[THS] Afghanistan war logs: tensions increase after revelation of more leaked files
The Harder Stuff in news and commentary
ths at psalience.org
Wed Jul 28 13:59:01 CEST 2010
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/27/afghanistan-war-logs-tensions-strained
Afghanistan war logs: tensions increase after revelation of more leaked files
Coalition commanders hid civilian deaths, war logs reveal
US, Afghanistan and Pakistan trade angry accusations
Leak poses 'very real threat' to US forces - White House
* David Leigh and Matthew Taylor
* The Guardian, Tuesday 27 July 2010
* Article history
US marines in Afghanistan The Pentagon said it was conducting an investigation into
whether information in the logs placed coalition forces or their informants in danger.
Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images
Tensions between the US, Afghanistan and Pakistan were further strained today after
the leak of thousands of military documents about the Afghan war.
As members of the US Congress raised questions about Pakistan's alleged support for
the Taliban, officials in Islamabad and Kabul also traded angry accusations on the
same issue.
Further disclosures reveal more evidence of attempts by coalition commanders to
cover up civilian casualties in the conflict.
The details emerge from more than 90,000 secret US military files, covering six years
of the war, which caused a worldwide uproar when they were leaked yesterday.
The war logs show how a group of US marines who went on a shooting rampage
after coming under attack near Jalalabad in 2007 recorded false information about
the incident, in which they killed 19 unarmed civilians and wounded a further 50.
In another case that year, the logs detail how US special forces dropped six 2,000lb
bombs on a compound where they believed a "high-value individual" was hiding,
after "ensuring there were no innocent Afghans in the surrounding area". A senior
US commander reported that 150 Taliban had been killed. Locals, however, reported
that up to 300 civilians had died.
Other files in the secret archive reveal:
Coalition commanders received numerous intelligence reports about the
whereabouts and activity of Osama bin Laden between 2004 and 2009, even though
the CIA chief has said there has been no precise information about the al-Qaida
leader since 2003.
The hopelessly ineffective attempts of US troops to win the "hearts and minds" of
Afghans.
How a notorious criminal was appointed chief of police in the south-western
province of Farrah.
Speaking at a press conference at the Frontline Club in central London yesterday,
Julian Assange, of Wikileaks, the website which initially published the war logs, said:
"It is up to a court to decide clearly whether something is in the end a crime. That
said, on the face of it, there does appear to be evidence of war crimes in this
material."
Four days after it was first approached by the Guardian, the British Ministry of
Defence said it was still unable to give an account of two questionable clusters of
civilian shootings by British troops detailed in the American logs.
They were alleged to have taken place in Kabul in a month in 2007 when a
detachment of the Coldstream Guards was patrolling, and in the southern province of
Helmand during a six-month tour of duty by Royal Marine commandos at the end of
2008. The MoD said: "We are currently examining our records to establish the facts
in the alleged civilian casualty incidents raised."
The UK foreign secretary, William Hague, told the BBC that the leaked documents
could "poison the atmosphere in Afghanistan" but at the same time insisted they
would not affect British troops:
Writing in the Guardian, Eric Joyce, a former soldier and parliamentary aide to the
former Labour defence secretary Bob Ainsworth, described the leaked documents as
a "game changer", adding that some of the questions raised were "stunning in their
enormity".
The former Liberal Democrat leader and spokesman on defence and foreign affairs,
Sir Menzies Campbell, said the documents showed how difficult it would be for UK
troops to leave Afghanistan in 2015, the date set by David Cameron.
"The leaked documents show just how awesome the task will be to bring the Afghan
police and army to a condition where they can be responsible for security," said
Campbell.
Amnesty International called for reforms to the recording of civilian casualties after a
row broke out over an incident in which the Afghan government says 45 villagers
were killed in a rocket attack. The coalition disputes that it was responsible. Amnesty
called on Nato "to provide a clear, unified system of accounting for civilian casualties
in Afghanistan".
Daniel Ellsberg compared the publication of the war logs to the Pentagon Papers,
which he leaked to the New York Times in 1971. "The Pentagon Papers did not stop
or even affect the war but affected public opinion a great deal. Are we really going to
do better with another $300bn [spent on the war in Afghanistan] on more bombs,
more special forces, more drones? The Taliban are not going to quit."
The director of the military thinktank the Royal United Services Institute, Professor
Michael Clarke, said in London: "There is no doubt that the leaks are politically pretty
damaging. The papers give an impression of a lack of military discrimination in how
operations were conducted."
The Pentagon said it was conducting an investigation into whether information in the
logs placed coalition forces or their informants in danger.
Last night President Obama's press secretary, Robert Gibbs, claimed the logs
published by the Wikileaks website posed "a very real threat" to US forces: "It's not
the content
there are names, there are operations, there are sources, all of that
information out in the public domain has the potential to do harm."
The Guardian was allowed to investigate the logs for several weeks ahead of
publication, along with the New York Times and the German weekly Der Spiegel. The
three have published excerpts from the documents which do not pose a risk to
informants or military operations.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
more stories at The Guardian, see top link
#
Barack Obama enlists Afghan war leaks in support of policy switch
Material cataloguing blunders justifies decision to deploy 30,000 more US troops, US president says
#
Wikileaks condemned by White House over war documents
#
Wikileaks founder rebuts White House criticism
#
Secret files expose real Afghan war
#
White House attacks Pakistan over Taliban aid
#
Pakistan spy agency denies backing Afghan Taliban
#
Recriminations fly over alleged support for Taliban
#
Whose side is Pakistan on?
#
Leaked Afghanistan files reveal corruption and drug-dealing
#
Task Force 373 special forces hunting top Taliban
#
US covered up fatal Taliban missile strike on Chinook
#
Wikileaks documents suggest Taliban has capacity to fire on aircraft
#
How US marines sanitised record of bloodbath
#
Civilian deaths show cost of US strategy
#
How the US is losing the battle for hearts and minds
#
Clandestine aid for Taliban bears Pakistan's fingerprints
#
War logs reveal hand of Osama bin Laden
#
Iran's covert operations in Afghanistan
#
How the IED became Taliban's weapon of choice
#
Civilians caught in firing line of British troops
#
Wikileaks Afghanistan files: download the key incidents as a spreadsheet
#
Secret war along the Pakistan border
#
'Green on green' fights between Afghan police and troops
#
Nato feared Taliban could tap its mobile phones
#
Will Kabul turn on Pakistan?
#
Afghanistan war logs: the glossary
#
Interactive Afghanistan war logs: IED attacks on civilians, coalition and Afghan troops
#
Wikileaks' Afghanistan war logs: how our datajournalism operation worked
More information about the THS
mailing list