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U.S. gunship videotaped its Afghan wedding attack

CNN buried this in CNN Asia | 10.07.2002 05:29

The AC-130 gunship involved in last week's attack that mistakenly killed civilians in southern Afghanistan recorded some images of the airstrike, but U.S. officials will not say what the video shows.

U.S. gunship videotaped its Afghan wedding attack
U.S. gunship videotaped its Afghan wedding attack


U.S. gunship videotaped Afghan strike
CNN Asia
July 8, 2002
 http://asia.cnn.com/2002/US/07/08/afghan.gunship/index.html

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The AC-130 gunship involved in last week's attack that mistakenly killed civilians in southern Afghanistan recorded some images of the airstrike, but U.S. officials will not say what the video shows, CNN has confirmed.

The air attack, which the United States and Afghanistan are investigating, killed at least 48 civilians and injured another 117 in Oruzgan province, where villagers said a wedding party was in progress, Afghan officials said.

The videotape is highly classified and is so sensitive it likely won't be released without direct approval by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Gen. Tommy Franks, commander in chief of U.S. Central Command.

One critical unanswered question for the Pentagon is whether the imagery shows anti-aircraft artillery fire. Questions have arisen about whether the gunship crew might have mistaken celebratory wedding fire by rifles for artillery fire.

Defense Department sources said ground controllers insisted they saw artillery guns firing before the gunship was called in. Central Command has initiated a formal probe, and investigators will be looking, in part, for shell casings that might have come from an artillery gun.

Sources said the tape is unlikely to be released, partly because of concerns that it would set a precedent with the news media. Video taken from a gunship of controversial incidents is rarely made public.

 http://asia.cnn.com/2002/US/07/08/afghan.gunship/index.html

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Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

Are you happy now?

11.07.2002 03:08

Well, I guess all you America haters had your dreams answerd. I guess you could all now burn old glory and march for homicide bombers with a new found passion. The U.S. admits it was a tragic mistake and tries not to target civillians but that does not matter,even if Al-Queda fighters might be hidding in populated areas to use people as human shields,it does not matter,even if the U.S. helped bring in a new goverment that is democratic and respects the rights of women,that does not matter ethier.
Its just more fodder for the anti-American propaganda machine.

Sir Nose


Happy?

11.07.2002 08:56

I don't think anyone is happy about the killing of 48 civilians, Sir Nose. But I take issue with your assertation that the US admits it made a mistake when bombing those civilians. The US never admits it made a mistake. That is the whole ethos of American life. Like the catholic church of centuries past, the US sees itself as infallible before the rest of the world, imbued with a god-given absolution prior to every act of violence and terror it commits.

jjf


Reasons to be cheerful

12.07.2002 08:55

If the US/Zionist/UK Coalition stopped bombing, maiming and killing kids and exporting arms to others to maim and kill kids, we'd have no reason to hate them.

Export non-GM seeds, food, clothes, implements of agriculture, instead of Ebola, and stop corporations polluting the water in developing nations and the whole world will worship America's sick materialistic, overindulgent, pitiless, debauched, perverted, excessive, violent, coke snorting, beer swigging society.

I. Rate