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Obama’s Afghan War: The New Metric of Civilian Casualties

Prof Marc W. Herold | 13.06.2009 21:31 | Analysis | Anti-militarism | Terror War | World

During 2009, seven out of ten civilians killed by the Obama and NATO
military machines have been women and children. Clearly, the Obama regime
has failed on the metric of civilian casualties.

By Eneko in Diagonal Periódico.
By Eneko in Diagonal Periódico.

B1-B bomber delivers 2,000 lb bomb upon alleged Taliban positions in the village
B1-B bomber delivers 2,000 lb bomb upon alleged Taliban positions in the village

Graph: Annualized Monthly Averages of Afghan Civilian Deaths 2005-2009
Graph: Annualized Monthly Averages of Afghan Civilian Deaths 2005-2009


During 2009, seven out of ten civilians killed by the Obama and NATO
military machines have been women and children. Clearly, the Obama regime
has failed on the metric of civilian casualties.

A tacit agreement operates between the Obama administration, the U.S
corporate media, most progressive U.S. liberals, and the United Nations
Assistance Mission for Afghanistan (UNAMA). All dream to a lesser or greater
degree of a future social democratic paradise in Afghanistan where girls'
schools would be flourishing and small farmers exporting pomegranates.[i]
Some debate exists over the means to achieve this end. Much ado has been
made during the past five months as to whether the Obama approach to
Afghanistan differs or not with that of its predecessor.

What is certain is that Afghanistan has become Obama's war.[ii] Words
matter: this is Obama's war and it is a military surge. Obama has put in
motion a surge of U.S occupation troops raising them by 50% to a level of
55,000 by mid-summer 2009 (including a 1,000-strong contingent of Special
Forces). He is continuing and expanding Bush's use of mercenaries. Pentagon
data indicates that private security contractors working for the Pentagon
have risen by 29% during the first quarter of 2009.[iii]

A debate centers upon to what degree the Obama approach is one of
counter-terrorism (CT) or counter-insurgency (COIN). Central to the latter
is the metric of civilian casualties and this is where the U.S media by
commission and the UNAMA by omission enter the evolving Afghan tragedy. Much
of the U.S left by having earlier proclaimed that the Afghanistan was the
"good war" and being inebriated by the nation-building of humanitarian
imperialism is now suffering from a bi-polar disorder, rendering it
irrelevant.

With the sacking of General McKiernan and the entry of General McChrystal
(along with the continuing prominence of counter-insurgency aficionado
Kilcullen), Obama appears to tilt towards the COIN approach in Afghanistan.
Put in other terms, the approach is population-centric rather than
military-centric. General McChrystal stated in congressional testimony that
"the measure of American and allied effectiveness would the `number of
Afghans shielded from violence,' not the number of enemies killed."[iv] He
also said, "This is a critical point. It may be the critical point. This is
a struggle for the support of the Afghan people. Our willingness to operate
in ways that minimize casualties or damage, even when doing so makes our
task more difficult, is essential to our credibility. I cannot overstate my
commitment to the importance of this concept...Sir, I believe the perception
caused by civilian casualties is one of the most dangerous things we face in
Afghanistan, particularly with the Afghan people, the Pashtun most
likely."[v]

His approach hence is classic COIN, rather than focusing forcefully upon
taking the fight to the Taliban and their associates (military-centric).
Naturally, the COIN strategy if successful by providing better actionable
intelligence enables better carrying out the military fight against
"insurgents." This strategy finds favor both in Karzai's Kabul (to which yet
more monies will flow) and in European capitals where the military-centric
approach is unacceptable. The "new" U.S strategy which it turns out is not
new at all, involves building up the Afghan military-police apparatus,
pressuring NATO to take a greater role, employing "precision strikes" to
avoid civilian casualties, etc. All this was tried under Bush and failed.
Why should we expect anything different under Obama? But what is new is the
metric of Afghan civilian casualties. This was well expressed in an
editorial of the Boston Globe,

McChrystal and the new number two commander in Afghanistan, Lieutenant
General David Rodriguez, must make one tenet in their guerrilla warfare
playbook an absolute priority: protection of the civilian population. The
Taliban are reaping benefits from a dynamic that should be familiar from
other guerrilla wars. When Taliban fighters stage an ambush, US forces
frequently feel compelled to call in air strikes or artillery fire. And all
too often, as happened last week, innocent Afghan villagers are hurt or
killed. The inevitable outcome is widespread anger against the foreign army.
This is what Afghan President Hamid Karzai lamented again and again last
week during a visit to Washington. He begged Americans to stop killing
Afghan civilians. What Karzai knows, and what McChrystal must take to heart,
is that nearly all Afghans despise and fear the Taliban. Yet no US strategy
can defeat the Taliban unless the foreigners become protectors - not
destroyers - of Afghan families.[vi]

An editorial in the New York Times of June 8th added

Protecting Afghan civilians and expanding the secure space in which they can
go about their lives and livelihoods must now become the central purpose of
American military operations in Afghanistan.[vii]

As pointed out by Jeff Huber, the McChrystal metric of winning - the number
of Afghans shielded from violence - is nonsense. How many shielded Afghans
will equate to victory? Who is going to shield them?[viii] General
McChrystal who was head of secretive Joint Special Operations Command,
involved in widespread murder and carnage across Afghanistan? In other
words, under the McChrystal metric, it will be impossible to know when we
have won. This is an invitation to war without end.

While it is not my purpose here to critique the feasibility of "protecting
civilians" and whether such ever was U.S policy - indeed I argued exactly
the contrary in December 2001[ix] - a few words are imperative. Protecting
the civilian population requires a massive and prolonged U.S/NATO presence
in the countryside, but as I have argued elsewhere, such requires around
400,000 foreign troops.[x] The Obama surge is obvious: to give Afghans
enough space to rebuild their lives[xi]; but it is far too little, too
late.[xii] Establishing such a presence necessitates clearing areas of the
Taliban and their associates, but if many of the Taliban are residents of
these regions then such clearing must take the form of population removal to
fortified strategic villages (as in Vietnam).[xiii] Moreover, such clearing
carried out with admittedly very poor on-the-ground actionable intelligence,
will per force kill many innocents (as I demonstrate below has "precisely"
occurred under the Obama clock). In other words, the U.S and NATO are caught
in an unwinnable Catch-22.

The metric of civilian casualties has two dimensions: the one on-the-ground
in Afghanistan and the other how Obama's war gets reported outside
Afghanistan. In Afghanistan today, word spreads very quickly about civilians
killed by U.S and/or NATO actions. The foreign forces constantly lament the
effectiveness of so-called Taliban propaganda. The presence of cell-phone
technology has greatly facilitated such diffusion. No way exists to contain
the spread of such information within Afghanistan.[xiv]

Things look very differently as regards how Obama's Afghan war gets reported
outside Afghanistan. Given the new metric of civilian casualties, the U.S
government is going to greater lengths to manage the news coming out of
Afghanistan. As is widely acknowledged, the U.S corporate (non right wing)
media is having a "love affair" with the Obama administration.[xv] This is
obvious as regards matters of foreign policy, the Pentagon and all the more
so for Central Asia.

It is no secret that Obama has taken over the U.S peace movement.[xvi] For
example, John Podesta's `liberal think tank the Center for American Progress
(CAP) strongly supports Obama's escalation or surge in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. MoveOn.org today serves as a full-time cheerleader of Obama's
policy agenda and is at best silent on Obama's Afghan surge. More
importantly, the established corporate media is largely silent about the
continuing devastation perpetrated upon Afghan civilians by the Obama Afghan
war. Only when a thoroughly egregious attack takes place as in Farah in
early May 2009 when 97-147 civilians perished under U.S. "precision" bombs,
is mention made. A British newspaper (not the Washington Post or
equivalents) published a photo of what happens on the ground when a 2,000
pound bomb explodes (see below).[xvii] A B-1B bomber dropped two such bombs
on a string of villages in Farah province on May 5th with devastating
results.[xviii] This is precision? The effective casualty radius for such a
bomb (meaning 50% of exposed persons within this range will die) is at least
400 meters from impact point.



[Image: A B1-B bomber delivers a 2,000 lb bomb upon alleged Taliban positions
in the village of Yatimchay, Helmand, in support of an assault by British
Royal Fusillers during Operation Mar Lew.]



Facts-on-the-ground reveal that under Obama since January, more bombs are
being dropped contra the administration's public relations. Rolfsen reports
in The Navy Times that

Air Force, Navy and other coalition warplanes dropped a record number of
bombs in Afghanistan during April, Air Forces Central figures show. In the
past month, warplanes released 438 bombs, the most ever. April also marked
the fourth consecutive month that the number of bombs dropped rose, after a
decline starting last July. The munitions were released during 2,110
close-air support sorties. The actual number of airstrikes was higher
because the AFCent numbers don't include attacks by helicopters and special
operations gunships. The numbers also don't include strafing runs or
launches of small missiles.[xix]

One searches in vain in the U.S mainstream press for reporting upon all
those bombs being dropped upon Afghanistan. Vietnam-era enemy body counts
are now officially back as part of the U.S propaganda war.[xx] Even less is
written on the concrete results - other than the prolific references to
"eliminated militants" - of such bombing. Such is to be expected from a
corporate media largely in tow to the Pentagon and the Obama regime.
Naturally exceptions exist as for example the independent reporting by the
freelance journalist, Chris Sands of Britain who has been working
independently in Afghanistan since 2005.[xxi] Sadly for every Chris Sands,
there are dozens like Jason Straziuoso (Associated Press), Lara Logan (CBS
60 Minutes) or Laura King (Los Angeles Times) who serve as megaphones for
the Pentagon's version of events.

The U.S. military's "Jan. 31, 2009 Airpower Summary" stated "in the Musa
Qala area, a coalition aircraft bombed an anti-Afghan force compound with a
precision-guided munitions. A coalition ground commander had ordered the
strike after enemy forces began shooting at his unit with small-arms fire
and RPGs." How did this look from the ground? Four months after the U.S air
strike, the independent reporter, Chris Sands, reported what had happened on
that fateful day. He interviewed a 13-year-old girl, Ghrana, in a Kabul
rehabilitation center. Walking on crutches, Ghrana told Sands what had
really taken place in Musa Qala when U.S war planes "bombed an anti-Afghan
compound" killing and wounding many. Sands wrote

She sounded neither angry nor particularly sad describing what happened
during a journey to her sister's house in the south-western province of
Helmand, one morning. "I didn't hear any shooting or anything. Then I saw
red coloured bombs falling from the aeroplane," she said. Nine of her
relatives were killed, including her mother. Ghrana lost her right leg and
much of her left arm. In military parlance she and her family were all
collateral damage, an unfortunate, but inevitable, consequence of war. Each
day that goes by they are joined by other men, women and children caught in
a struggle that many Afghans say is more brutal than anything in their
country's history... Exactly why Ghrana and her family were bombed in Musa
Qala district three-and-a-half months ago may never become clear. She
insists there were no Taliban in the area at the time and there is no
obvious reason why her family was confused for insurgents.

Whatever the events were that led to the bombing, the results have been
devastating. In a remote and violent part of one of the world's poorest
countries, she must now try to find decent medical treatment and piece her
life back together. Meanwhile, her remaining relatives pray for the day when
the foreign troops finally withdraw from their country. "It will be like Eid
for us," said her uncle, Ahmed Abed, a polite 32-year-old who brought his
niece to Kabul. "The Americans know who is a Talib and who is innocent, but
they don't care. If it is a Talib or a girl, they don't care. They are
crazy. It's like they are blinded by love. If anyone comes in front of their
face, they shoot them. They never care who it is. I can accept that
airplanes make mistakes, but I have seen with my own eyes them fire from a
vehicle at a woman in the street." Mr Abed's anger is common among Pashtuns,
Afghanistan's largest ethnic group. Predominant in the south and east, many
of them were naturally suspicious of the occupation. Now, with their homes
in ruins and their futures more uncertain than ever, they are downright
hostile.[xxii]

This atrocity went unreported until Mr. Sands wrote his article in the UAE's
daily, The National, providing evidence that the figures cited in The Afghan
Victim Memorial Project are a significant under-estimate of the true toll
taken upon innocent Afghan civilians by the U.S. and NATO foreign forces.

Another exception is Dexter Filkins of the New York Times, who in February
past penned an article titled "Afghan Civilian Casualties Rose 40 Percent in
2008."[xxiii] Mr. Filkins relied upon overall figures provided by the UNAMA
in a report released in February, but complemented those with valuable case
detail. The UNAMA report was certainly a healthy anti-dote to NATO
propaganda which blithely asserted in January 2009 that only 973 civilians
were killed and only 97 by international forces during 2008.

But can we confidently rely upon such UNAMA figures? The UNAMA will
apparently be releasing new figures for 2009 this month.[xxiv] The UNAMA
itself concedes that it is not engaged in "body-counting" in Afghanistan.
The reasons cited include inaccessibility to many areas of conflict and a
lack of adequate human resources to carry out such work.[xxv] Further
skepticism is warranted as the UNAMA refuses to publish disaggregated data
which would allow fact-checking. In effect, we are asked to believe in the
UNAMA figures. But, such amounts to faith-based counting.

The Table and graph below present the evolving matrix of death for Afghan
civilians, 2005-2009. The rows represent different counts: Herold; the
United Nations' UNAMA; Human Rights Watch (HRW); the Afghanistan Rights
Monitor (ARM); and the Afghan Ambassador to Australia (only 2008
figure[xxvi]). The UN data is for deaths caused by all pro-government
forces. In order to make it comparable, I have assumed that 15% of civilian
deaths were caused by Afghan forces, giving the revised ( ) figures. The
graph below converts the annual totals into monthly averages for each year.

+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
| | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 |2009 (Jan-May) |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
|Herold |408-478 | 653-769 |1,010-1,297|864-1,017| 401-494 |
| | | | | | |
|midpoint | 443 | 711 | 1,154 | 941 | 443 |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
|U.N | | | 477 | 829 | |
| | | | | | |
|adjusted | | | (405) | (705) | |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
|HRW | | 230 | 434 | | |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
|ARM | | | | 1,100 | |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+
|Afghan amb. | | | | 1,000 | |
+------------+--------+---------+-----------+---------+---------------+

In order to better discern the evolution over time, the graph below presents
annualized monthly averages of Afghans who perished at the hands of the U.S
and its NATO allies. What emerges clearly is that for Afghan civilians, 2009
has been as deadly as the high point of 2007. The average monthly figure for
2009 is 90 innocent civilians killed; if we take just the Obama weeks (Jan
21 - May 31st) the figure rises to 96 (identical to the worst monthly
average for 2007). In other words, by historical standards, the Obama regime
fails on the metric of protecting innocent civilians from death at the hands
of U.S and NATO occupation forces.




[Graph: Annualized Monthly Averages of Afghan Civilian Deaths 2005-2009]




Figures for the year 2008 are now available from the UNAMA, NATO and Herold.
Whereas the UNAMA provides overall civilian casualty figures, my own work
focuses only upon innocent Afghans killed by U.S/NATO actions. The NATO
figure is sheer propaganda. The following Table contrasts the compilations
for civilians killed by US/NATO:

+---------------+-------------------+---------------------+----------------+
| | UNAMA figures for | Herold figures for |NATO figures for|
| | pro-government |US/NATO-caused deaths| deaths caused |
| | caused deaths | | US/NATO action |
+---------------+-------------------+---------------------+----------------+
| All of 2008 | 828 (705) | 864-1,017 | 97 |
+---------------+-------------------+---------------------+----------------+
| Jan-May 2009 | n.a. | 387-472 | n.a. |
| (inclusive) | | | |
+---------------+-------------------+---------------------+----------------+
Source: data for Herold can be reconstructed from the Afghan Victim Memorial
Project data base

The compilations are not strictly comparable. The UNAMA also includes
civilians who perished at the hands of Afghan forces. In other words, one
can safely assume that the UNAMA captures only about 70% of those counted by
Herold.[xxvii] This serves to lessen U.S/NATO culpability and improve
U.S/NATO "performance" on the metric of Afghans protected from violence.

How should one assess Obama's Afghan war based upon the metric of civilian
casualties? The U.S media and the U.S left are largely silent (the latter
choosing to ignore data I have provided[xxviii] choosing instead to rely
upon questionable accounts by Human Rights Watch and the UNAMA).). The
previously mentioned rise in U.S air strikes augers poorly. The following
Table presents data on civilians killed by US/NATO actions compiled from the
Afghan Victim Memorial Project for 2009:

+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| |Low count |High count |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|January 2009: Bush 20 days|63 |77 |
| | | |
|Obama 11 days |35 |35 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|February |50 |50 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|March |36 |36 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|April |70 |75 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|May |147 |221 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Sub-total.... |401 |494 |
| | | |
|Obama sub-total.... |338 |419 |
+--------------------------+--------------------+--------------------+

It should be noted that the figures for the six months Jan-June 2008
(inclusive) were 278-343. Comparing this with the data for five months in
the last row in the Table above clearly demonstrates that even by the
standards of the Bush administration, the Obama regime cares less about the
well-being of Afghan civilians at least insofar as waging a "clean war,"
that is on the metric of civilian casualties Obama fails.

What about the demographics of the Afghan dead? As I have long argued, well
over one half of Afghan civilians killed by U.S and NATO forces have been
women and children. Of the civilians killed about whom demographics are
known (70% of the universe deaths), some 70% were women and children under
the Obama clock (Jan 21 - May 31st)[xxix]:

+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| |Low count |High count |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Men |65 + 11 = 76 |67 + 11 = 78 |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Women |13 = 21 = 34 |13 = 21 = 34 |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Children |71 + 65 = 136 |71 + 65 = 136 |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Undetermined |92 |121 |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
|Total |338 |365 |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
Note: For the massacre in Farah on May 5th, I have used the figures provided
by the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC): 11 males, 21
women and 65 children (31 girls and 34 boys).

By disproportionately killing civilian women and children, the Obama regime
has clearly failed on the metric of civilian casualties.

Frequently one reads commentary (no evidence provided) that air strikes are
more deadly for civilians than ground raids. My data base allows testing
this hypothesis. The Table below summarizes the evidence for U.S and NATO
actions during 2009 which led to the killing of Afghan civilians.

+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
|Type of attack |(1) Number of attacks|(2) Civilians |Ratio of (2)/(1) |
| | |killed | |
+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
|Air | 23 | 213 - 270 | 9.3 - 11.7 |
+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
|Ground | 41 | 91 | 2.2 |
+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
|Air & ground | 6 | 27 - 51 | 4.5 - 8.5 |
+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
|Other (e.g. | 4 | 7 | 1.7 |
|traffic) | | | |
+---------------+---------------------+------------------+-----------------+
The data clearly reveals that U.S/NATO air strikes in Afghanistan today are
4-5 times more deadly than ground raids.

Conclusion

Having inherited a war in Afghanistan, the Obama administration nonetheless
had choices. Some for instance like Gilles Dorronsoro argued that the very
presence of foreign forces was inflaming the conflict and that what was
called-for was a scaling-down of military action, focusing and exiting.[xxx]
Instead, the Obama team which includes many members of the former Bush
regime, decided to fight the "good war" in Afghanistan. During the past five
months, the conflict has further escalated and promises to do more of the
same.

By the announced metric of protecting Afghan civilians, the Obama team has
failed miserably even more so than its predecessor. What is different is the
public relations which began with in the words of Michael Stewart "Operation
Redefinition." One can redefine as much as one wants, the reality for
Afghans pursuing their daily lives has deteriorated as documented herein.
Since taking office and assuming the position of Commander-in-Chief, Obama
and his NATO allies have killed at the very least some 338-419 Afghan
civilians (compared to 278-343 under the Bush clock during the first six
months of 2008). In addition, deadly CIA drone attacks within Pakistan have
continued since Obama took command. Of the sixty cross-border U.S drone
attacks upon Pakistan between January 14, 2006 and April 8, 2009,

Only 10 were able to hit their actual targets, killing 14 wanted al-Qaeda
leaders, besides perishing 687 innocent Pakistani civilians. The success
percentage of the US predator strikes thus comes to not more than six per
cent.[xxxi]

Simple arithmetic shows that in some eighty days in office, Obama has
managed to raise the monthly average kill rate in drone attacks achieved by
Bush from 32 during 2008 to 45 per month (for February-March 2009).

The Obama team might well head the words of the Pakistani intelligence
agent, `Colonel Iman,' who after training at Fort Bragg's Special Forces
base, oversaw the training camps for jihadis (including Mullah Omar) during
the late 1970's and 1980's. Iman told Christina Lamb (another fine
independent British journalist), that he left Afghanistan in late 2001 and
claims he has not returned, but

"I can go any time on my old routes, even the Americans cannot stop me, but
there is no need," he said. "I have friends roaming all over there. At times
they give me a call, they like to hear my voice. I'm quite happy with the
current situation because the Americans are trapped there. The Taliban will
not win but in the end the enemy will tire, like the Russians."[xxxii]

The ex-CIA station chief in Kabul, Graham Fuller is emphatic that Obama's
policies are aggravating the situation in Afghanistan (and Pakistan),

Only the withdrawal of American and NATO boots on the ground will begin to
allow the process of near-frantic emotions to subside within Pakistan, and
for the region to start to cool down. Pakistan is experienced in governance
and is well able to deal with its own Islamists and tribalists under normal
circumstances; until recently, Pakistani Islamists had one of the lowest
rates of electoral success in the Muslim world. But U.S. policies have now
driven local nationalism, xenophobia and Islamism to combined fever pitch.
As Washington demands that Pakistan redeem failed American policies in
Afghanistan, Islamabad can no longer manage its domestic crisis.[xxxiii]



-----
Notes

[i] Barry Newhouse, "Afghanistan Promotes Crop More Profitable Than Poppy,"
VOA News (December 3, 2008)

[ii] This essay builds upon previous work as "America's Afghan War: The Real
World versus Obama's Marketed Imagery," RAWA News (April 12, 2009) and in
"What do Obama's First 100 Days Mean to Common Afghans?" Global Research
(May 1, 2009)

[iii] Discussed in Michael Winship, "The Privatization of `Obama's War',"
Online Journal (June 8, 2009)

[iv] Al Pessin, "New Commander Pledges to Protect Afghan Civilians in
`Winnable War'," VOA News (June 2, 2009)

[v] Noah Schachtman, "New Top General Could Mean Changes for Afghan
Airstrikes," Wired.com (June 5, 2009)

[vi] "New Strategy, New Commander," Boston Globe (May 13, 2009)

[vii] "Editorial Measuring Success in Afghanistan," New York Times (June 8,
2009)

[viii] Jeff Huber, "Our McMan in Bananastan," Antiwar.com (June 8, 2009)

[ix] Where I wrote, "I believe the argument goes deeper and that race enters
the calculation. The sacrificed Afghan civilians are not 'white' whereas the
overwhelming number of U.S. pilots and elite ground troops are white. This
'reality' serves to amplify the positive benefit-cost ratio of certainly
sacrificing darker Afghans today [and Indochinese, Iraqis yesterday] for the
benefit of probably saving American soldier-citizens tomorrow. What I am
saying is that when the "other" is non-white, the scale of violence used by
the U.S. government to achieve its state objectives at minimum cost knows no
limits. "See my "A Dossier on Civilian Victims of United States' Aerial
Bombing of Afghanistan: A Comprehensive Accounting [revised]," Cursor.org
(March 2002)

[x] See my "What do Obama's First 100 Days Mean to Common Afghans?" op. cit.

[xi] by the defense editor of the London Times, Michael Evans, "The Yanks
and Their Firepower are coming...' but not to destroy the Taliban," Times
(May 12, 2009)

[xii] see "America's Afghan War," op. cit and Ken Fireman, "Obama's Afghan
Troop-Surge Plan May Prove Too Much, Too Late," Bloomberg.com (December 23,
2008)

[xiii] the difficulty for U.S occupation forces to isolate villagers from
the Taliban is described in Philip Smucker, :"US Soldiers' Limited Options
Limited to Protect Afghans from Taliban," McClatchy Newspapers (May 25,
2009)

[xiv] See Jason Motlagh, "After Gunfire, U.S., Taliban Swing PR Cudgel," ABC
News (May 16, 2009)

[xv] On the other hand, in Europe sharp criticisms are more common, see the
excellent analysis by Alejandro Pozo Marin, Alliance of Barbarities.
Afghanistan 2001-2008 10 Reasons to Question (and Rethink) Foreign
Involvement" (Barcelona: J.M. Delas Centre for Peace Studies - Justice and
Peace, December 2008), 44 pp.

[xvi] well analyzed in Justin Raimundo, " `Progressive' Warmongers,"
Antiwar.com (April 7, 2009)

[xvii] Chris Hughes, "We Witness the Dangers Our Troops Face in Afghanistan
Minefield," The Daily Mirror (June 1, 2009) )

[xviii] see my account on the Afghan Victim Memorial Project data base

[xix] Bruce Rolfsen, "Record Bombs Dropped in Afghanistan in April," The
Navy Times (May 4, 2009)

[xx] Michael M. Phillips, "Army Deploys Old Tactic in PR War," Wall Street
Journal (June 1, 2009)

[xxi] See for example his "Afghanistan: Chaos Central," Counterpunch
(February 25, 2009)

[xxii] Chris Sands, "Afghan Anger Grows at Slaughter of the Innocents," The
National (May 19, 2009)

[xxiii] in The New York Times (February 18, 2009)

[xxiv] Mentioned in Adam B. Ellick, "Uncertainty Clouds British Report of
Taliban Leader's Death," New York Times (June 3, 2009)

[xxv] The UNAMA's Human Rights Unit has around six people in each of the
mission's eight regional offices. The unit collects data on civilian
casualties from various available sources and tries to verify the data. See
"Afghanistan: UN Trying to Verify Civilian Casualties with Limited
Resources," IRIN NEWS (September 20, 2007)

[xxvi] from Brendan Nicholson, "Australian Troops Kill 5 Afghan Children,"
The Age (February 14, 2009)

[xxvii] The 2008 mid-point figures for Herold is 939. I we assume that 20%
of the deaths caused by pro-government forces were caused by Afghan farces,
then the adjusted UNAMA figure is 662 (which is about 70% of 939).

[xxviii] for example, by Dave Markland and Tom Engelhart, see Dave Markland,
"Afghanistan Past & Present," ZNews (June 9, 2009)

[xxix] This figure is almost exactly identical to that (72%) for the first
eight months of 2008, see Marc Herold, "Truth as Collateral Damage. Civilian
deaths from US/NATO air strikes in Afghanistan are not accidents or mistakes
- they are calculated and predicted," The Guardian (October 22, 2008)

[xxx] Gilles Dorronsoro, "Focus and Exit: An Alternative Strategy for the
Afghan War," Carnegie Endowment for International Peace report (January
2009)

[xxxi] "60 Drone Hits Kill 14 Al-Qaeda Men, 687 Civilians," The News (April
10, 2009)

[xxxii] Christina Lamb, "The Taliban Will `Never be Defeated'," Times (June
7, 2009)

[xxxiii] Graham E. Fuller, "Obama's Policies Making Situation Worse in
Afghanistan and Pakistan," The Huffington Post (May 11, 2009)

Marc W. Herold is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research
Articles by Marc W. Herold [1]


[1]  http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=listByAuthor&authorFirst=Marc%20W.&authorName=Herold

Prof Marc W. Herold
- Homepage: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13957

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C4 Dispatches - Afghanistans Dirty War

14.06.2009 09:23

"As the US apologises for the recent killing of civilians in air strikes on the Farah province of Afghanistan, Dispatches examines the effect these military operations are having on US-Afghan relations. Directed by Emmy and Bafta award-winning film-maker Tom Roberts, this programme investigates a similar American assault on the village of Azizabad last year, in which scores of civilians, including dozens of women and children were killed. The film examines the reaction of the US forces - which initially declared the operation a success and denied any civilian deaths - and looks at how, despite evidence to the contrary, the US army remains robust in denying any wrongdoing."

Channel Four tommorow show an examination of one such attack, a US strike which the US claimed killed 22 Taliban and 33 civilians ( initially denying any civilian casualties).
In reality 90 Afghans were killed and known of them were Taliban. The airstrike was called in by a Afghan leader of a rival village in a dispute over jobs, a crime he has since been convicted of.

Danny


Abuse is more important than abuse photos

16.06.2009 15:33

An article entitled 'No Proof Detainee Photos Led to Military Deaths' states "none has publicly questioned the premise that the photos would lead to Americans’ deaths".
 http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=news-000003143986

I'd agree with that but by focussing the issue on photographs the article and the debate is missing the point. It goes on to argue that violence fell just after the photographs were released, but that is irrelevant. The abuse that was photographed did lead to Americans deaths, and British deaths too, it was just already common knowledge in Iraq due to the people who had been released or killed there, as this interview at the time proves:

openDemocracy: Did the recent photographs of abuse by coalition troops, both American and (allegedly) British, make any real difference or did they seem to confirm what people already felt?

Yahia Said: The reception was surprisingly low-key in Iraq. Part of the reason was that rumours and tall stories, as well as true stories, about abuse, mass rape, and torture in the jails and in coalition custody have been going round for a long time. So compared to what people have been talking about here the pictures are quite benign. There’s nothing unexpected. In fact what most people are asking is: why did they come up now? People in Iraq are always suspecting that there’s some scheming going on, some agenda in releasing the pictures at this particular point. At the same time Jalal Talabani of the governing council came out saying this is nothing compared to Saddam Hussein. There was immediate, you know, everybody was quite upset about that.

 http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqivoices/article_1886.jsp












Danny


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