10) INFO LEAKS REVEAL
SCOPE OF AFGHAN WAR DISASTER
(The following
article is from the August 1-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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This is a
slightly abridged version of a widely-circulate report by U.S. blogger
Kevin Gosztola
Classified information on the war in
Afghanistan has been released by the New
York Times, The Guardian, and
Der Spiegel. Nearly 92,000
documents were provided to the three sources
by Wikileaks, and have been published in the form of "war logs."
The
documents illuminate
disturbing realities: a US-assassination squad in Afghanistan operates
with a "kill-and-capture list," drones used by the US are prone to
system failures, computer glitches and human error, Pakistan actively
arms the Taliban even as the US works to keep the country an ally, CIA
has expanded its paramilitary operations, intelligence agents are awash
in data they don't know what to do with (a conclusion that the
Washington Post's "Top Secret
America" digital journalism project
probably demonstrates as well), how killings of civilians by forces are
going unreported, how the US has covered up certain Taliban activity,
and how Iran is likely aiding the Taliban.
Der Spiegel characterizes
the
US-assassination squad as "the Secret Hunters." The squad, known as
Task Force 373 to the NATO coalition in Afghanistan, is a "black unit
of forces" that has been hunting "down targets for death or detention
without trial." The targets come from the joint priorities effects list
(JPEL), a list of more than 2,000 senior figures believed to be drug
barons, bomb makers or part of the Taliban or al-Qaida. Forces set out
to "seize" targets on these lists for "internment" but in many cases
the targets are killed instead.
The force
includes "U.S. elite
soldiers" from the "Navy Seals and members of the Delta Force." They
receive orders "directly from the Pentagon and are independent of the
chain of command of the international ISAF Afghanistan security
forces." The decision to arrest or kill is often up to those hunting
the targets down.
The
existence of an
assassination squad is not surprising to those who remember it was
revealed in 2009 that former Vice President Dick Cheney ordered "a
highly classified CIA operation hidden from Congress because it pushed
the limits of legality by planning to assassinate al-Qaida operatives
in friendly countries without the knowledge of their governments."
Pakistan
Documents
indicate Pakistan, a
US ally, have "directly with the Taliban in secret strategy sessions to
organize networks of militant groups that fight against American
soldiers in Afghanistan, and even hatch plots to assassinate Afghan
leaders." The intelligence files suggest Pakistan's spy agency ISI has
been supplying, arming, and training insurgents in Afghanistan since
2004.
The Obama
Administration
provides $1 billion of military aid to Pakistan. There is significant
doubt about much of the information concerning ISI. The recorded
allegation of a plot against Hamid Karzai is sourced to the National
Directorate of Security (NDS), which is Afghanistan's premier spy
agency and an agency with a history of hostility toward the ISI.
However, the documents do indicate the ISI is engaged in some level of
collusion with the Taliban.
Also
illuminated is the reality
that US forces are getting into battles on the Pakistan border and in
Pakistan. US troops have been "disregarding Pakistani sovereignty to
fire on Taliban fighters" being sheltered by Pakistanis in the
country's tribal belt.
Civilian deaths
The
existence of CIA
paramilitaries isn't much of a secret to Der Spiegel, which reported on
America's use of CIA paramilitaries in Iraq. However, the
paramilitaries' role in civilian deaths has likely gone unreported due
to the nature of the paramilitary forces.
Around 144
entries in the war
logs indicate so-called "blue on white" events involving assaults on
Afghans resulting in hundreds of casualties. The logs indicate civilian
casualties come from the shooting of individual innocents or air
strikes.
The Guardian's assessment is
that "the logs demonstrate how much of the contemporaneous US internal
reporting of air strikes is simply false." The source notes this in
conjunction with the reality that "US and allied commanders frequently
deny allegations of mass civilian casualties, claiming they are Taliban
propaganda or ploys to get compensation, which are contradicted by
facts known to the military."
Taliban missile strike
The leaked
documents indicate
the Taliban has been using portable heat-seeking missiles. The
documents show that the US military covered up "a reported
surface-to-air missile strike by the Taliban that shot down a Chinook
helicopter over Helmand in 2007 and killed seven soldiers, including a
British military photographer."
The CH-47
Chinook was shot down
on 30 May 2007 after dropping troops at the strategic Kajaki dam in
Helmand where the British were leading an anti-Taliban drive. Witnesses
reported that a missile struck the left rear engine of the aircraft,
causing it to burst into flames and nosedive into the ground. All on
board died.
NATO and US
officials suggested
the Chinook was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) but the logs
show they were certain it was a missile from a Manpad - the military
term for a shoulder-launched surface-to-air missile.
Altogether,
about 10 near-misses
by missiles show up in the documents. They suggest that some of the
same technology used against Russia in the 1980s (which the CIA
supplied) is being used against US troops and coalition forces.
Notes in conclusion
The above
summaries provide a
glimpse into the nearly 92,000 documents posted on Wikileaks.org. There
is much more to be said about the contents, and no doubt there are
details missing in the previous portion of this article that probably
should not have been left out.
Julian
Assange told The Guardian
(in a video that appears on the source's website), "The significance of
this material is both the overarching context - that is it covers the
entire war since 2004 - and the individual events" detailed like the
incidents with Task Force 373 and the information in the logs
concerning the way "the political class interfaces with US military and
intelligence." In the video, Assange notes the release is
analogous to the Pentagon Papers, in some respects, and notes how this
leak is much different.
"The
situation is different in
that it's not just more material and been pushed to a bigger audience
and much sooner - like everyone has the book, the whole log at once -
but rather that [the situation is different because] because people can
give back. So, people who are around the world who are reading this are
able to comment on it and put it in context and understand the full
situation. That is something that has not previously occurred and can
only be brought about as a result of the Internet."
Indeed, any
person can look over
these files by downloading them or by media sources who have done their
journalistic duty by reporting on the documents. The people of the
world can respond and give back to the people who are bearing the brunt
of this war and its abuses by engaging in a conversation about the
leaked materials - first by sharing what is detailed in the contents
and then by commenting on what the content's details mean and what the
proper response to those details should be.
The White
House already is
actively working to smear the leak and downplay the publication of the
documents and the incidents that can be found in the leaked documents.
An official statement released reads: "We strongly condemn the
disclosure of classified information by individuals and organizations,
which puts the lives of the US and partner service members at risk and
threatens our national security. Wikileaks made no effort to contact
the US government about these documents, which may contain information
that endanger the lives of Americans, our partners, and local
populations who co-operate with us."
The White
House misunderstands
or, in effort to protect US interests, makes a seriously flawed
argument. As Assange says, "militaries keep information secret to
prosecute their side of a war but also to hide abuse." There is a
military argument for keeping secret information on "where troops are
about to deploy" from. But, since the information is all from
2004-2010, none of the information is particularly sensitive.
It is not
the job of any
journalist to contact governments and ask permission to report
something (even though that is how the majority of US press operate).
As Assange said at the TED Conference this month, "there's a lot of
information organizations are spending economic effort into concealing.
That's a really good signal that when information gets out there's a
hope for doing some good."
The US
government cannot get and
will not get the value of the leaked documents. It's not in the
government's interest to find value in them. That doesn't mean the
people of the world, especially Americans, cannot appreciate access to
documents that show the truth of what is going on and use the release
of classified information to catalyze a change, to shift perceptions on
the Afghan war by spreading the contents of the documents far and wide.