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The
price in blood that has already been paid for America's war against
terror is only now starting to become clear. Not by Britain or the
US, nor even so far by the al-Qaida and Taliban leaders held responsible
for the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington. It has
instead been paid by ordinary Afghans, who had nothing whatever
to do with the atrocities, didn't elect the Taliban theocrats who
ruled over them and had no say in the decision to give house room
to Bin Laden and his friends.The Pentagon has been characteristically
coy about how many people it believes have died under the missiles
it has showered on Afghanistan. Acutely sensitive to the impact
on international support for the war, spokespeople have usually
batted away reports of civilian casualties with a casual "these
cannot be independently confirmed", or sometimes simply denied
the deaths occurred at all. The US media have been particularly
helpful. Seven weeks into the bombing campaign, the Los Angeles
Times only felt able to hazard the guess that "at least dozens
of civilians" had been killed.
Now, for the
first time, a systematic independent study has been carried out
into civilian casualties in Afghanistan by Marc Herold, a US economics
professor at the University of New Hampshire. Based on corroborated
reports from aid agencies, the UN, eyewitnesses, TV stations, newspapers
and news agencies around the world, Herold estimates that at least
3,767 civilians were killed by US bombs between October 7 and December
10. That is an average of 62 innocent deaths a day - and an even
higher figure than the 3,234 now thought to have been killed in
New York and Washington on September 11.
Of course, Herold's
total is only an estimate. But what is impressive about his work
is not only the meticulous cross-checking, but the conservative
assumptions he applies to each reported incident. The figure does
not include those who died later of bomb injuries; nor those killed
in the past 10 days; nor those who have died from cold and hunger
because of the
interruption of aid supplies or because they were forced to become
refugees by the bombardment. It does not include military deaths
(estimated by some analysts, partly on the basis of previous experience
of the effects of carpet-bombing, to be upwards of 10,000), or those
prisoners who were slaughtered in Mazar-i-Sharif, Qala-i-Janghi,
Kandahar airport and
elsewhere.
Champions of
the war insist that such casualties are an unfortunate, but necessary,
byproduct of a just campaign to root out global terror networks.
They are a world apart, they argue, from the civilian victims of
the attacks on the World Trade Centre because, in the case of the
Afghan civilians, the US did not intend to kill them.
In fact, the
moral distinction is far fuzzier, to put it at its most generous.
As Herold argues, the high Afghan civilian death rate flows directly
from US (and British) tactics and targeting. The decision to rely
heavily on high-altitude air power, target urban infrastructure
and repeatedly attack heavily populated towns and villages has reflected
a deliberate trade-off of the lives of American pilots and soldiers,
not with those of their declared Taliban enemies, but with Afghan
civilians. Thousands of innocents have died over the past two months,
not mainly as an accidental byproduct of the decision to overthrow
the Taliban regime, but because of the low value put on Afghan civilian
lives by US military planners.
Raids on targets
such as the Kajakai dam power station, Kabul's telephone exchange,
the al-Jazeera TV station office, lorries and buses filled with
refugees and civilian fuel trucks were not mistakes. Nor were the
deaths that they caused. The same goes for the use of anti-personnel
cluster bombs in urban areas. But western public opinion has become
increasingly
desensitised to what has been done in its name. After US AC-130
gunships strafed the farming village of Chowkar-Karez in October,
killing at least 93 civilians, a Pentagon official felt able to
remark: "the people there are dead because we wanted them dead",
while US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld commented: "I cannot
deal with that particular village."
Yesterday, Rumsfeld
inadvertently conceded what little impact the Afghan campaign (yet
to achieve its primary aim of bringing Bin Laden and the al-Qaida
leadership to justice) has had on the terrorist threat, by speculating
about ever more cataclysmic attacks, including on London. There
will be no official two-minute silence for the Afghan dead, no newspaper
obituaries or memorial services attended by the prime minister,
as there were for the victims of the twin towers. But what has been
cruelly demonstrated is that the US and its camp followers are prepared
to sacrifice thousands of innocents in a coward's war. |
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