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Derrick Crowe

Derrick Crowe

Posted: February 22, 2011 10:50 AM

General Petraeus and his public relations team reportedly engaged in a scummy attempt to deflect blame for an alleged civilian casualty event on Sunday, suggesting that Afghan parents caught in the crossfire of a coalition raid burned their own children to incriminate international forces. International forces led by the U.S. are accused of killing as many as 60 civilians during a several-day operation in Ghaziabad district in Kunar Province, Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the U.S.-led coalition has a long history of blaming the victims when they get caught in potentially explosive civilian casualty incidents, making this vile accusation particularly hard to believe.

To the shock of President Hamid Karzai's aides, Gen. David H. Petraeus suggested Sunday at the presidential palace that Afghans caught up in a coalition attack in northeastern Afghanistan might have burned their own children to exaggerate claims of civilian casualties, according to two participants at the meeting.

[Unnamed sources in the room for the conversation] said Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, dismissed allegations by Karzai's office and the provincial governor that civilians were killed and said residents had invented stories, or even injured their children, to pin the blame on U.S. forces and force an end to the operation.


Has Petraeus lost his mind? One better have some pretty solid evidence before accusing people who may have lost children or seen them badly injured of lying of hurting their own kids. From what I can tell, there's no evidence of parental abuse being responsible for the reported injuries of children. Petraeus and his spin shop are trying to get ahead of the story, throwing multiple possible accounts of what happened into the mix to blunt the outrage that will surely result when a story about an awful set of civilian killings hits the news. But lacking hard evidence, Petraeus' hypothetical seems ugly and vicious, relying on pervasive notions of Afghans as backward and barbaric to escape accountability.

A Pattern of Blaming the Victim

International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) press flak Rear Adm. Greg Smith claimed to have watched video of the attacks and said everything was just peachy:

During the next five hours, Smith said, surveillance drones tracked the fighters while the Apaches fired 30 mm Gatling guns, rockets and Hellfire missiles. "I have reviewed the footage and found no evidence women and children were among the fighters," he said. "Again, no civilian structures were anywhere near where these engagements took place. It was at night and in very rugged terrain."


And yet...

On Saturday, Wahidi, the provincial governor, sent a three-person fact-finding team up the valley to the village of Helgal. They returned with seven injured people, including a woman and a man, both 22 years old, and five boys and girls 16 or younger. Smith said they had burns and shrapnel wounds, none of them life-threatening.


Now, wait a second. Smith says there's no evidence women and children were among the fighters, yet also says that civilians had shrapnel wounds? Then Smith does what he tends to do when there's a potentially attention-getting civilian casualty incident: He blames the Afghan families:

The U.S. military "did have initial reports that the feet and hands of the children appeared to have been burned," Smith said. "We have observed increased reporting of children being disciplined by having their hands and feet dipped into boiling water. No one is claiming this is the case in this instance, but it may well be."


Recall that Smith did the same thing when U.S. special forces killed several Afghan civilians, including pregnant women, in Gardez, whom he said had been discovered "tied up, gagged and killed," presumably by the families of the women.

"[Smith] added, however, "I don't know that there are any forensics that show bullet penetrations of the women or blood from the women." He said they showed signs of puncture and slashing wounds from a knife, and appeared to have died several hours before the arrival of the assault force. In respect for Afghan customs, autopsies are not carried out on civilian victims, he said.


In the Gardez case, Smith was either inventing or conveying bald-faced lies. The women did not die "several hours before the arrival of the assault force." They died after special forces team members shot them, and one of them died while special forces troops dug bullets out of her to cover their tracks.

Video Evidence?

ISAF flaks have a bad habit of claiming to have incontrovertible video evidence that U.S. forces did nothing wrong which often doesn't pan out. Remember the Farah massacre? Dozens of civilians died, and Col. Greg Julian swore that our forces weren't responsible.

The footage shows insurgents streaming into homes that were later bombed, said Col. Greg Julian, the chief U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan. He said ground troops observed some 300 villagers flee in advance of the fighting, indicating that not many could have been inside the bombed compounds... Investigators later reviewed hours of cockpit video from the fighter jets as well as audio recordings of the air crew's conversation with the ground commander. Julian said the military would release the footage and other evidence in the coming days.


Despite Julian swearing he watched hours of cockpit video vindicating the bombers, the U.S. military later admitted (.pdf) that the pilots did in fact kill those civilians after the pilots lost contact with their intended targets before firing.

Pardon me for not jumping to ISAF's defense, after they lied about the use of grenades at the Farah massacre, or claimed the Afghans they shot up at Gardez were "dead when they got there" with bodies stashed near food preparation areas. And pardon me also for not trusting a thing that comes out of Rear Adm. Greg Smith's mouth, the ISAF flak that tried to smear journalist Jerome Starkey for accurately reporting the facts about the Gardez killings. The job of an ISAF public affairs officer is not to tell you the truth, no matter how much that observation provokes their pique. The job of an ISAF PAO is to aid in the war effort by spinning events to the advantage of their side of the conflict. Smith is not a credible source (as proved by the Gardez/Starkey affair, if nothing else) and should be contextualized and held at arms length by any serious journalist.

Enough Spin Already

When asked about reports of his ugly attempt to blame the victims in Ghaziabad: "Petraeus, through a spokesman, declined to comment."

I bet.

ISAF seems to be talking out of several sides of their mouth. Were there no civilians in the area, or did locals in the crossfire invent a story? Did the parents burn their own children, or was there shrapnel in them? And how would shrapnel get into the kids if there were no civilians nearby? This story is still developing, but it bears many of the hallmarks of ISAF's past attempts to warp news coverage after attention-getting reports of mass civilian casualties surfaced.

Enough spin. If ISAF has video of the events in question, it should be made available to the public immediately. There should be an independent UN investigation into the killings and maimings in Ghaziabad, and, unless he has hard evidence, Petraeus should also publicly apologize for trying to deflect blame onto the families who lost loved ones or saw their children injured. Frankly, this kind of talk is tawdry and disgraceful.

Oh, and six more civilians were killed when one of ISAF's missiles hit a mud-built home in Nangarhar.

If you're fed up with this brutal, futile war that's not making us safer, join Rethink Afghanistan on Facebook and Twitter.

 

Follow Derrick Crowe on Twitter: www.twitter.com/derrickcrowe

General Petraeus and his public relations team reportedly engaged in a scummy attempt to deflect blame for an alleged civilian casualty event on Sunday, suggesting that Afghan parents caught in the cr...
General Petraeus and his public relations team reportedly engaged in a scummy attempt to deflect blame for an alleged civilian casualty event on Sunday, suggesting that Afghan parents caught in the cr...
 
 
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T-Haight
What was wrong with federalism?
09:53 AM on 02/23/2011
The Pentagon formally denied that Gen Petraeus made any such comments. I posted about it at around 7:00 EST. Yet there is no mention in this article, and the post was not made.

Huffington Post should be ashamed for refusing to even consider what the USAF said or include comments linking to the statement.
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
07:57 AM on 02/23/2011
"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together"

"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children"

-- Dwight David Eisenhower
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
07:55 AM on 02/23/2011
"Of all the enemies of true liberty, war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few. In war, too, the discretionary power of the Executive is extended; its influence in dealing out offices, honors and emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing the force, of the people. The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced in the inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and in the degeneracy of manner and of morals, engendered in both. No nation can preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.

The strongest passions and most dangerous weaknesses of the human breast; ambition, avarice, vanity, the honorable or venal love of fame, are all in conspiracy against the desire and duty of peace".

--James Madison
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
07:52 AM on 02/23/2011
"Men acquainted with the battlefield will not be found among the numbers that glibly talk of another war. Many people think I glorify war, but I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity. In fact war is no longer a lively adventure or expedition into romance, matching man against man in the test of the stouthearted. Instead, it is aimed against the cities mankind has built. Its goal is their total destruction and devastation. And although I have lead many into battle I have come to the realization that next to the loss of freedom, war is the ultimate, which can befall a nation. It is so horrible that imagination cannot grasp it in all its hideous aspects"

--Dwight David Eisenhower
11:40 PM on 02/22/2011
My kids were introduced to 'cool response' in third grade. Let me share that here as it seems relevant. Launching a war on a country like Iraq that did nothing wrong to us, was too hot. Taking a hit like 911 and not launching a strike back, would be too cold. We have to remember that the troops are not in Afg for its natural resources!
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
01:26 AM on 02/23/2011
"We have to remember that the troops are not in Afg for its natural resources! "
Good sarcasm.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:47 PM on 02/22/2011
Good article.

Petraeus, the Master of CounterInsurgency, has a "strategy" that bears a striking resemblance to the CIA's Operation Phoenix program in Vietnam, which resulted in 250,000 dead South Vietnamese - "pacified" right out of existence, men, women, and children who just happened to be there.

End this obscene war now.
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
01:24 AM on 02/23/2011
Good comparison.
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greg abbott
Anti-Apartheid and Pro-Democracy
08:29 PM on 02/22/2011
I can't stand the thought of Petraeus running for President someday - the earliest would be 2016 but I hope it never happens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Damon
Do or do not, there is no try.
08:10 PM on 02/22/2011
There will always be collateral damage in war. There will always be atrocities committed in war by all sides. Perfect, clean results in combat only exist in the movies and in the rose colored idealistic imaginations of those who have never been in combat. To blame the combat soldier is to demonstrate blatant ignorance of the very task you sent him there to do. If you don’t like what happens in combat your issue is with those who directed the war be fought. President Obama could have everyone home in 6 months. So until then just be glad someone else volunteered to go and you didn’t have to.
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
01:29 AM on 02/23/2011
Supposedly we have a democratic republic and we can and should tell the military what to do and punish them when they over-reach the authority alloted to them by the Constitution which is very little.
If you don't like the American Constitution, feel free to leave. Otherwise, accept responsibility by demanding that the military put an end to this war and their particpation in atrocities.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Damon
Do or do not, there is no try.
06:30 AM on 02/23/2011
And exactly how should the military put an end to this war and the atrocities that occur in it? Refuse the orders of the POTUS? Just pack up and go home? Sounds like someone should get a bit more familiar with the Constitutional role of our military. But thanks for making my point better than I ever could have.
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06:30 PM on 02/22/2011
Do you know what I despise most about terrorists? They refuse to take responsibility for their actions or its consequences.

They are consistently being MADE to perpetrate their violence.
SOMEONE ELSE is always at fault and responsible for their horrors.
Civilians are merely COLLATERAL DAMAGE in a greater cause.

Sound familiar?
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Semprini
The Dept. of Redundancy Dept.
07:08 PM on 02/22/2011
All too familiar...already fanned.
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
01:31 AM on 02/23/2011
I wouldn't call US oldiers terrorists, just misled.
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09:27 PM on 02/23/2011
I was thinking more of the paper-soldiers at the top, deciding tactics and policy.
06:23 PM on 02/22/2011
The usual Pentagon M.O in such cases:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpyKnJOCIy4
05:46 PM on 02/22/2011
Killing babies is the essence of war. What happened to the soldiers who handcuffed 8 Afghan boys and shot them in the head? Nothing. What happened to the soldiers who shot two pregnant women in front of their families and then dug the bullets out with their knives? Nothing. What happens to our air force pilots when they bomb and strafe villages? Nothing. What will happen to the soldiers who killed the 60 villagers discussed in this article? Nothing. Why? Because war makes monsters of us all, not just out of the soldiers. And when these murderers come back to the US, many of them continue with their rape and murder. See Lethal Warriors by David Philipps. Any city or town with a large population of soldiers knows that these men beat their wives and girlfriends, rape women, shot innocent bystanders, and more. Look at Colorado Springs, with dozens of murders and rapes by soldiers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maatpublish
writer, publisher, producer, & social commentator
04:42 PM on 02/22/2011
It's estimated that every single US service person deployed to Afghanistan costs $1.2 million dollars - EACH. The lowest portion of that cost goes to the pay or our men and women, Other costs go toward equipment, but mostly for the fuel costs associated with that single person.

Isn't it time for the United States to stop spending so much money on a mission that makes us no safer nor does it do anything but serve to alienate us with the people in the region?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CommonSenseAmerican
Occam's Razor isn't something you shave with!
04:37 PM on 02/22/2011
Not saying that he isn't confused about the events that actual happened, but I can not believe that simply out of hand you would dismiss the possibility by saying "Is he out of his mind?"

Do you not read almost on a daily basis about Muslims blowing themselves up or stoning women to death while buried to their necks for BEING raped, or starving their children or honor killings and the list could go on.....

This may not be the case but it certainly doesn;t strike me as out of the realm that they would do that to their own children. Life is meaningless to these radical Muslims, the only thing that matters is Allah.
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checkmoot
We have met the enemy and he is us.
03:41 PM on 02/22/2011
We need more Wiki Leaks footage. I'm a vet and the video showing those people in Baghdad being shot down in cold blood by that helicopter gunner turned my stomach. The worst part was when some people driving by saw that one was still alive and when they stopped to try to help him, they were machine gunned while they were trying to put him in the van. I'm sure that video is still on the Tube.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gracie fr
02:38 PM on 02/22/2011
Blaming the victims is a despicable call, but it follows playbook of America’s best friend and the “only democracy in the Middle East”.