Nasir Khan
Even the American installed regime of Hamid Karzai has vigorously protested against the American and NATO forces who have killed more than a hundred civilians in a few days. But they are also killing by hundreds all those who oppose the occupation of Afghanistan by America.
As far as we are concerned we see the killing of more than a hundred of civilians or hundreds of resistance fighters by American and NATO forces has no significance for them in purely human terms. They use their high-tech weapons to kill the Muslim enemy in any manner they choose. They have been taught that they are doing God's work and bringing 'democracy' and 'Western values' to Afghanistan.
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Source: The New York Times
Hamid Karzai Saturday criticized military operations in Afghanistan.
By BARRY BEARAK
Published: June 24, 2007
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 23 — Somber, impatient and angry, President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan on Saturday accused the United States military and its NATO allies of carrying out “careless operations” that lead to civilian casualties, asserting that “Afghan life is not cheap and should not be treated as such.”
His remarks, made on the front lawn of the presidential palace, came in response to a week in which more than 100 civilian deaths have been reported from airstrikes and artillery fire against the Taliban.
“The extreme use of force, the disproportionate use of force to a situation, and the lack of coordination with the Afghan government is causing these casualties,” he said. “You don’t fight a terrorist by firing a field gun from 37 kilometers away into a target. That is definitely bound to cause civilian casualties. You don’t hit a few terrorists with field guns.”
Mr. Karzai has made these criticisms before in recent months. While his rebuke on Saturday was more irate in tone, he was still vague about his government’s intended recourse if the civilian deaths continue to mount. “Either this cooperation and coordination will be created and applied, or Afghanistan will take its decision in this regard,” he said.
More than 50,000 foreign troops are operating in Afghanistan, the bulk of them Americans. The Taliban insurgency has employed guerrilla tactics that include attacks on police stations, aid workers and schools. The Taliban commonly hide among civilians, and NATO officials insist that it is the insurgents who deserve blame when innocents die.
Late Saturday, there were fresh reports of civilian deaths, this time in Paktika Province along the frontier between Afghanistan and Pakistan, where NATO forces and the United States-led coalition said they had killed 60 insurgents. During the fighting, a rocket landed across the border and hit a house, killing nine civilians, according to a Pakistan Army spokesman quoted by The Associated Press.
Sunday, June 24, 2007
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