http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1724665/wikileaks-revelations-deeply-embarrassing-us

So when it is abroad is ok, but when the war knocks at your door and 
demolishes a couple of buildings everybody is shocked.
Puaffffff! Typical US hypocrisy!
If it's Afghan people (women and children) they are "collateral damage" 
if it's US people then it is bloody murder.

"""

*THE RELEASE* by Wikileaks of more than 70,000 military files from the 
Afghanistan war has revealed alarming problems with the invasion, not 
least that the war is being lost.

On one hand US ally Pakistan appears to be supporting the Taliban and 
providing them with safe havens from which to launch raids into 
Afghanistan, and on the other hand there is evidence hinting that US and 
NATO troops have been labeling civilian casualties as 'Taliban fighters'.

In one incident western troops reported killing 30 Taliban fighters, but 
a UN investigation found 90 civilian deaths including 60 children.

Generally the files are the sorts of things that the US government in 
particular does not want people to see. About 200,000 pages have been 
published by Wikileaks including reports of some key incidents that 
conflict with previous official statistics in what appears to be the 
biggest breach of military security in US history.

According to Wikileaks, on 21 August 2008 a field report was filed where 
a task force reported receiving small arms fire from five Afghan 
insurgents, 13 kilometers south east of Shindand Airfield. This is the 
village of Azizabad.

Close air support was requested by allied troops on the ground. An 
AC-130 close air support gunship arrived and opened fire on the insurgents.

The report goes on to say that friendly forces recovered at the scene of 
the battle five chest rigs for ammunition, one machine gun, eight AK-47 
guns, 1,000 rounds of 7.62 milimeter bullets, 3,000 rounds of 7.62 
milimeter loose bullets, $3,000, one body-armour carrier with ceramic 
plates, two digital cameras and improvised explosive device making 
materials.

The report adds that 30 insurgents were killed in the action and one US 
soldier was wounded.

All fairly straight-forward, except that the UN sent an investigation 
team from the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), 
who concluded that some 90 civilians were killed during the AC-130 
engagement. The military failed to mention that of the 90 civilians 
killed, around 60 were kids, plus 15 women and 15 men. It concluded that 
another 15 villagers were wounded.

Another Battlefield Damage Assessment shows 181 enemies killed in action 
and fails to mention 31 civilians were also killed, including 20 people 
from the same extended family.

After this action a NATO spokesman was quoted as saying, "The single 
thing that we have done wrong, and we are striving hard to improve on 
next year, is killing innocent civilians." Well, on that evidence NATO 
forces would be hard pressed to improve on killing innocent civilians.

Other files show that that the US had formed assassination squads to 
kill al-Qaida operatives. These activities led to civilian casualties, 
including children.

The Wikileaks secret files also claim that an intelligence officer from 
Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) attempted to assassinate 
Afghanistan's president Karzai.

The US Special Forces unit tasked with carrying out assassinations was 
called Task Force 373 and it was supposed to kill the al-Qaida leader 
Abu Laith al-Libi. Al-Libi was believed to have been a training camp 
leader for al-Qaida and the Taliban and appeared in a number of videos 
with al-Qaida's second in command Ayman al-Zawahiri. The files show that 
the raid resulted in the deaths of seven children. Al-Zawahiri was not 
there, but apparently they failed to check that first.

TF 373 was also responsible for another botched raid on an Afghan 
Village that left seven Afghan National Police (ANP) officers dead. The 
unit appeared to be armed with 'Himar' missiles which are hardly a 
stiletto dagger for an assassination squad. If the hit team that shot US 
President Kennedy had used a Himar to take out JFK they would have 
destroyed everything within a hundred yards radius of the Dallas 
Textbook Depository.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange also published the hit list for the TF 
373 which seems to have been made up by Afghan governors, local 
warlords, and people who might have been unhappy with a competitor.

Assange told Channel Four 
<http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/politics/international_politics/secret+files+wikileaks+exposes+aposunseen+afghan+warapos/3723387>
 
that Task Force 373 got out of control with no accountablity.

He also said that US forces tended to call in an air strike at the 
slightest hint of trouble. A soldier would see a bit of unexploded 
ordinance and instead of ignoring it, or shooting it, they called in an 
airstrike, and then a village was hit and 17 people were taken to hospital.

Also alarming for the the region are Pakistan ISI links to al-Qaida. In 
one incident Wikileaks shows ISI agents and five al-Qaida operatives are 
working together on a mission, crossing into Afghanistan from Pakistan 
to carry out an attack.

One project was an attempt by an ISI officer to assassinate Afghan 
president Hamid Karzai, through a Taliban contact.

It does lead to the question of whether the Pakistan intelligence 
community uses its al-Qaida contacts to do its dirty work. The 
assassination of Benazir Bhutto might be a case in point.

It is not surprising that the US government thinks that Wikileaks is a 
menace. But really the materials released by Wikileads show that the US 
is unable to successfully wage war in a region that rightly has been 
called 'the graveyard of empires', and that the Taliban are winning.

  """




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