War on Terror
UAV
Strikes to Continue in Afghanistan Despite Mission End: Former Official
©
Photo: US Air Force / Staff Sgt. Brian Ferguson
01:32 31.12.2014(updated
02:51 31.12.2014)
10900
Former CIA official
claims that US drone strikes targeting the Taliban and other insurgent groups
will continue despite the official end of NATO combat operations in
Afghanistan.
WASHINGTON, December
31 (Sputnik) – US drone strikes targeting the Taliban and other insurgent
groups will continue despite the official end of NATO combat
operations inAfghanistan, a former CIA official told Sputnik.
“The current transition in the NATO operation
presumably means there will be less overall kinetic activity by any
foreign forces in Afghanistan, but there probably will continue
to be some US operations, especially with unmanned aerial vehicles
[drones],” Paul Pillar, a 28-year veteran of the CIA, currently a fellow
at Georgetown University, said on Tuesday.
Pillar said that the
mission has been gradually losing the Afghan people's support due to heavy
civilian death toll of NATO military operations.
"We missed opportunities to find an off-ramp
and subsequently found ourselves in a prolonged war in which support
from the Afghan people has declined. The collateral casualties have much
to do with that declining support," he said.
Civilian casualties – or collateral damage – have been
a major political issue between the Afghan government and NATO's
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). In the first 11 months
of 2014, 3,188 civilians were killed and 6,429 wounded, the highest
numbers since the United Nations started issuing reports in 2009.
A report published this week by the German
newspaper Spiegel analyzing documents from whistleblower Edward Snowden
revealed that NATO forces in Afghanistan not only conducted airstrikes
against the Taliban leadership but also routinely targeted mid- and
lower-level group members, leading to more civilian deaths.
“The procedures that NATO forces have used to vet
targets and to determine who is or is not part of the insurgency
appear to be thorough and careful procedures,” Pillar noted.
On December 28, the US-led NATO coalition formally
ended its 13-year military campaign in Afghanistan. However, US President
Barack Obama said earlier this week that around 10,000 US troops will
remain behind in a train and support role as the Taliban and other
insurgent groups still threaten Afghanistan.
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