| AlJazeera, Aug 21, 2009 |
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At least 10 people have been killed after a suspected US drone fired missiles into Pakistan’s North Waziristan region, Pakistani intelligence agency officials have said. The raid on Friday on Darpa Kheil village was the third such attack this month in Pakistan’s ethnic Pashtun tribal areas by what are believed to be CIA-operated pilotless aircraft. “The attack caused a huge explosion,” said a Reuters reporter in Miranshah, about 2km from the scene of the raid. Drones were seen flying over the area after the blast, he said. Madrassa attacked Darpa Kheil village is home to a large madrassa, or religious school, set up by Jalaluddin Haqqani, a former veteran Afghan fighter commander who is also a senior Taliban leader. US drone aircraft attacked the complex in September last year, killing 23 people, most of them members of Haqqani’s family. Pakistani and US officials believe Baitullah Mehsud, the Pakistani Taliban chief, was killed in a similar strike in neighbouring South Waziristan on August 5. Pakistan, an ally of the US, which is fighting al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters in the region, officially objects to US drone attacks on its soil, saying they violate its sovereignty. |
Archive for the ‘war’ Category
Deadly ‘US drone raid’ in Pakistan
August 21, 2009Granai: anatomy of a massacre
August 19, 2009On May 4 the US bombed the village of Granai in Farah province, Afghanistan, killing 140 civilians according to the Afghanistan government, including approximately 90 children.
It was the single largest loss of life caused by US/NATO forces since the 2001 invasion.
President Hamid Karzai denounced the air strikes as “unjustifiable and unacceptable,” hundreds of people demonstrated in Kabul and in Farah city there was a riot outside the governor’s office and traders closed their shops in protest.
The US military initially claimed the civilians had been killed by grenades hurled by Taliban fighters. These assertions were shown to be false by eyewitness accounts and were quickly withdrawn.
Iraq War’s Winners and Losers
August 18, 2009By Sherwood Ross | Consortiumnews.com, Aug 17, 2009
Editor’s Note: Except for some die-hard neocons, it’s widely recognized that the Iraq War has been a debacle for the United States – paid for in unnecessary loss of Iraqi and American lives, international opprobrium, and the diversion of an astronomical sum of money from domestic priorities to warfare.
However, some military contractors have done quite nicely, thanks; so too have many oil companies, even as the ancillary costs of the $1 trillion-plus war continue to ripple through a devastated U.S. economy, as writer Sherwood Ross describes in this guest essay:
“On my last day in Iraq,” veteran McClatchy News correspondent Leila Fadel wrote August 9, “as on my first day in Iraq, I couldn’t see what the United States and its allies had accomplished. … I couldn’t understand what thousands of American soldiers had died for and why hundreds of thousands of Iraqis had been killed.”
Quite a few oil company CEO’s and “defense” industry executives, however, do have a pretty good idea why that war is being fought. As Michael Cherkasky, president of Kroll Inc., said a year after the Iraq invasion boosted his security firm’s profits 231 percent: “It’s the Gold Rush.”
U.S. government withholds information about Bagram detainees
August 16, 2009By Danielle Kurtzleben, Inter Press Service News
WASHINGTON, Aug 14 (IPS) – The U.S. government continues to withhold even the most basic information about prisoners in the Bagram detention facility in Afghanistan, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), a New York-based legal rights organisation.
An April 2009 ACLU Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for documents and information about the detainment of prisoners at Bagram has yielded dead ends with both the Department of Defence (DOD) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
The ACLU wants the Obama Administration to make these records public, including information about “the number of people currently detained at Bagram, their names, citizenship, place of capture and length of detention, as well as records pertaining to the process afforded those prisoners to challenge their detention and designation as ‘enemy combatants.’”
US Raid Kills at Least Eight Afghan Civilians and Police
August 15, 2009Identities of Victims Remains Disputed
In yet another case of apparent civilian casualties in a US raid, a military operation in the Spin Ghar district of Nangarhar killed at least eight people, including reportedly two members of Afghanistan’s security forces. The identities of the others slain remains disputed.
The raid reportedly came following reports of a planned militant attack to be carried out during next Thursday’s presidential elections. Provincial officials say thaty members of a border patrol officer’s family were among those killed, as well as the border patrol officer and a member of the military.
Members of the family were also detained in the raid, though it remains unclear at this point if they have been released, as has so often been the case in botched raids. Local tribals are reportedly still debating whether or not to bury the slain or to display them as a public protest.
Yet NATO’s official report of the incident claimed only three had been killed, and characterized them as “militants.” The remote district, located along the Pakistani border, is difficult to obtain detailed reports from, and the full details of the incident may not be known for several days.
UN: Israel had ‘impunity’ in Gaza
August 15, 2009| Al Jazeera, Aug 15, 2009 |
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The senior human rights official at the United Nations has said that the Israeli military acted with “near impunity” during its late-December to mid-January offensive on the Gaza Strip, violating international law. Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said in a report on Friday that evidence collected on the Gaza war had pointed to human rights abuses by Israel. She said that a grave humanitarian situation in Gaza before the Israeli invasion was exacerbated by Operation Cast Lead, a military campaign that had the stated aim of preventing Palestinian rocket squads from firing missiles into Israel. |



The Afghan Pipe Dream
August 20, 2009America’s convoluted, Alice-in-Wonderland interpretation of this summer’s top political show – the “free expression of the people” in the Afghanistan election – reads like an opium dream. In fact, it is actually a pipe dream – as in Pipelineistan. With the added twist that no one’s saying a word about the pipe that’s delivering the opium dream.
As in an opium dream, delusion reigns. The chances of United States President Barack Obama actually elaborating what his AfPak strategy really is are as likely as having his super-envoy Richard Holbrooke share a pipe with explosive uber-guerrilla warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
Continues >>
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Tags:"the kebab seller", Afghanistan, General Stanley McChyrstal, Hamid Karzai, Osama bin Laden, Pashtuns, Pepe Escobar, President Barack Obama
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