Friday, November 6, 2009

Nation & World

Civilian Casualties Could End Airstrike Support

Pentagon officials say stopping civilian deaths is their top priority

Posted June 17, 2009

Rising anger over Afghan civilians accidentally killed in U.S. military bombing campaigns has prompted some U.S. officers to issue a stark warning to troops involved in airstrikes: If grave mistakes persist, they could lose armed air support—considered by most soldiers and marines to be an invaluable tool during battle. "Maybe they're just saying that to us as a scare tactic," says one U.S. military officer in Afghanistan. "But they are really serious about cutting these deaths."

Pentagon officials took care to emphasize that latter point this week, particularly on the heels of a report that concluded that U.S. troops failed to follow proper procedures before dropping a 2,000-pound bomb on a building in western Afghanistan last month. Afghan officials claimed some 140 civilians were killed as a result, which would make the incident the deadliest since the 2001 invasion. President Hamid Karzai decried the repeated casualties, adding that the deaths were driving a wedge between America and the Afghan people. He called on U.S. forces to halt airstrikes.

Such a move would be "extreme" and unlikely, say senior Pentagon officials. "We probably would not do that," National Security Adviser James Jones said last month, calling the idea of suspending air support "imprudent," and adding that it would be like fighting "with one hand tied behind our back." It was a step not among the recommendations issued this month by investigators of the May incident. An unclassified version of the report, scheduled to be released last week with the blessing of Pentagon leadership, was delayed after State Department officials expressed concern that the report would inflame tensions in the region. "It's one thing if you do things internal to this building," said Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell, who played down suggestions that the hold up was the result of State Department concerns. "But often times, when you reach out and include others, it takes longer than you anticipate."

Pentagon officials note both publicly and privately that despite a 40 percent drop in civilian deaths over the past year, according to U.S. commanders, they remain "tremendously concerned" about the deaths of Afghan civilians. Last year, after villagers were killed by U.S. bombs in a widely condemned August incident, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates took the unusual step of drafting a memo that called on U.S. military officials "to acknowledge civilian casualties, express regret, compensate the families—and then investigate," says a senior Pentagon official. Gates "doesn't normally get involved in strategic communication issues," says the official. "But he felt strongly" that the military should be "more forthcoming and forward-leaning." In Brussels last week for a meeting with NATO leaders, Gates called civilian casualties "one of our greatest strategic vulnerabilities."

The deaths, however, have continued, along with calls for answers. "How do you expect the people who keep losing their children to remain friendly?" Karzai asked.

This is a critical question among senior U.S. military officials as well, particularly in the midst of a counterinsurgency war, which emphasizes winning the support of local population. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the new commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, noted on Capitol Hill this month that the U.S. military would place a premium on protecting civilians.

Up until now, that goal has been eluding the U.S. military, say officials. Gen. David Petraeus echoed Pentagon concerns in recent conversations with Karzai. He said the U.S. military would "certainly" re-examine its procedures "yet again, in the wake of this latest incident."

Indeed, immediately after the Senate voted to confirm him last week, McChrystal caught a flight to Afghanistan. There, he has been given 60 days to conduct his own study of U.S. military strategy. Figuring out how to protect Afghans from the unintended consequences of war, say U.S. officials, will be one of his chief charges.

Reader Comments

For T. J. Campbell, military view

Bush-Cheney-Rice all have ties to profits from oil, construction & "security" companies. An oil tanker is named for Rice. As time passed, investigators discovered she failed to pass along warnings about the upcoming WTC attacks. They exposed how Bush rushed Saudi Arabians to safety, & how the debris was removed SO VERY FAST, much of it to faraway Japan. Offices in the WTC buildings had records of some corporations that later were investigated for 'irregularities." BushCo propaganda told soldiers they're in the Middle East to "liberate the people." In fact, Iraq's socialist Baath Party nationalized its oil & other valuable natural resources. It did that to prevent foreign investors from buying them, taking them out of public ownership. Time will bring more exposures, but we already know banks, museums, palaces & official buildings were looted. The latter had official seals, signatures, rules of procedure, etc. These formerly well-guarded things could thereafter be used to create forgeries to perfection, with the original seals "proving authenticity." Our taxes were stolen to conduct a war that exists because Bush & aides lied to Congress.

We are paying to USE weapons that exist, to replace

The Bush War exists to pay soldiers to kill people and destroy property. Then, in come contractors to rebuild. We're stupidly actually paying to build hospitals in Iraq while we lack health care for all here. We're idiotically building Iraq schools while California is bankrupt and teachers buy pencils for students. We're "bone-heads" for accepting what Bone-Head Number One brought on us by lying to Congress. We need massive anti-war demonstrations, but Bush fixed it so too many people spend days looking for work or diving dumpsters for food. We were spending two billion dollars a week on the war when it was new. We'll be in debt forever, paying high interest on money Congress borrowed for war. Many lawmakers are millionaires and are invested in lending agencies, so they vote for costly surges. China's a big lender. so our taxes are helping it become the master of world trade. The stolen election of 2000 got us stuck with the worst president ever--a Christian fanatic waging a personal war "against the people who tried to kill my father." He is not dyslexic, by the way. New books say he "just does not understand " too many things.

Avoidable Civilian Casualties

As a Marine I can assure Kim that we care very deeply about our targeting procedures and about preventing avoidable civilian casualties. Our concern is not just because of the disasterous political consequences but also because we too have to sleep at night and the sight of maimed or dead children will haunt a man the rest of his live. Rare is the man in our military who can make even an honest mistake and not be haunted by the specter of it's consequences. No nation on earth has taken greater care to prevent civilian casualties and certainly not the Taliban who murder people, in horrible ways, to put fear into the hearts of those who might be considering helping coalition forces. Our forces fight with restraint, honor, and a desire to help the people they were sent to liberate. It's a very tough, dirty, scary job and those that are fighting it deserve our admiration and support.

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