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FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

Here is an update to our latest Truth in Media Global Watch Bulletin which 
is now available at our Web site.  Just click on the animated (green) THE 
NEWS button to go to our latest report.

Of course, you can also click on the TiM Bulletins Index button in the left 
frame - to go to selections of our Bulletins archived by geographic regions 
and subjects, and in chronological order.  Or click on any other button in 
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And now, here are the headlines of the latest TiM Bulletin.  Just keep in 
mind that our stories are CONSTANTLY updated, and that the e-mail text 
enclosed below is often merely the first edition of a story.  So we 
recommend that you keep checking the TiM Web site daily, so that you would 
not miss out on some important news or commentary updates.

Here is an UPDATE to the latest TiM Bulletin:

                                         HIGHLIGHTS

Afghanistan                     1a. More �Anaconda� Embarrassments: No 
Sleeping
                                               Bags for Mountain Duty

                                              Women and Children Killed by 
U.S. Bombs;
                                              Ex-spy chief: Al Qaida has 
U.S. prisoners

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1a. More �Anaconda� Embarrassments: No Sleeping Bags for Mountain Duty

More Women and Children Killed by U.S. Bombs; Ex-spy chief: Al Qaeda Has 
U.S. Prisoners

WASHINGTON, Mar. 13 - The �Anaconda� embarrassments that we described in 
Item 1 of this TiM Bulletin were far from an exception in 
Afghanistan.  Here�s, for example, an excerpt from a Mar. 10 Associated 
Press report, quoting comments made by some U.S. troops who had just 
returned from the battle zone:

BAGRAM, Afghanistan (AP) -- Exhausted and muddy, hundreds of U.S. soldiers 
returned from an eight-day battle in the mountains Sunday as the military 
said the few remaining enemy forces were hunkering down in caves.  [�]

The Chinooks flew in low in formation over the valley beside the base. With 
the helicopter blades still turning, visibly relieved soldiers carrying 
huge backpacks and heavy machine guns hopped out and walked slowly toward 
their comrades.
U.S. troops arriving here said they had not expected to find so many 
Taliban and al-Qaida forces waiting for them when they moved into the 
rugged mountains of Paktia province on March 2.

The soldiers were unprepared for the subfreezing temperatures at 10,000 
feet -- some said they hadn't even brought sleeping bags. They spoke of 
staying awake at night and sleeping by day when it was warmer.  There were 
cases of hypothermia, they said, and drinking water would freeze (emphasis 
added by TiM).

Our defense budget has already soared to about $343 billion per year.  But 
that was not enough for the �death merchants� Washington stooges, such as 
George Bush and Dick Cheney,

Wasting no time for a chance to gouge the flag-waving public, the Bush 
administration has already marshaled huge increases in our nation�s defense 
spending (an additional $59 billion in fiscal 2003 alone; $675 billion over 
the next 10 years - see the chart in the TiM Bulletin Bush League All-Stars 
(Feb 3, 2002).

And now, we discover that our fighting men in the Afghanistan mountains 
were not even issued sleeping bags!  That�s far worse than the $500 hammers 
that the Pentagon of the 1970s had reportedly purchased.  This is 
incompetence laced with criminal neglect.  How many troops did the Pentagon 
lose or injure because of it?

It all goes to show us that the price of stupidity is infinite; that no 
amount of additional spending will protect this nation and our troops from 
incompetence of our leaders.  Nor the civilian population of the countries 
that Washington�s New World Order juggernauts choose to target.

As we were writing The �Anaconda� Embarrassment report, the news broke that 
our mighty warriors manage to kill some more innocent Afghan women and 
children.

Here an excerpt from a Mar. 13 Associated Press report:

Women and children were among 14 people killed in a U.S. airstrike in 
eastern Afghanistan last week, military officials said. A wounded child 
survived and was reported in stable condition at a military hospital.

U.S. officials believe the 15 people in the vehicle were linked in some way 
to the al-Qaida terror network, Central Command spokesman Lt. Col. Martin 
Compton said Tuesday.

Their vehicle was attacked by two U.S. fighter jets on the morning of March 
6 in eastern Afghanistan, the command said.
Officials at both the Pentagon and the Central Command, which is 
responsible for U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, said Tuesday they 
still lacked key details about the incident. Officials said they did not 
know how many women and children were among the 14 killed, whether they 
were Afghans or the kind of vehicle attacked.

The fighters attacked the vehicle after it left what Compton described as a 
compound known to be used by al-Qaida members.  The compound was in Paktia 
province near the border with Pakistan and close to the Afghan village of 
Shikin, Compton said�.

Asked why the incident was not disclosed earlier, Compton said U.S. 
military officials needed time to piece together what happened before 
making the announcement.

U.S. officials have said repeatedly during the five-month war that they 
take special precautions to minimize civilian casualties. Pentagon 
officials have said that is important to counter propaganda by al-Qaida and 
their Taliban allies that the U.S. war is targeting innocent Muslims.

Sure thing� just as NATO �made sure� they did not target �innocent Serbs� 
in 1999, while destroying the country�s civilian infrastructure, and 
killing more than 1,000 civilians, 79 of them children - the �collateral 
damage.�

Was the above incident an exception?  Hardly.  We�ve even killed our own 
allies assuming they were the Taliban or Al Qaeda.  On Feb. 21, for 
example, nearly one month after one such incident, the Secretary of Defense 
was forced to eat crow in public.  Here�s an excerpt from a New York Times 
(Feb. 22) report:

WASHINGTON, Feb. 21  Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said today that 
16 Afghan fighters killed by American troops north of Kandahar last month 
were not members of the Taliban or Al Qaeda. While he described the deaths 
as "unfortunate," he issued no apology and said there was no reason for 
disciplinary action.

In describing the results of the official inquiry into the Special Forces 
mission, Mr. Rumsfeld said the United States alone generated the 
intelligence that pointed to two compounds in the Hazar Qadam Valley as 
enemy garrisons.

Evidence has been mounting that the two raids, carried out overnight on 
Jan. 23, resulted in deaths and detainment of fighters loyal to the new 
interim Afghan government. Some officials had speculated that the United 
States might have been duped into mounting the attacks by false information 
from rival warlords.

A number of questions remained unanswered today  officials said Mr. 
Rumsfeld himself asked for clarification on some points from the United 
States Central Command  and certain details contradicted reports from 
villagers in Hazar Qadam, including assertions that 21 people died in the raid.

And then there were strikes against purely civilian targets, such as some 
residential neighborhoods in Kabul that were hit in late October.  Here�s 
an excerpt from an Oct. 29 Associated Press report:

Errant Bombs Reportedly Kill Some 13 Afghan Civilians

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP), Oct. 29 - American airstrikes meant to punish the 
Taliban spilled over Sunday (Oct. 28) into residential neighborhoods of the 
Afghan capital, killing 13 civilians, witnesses said. It was the second 
time in as many days that missiles have accidentally hit homes and killed 
residents.

Later Sunday, U.S. jets were back over the skies of the beleaguered Afghan 
capital, and strong explosions could be heard in the direction of the main 
road from Kabul to the opposition-controlled Bagram air base (now in 
American hands - TiM Ed.).

Weeping families buried their dead hours after the morning bombardment, 
apparently aimed at Taliban targets to the north and east of Kabul. "I have 
lost all my family. I am finished," said a sobbing woman in the Qali Hotair 
neighborhood on Kabul's northern edge.

In Washington, Pentagon spokesmen had no immediate comment on the latest 
strikes and civilian casualties involved. It has stressed repeatedly that 
civilians are never deliberately targeted. [�]

In Sunday morning's airstrikes, witnesses said 10 people were killed in the 
Qali Hotair area. An Associated Press reporter saw six bodies, four of them 
children. A wailing father hugged the dead body of his son, who looked 
barely 2. Bereaved women slapped themselves with grief.

Three other people died near an eastern housing complex called Macroyan, 
witnesses said.

In Kabul's Wazir Akbar Khan Hospital, a semiconscious 13-year-old named 
Jawad did not yet know that all eight other people in his family had been 
killed.

"He asked me, 'How is my family?'" said a neighbor, Mohammed Razi, ushering 
a journalist out of the boy's hospital room. "I said, 'They are all OK. You 
were walking in your sleep, and you fell down the well by your house, and I 
rescued you.'" [�]

The strikes that hit Kabul came only 12 hours after stray bombs landed 
Saturday evening behind the rebel military alliance's battle lines north of 
the capital. Areas behind Taliban lines were also reported hit.

Eight or nine civilians were killed - most of them in alliance-held areas, 
according to witnesses.�

Once again, such �collateral damage� tragedies are reminiscent of the NATO 
bombing of Serbia in 1999.  America�s most-decorated living soldier, Col. 
David Hackworth, summed up the basic military doctrine of the cowardly war 
criminals who run the New World Order armies as follows:

�Bomb the civilians and the civilian structures until that country's 
military can't stand to watch it anymore.� (see �Hackworth,� Sep. 1999)

And just think - such crimes against humanity are being perpetrated in our 
name and with our money.  But for the number of victims, what makes such 
state terrorism any better than the Al Qaeda kind?

Speaking of Al Qaeda and their Afghan hosts, the Taliban, the UPI newswire 
reported that the enemy the Pentagon claimed to have defeated are actually 
holding some U.S. soldiers prisoner.  Here is an excerpt:

Ex-spy chief: Al Qaida has U.S. prisoners

By Anwar Iqbal, UPI South Asian Affairs Analyst

Published 3/13/2002 6:13 PM

WASHINGTON, March 13 (UPI) -- A former Pakistani spymaster with links to 
the Taliban claims that al Qaida has captured American prisoners in eastern 
Afghanistan, forcing U.S. troops to end the siege of their stronghold and 
withdraw.

U.S. officials have denied the claim.

Talking to United Press International from his home in Islamabad, Gen. 
Hamid Gul, the former chief of Pakistan's main spy agency Inter Services 
Intelligence, said the United States sent "some Americans to Shahikot, 
dressed as Afghans."

Shahikot is the mountainous region of eastern Afghanistan where U.S. forces 
and their Afghan allies taking part in "Operation Anaconda" have been 
bombing and fighting several hundred al Qaida and Taliban fighters holed up 
in a series of cave complexes since March 1.

According to Gul the Americans sent to infiltrate the mountain strongholds 
could speak the local language of Pashto, and some even had beards.  "The 
idea was to slip through the Taliban defenses into the al Qaida hideouts in 
the mountains. But they were detected and captured."

Gul said this forced the Americans to make a deal with al Qaida and Taliban 
fighters and withdraw their troops.  "The withdrawal of U.S. troops allowed 
most of the Taliban and al Qaida fighters to escape and melt away among the 
Pashtun tribesmen living in the area," said the Pakistani general.

"I wonder what the Americans were trying to achieve with this 
Hollywood-style operation. Afghanistan is no Hollywood. It is a traditional 
tribal society where even a dog from another tribe is noticed by everyone."

Gul also claimed that not many Taliban or al Qaida fighters were killed in 
eastern Afghanistan as there was "no face-to-face fighting" and the 
"bombing is not very effective against those hiding in the caves."

Commenting on the claim of U.S. prisoners, Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria 
Clarke said: "We have no servicemen missing."

"We have no information at all about any American being taken prisoner ... 
it is totally inaccurate," added a U.S. Central Command spokesman, Charles 
Portman.
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