British
Criticize U.S. Air Attacks in Afghan Region
By Carlotta Gall
08/09/07 "New
York Times"
-- - -SANGIN, Afghanistan — A senior British commander
in southern Afghanistan said in recent weeks that he had
asked that American Special Forces leave his area of
operations because the high level of civilian casualties
they had caused was making it difficult to win over local
people.
Other British officers here in Helmand Province, speaking on
condition of anonymity, criticized American Special Forces
for causing most of the civilian deaths and injuries in
their area. They also expressed concerns that the Americans’
extensive use of air power was turning the people against
the foreign presence as British forces were trying to
solidify recent gains against the Taliban.
An American military spokesman denied that the request for
American forces to leave was ever made, either formally or
otherwise, or that they had caused most of the casualties.
But the episode underlines differences of opinion among NATO
and American military forces in Afghanistan on tactics for
fighting Taliban insurgents, and concerns among soldiers
about the consequences of the high level of civilians being
killed in fighting.
A precise tally of civilian deaths is difficult to pin down,
but one reliable count puts the number killed in Helmand
this year at close to 300 civilians, the vast majority of
them caused by foreign and Afghan forces, rather than the
Taliban.
“Everyone is concerned about civilian casualties,” the
senior British commander said. “Of course it is
counterproductive if civilians get injured, but we’ve got to
pick up the pack of cards that we have got. Other people
have been operating in our area before us.”
After months of heavy fighting that began in early 2006, the
British commanders say they are finally making headway in
securing important areas such as this town, and are now in
the difficult position of trying to win back support among
local people whose lives have been devastated by aerial
bombing.
American Special Forces have been active in Helmand since
United States forces first entered Afghanistan in late 2001,
and for several years they maintained a small base outside
the town of Gereshk. But the foreign troop presence was
never more than a few hundred men.
British forces arrived in the spring of 2006 and now have
command of the province with some 6,000 troops deployed,
with small units of Estonians and Danish troops. American
Special Forces have continued to assist in fighting
insurgents, operating as advisers to Afghan national
security forces.
It is these American teams that are coming under criticism.
They tend to work in small units that rely heavily on air
cover because they are vulnerable to large groups of
insurgents. Such Special Forces teams have often called in
airstrikes in Helmand and other places where civilians have
subsequently been found to have suffered casualties.
In just two cases, airstrikes killed 31 nomads west of
Kandahar in November last year and another 57 villagers,
half of them women and children, in western Afghanistan in
April. In both cases, United States Special Forces were
responsible for calling in the airstrikes.
The chief British press officer in Helmand, Col. Charles
Mayo, defended the American Special Forces and said they
were essential to NATO’s efforts to clear out heavily
entrenched Taliban insurgents.
An American military spokesman said United States Special
Forces would continue to operate in Helmand for the
foreseeable future. He denied that their tactics had caused
greater civilian deaths and blamed the Taliban for fighting
from civilian compounds.
“U.S. Special Forces have a tremendous reputation not only
in combat operations but also in training and advising the
Afghan National Security Forces,” Lt. Col. David Accetta, a
spokesman for American forces in Afghanistan, said in an
e-mail response from Bagram air base.
United States Special Forces had also provided development
and medical assistance, which, with the combat missions,
“can be said to have ‘turned the tide’ in Helmand,” he said.
But the senior British commander, who spoke on condition of
anonymity during an interview in July, said that in Sangin,
which has been calm recently, there was no longer a need for
United States Special Forces. “There aren’t large bodies of
Taliban to fight anymore; we are dealing with small groups
and we are trying to kick-start reconstruction and
development,” he said.
Orders had just come down from the NATO force’s headquarters
in Kabul, which is led by Gen. Dan K. McNeill of the United
States, re-emphasizing the need to avoid civilian deaths, he
said.
“The phrase is: ‘It may be legal but is it appropriate?’ No
one is saying it is illegal to use air power, but is there
any other way of doing it if there is a risk of collateral
damage?” he said.
For months, frequent reports of civilian casualties have
trickled out of Helmand, scene of some of the fiercest
battles of the recent war. But there has rarely been
independent confirmation of the reports because the province
has been too dangerous for journalists to visit.
Yet there is no doubt there have been civilian casualties,
and British and Afghan officials acknowledged that they had
seen some of them.
Villagers brought the bodies of 21 civilians killed in
airstrikes May 8 on the village of Sarwan Qala to show the
authorities in Sangin, they said. United States Special
Forces were battling the Taliban on that occasion and called
in the strikes, the United States military said in a
statement at the time.
Three days later the nearby village of Sra Ghar was hit.
British soldiers at a base called Robinson just south of
Sangin said they had received 18 civilians around that time
who were wounded in an American operation and flew them out
to NATO hospitals for treatment.
On a rare visit to Helmand in mid-July, a journalist
encountered children who were still suffering wounds
sustained in that bombing raid or another around that time.
Their father, Mohammadullah, brought them to the gate of the
British Army base seeking help.
His son, Bashir Ahmed, 2, listless and stick thin, seemed
close to death. The boy and his sister Muzlifa, 7, bore
terrible shrapnel scars. NATO doctors had removed shrapnel
from the boy’s abdomen at the time of the raid and had
warned his father that he might not survive, but two months
later he was still hanging on.
The father said the bombing raid killed six members of the
family and wounded five. His wife lost an arm, and the
children’s grandmother was killed, he said.
Altogether, he said, 20 people were killed in the airstrikes
after Taliban fighters came through the village. He figured
that the planes had bombed them mistakenly, because the
Taliban were fighting United States forces well below the
village at the time.
He said that he opposed the Taliban, but that after the
bombing raid the villagers were so angered that most of the
men who survived went off to join the insurgents. Whether
people would support the foreign troops “depends on the
behavior of ISAF,” Mohammadullah said, referring to the
NATO-led International Security Assistance Force. “If they
treat the civilians well, they will win.”
It is in fact the possibility of the population turning
against them, or the unpopularity of the campaign back home,
that most concerns the military, one NATO military official
said. “We know we can beat the Taliban on the ground,” the
official said. “The issue is the population.”
A civilian NATO from Kabul added, “The problem is Afghans
are waking up and thinking: ‘Why are they doing this?’ ”
Maj. Dominic Biddick, commander of a company of British
soldiers in Sangin, is making a big effort to ease the anger
and pain as his men patrol the villages. He has a $5,000
good-will fund and hands out cash to victims he comes
across, like the farmer whose two sons were shot in the
fields during a recent operation. And he has $10,000 a month
to spend on community assistance programs. “If you are
genuinely caring, you can win friends,” he said.
Capt. Catherine Fisher, a civil affairs officer in Sangin,
said that over six weeks ending in July she had received
requests from 75 families who had lost relatives or property
in recent fighting.
But while some of the victims and local people blame the
Taliban for bringing violence to Helmand, hostility and
bitterness toward the foreign forces remains.
“The Americans are killing and destroying a village just in
pursuit of one person,” said Mahmadullah, 24, referring to
Osama bin Laden. “So now we have understood that the
Americans are a curse on us, and they are here just to
destroy Afghanistan. They can tell the difference between
men and women, children and animals, but they are just
killing everyone.”
A trained mullah from the village of Kutaizi, half an hour
from Sangin, Mahmadullah reacted with sarcasm to the idea
that reconstruction and assistance could change the minds of
the people.
“First they kill me, and then they rebuild my house?” he
said. “What is the point when I am dead and my son is dead?
This is not of any worth to us.”
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
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