Liberate With Extreme Prejudice:
Another Civilian Slaughter in Afghanistan
by Chris Floyd
While the Anglo-American media goes into hyper-drive over a pair of utterly bungled terrorist wannabe attacks in the UK, the actual, highly efficient slaughter of innocent civilians in Afghanistan by American forces continues at a frenzied pace.
Dozens of Afghan civilians -- from 50 to 80 -- were killed in a three-hour bombing raid on the village of Hyderabad on Saturday, local officials of the American-backed Afgan government told the Observer.
One man, Mohammed Khan, lost seven members of his family, including his brother and five of his brother's children, the paper reported.
In the month of June alone, more
than 200 Afghan civilians were killed by their "liberators" -- a kill
ratio far outstripping that of the violent sectarians of the Taliban.
On the ground and especially in the air, U.S. forces are now applying a
sledgehammer approach to their counterinsurgency operations, firing
blindly into crowds and at civilians after attacks, or suspected
attacks, by the Taliban, and calling down massive firepower on
residential areas. British commanders are increasingly concerned about
the American policy of "Kill 'em all; let God sort 'em out," and blame
the recent escalation on newly installed NATO commander, the U.S.
General Dan McNeill, as the Observer notes:
Senior British
soldiers have previously expressed concerns that McNeill, who took
command of the 32,000 Nato troops in Afghanistan only recently, was 'a
fan' of the massive use of air power to defeat insurgents and that his
favoured tactics could be counter-productive.
'Every civilian
dead means five new Taliban,' said one British officer who has recently
returned from Helmand. 'It's a tough call when the enemy are hiding in
villages, but you have to be very, very careful,' he added. The
American general has been dubbed 'Bomber McNeill' by his critics.
The
bloodletting in Hyderabad came less than 24 hours after yet another
mass civilian killing by U.S. forces in Iraq, the Observer noted:
American
forces in Iraq also found themselves heavily criticised over civilian
deaths when eight people died, apparently caught in crossfire from a
gunfight between insurgents and soldiers in Baghdad's Sadr City
yesterday. But residents, police and hospital officials said eight
civilians were killed in their homes and angrily accused US forces of
firing blindly on innocent people. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
condemned the raids and demanded an explanation for the assault on a
district where he has barred American operations in the past.
The
Sadr City killing comes less than a week after more than a dozen
innocent Iraqis -- members of a local anti-terrorist village guard, no
less -- were literally chopped to pieces by American gunships, as we
noted here: Slandering the Dead: The American Massacre at al-Khalis.
But we're sure that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will heeded just as
urgently as Afghan President Hamid Kharzai has been in his repeated --
and sometimes openly tearful -- calls for American and NATO forces to
restrain their blunderbuss attacks in his country.
|