Word Games: Most US Media Hide an American Atrocity in Afghanistan Behind 'NATO' and Fudge the Victims' Ages
by Dave Lindorff
The people of Afghanistan know who w

as flying the two helicopter
gunships that brutally hunted down and slaughtered, one by one, nine
boys apparently as young as seven years old, as they gathered firewood
on a hillside March 1. In angry demonstrations after the incident, they
were shouting “Death to America.”
Americans are still blissfully unaware that their “heroes” in
uniform are guilty of this obscene massacre. The ovine US corporate
media has been reporting on this story based upon a gutless press
release from the Pentagon which attributes the “mistake” to “NATO”
helicopters.
The thing is, this terrible incident occurred in the Pech Valley in
Afghanistan’s Kunar province, where US forces have for several years
been battling Taliban forces, and from which region they are now in the
process of withdrawing. Clearly then, it is US, and not “NATO”
helicopters which have been responding to calls to attack “suspected
Taliban forces.”
So why can’t the Pentagon say that? And if they won’t say that, why
won’t American reporters either demand that they clearly state the
nationality of whatever troops commit an atrocity, or exercise due
diligence themselves and figure it out?
There is a second issue too. Most publications appear to have followed the lead of the highly compromised New York Times,
and are going with the Pentagon line that the boys who were killed were
aged 9-15. That’s bad enough. It’s hard to see how helicopter pilots
with their high-resolution imaging equipment, cannot tell a 9-year-old
boy when they see one, from a bearded Taliban fighter. But at least one
news organization, the McClachy chain, is reporting
that the ages of the boys who were murdered from the air were 7-13. If
that latter range of ages is correct, then it is all the more
outrageous that they were picked off one by one by helicopter gunners.
No way could they have mistaken a 7-year-old for an adult.
No wonder even the famously corrupt Afghan President Hamid Karzai
refused to accept an apology proffered for this killing by Afghan War
commander Gen. David Petraeus.
Calls by this reporter to the Pentagon for an accurate report on
whose troops were flying those two helicopters, and for an accurate
accounting of the ages of the nine victims, have thus far gone
unanswered. This, I have discovered, is fairly standard for the Defense
Department. If it’s a story about some big victory, or a new
eco-friendly plan for a military base’s heating system, you have to beat
the Pentagon PR guys off with a stick, but if you call them about
something embarrassing or negative, you get passed from Major Perrine to
Lt. Col. Robbins to Commander Whozits, and nobody give you an answer.
Finally you’re given someone to email a question to, and that message
goes into the Pentagon internet ether and never gets returned.
So let’s give an honest report here: Two US helicopter gunships,
allegedly responding to a report of “insurgent” activity on a hillside
in Kunar Province, came upon the scene of 10 young Afghan boys who were
collecting brush for fuel for their families. The gunships, according to
the account of a lone 11-year-old surviver who was hidden by a tree,
systematically hunted down the other nine boys, hitting them with
machine gun and rocket fire and killing them all--their bodies so badly
damaged that their families had to hunt for the pieces in order to bury
them.
This atrocity is being described as a “mistake,” but it was no
mistake, clearly. The crews of the helicopters were shooting at fleeing
human beings who made no attempt to return fire (obviously, because all
the boys had were sticks, which they surely dropped when the first shots
were fired).
They almost certainly saw that they were dealing with kids, because
it would be hard to mistake even a nine year old for an adult,
particularly in a country where young kids go around with their heads
uncovered, and don’t have beards, while adult males generally wear head
coverings, and have full beards. But killing kids is part of the deal
in America’s war in Afghanistan. Even in Iraq, 12 year olds were being
classified by the US military (in contravention of the Geneva
Conventions) as being “combat age,” for example in the assault on the
city of Fallujah.
Let’s also be clear that this slaughter of nine Afghan children is
the ugly reality behind Gen. Petraeus’s supposed policy of “protecting
civilians.” Here’s a number that tells the true story about that
policy: since Gen. Petraeus assumed command after the ousting of Gen.
Stanley McChrystal, US airstrikes in Afghanistan have gone up by 172%.
That’s not counting attacks by remote-controlled, missile-firing drone
aircraft, which are also up by a huge amount. Those airstrikes and
drone attacks are notoriously deadly for civilians--far more so than
ground attacks, but of course they have the advantage for our “heroes”
in uniform of reducing the number of US casualties in this hugely
one-sided conflict.
There are so many aspects to this story that are disturbing, it’s
hard to know what’s worse. Clearly we are deliberately murdering kids in
Afghanistan, and this particular incident is just an example we know
about. The men who did this will hopefully pay for their crimes by
living with their guilt, but hopefully there will be an honest
investigation and proper punishment too by military authorities (I’m not
holding my breath). Petraeus and his boss, Commander in Chief Obama,
should also be called to account and punished for implementing a war
plan that calls for this kind of brutal slaughter of civilians.
But the US media are also guilty here. How can Americans reach
proper conclusions about this obscene war against one of the poorest
peoples in the world if our supposedly “fair and balanced” media simply
perform the role of Pentagon propagandist, running Defense Department
press releases as if they were news reports?
The blood of these poor Afghan kids is smeared not just on the hands
of Obama and the generals, and the soldiers who pull the triggers and
push the buttons that unleash death, but on the desks and keyboards of
American newsrooms that cover up their crimes.