-Caveat Lector-

Very good article below by a British journalist in
Afghanistan doing his job and reporting events that we
never hear about in "The New York Times", "Washington
Post" or CNN etc. Civilian deaths are extremely high
and mounting. High tech weapons make little difference
if you bomb indiscriminately. In Vietnam we destroyed
the village in order to save it,  here we destroy the
village in the hopes of killing a few terrorists and
sacrifice dozens of innocents in the process.
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Thank you. Gavin.


A village is destroyed. And America says nothing
happened

War on terrorism

Richard Lloyd Parry in Kama Ado, Afghanistan
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia_china/story.jsp?story=108209
04 December 2001

The village where nothing happened is reached by a
steep climb at the end of a rattling three-hour drive
along a stony road. Until nothing happened here, early
on the morning of Saturday and again the following
day, it was a large village with a small graveyard,
but now that has been reversed. The cemetery on the
hill contains 40 freshly dug graves, unmarked and
identical. And the village of Kama Ado has ceased to
exist.

Many of the homes here are just deep conical craters
in the earth. The rest are cracked open, split like
crushed cardboard boxes. At the moment when nothing
happened, the villagers of Kama Ado were taking their
early morning meal, before sunrise and the beginning
of the Ramadan fast. And there in the rubble, dented
and ripped, are tokens of the simple daily lives they
led.

A contorted tin kettle, turned almost inside out by
the blast; a collection of charred cooking pots; and
the fragments of an old-fashioned pedal-operated
sewing machine. A split metal chest contains scraps of
children's clothes in cheap bright nylon.

In another room are the only riches that these people
had, six dead cows lying higgledy-piggledy and
distended by decay. And all this is very strange
because, on Saturday morning � when American B-52s
unloaded dozen of bombs that killed 115 men, women and
children � nothing happened.

We know this because the US Department of Defence told
us so. That evening, a Pentagon spokesman, questioned
about reports of civilian casualties in eastern
Afghanistan, explained that they were not true,
because the US is meticulous in selecting only
military targets associated with Osama bin Laden's
al-Qa'ida network. Subsequent Pentagon utterances on
the subject have wobbled somewhat, but there has been
no retraction of that initial decisive statement: "It
just didn't happen."

So God knows what kind of a magic looking-glass I
stepped through yesterday, as I travelled out of the
city of Jalalabad along the desert road to Kama Ado.
>From the moment I woke up, I was confronted with the
wreckage and innocent victims of high-altitude,
hi-tech, thousand-pound nothings.

The day began at the home of Haji Zaman Gamsharik, the
pro-Western anti-Taliban mujahedin commander who is
being discreetly supplied and funded by the US
government. The previous day I had followed him around
Jalalabad's mortuary, where seven mutilated corpses
were being laid out � mujahedin soldiers of Commander
Zaman who had been killed when US bombs hit the
government office in which they were sleeping. And
now, it had happened again.

There they were in the back of three pick-up trucks �
seven more bloody bodies of seven more mujahedin,
killed when the guesthouse in which they were sleeping
in the village of Landi Khiel was hit by bombs at
6.30am yesterday morning.

Commander Zaman is a proud, haughty man who fought in
the mountains for years against the Soviet Union, but
I've never seen him look so vulnerable. "I sent them
there myself yesterday,'' was all he could say. "I
sent them for security.''

But the commander provided us with mujahedin escorts
of our own, and we set off down the road to Landi
Khiel. We found the ruins of the office where the
first lot of soldiers had died, and the guesthouse
where they perished the previous morning. And there,
in the ruins of a family house, was a small fragment
of nothing. It was the tail-end of a compact bomb. It
bore the words "Surface Attack Guided Missile AGM
114", and a serial number: 232687. It was half-buried
in the remains of the straw roof of a house where
three men had died: Fazil Karim, his brother Mahmor
Ghulab, and his nephew Hasiz Ullah. "They were a
family, just ordinary people," said Haji Mohammed
Nazir, the local elder who was accompanying us. "They
were not terrorists � the terrorists are in the
mountains, over there.''

So we drove on in the direction of the White
Mountains, where hundreds of al-Qa'ida members, and
perhaps even Osama bin Laden himself, are hiding in
the Tora Bora cave complex. A B-52 was high in the
sky; a billow of black smoke was visible, blooming out
of the valley. Something, surely, was happening over
there. And then we reached the ruins of Kama Ado.
Among the pathetic remains I found only one sinister
object - an old leather gun holster with an ammunition
belt. It is conceivable that a handful of al-Qa'ida
members had been spending the night there, and that US
targeters learnt of their presence.

But after 22 years of war, almost every Afghan home
contains some military relic, and the villagers swore
they hadn't seen Arab or Taliban fighters for a
fortnight. Certainly there could not have been enough
terrorists to fill the 40 fresh graves. One person
told me a few holes contained not intact people, but
simply body parts.

We had been warned that white faces would meet an
angry reception in the village where nothing happened,
but I encountered despair and bafflement. I had only
one moment of real fear, when an American B-52 flew
overhead. We halted our convoy, clambered out of the
cars and trotted into the fields on either side. The
plane did a slow circle; I was conscious of electronic
eyes looking down on us, the only traffic on the road.
Then, to everyone's relief, the bomber veered away.

Before we left the city, an American colleague in
Jalalabad telephoned the Pentagon and informed them of
our plans to travel to the village where nothing
happened. I can't help wondering, in these
looking-glass times, what that B-52 would have done to
our convoy if that telephone call had not been made.
Perhaps nothing would have happened to me too.


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