At midnight last night, the United States formally recorded its most lethal month in the seemingly endless war in
Afghanistan. Some 66 servicemen died – at least two a day, every day,
for 31 days. That was July. June was the deadliest for the coalition as a
whole, and the first six months of 2010 were among the bloodiest for
civilians since records began in 2007. What will August bring? Or
September and October, months which, General David Petraeus, the US
commander, has warned may well bring even more intense fighting? By that
time, the war will have gone into its 10th year, and so will move
towards, and beyond, the landmark when it will have lasted longer than
the First and Second World Wars combined.
It is, especially for the Afghan people, a war without end, and one to add to their history of other fruitless
conflicts. An Independent on Sunday assessment, using records kept by
Professor Marc Herold of the University of New Hampshire and the UN,
puts the civilians killed as a direct result of the war since 2001 at
13,746. Last year, the toll of those who died directly or indirectly was
estimated by another US academic to be as high as 32,000.
Meanwhile, the US continues to pile in troops. American strength stands at about
95,000, and by the end of August the figure is expected to swell to
100,000 – three times the number in early 2009. As a result, US
commanders have been stepping up the fight against the insurgents in
their longtime strongholds such as the Arghandab Valley, Panjwaii and
Zhari – all on the outskirts of Kandahar city, the biggest urban area in
the ethnic Pashtun south, and the Taliban's spiritual birthplace, where
support for the insurgency runs deep.
Yet, as the US and its allies step up pressure around Kandahar, Taliban resistance has also intensified in Helmand to
the west and in Zabul to the east. And there were disconcerting scenes
in Kabul on Friday. Police fired weapons into the air to disperse a
crowd of angry Afghans who shouted "Death to America!", hurled stones
and set fire to two vehicles after an SUV, driven by US contract
employees, was involved in an accident that killed four Afghans.
Yesterday, hundreds of UK troops, together with Afghan army units, were in the
second day of Operation Tor Shezada, attempting to push Taliban
insurgents out of a stronghold in southern Afghanistan. Military chiefs
said they made progress, and two compounds near Sayedebad in central
Helmand were being held. The operation started on Friday, spearheaded by
1st Battalion, The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment, with soldiers being
dropped from Chinook helicopters under cover of darkness. They then
moved in to clear compounds and establish patrol bases in the area. They
were unopposed as they took their first objectives and then reinforced
positions.
Major Simon Ridgway said British and Afghan troops had faced no more than limited small-arms fire in the
initial stages. "By securing and dominating the area, we reduce the
freedom of movement for the insurgent and then, together with the local
people... we can establish security that stops the insurgent having the
ability to influence and intimidate the local people."
The Ministry of Defence said the operation was "progressing well".
Such upbeat talk is not new, and is often followed, weeks or months later,
by news that successes have been undone by Taliban resurgence, Afghan
government corruption, or the day-to-day survival instincts of a
war-weary population whose hearts and minds have never been lastingly
captured. The US documents made public by WikiLeaks have only added to
the sense that the Afghan war against an elusive enemy unaccountable to
any democracy is the unsustainable in pursuit of the unbeatable.
New details of incidents referred to in the documents highlight the
relentless "collateral damage" – revealing how innocent bystanders have
been killed, including women and children, by coalition forces. Among
the cases are more than 20 incidents where British troops fired on
civilians, resulting in 46 people being killed or injured. The documents
contain allegations that a detachment of British troops repeatedly shot
civilians in the streets of Kabul in one month of 2007, and that
commandos shot innocent civilians on eight occasions in Helmand province
in 2008.
One incident, on 15 October 2008, saw a platoon commander from 45 Commando Royal Marines shoot a seven-year-old
boy who died from his wounds five days later. The soldier had fired "an
aimed warning" shot at what he claimed was a "young man 'dicking'
[spying on] the patrol". Other cases include a US patrol machine-gunning
a bus, wounding or killing 15 of its passengers; and, in 2007, Polish
troops directing mortar fire against a village, killing members of a
wedding party – including a pregnant woman.
One report details an incident where a compound was bombed in an attempt to
kill a "high-value individual", after "ensuring there were no innocent
Afghans in the area". A US commander reported that 150 Taliban had been
killed. But locals reported up to 300 civilians had died. Civilian
casualties continue to mount as fighting intensifies. Just over a week
ago, at least 45 civilians were killed by a Nato rocket attack on a town
in Helmand.
The death of innocent civilians, whether by accident or design, goes some way towards explaining why the
coalition is failing to win hearts and minds. A compelling example of
the depth to which some Afghans are opposed to what they view as a
foreign occupation is the incident where an American patrol was lured
into a deadly ambush by villagers in Ganjigal, eastern Afghanistan, in
September last year. Four US soldiers died. A report says soldiers
stated: "They had eyewitness accounts of children in the village firing
at the CF ground unit... and women assisting to resupply ammunition."
A number of the leaked documents refer to incidents where Afghan police
or soldiers have turned on coalition forces, often to deadly effect. One
report relates how five British soldiers were shot dead and six injured
by a rogue Afghan policeman last November. Last month three British
soldiers were killed and four injured by an Afghan soldier at a base in
Nahr-e Saraj.
Coalition forces are faced with a ruthless enemy that is unfettered by "rules of engagement" and totally
unaccountable for its actions. The WikiLeaks documents reveal not only a
huge rise in the Taliban's use of improvised explosive devices since
2004 (up from around 300 to 7,155 last year), but an attempt to kill
coalition forces by poisoning their drinking water with cyanide in
October 2009.
Another document reveals how a three-year-old child was murdered by the Taliban and left in a rubbish
bag on the steps of the Afghan Women's Council. A report in June 2007
stated: "The deceased child [of a student] was placed in a garbage bag
in front of the Women's Council. This was to display dislike for the
female student attending classes."
Fatal flaws: MoD ignored repeated warnings about vulnerable vehicles
Defence chiefs were warned of the fatal vulnerability of the lightly armoured
"Snatch" Land Rovers used by British forces in Iraq three years before
ministers were told the vehicles must be replaced, The Independent on Sunday can reveal.
It emerged last week that a British general told the Government in July
2006 that front-line commanders wanted better-protected vehicles so they
could carry out missions "without unnecessary casualties".
But an internal Ministry of Defence report shows that only weeks into the
conflict, in 2003, members of the Royal Military Police (RMP) complained
about the "risk" they had faced travelling in Snatch and the need for
vehicles that offered better protection.
As many as 19 UK personnel were killed in the vehicles, in Iraq and Afghanistan, during the intervening period.
The IoS established that, in the post-operational report submitted by 1 (UK)
Armoured Division on its return from the Iraq conflict, the RMP stated
the need for protected vehicles which "would allow them to operate
further forward (they did deploy forward in soft-skinned vehicles at
risk)".
It added that "the necessity... to be equipped with protected vehicles was demonstrated repeatedly throughout
the operation" and that "at times [personnel]... driving Land Rovers
were placed in range of enemy... fire".
Rose Gentle, whose soldier son Gordon was blown up in a Land Rover in Iraq in
2004, said: "If they had heeded the warnings, none of these lads would
have had to get into one of those vehicles again."
Brian Brady
You need to be a member of 12160 Social Network to add comments!
Join 12160 Social Network