won by the side that provides decent jobs paying enough to feed a family; by the side that helps grow crops rather than spraying chemicals on them or burning them as part of a “war on drugs” carried out by a government proven by the US National Security Archive, and investigative journalists historians to have colluded with drug traffickers from Vietnam, El Salvador and Nicaragua to Panama, Colombia and Afghanistan; by the side that provides people with a decent education; by the side that helps provide hospitals and the funding to pay doctors and buy or produce medicines (32) – (35).

It will be won by defeating the greatest killers in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the world : hunger, cold, ignorance and illness. Every dollar or pound spent on bombs, bullets and fuel to transport them to the war zone is a dollar or a pound that could have been spent on saving lives and winning hearts and minds rather than destroying some and turning others against us.

A real war for hearts and minds can only be won by only firing in self-defence or the defence of others – and not by seeking to secure control of areas by offensives, nor by airstrikes, nor by assassination by missile strike or airstrike, nor by ‘counter terrorism’ or ‘counter insurgency’ operations’. US “counter-insurgency” methods are terrorism and brutality of a kind that even the Taliban has never matched.

A genuine ‘war for hearts and minds’ is won by the side that explodes the least bombs, fires the fewest bullets and provides the most food, education and medical care to allow others’ hearts and minds freedom to develop the way they want to – and not the way big companies and Pentagon planners in another country want them to.


(1) = Professor Marilyn B. Young (1990) ‘The Vietnam Wars 1945-1990’

(2) = Professor Marilyn B. Young (1990) ‘The Vietnam Wars 1945-1990’, pages 212-213

(3) = Professor Greg Grandin (2007) ‘Empire’s Workshop : Latin America, the United States and the Rise of Imperialism’, Holt Paperbacks, New York, 2007, Chapter 3, especially pages 90-91, 101 and 116-117

(4) = See this post and Guardian 22 Nov 2009 'US pours millions into anti-Taliban militias in Afghanistan', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/22/us-anti-taliban-militias-afghanistan

(5) = Independent 19 Oct2001 ‘Blair in row with aid group over claim that Taliban are looting food convoys’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/blair-in-row-with-aid-group-over-claim-that-taliban-are-looting-food-convoys-631897.html

(6) = AP 26 Oct 2001 ‘U.S. Jets Hit Red Cross in Kabul’, http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-47764791.html and http://www.rawa.org/s-rc.htm

(7) = Independent 27 Oct 2001 ‘Kabul Red Cross is bombed again byAmerican jets again’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/kabul-red-cross-is-bombed-again-by-american-jets-again-748595.html

(8) = BBC News 17 May 1999 ‘Nato pilot bombed refugees’, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/319943.stm

(9) = Independent 14 May 1999 ‘Robinson criticises Nato'sbombing’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/war-in-the-balkans-refugees--riddle-as-hundreds-of-disappeared-turn-up-1095561.html

(10) = Human Rights Watch Feb 2000 ‘CIVILIAN DEATHS IN THE NATO AIRCAMPAIGN’, http://www.hrw.org/legacy/reports/2000/nato/

(11) = Guardian 3 Jan 2002 Refugees left in the cold at 'slaughterhouse' camp http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/jan/03/immigration.afghanistan

(12) = Guardian 9 Jan 2002 ‘Afghans eat grass as aid fails to arrive’,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2002/jan/09/disasterresponse

(13) = Observer 27 Jan 2002 ‘Hunger and vengeance haunt Afghanistan's sprawling tent city’,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/jan/27/afghanistan.suzannegoldenberg

(14) = The Ecologist March 2002 ‘Media indifference to Afghan crisis :
Why is the mainstream media ignoring the mass death of Afghan civilians?’,
 http://www.rawa.org/ignoring.htm

(15) = Guardian 4 Feb 2002 ‘Aid packages ignore starving Afghans’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/feb/04/afghanistan.suzannegoldenberg

(16) = Independent 27 Nov 2001 ‘Legacy of civilian casualties in ruins of shattered town’,http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/legacy-of-civilian--casualties-in-ruins--of-shattered-town-618256.html

(17) = Independent 05 Dec 2001 ‘Civilians abandon homes after hundreds are casualties of US air strikes on villages’ , http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/civilians-abandon-homes-after-hundreds-are-casualties-of-us-air-strikes-on-villages-619093.html

(18) = Independent  01 Jan 2002 ‘US accused of killing 100 civilians in Afghan bombing raid’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/us-accused-of-killing-100-civilians-in-afghan-bombing-raid-621643.html

(19) = Independent  04 Dec 2001 ‘A village is destroyed. And America says nothing happened’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/a-village-is-destroyed-and-america-says-nothing-happened-619007.html

(20) = Guardian 7 Jan 2002 ‘Bloody evidence of US blunder’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/jan/07/afghanistan.rorycarroll

(21) = Guardian 20 May 2002 ‘Forgotten victims’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/may/20/afghanistan.comment

(22) = Professor Marc Herold ‘A Dossier on Civilian Victims of United States' Aerial Bombing of Afghanistan : October 7, 2001 thru March 2002’, http://cursor.org/stories/civilian_deaths.htm

(23) = Guardian 9 Oct 2001 ‘Border stays shut to fleeing Afghans’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/oct/09/afghanistan.immigration

(24) = Independent 21 Aug 2002 ‘Return to Afghanistan: Explosives that US knew would kill innocents continue to take their toll’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/return-to-afghanistan-explosives-that-us-knew-would-kill-innocents-continue-to-take-their-toll-639403.html

(25) = Sunday Herald 24 March 2002 Eyewitness: Afghanistan - 'They took our food stocks and water pumps, then beat us', http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4156/is_20020324/ai_n12574522/?tag=content;col1

(26) = Mail & Guardian (South Africa) 21 Dec 2007, 'Housing protests grip New Orleans', http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__international_news/&articleid=328354&referrer=RSS

(27) = Klein, Naomi (2007), 'The Shock Doctrine' , Penguin , London, 2007, Chapter 20

(28)  = Washington Post 12 Jan 2007, ‘New Orleanians March to Protest Crime Wave’, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/11/AR2007011101875.html

(29) = Independent 05 Sep 2003 ‘UN fears instability in Kabul after Mayor demolishes 'illegal' homes’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/un-fears-instability-in-kabul-after-mayor-demolishes-illegal-homes-578847.html

(30) = Washington Post 16 Sep 2003 ‘Land grab in Kabul embarrasses government’ and several other articles reproduced at http://www.hewad.com/news1.htm

(31) = Professor Greg Grandin (2007) ‘Empire’s Workshop : Latin America, the United States and the Rise of Imperialism’, Holt Paperbacks, New York, 2007, p 48

(32) = Professor Alfred McCoy (1991) ‘The Politics of Heroin - CIA complicity in the global drug trade’, Lawrence Hill , New York ,1991

(33) = US National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 2, ‘The Contras, Cocaine,
and Covert Operations’, http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB2/nsaebb2.htm

(34) = See sources on this link http://alienatedleft.blogspot.com/2009/11/kims-howells-of-protest-against-war-in.html#_ftn4b

(35) = US National Security Archive 02 Aug 2004 'U.S. INTELLIGENCE LISTED COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT URIBE AMONG "IMPORTANT COLOMBIAN NARCO-TRAFFICKERS" IN 1991', http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB131/index.htm

McChrystal's El Salvador in Afghanistan and/or Obama's peace talks with Taliban and Hekmatyar?

And the strange case of Bashir Noorzai

The latest news from Afghanistan is that McChrystal's new counter-insurgency strategy involves embedding US Special Forces with local Afghan militias. For some reason McChrystal has made this a purely US operation, with ISAF and NATO having no part in it and being given little information on it. Is this an El Salvador death squads option for Afghanistan like the ones Reagan inflicted on Salvadoran's and the one's Bush inflicted on Iraqis and which Obama hasn't seemed to end? Let's hope not, but if not the secrecy with allies is strange.(1)

The "Noorzai" referred to by McChrystal's predecessor in the Guardian article as the man McChrystal wanted to hand out the money to potential Afghan militia leaders would seem to be Arif Noorzai, an Afghan government minister (2). Bashir Noorzai, the former head of the same clan, was arrested on charges of heroin trafficking in the US in 2005 and jailed in April 2009 according to Reuters (with no explanation for why he spent 4 years in jail before being tried)(3) - (5). Now it may be hard to find anyone with any influence in Afghanistan who isn't involved in the heroin trade, but this makes NATO governments' claim that they've sent troops there to end the heroin trade even more ludicrous - and provides another reason to move to legalisation of Afghan poppy crops for the production of medical opiate painkillers, something already allowed in Britain (6).

Having said that Bashir Noorzai's trial seems to have been highly political.The US gives massive military aid and political support to the Colombian government, whose President Uribe is known to be deeply involved in the drugs trade in Cocaine (7). Bush and Clinton both backed Uribe - and Hillary Clinton is Obama's Secretary of State. So if the Bush and Obama administrations both want Bashir jailed it can't really be because he's involved in drugs trafficking. Peter Dale Scott also quotes Pakistani investigative journalist Ahmed Rashid's book 'Descent into Chaos' which revealed that during the 2001 invasion "the Pentagon had a list of twenty-five or more drug labs and warehouses in Afghanistan but refused to bomb them because some belonged to the CIA's new NA [Northern Alliance] allies." (8)

Reuters reported that:

In sentencing him, U.S. District Judge Denny Chin noted Noorzai's history and his circumstances in coming to the United States were "unusual" but said he could not "second guess" the U.S. government on whether they should have arrested him."They are foreign policy considerations," said Chin. (8)

The Times article from May this year mentions Obama's envoy to Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke "has met Daoud Abedi, an Afghan-American businessman close to Hekmatyar, and the US administration will fund an Afghan government department to conduct negotiations with Hezb-i-Islami and the Taliban."(9)

This sounds like an attempt at peace negotiations, but knowing the history of US interventions, US government thinking and looking at McChrystal's report to Obama this suggests Obama is trying to use military force - possibly including El Salvador style death squads - to pressure the Taliban and Hekmatyar to make a peace deal. How likely is that to work? Would the US make peace while under attack by regular and irregular enemy forces? (10)

Hekmatyar was backed by the Us as one of the Mujahedin warlords fighting the Soviet invasion, but went onto the State Department's "most wanted" list of terrorists after he was allegedly involved in organising the 1993 World Trade Center bombing (which, like September 11th seemed to involve a surprising number of warnings before the attack being ignored by the upper ranks of the FBI and government). He is certainly as extreme in his views and actions as any Taliban (11), (12).

However handing out money to bribe Afghans to change sides is likely to be far more effective than fighting them to try to get them to surrender. Pakistani investigative journalist and author Ahmed Rashid recounts in his book 'Descent into Chaos' that it took only millions of dollars to bribe some Taliban commanders to change sides or stay neutral in October 2001, while US airstrikes mostly just killed civilians. The current war costs millions each day. The question is whether handing out money to clan leaders and warlords, as the Bush admin-istration did in larger amounts than it provided to Karzai's government, will just make the warlords stronger and any chance for an elected government that could provide legal protection to Afghans weaker. (14)

(1) = Guardian 22 Nov 2009 'US pours millions into anti-Taliban militias in Afghanistan', http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/22/us-anti-taliban-militias-afghanistan

(2) = Times 10 May 2009 'Karzai in move to share power with warlord wanted by US',
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6256675.ece

(3) = Reuters 11 Sep 2008 'Accused Afghan drug lord goes on trial in New York',
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN1130538820080911

(4) = Reuters 11 Sep 2008 'Accused drug lord in U.S. called Taliban backer',
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN1130538820080911

(5) = Reuters 30 Apr 2009 'Afghan tribal leader gets life in prison in NY',
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN1130538820080911

(6) = Herald 03 Sep 2008 ‘UK farmers allowed to cultivate poppies for morphine’,
(2) = Herald 03 Sep 2008 ‘UK farmers allowed to cultivate poppies for morphine’,
http://www.theherald.co.uk/search/display.var.2439164.0.uk_farmers_allowed_to_cultivate_poppies_for_morphine.php

(7) = US National Security Archive 02 Aug 2004 'U.S. INTELLIGENCE LISTED COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT URIBE AMONG "IMPORTANT COLOMBIAN NARCO-TRAFFICKERS" IN 1991', http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB131/index.htm

(8) = Ahmed Rashid, Descent into Chaos: The United States and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia (New York: Viking, 2008), page 320

(9) = See (5) above

(10) = See (2) above

(11) = COMISAF’s Initial Assessment – Lt. General William McChrystal 30 Aug 2009,http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/Assessment_Redacted_092109.pdf?sid=ST2009092003140

(12) = Rashid , Ahmed(2001) Taliban , Tauris,London ,2001 - Chapter 14

(13) = Bovard, James (2003) ‘Terrorism and Tyranny : Trampling Freedom, Justice and Peace to Rid the World of Evil’, Palgrave MacMillan, N.Y & Houndmills, U.K, 2003, paperback edition, Chapter 3, especially pages 32-38

(14) = Ahmed Rashid (2008) ‘Descent into Chaos : How the war against Islamic extremism is being lost in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia’, Allen Lane (Penguin books), London, 2008, Chapter 8, pages 125-144 of hardback edition and chapter 4 (page 76) of hardback edition

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Have NATO airstrikes killed fewer civilians in Afghanistan under Obama? And have they fallen under McChrystal?

Contents Links





Any figures likely far lower than real total

When looking at the figures on civilian deaths in Afghanistan it’s important to remember that there is no independent and reliable source of figures that has sufficient resources and security to investigate and record all killings of civilians, especially in a country as large and mountainous as Afghanistan – so any figures are likely to be significantly lower than the real totals.

The two main bodies giving figures are UNAMA and the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC). Of the two only UNAMA gives monthly and annual totals for the whole country (and only from 2007 on), while the AIHRC does in-depth interviews of Afghans and NATO forces for some cases. The Afghanistan Conflict Monitor of the Simon Fraser University in Australia warns that that “figures released by these agencies likely represent a substantial undercount”.

(Also note that the sources i provide don’t even cover every airstrike that’s been reported in the media between the Azizabad airstrikes in August 2008 and the present.)

Back to contents links/ top of page

The Afghanistan Conflict Monitor of the Simon Fraser University in Australia, ‘Civilian Casualties’, http://www.afghanconflictmonitor.org/civilian.html


 


No entirely independent source for figures, only UN produces monthly and annual totals

As the US and its ally the Afghan government are both UN members – and the US is the most powerful member of the UN, even UNAMA figures may be subject to some downward pressure from the US government. This may even be more the case under Obama – who is keen to show civilian deaths caused by NATO in Afghanistan are falling – than under Bush. There has been a fall in the number of civilian casualties from air strikes reported by NATO and the Afghan government according to the media. This may show a genuine fall, as in the past the Karzai

The AIHRC is not as independent as its name might suggest given that its members were all appointed by Hamid Karzai, the Afghan President installed by the US. It’s chairperson is a woman – Dr. Sima Samar - who has received death threats from both the Taliban and fundamentalist warlords allied to NATO and would not be allowed to be in any public position if not for NATO governments’ pressure. (I’m completely in favour of women being in public life and Dr. Samar is both brave and the right kind of person to have on the commission)  She and her fellow commissioners were appointed by President Karzai, who was appointed by President Bush. She has said she hopes NATO troops will “stay to finish the job you have started”. So if the AIHRC has a bias it’s therefore likely to be more pro-NATO than anti-NATO, though it frequently disputes both Afghan government figures (sometimes saying they’re too high) and NATO claims and figures (saying they’re too low), showing a high degree of independence in practice.

 In some cases Amnesty International have talked to village elders to get the names and numbers of civilians killed in an airstrike, or Human Rights Watch have carried out investigations, or International Red Cross staff on the ground have been able to give rough estimates of the scale of civilian deaths, but, though the resulting figures are often higher than UNAMA or AIHRC or afghan government ones when they do investigate an incident,  none of these three sources attempt to provide comprehensive figures for civilian deaths in Afghanistan. There is also the Afghan Rights Monitor group, which seems to be genuinely independent of the Afghan government, unlike the AIHRC. ARM figures, like Amnesty figures, are sometimes much higher than AIHRC or UNAMA figures – leading to arguments with UNAMA.

Since Azizabad President Karzai has also set up a commission specifically to investigate airstrikes and this provided figures on the Kunduz strike in October.

In general NATO figures for civilian casualties caused by their airstrikes are the lowest (and least credible given their terrible record of deliberately reducing the true figures in their “investigations”).

However frequently no two sources agree on the number of casualties (especially the case in the Kunduz airstrikes). UNAMA figures are a bit higher than NATO’s. Afghan government figures tend to be very high, at least in high profile cases where large numbers of civilians have been killed, due to public pressure for the true figures. AIHRC and investigations by Amnesty International give the  most credible figures as they are usually based on interviews with survivors and village elders and use the best methodology.

Back to contents links/ top of page

Sources

The Afghanistan Conflict Monitor of the Simon Fraser University in Australia, ‘Civilian Casualties’, http://www.afghanconflictmonitor.org/civilian.html

Independent 25 Jun 2002 ‘Afghanistan loses female minister in row over sharia law’,

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/afghanistan-loses-female-minister-in-row-over-sharia-law-646366.html

Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, Commissioners, Dr. Sima Samar,

http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Commissioners/Dr_samar.htm

UN News Service 17 Feb 2009 ‘Number of Afghan civilian deaths in 2008 highest since Taliban ouster, says UN’, <a href="http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=29918&Cr=Afghan&Cr1=civilian+rights

UNOG/UNAMA 31 Jul 2009 ‘AFGHANISTAN: CIVILIAN CASUALTIES KEEP ON RISING, SAYS UN REPORT’, http://www.unog.ch/80256EDD006B9C2E/%28httpNewsByYear_en%29/0A22BB5BFE041B76C125760400343AE3?OpenDocument


 


 

Mis-quoting Human Rights Watch

In July 2008 a Human Rights Watch researcher was quoted as follows in the New York Times

‘“In their deliberate targeting, the Air Force has all but eliminated civilian casualties in Afghanistan,” said Marc Garlasco, senior military analyst with Human Rights Watch...The greater risk of civilian casualties, Mr. Garlasco said, comes in unplanned targeting, when American and allied troops come under attack unexpectedly and call for airstrikes...In an attempt to help troops on the ground caught up in the fight, there have been situations where they have killed civilians.’”

If that is the case (and it may well be as Garlasco is a former US soldier and experienced HRW investigator) it didn’t stop NATO airstrikes killing large number of civilians in what must have been unplanned attacks over and over again – at Azizabad, Farrah, Kunduz and many other places.

Many people half-quoted or mis-quoted Garlasco to give the impression he was saying NATO had almost entirely ended killings of civilians in air strikes in Afghanistan. He hadn’t. He’d just specified which kinds of airstrikes were killing most civilians.


NYT 23 Jul 2008 ‘Civilian Risks Curbing Strikes in Afghan War’,

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/23/world/asia/23military.html?ex=1374552000&en=432eead6b7d6fae9&ei=5124&partner=digg&exprod=digg (page 1 only except for subscribers) ,


read the full version at http://warvictims.wordpress.com/2008/07/23/afghanistan-civilian-risks-curbing-strikes-in-afghan-war/#more-754


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Azizabad airstrikes, August 2008 – Why NATO figures are unreliable, based on deliberately flawed methodology

Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission found that the US military have consistently tried to deny the true number of civilians killed by air strikes in Afghanistan by using deliberately flawed counting methods.

In the worst incident of 2008 under Bush, at Azizabad,  US airstrikes after fighting between Taliban and NATO ground forces near Azizabad in Afghanistan killed at least 76 civilians according to a subsequent AIHRC investigation – and 95 according to the Afghan government.

As the issue wouldn’t go way the US military’s figure rose from 7 to  26 civilians killed, still conflicting with UN, Afghan government , AIHRC and Human Rights Watch investigations which showed at least 97 civilians were killed.

In another typically dishonest US military “investigation” a General Callan provided a final US military figure of 33 civilians dead, based on such innovative methodology as counting burials of a whole family in one grave as one civilian casualty (which was false as it’s common to bury families together and in airstrikes often a few lumps of flesh are all that’s left of the bodies) and counting all adult males as Taliban (the same definition of ‘enemy combatant’ used by General Mladic and the Bosnian Serbs at Srebrenica).

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Sources

AFP 26 Aug 2008 ‘US-led force says 5 Afghan civilians killed in strikes’,

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/08/26/2347302.htm

PBS 27 Aug 2008 ‘U.N. Says 90 Civilians Killed in Afghan Airstrike’, http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/asia/july-dec08/afghan_08-27.html

Washington Post 29 Aug 2008 ‘Pentagon Reports U.S. Airstrike Killed 5 Afghan Civilians, Not 90’, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/28/AR2008082802203.html

AP 02 Sep 2009 ‘US probe finds fewer Afghan deaths than UN claimed’, http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1A1-D92UJ9FO0.html

Human Rights Watch 08 Sep 2008 ‘“Troops in Contact” - Airstrikes and Civilian Deaths in Afghanistan’, http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2008/09/08/troops-contact-0

Human Rights Watch 14 Jan  2009 ‘Letter to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on US Airstrikes in Azizabad, Afghanistan’, http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/01/14/letter-secretary-defense-robert-gates-us-airstrikes-azizabad-afghanistan

HRW 15 Jan 2009 ‘Afghanistan: US Investigation of Airstrike Deaths ‘Deeply Flawed’,

http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/01/15/afghanistan-us-investigation-airstrike-deaths-deeply-flawed



Farah Airstrikes, May 2009 : Propaganda continued under Obama

The Azizabad airstrikes were followed in August 2009 by airstrikes in the province of Farah.

Red Cross staff on the ground reported the strikes continued for 14 hours and had killed dozens of civilians. They and Afghan survivors said that civilians had fled miles from the scene of the fighting, only to be followed and bombed by US planes, apparently believing them to be fleeing Taliban.  The US military initially denied any significant civilian casualties. Then Defence Secretary Robert Gates and the Pentagon came out with an imaginative tale in which the Taliban had gone from house to house throwing grenades in to kill civilians – and had then pretended US airstrikes had killed them – and carried the same bodies from one village to another to make it look like there were more than there really were. Seeing that this story wasn’t being bought, they later admitted it wasn’t true.

The US military’s investigation found 20 to 35 civilians had been killed, but as usual this was an unbelievably low figure compared to those provided by more neutral bodies. The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission’s investigation gave a figure of 97 civilians killed – 21 women, 65 children and 11 adult men , along with 25 to 30 insurgents.

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Sources

Independent 06 May 2009 ‘Afghans riot over air-strike atrocity’, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/afghans-riot-over-airstrike-atrocity-1681070.html

Independent 06 May 2009 ‘'Dozens die' in Afghan air strikes says Red Cross’,

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/dozens-die-in-afghan-air-strikes-says-red-cross-1679930.html

ICRC News Release 06 May 2009 ‘Afghanistan: ICRC confirms dozens killed in air strikes’, http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/afghanistan-news-060509!OpenDocument

Independent 08 May 2009 ‘US denies 147 Afghan civilians killed’,

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/us-denies-147-afghan-civilians-killed-1681620.html

IOS 10 May 2009 ‘Patrick Cockburn: Who killed 120 civilians? The US says it's not a story’, http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/patrick-cockburn-who-killed-120-civilians-the-us-says-its-not-a-story-1682310.html

Human Rights Watch 14 May 2009 ‘Afghanistan: US Should Act to End Bombing Tragedies  :


Civilian Death Toll in May 3 Airstrikes Shows Previous Measures Inadequate’,

http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/05/14/afghanistan-us-should-act-end-bombing-tragedies

Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission 26 May 2009 ‘Press release:Balabolook incident’, http://www.aihrc.org.af/English/Eng_pages/Press_releases_eng/2009/pre_rel_balabluk_eng_26may2009.pdf

Voice Of America 26 May 2009 ‘Rights Group: 97 Afghan Civilians Killed in US Strikes’, http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2009-05/2009-05-26-voa41.cfm?CFID=295738253&CFTOKEN=56801835&jsessionid=00303d86380170fdca4e267160304e615c5a

Reuters 19 Jun 2009 ‘U.S. says Afghan air strikes killed 26 civilians’, http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE55I5Q920090619?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0

Reuters 19 Jun 2009 ‘U.S. says Afghan air strikes killed 26 civilians’, http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE55I5Q920090619?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0

Dispatches – Afghanistan’s Dirty War, Channel 4 News (UK) 12 Jun 2009, Afghanistan's Dirty War, http://www.channel4.com/programmes/dispatches/articles/afghanistans-dirty-war-watch-clips

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After Farah : Have things changed under McChrystal? ; Kunduz and after

After Azizabad Obama appointed a new military commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal. From now on there would supposedly be a new strategy, airstrikes would be used as little as possible and the number of civilians killed by them would be reduced as a result.

Yet many other NATO airstrikes have also killed civilians since Farah, the worst case so far being a German airstrike on petrol tankers hijacked by the Taliban near Kunduz in September 2009. The Taliban couldn’t use all the fuel themselves, so took what they could transport and told villagers they could take as much as they wanted. A German NATO officer meanwhile called in airstrikes, fearing the Taliban might use the tankers for suicide bombings against NATO forces. General McChrystal, seeing wounded civilians arrive in a hospital, admitted some civilians might have been killed, but unusually gave no figure. President Karzai’s air strike commission gave a figure of 30 civilians killed and 69 Taliban, but said 20 of the Taliban were “unarmed”, bringing the meaning of “Taliban” in its statement into question. Were they Taliban-sympathising civilians or Taliban who had put their weapons down? The Afghan Rights Monitor gave a figure of 60-70 civilians killed, while Afghan village elders gave Amnesty International a list of 83 civilians they said had been killed in the Kunduz strikes.

 Unless the US military has turned over an unprecedented new leaf it will be continuing to deny the real numbers killed – and for the months since Azizabad pretty much the only figures available are NATO and Afghan government ones (with the exception of other sources for the Kunduz strikes).

On NATO and recent Afghan government figures Kunduz might look like an isolated incident. During June 2009, beginning almost a month after McChrystal took command, only 10 civilians were killed by NATO airstrikes in major offensives on Taliban held territory; and only 8  in July during similar circumstances . The NATO and Afghan government figures for August were very low too. However  given the record of deceit in US military and NATO figures on civilian deaths and the immense pressure the US government can put on Karzai’s government it would be a very trusting, naive or blindly “patriotic” person who took these figures as the real ones without any investigation of them by more reliable sources.

If for instance you look at the US military’s initial claims for Azizabad – 5 civilian deaths – with the AIHRC investigation finding at least 76 or the Afghan government figure of 95 that puts the NATO figure at around one fifteenth to one twentieth of more reliable sources. If you compare their final figure of 33 – its under half of the AIHRC figure and just over a third of the Afghan government one – and they are unlikely to concede such a high proportion of the real figure in cases which have received much less publicity.

Media reports of AIHRC figures mean the total for September 2009 alone must be at least 78 in at least two incidents, which brings the monthly average to higher than the UNAMA figures for January to June 2009 of 200 civilians (or 33 per month) killed by airstrikes in Afghanistan. If we take into account that AIHRC figures would probably be higher than the UNAMA ones the totals per month of civilians killed in airstrikes might be about the same for the months of 2009 before McChrystal took command and the months since he did (assuming the Obama administration has not put pressure on UNAMA to lower the figures).

Alternatively if we reason that Afghan government figures used to be higher than NATO ones the fact that they now agree might indicate that civilian deaths from airstrikes genuinely have fallen

It  might be possible to dismiss incidents like the Azizabad, Farah and Kunduz strikes as “freak accidents” if it wasn’t for the fact that they have happened just as frequently as they did under Bush for 7 years – and  are merely the worst instances of a common event. For instance on 20th May – mere weeks after Azizabad – the US military was admitted to having killed at least 8 more civilians in a separate airstrike on “Taliban” who turned out not to be. About a fortnight after the strikes on the tankers at Kunduz a group of 6 farmers was killed by another NATO airstrike. For a fuller list of reports on air strikes in Afghanistan see the Afghan Conflict Monitor’s civilian casualties page.

So AP headlines like ‘Western airstrikes kill fewer civilians’ become a bit dubious when you read the rest of the article – which says the sources for the claim were NATO and its allies in the Afghan government – one of the sides in the war (27). It’s true that the Afghan government has given higher figures than NATO for civilian casualties of air strikes in the past, at least where the number of dead was big enough to cause widespread anger among Afghans, but it may be under greater pressure to be “on message” now that the Obama administration has indicated it would prefer to replace Karzai. It's also worth noting that that AP headline was from 10th August 2009. Less than a month later the Kunduz air-strikes happened.

Conclusion

Professor Marc Herold sees the increase in NATO casualties as an indication that the bad publicity and loss of more Afghan public support caused by the high rate of civilians being killed by airstrikes has forced the US military into relying on fighting on the ground and avoiding airstrikes. This is possible, but then there was a 78% increase in NATO casualties in Afghanistan after the first wave of NATO reinforcements under Obama and Brown when we know for certain that airstrikes were killing more civilians than in the same months of the previous year. The cause seems to have been NATO offensives carried out with the new forces available leading to more fighting and more civilian and military casualties. Since we have no figures on civilian casualties since Azizabad other than NATO and Afghan government ones there is no way as yet to tell if NATO are killing less civilians in airstrikes since Azizabad or not. The unprecedented agreement between NATO and the Karzai government on these figures may be due to falling casualties from airstrikes, or it may be due to increased political pressure from the US government on Karzai.

Whichever interpretation you take there is no doubt that the total number of civilian casualties from all causes (not just NATO airstrikes) in Afghanistan rose steadily in 2007 to 2008 under Bush and has continued to rise for the first 6 months of 2009 under Obama compared to the first 6 months of 2008 under Bush (and ditto for the first 10 months of each year). NATO casualties in the first 3 months under Obama, after reinforcements were sent, also rose 78% compared to the last 3 months of 2008. So so far under Obama civilian casualties continue to increase, probably due to more troops being present leading to more fighting. It's true that the proportion of civilian casualties caused by NATO and Afghan government forces has fallen and the proportion killed by their enemies has risen, but civilians are still dying in greater numbers.


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Sources for 'After Farah';'Have things changed under McChrystal; after Kunduz - and - Conclusion

General/Conclusion


Afghanistan Conflict Monitor (Simon Fraser University, Australia) – Airstrikes,


http://www.afghanconflictmonitor.org/airstrikes/

UN News Service 17 Feb 2009 ‘Number of Afghan civilian deaths in 2008 highest since Taliban ouster, says UN’, http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=29918&Cr=Afghan&Cr1=civilian+rights


 

UNAMA 31 Jul 2009 ‘AFGHANISTAN: CIVILIAN CASUALTIES KEEP ON RISING, SAYS UN REPORT’, http://www.unog.ch/80256EDD006B9C2E/%28httpNewsByYear_en%29/0A22BB5BFE041B76C125760400343AE3?OpenDocument


 

AP/MSNBC 10 Aug 2009 ‘Western airstrikes kill fewer Afghan civilians’, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32362324/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/

United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan, Human Rights Unit ‘ Afghanistan : Mid Year Bulletin on Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict, 2009’, http://unama.unmissions.org/Portals/UNAMA/human%20rights/09july31-UNAMA-HUMAN-RIGHTS-CIVILIAN-CASUALTIES-Mid-Year-2009-Bulletin.pdf


 

UNoCHA IRIN 12 Nov 2009 'AFGHANISTAN: Over 2,000 civilians killed in first 10 months of 2009',
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=87003

Guardian 11 Jun 2009 ‘Insurgents are back in force in Afghanistan – and British troops are bearing the brunt’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/jun/11/afghanistan-taliban-helmand-uk-troops

Between Azizabad and Farah


= Guardian.co.uk 11 Jul 2008 ‘US air strike wiped out Afghan wedding party, inquiry finds’,http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jul/11/afghanistan.usa

NYT 21 Jul 2008 ‘U.S. and NATO Forces Kill 13 Afghans in Strikes Said to Be Mistakes’,


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/21/world/asia/21afghan.html?_r=1&ref=world&oref=slogin


(9 Afghan police officers killed according to NATO after hit by airstrike when mistaken for Taliban; NATO says 4 civilians killed, 4 wounded by NATO mortar fire, deaths of 3 others “not confirmed” according to NATO)


Sources : After Farah, before Kunduz

Andronkis International - AKI (Rome, Italy) 20 May 2009 ‘Afghanistan: NATO airstrike kills civilians in south’, http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Security/?id=3.0.3337058473


AKI 5 Aug 2009 ‘Afghanistan: NATO disputes civilian casualties’,http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Security/?id=3.0.3624008552

AP/MSNBC 10 Aug 2009 ‘Western airstrikes kill fewer Afghan civilians’, , http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32362324/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia/


United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan, Human Rights Unit ‘ Afghanistan : Mid Year Bulletin on Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict, 2009’, http://unama.unmissions.org/Portals/UNAMA/human%20rights/09july31-UNAMA-HUMAN-RIGHTS-CIVILIAN-CASUALTIES-Mid-Year-2009-Bulletin.pdf


Sources : Kunduz


Reuters 04 Sep 2009 ‘After Afghan strike, charred flesh and burning rage’, http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE58356F20090904 (survivors of airstrike on fuel tankers say many of dead civilians)


NYT 04 Sep 2009 ‘NATO Strike Magnifies Divide on Afghan War’, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/05/world/asia/05afghan.html


Al Jazeera 05 Sep 2009 ‘Scores dead in Nato raid on Kunduz’, http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/09/200994465561117.html


LA Times 05 Sep 2009 ‘Afghan officials say NATO airstrike killed mostly civilians, http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghan-violence5-2009sep05,0,166919.story (US military claim most of those killed by bombing hijacked fuel tankers were Taliban)


CNN 07 Sep 2009 ‘U.S. general sure Afghan civilians wounded in airstrike’, http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/09/06/afghanistan.airstrike.probe/index.html


Guardian 11 Sep 2009 ‘Victims' families tell their stories following Nato airstrike in Afghanistan’, http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/sep/11/afghanistan-airstrike-victims-stories


Al Jazeera 05 Sep 2009 ‘Scores dead in Nato raid on Kunduz’, http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/09/200994465561117.html


LA Times 05 Sep 2009 ‘Afghan officials say NATO airstrike killed mostly civilians, http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghan-violence5-2009sep05,0,166919.story (US military claim most of those killed by bombing hijacked fuel tankers were Taliban)


CNN 07 Sep 2009 ‘U.S. general sure Afghan civilians wounded in airstrike’, http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/09/06/afghanistan.airstrike.probe/index.html


Voice of America 07 Sep 2009 ‘Afghan Rights Group Says Mostly Civilians Killed in NATO Airstrike’, http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-09-07-voa24.cfm


VOA 13 Sep 2009 ‘Afghan Commission Says 30 Civilians Killed in NATO Strike’, http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-09-13-voa13.cfm


After Kunduz


Globe and Mail (Canada) 29 Sep 2009 ‘Airstrike killed farmers, Afghans say’,


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/airstrike-killed-farmers-afghans-say/article1303346/


NYT 01 Oct 2009 ‘Afghans Say Airstrike Kills 8, Mostly Civilians’,


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/02/world/asia/02kabul.html


Afghan tribal elders said Thursday that eight people, at least five of them civilians, were killed in an airstrike in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday.’


 


CNN 01 Oct 2009 ‘NATO: Airstrike killed Afghan women, children’, http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/10/01/afghanistan.nato.airstrike/


(UN says 1,500 civilians killed in Afghanistan Jan-Aug 2009)