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FAC News -
Monday, December 3, 2001 10:42 AM
US war crime
in Afghanistan: Hundreds of prisoners of war slaughtered at Mazar-i-Sharif
By the Editorial
Board
World Socialist Website
27 November
2001
The killing
of as many as 800 captured Taliban prisoners Sunday in Mazar-i-Sharif
is a war crime for which the American government and military, right
up to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and President Bush, are
politically responsible. This massacre reveals the real nature of
the US attack on Afghanistan. The terrorist attacks of September
11 are but a pretext for a colonial-style war of pillage and mass
murder.
In both the
savage methods used, and the lies employed to cover up the crime,
the butchery at the Qala-i-Janghi fortress recalls the atrocities
of the Vietnam War period: the My Lai massacre, the murder of 20,000
Vietnamese in the Phoenix assassination program, the saturation
bombing and aerial defoliation with chemical poisons like Agent
Orange, the obliteration of the town of Ben Suc, where an American
officer declared it was necessary "to destroy the village in
order to save it."
According to
both press and US government accounts, US Special Forces and CIA
personnel were on the spot in Mazar-i-Sharif, calling in air strikes
by helicopter gunships and fighter-bombers and directing the actions
of Northern Alliance soldiers as they shot down hundreds of prisoners.
German television broadcast footage of Northern Alliance soldiers
shooting down from the walls of the fortress-prison into a mass
of prisoners below.
Most of those
killed, however, were annihilated by US air strikes. Warplanes dropped
bombs on the fort and AC-130 helicopter gunships, which can fire
1,800 rounds a minute, were called in by Special Forces spotters
in the fortress. Tanks and 2,000 Northern Alliance ground troops
were also brought in to complete the destructive work. Throughout
the one-sided battle, according to Time journalist Alex Perry,
who was on the scene, the 40 or so American Special Forces and British
SAS operatives were "running the show," directing both
the air and ground operations.
The barbarous
character of the repression was calculated, as indicated by the
comments of Northern Alliance spokesmen on Monday. "They were
all killed and very few arrested," said Zaher Wahadat, who
confirmed that as many as 800 may have died. Alim Razim, an adviser
to Gen. Rashid Dostum, the regional warlord, said that any prisoners
still alive wouldn’t be alive for long. "Those who are left
over will be dead," he said. "None of them can escape."
Northern Alliance
and Pentagon officials claimed that the Taliban prisoners had smuggled
weapons into the prison under their tunics, then opened fire on
the guards and sought to make their escape. But journalists inside
the prison at the time said that the prisoners had begun the rebellion
by overpowering several guards and seizing their weapons.
It is not even
clear that any organized rebellion actually took place. As the British
newspaper the Guardian observed, "‘Shot while trying
to escape’ is, after all, one of the oldest fibs in the book."
Northern Alliance troops may simply have opened fire on the prisoners,
provoking a revolt in self-defense.
The anti-Taliban
grouping has a long record of human rights violations, especially
at Mazar-i-Sharif, the scene of massacres by both sides during the
decade-long civil war in Afghanistan. The International Committee
of the Red Cross reported last week that it had found 400 to 600
bodies in Mazar-i-Sharif, apparent victims of summary execution
after the Northern Alliance captured the city on November 9.
By Alex Perry’s
account, the revolt began when the prisoners, Islamic fundamentalists
from Pakistan, Chechnya and various Arab countries, encountered
a journalist who began to question them. "Actually, I think
it was probably the British journalist," he wrote on Time’s
web site. "It’s merely the sight of a Western face. They’re
here to fight a jihad; they see a Western face; they assume that’s
who they’ve come to get."
The prisoners
had ample reason to react to the presence of Western personnel in
the prison. American CIA interrogators were in the facility to sort
out the prisoners, separating from the rank-and-file Taliban volunteers
the alleged Al Qaeda leaders, who would be subjected to more intensive
interrogation, i.e., torture, followed by execution.
The Taliban
prisoners unexpectedly surrendered Sunday in the besieged city of
Kunduz. They gave themselves up to General Dostum, whose Uzbek-based
force was approaching Kunduz from the west, rather than to General
Khan Daoud, the head of the largely Tajik force attacking from the
east, possibly because Dostum gave them assurances that they would
be repatriated to Pakistan.
There were
press reports over the weekend that Dostum had made such a deal,
and he was denounced by rival Northern Alliance commanders who wanted
the so-called "foreign Taliban" to be placed on trial
in Islamic courts or killed on the spot. It is quite likely that
the appearance of the Americans at Qala-i-Janghi was the first indication
to the Taliban prisoners that they had been double-crossed, and
they reacted accordingly.
A
massacre on Rumsfeld’s orders
If the exact
chain of events that led up to the slaughter at Qala-i-Janghi is
still uncertain, the moral and political responsibility for the
bloodbath is not. In the days leading up to the massacre, officials
of the UN and humanitarian organizations were warning of an impending
bloodbath. US officials, on the contrary, made it clear that they
wanted as many of the foreign Taliban killed as possible. Their
repeated public statements were undoubtedly accompanied by even
more bloodthirsty private directives to the Northern Alliance leaders,
who hardly needed any encouragement.
There is far
stronger evidence that the US government ordered the massacre at
Mazar-i-Sharif than any proof that has been produced to substantiate
the charge that Osama bin Laden ordered the September 11 terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington. The chronology is as follows:
November 19:
Northern Alliance General Khan Daoud suggested that he would be
willing to grant foreign Taliban fighters safe passage out of Afghanistan
if they would surrender Kunduz, and was negotiating with the Taliban
on this proposal.
November 20:
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld vetoed this proposal, declaring,
"It would be most unfortunate if the foreigners in Afghanistan—the
Al Qaeda and the Chechens and others who have been there working
with the Taliban—if those folks were set free and in any way allowed
to go to another country and cause the same kind of terrorist acts."
Rumsfeld was repeatedly quoted in subsequent days to the effect
that all foreign Taliban should be killed or imprisoned.
November 20:
The official spokesman for the US and British forces attacking Afghanistan,
Kenton Keith, said the US opposed any negotiated settlement at Kunduz,
declaring, "As far as we’re concerned, the only option is surrender."
In a thinly disguised justification for the coming massacre, he
claimed, "The coalition has used its best persuasive effort
to urge upon the commanders of the Northern Alliance restraint and
proper treatment of prisoners," but, he added, "We are
not in a position to guarantee anything."
November 21:
Rumsfeld, in an interview with the CBS program "60 Minutes
II," said he would prefer that Osama bin Laden be killed rather
than taken alive. "You bet your life," he said.
November 22:
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf met with British Foreign Secretary
Jack Straw in Islamabad, calling for UN intervention to avert a
bloodbath. Straw and UN officials issued verbal appeals for both
sides to observe "the laws of war", which include the
prohibition against killing of prisoners.
November 23:
The New York Times cited statements by "a senior Pentagon
official" opposing any release of captured foreign Taliban
fighters. "What we care about is that Al Qaeda and Taliban
are not capable of continuing to do what they’ve been doing,"
the official said.
November 23:
The Washington Post reported widespread concern in the Middle
Eastern press that Rumsfeld’s comments amounted to "a ‘green
light’ from the United States to kill so-called Afghan Arabs."
One commentator wrote that the Northern Alliance was being "encouraged
and incited by the Americans" to wreak vengeance on captured
Taliban prisoners.
November 24:
The Times cited statements by "an American official"
that the US Central Command wanted to interrogate non-Afghans taken
prisoner at Kunduz and other locations, to gather intelligence on
Al Qaeda. "It’s safe to say that CentCom is involved in a lot
of aspects, including what they might do if scores of prisoners
come out," said the official, referring to the Central Command.
"But we’re looking for as limited a role as possible, with
as much access to the prisoners as we can." This last report
indicates that top US military officers were closely monitoring
the treatment of the Taliban prisoners. The events in Mazar-i-Sharif
did not take them unawares.
The
role of the media
The response
by the American government and media to Sunday’s bloodbath in Afghanistan
has been brazen lying and defense of mass murder in a manner that
recalls the worst crimes of Nazism.
US military
spokesman Kenton Keith denied Monday that Alliance troops had carried
out a massacre, saying the "status" of the prisoners as
POWs covered by the Geneva Convention had changed once they "engaged
in offensive action" (i.e., once they resisted their own execution).
While press
reports have described the beating to death of Taliban prisoners
in Kunduz, in addition to the Qala-i-Janghi slaughter, Keith claimed
that Northern Alliance troops "have been behaving with restraint.
We do not know of any atrocities as part of any widespread pattern."
This version
of events has gone virtually unchallenged in the American press.
At Bush’s latest press conference, on Monday morning, the day after
the slaughter, there was not a single question on the prison massacre.
At Rumsfeld’s press conference later the same day, the question
came up only tangentially, and no reporter pursued the issue.
One expression
of the cynicism in the American press came four days before the
massacre, when the Washington Post published a lengthy front-page
review of the military situation. The Post likened American
actions in Afghanistan to the US role in the civil war in El Salvador
in the 1980s, when "US Special Forces advisers worked with
local forces on the ground to hunt down and kill Marxist guerrillas."
The comparison
of Afghanistan to El Salvador, made with evident approval, is perhaps
unintentionally instructive, confirming that the US intervention
in Central Asia has nothing to do with defending "human rights"
and little to do with fighting terrorism. The US counterinsurgency
campaign in El Salvador was one of the great crimes of the 20th
century. At least 50,000 people were murdered by US-backed death
squads. Among the best known victims of these fascist terrorists
were the Catholic Archbishop of San Salvador, Oscar Romero, and
four American Maryknoll nuns.
As for the
New York Times, its own report on the Mazar-i-Sharif killings
not only suggested that the Taliban victims were to blame for their
own deaths, but justified future massacres in advance. The Times
wrote: "The incident seems certain to deepen the distrust the
Northern Alliance feels as it takes control of hundreds, and potentially
thousands, of Taliban soldiers."
The American
media functions as a direct and willing instrument of the government’s
campaign of military aggression and political provocation. The television
networks and daily newspapers are prepared to cover up and justify
any crime committed by US forces anywhere in the world.
Who
are the terrorists?
Outside the
United States, even some leading establishment newspapers have been
compelled to take note of the bloodstained character of the American
intervention in Afghanistan. The British-based Guardian published
a column November 26 by Brian Whitaker that raised the question
of whether Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was guilty of war crimes.
Whitaker compared
the slaughter of Afghan prisoners to another imperialist atrocity,
the massacre of Palestinian refugees at the Sabra and Shatila camps
in September 1982, when Lebanese fascist militia entered the camps
under the protection of Israeli forces and murdered more than 1,000
men, women and children.
Whitaker wrote:
"The link between Sabra/Shatila and many of the killings in
Afghanistan is that both are examples of ‘green light’ warfare,
where the main protagonists try to escape responsibility by allowing
surrogates to do the unspeakable (and politically unacceptable)
dirty work while providing discreet encouragement and assistance."
Ariel Sharon,
Israeli defense minister at the time of Sabra and Shatila, was the
subject of a parliamentary inquiry and ultimately forced to resign.
Several European countries have sought to bring war crimes charges
against Sharon, now Israeli Prime Minister, over the 1982 events.
Whitaker writes:
"Whether the American defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, will
face a similar inquiry remains to be seen, but his recent statements
have given the green light for a killing spree. Of the non-Afghan
fighters in Afghanistan, he said: ‘My hope is that they will either
be killed or taken prisoner.’ It does not appear to matter which."
Even while
using stooge UN tribunals to prosecute particular enemies like former
Yugoslav President Milosevic, the US government has intransigently
opposed the establishment an International Criminal Court with jurisdiction
over war crimes committed by the government officials of any nation.
This is not simply the defense of US sovereignty as a point of abstract
doctrine. The top officials of the US government are engaged, day
by day, in planning, authorizing and executing actions which, by
any objective standard, would put them in the dock as war criminals
like Hitler, Göring and Goebbels.
The suicide
hijackings that killed nearly 4,000 people at the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon were a monstrous crime, although the US government
has failed to provide any significant evidence of the direct responsibility
of Osama bin Laden, let alone the Taliban regime. The September
11 attacks, however, in no way justify the crimes being committed
by American imperialism against the people of Afghanistan, and the
new crimes already being planned in the Pentagon and CIA against
other nations in the Middle East, Central Asia and elsewhere.
After the events
at Qala-i-Janghi, it is preposterous to claim that the American
intervention in Afghanistan has as its purpose the defense of human
rights, or the punishment of terrorists. The US government, with
its vast military arsenal and ruthless determination to work its
will by force, is the world’s biggest terrorist.
It is the responsibility
of the working people, both internationally and within the United
States, to build an independent political mass movement to put an
end to the imperialist war machine and the profit system that it
defends.
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