War
on Terror
Afghan ‘kill list’
leak: NATO risked civilian lives by targeting low-level Taliban fighters
Published
time: December 30, 2014 02:33
Afghans inspect a damaged house after a drone crash
last night in Jalalabad.(Reuters / Parwiz )
Besides
targeting top Taliban leaders, NATO forces in Afghanistan included low-ranking
fighters and drug dealers on their list of “legitimate” targets, risking
civilian lives in a wider airstrike campaign, Der Spiegel reported, citing
Snowden archives.
Classified
intelligence files from the NSA, GCHQ, and the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) from the archive of whistleblower Edward Snowden,
studied by Der Spiegel, include a list of the Western alliance’s “targeted
killings” in Afghanistan. The material covers the period from 2009-2011,
when US General Stanley McChrystal and then-General David Petraeus led
operations during the beginning years of Obama’s presidency.
Contrary
to the declared objective of winning the fight against the insurgency, the 'Kill
List' – or Joint Prioritized Effects List, with names numbering at times as
high as 750 – proves for the first time that NATO and US forces didn't just
target Taliban leadership, but also eliminated mid- and lower-level members of
the group on a large scale, according to Spiegel.
Other
revelations show that when an operation could result in too many civilian
casualties, ISAF headquarters in Kabul was contacted. However, bodyguards,
drivers, and any other male attendants were considered enemy combatants; only
women, children, and the elderly were treated as civilians.
"The
rule of thumb was that when there was estimated collateral damage of up to 10
civilians, the ISAF commander in Kabul was to decide whether the risk was
justifiable," an ISAF officer who worked with the list for years told
Spiegel.
General
Petraeus boasted to diplomats in Kabul in August 2010 that at least 365
insurgent commanders had been killed in just three months, marking an average
of about four killings day.
One
document showed a not much understood expansion of the ‘War on Terror’
to include a ‘War on Drugs.’ An NSA document included a United Nations
estimate that the Taliban was earning $300 million a year through the drug
trade. It went on to state that some narcotics traffickers were identified as
active insurgent commanders directing fighting against the coalition, and that
insurgents “could not be defeated without disrupting the narcotics trade.”
Reuters / Parwiz
In
October 2008, NATO defense ministers agreed that “narcotics trafficking
networks were legitimate targets for ISAF forces, due to the traffickers’ ties
to insurgency,” and traffickers would be added to the JEPL list and
targeted in strikes. Spiegel reported that there was a discussion about this
within NATO, with German NATO General Egon Ramms declaring the order "illegal"
and a violation of international law. The power struggle within NATO finally
led to a modification of the directive: targets related to drug production at
least had to be investigated as individual cases.
A
legal challenge was brought by an Afghan, Habib Rahman, in 2012. He believed
his relatives were unlawfully killed during a “kill list” operation,
when a US missile attack on their cars led to the deaths of 10 family members
and several others being injured. ISAF insisted there was a target in the
convoy, Muhammad Amin, whom the US accused of being a Taliban commander and
member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. An investigation of the incident
found that ISAF had killed Zabet Amanullah, and that Amin was not in the convoy
and was still alive.
"Even
now, there does not seem to be any acknowledgment within the military that they
may have got the wrong man," Kate Clark of the Afghanistan Analysts
Network told the Guardian. "It is really very bizarre. They think
Amin and Amanullah are one and the same."
Read more at: http://rt.com/news/218583-nato-afghan-kill-list/
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