Tuesday, May 01, 2007

We're Killing Their Children

The continued war is not gaining us support in Iraq, but increasing the number of those determined to kill our soldiers. Of course, when he vetoes legislation seeking to end the war the cretin in chief will be sentencing many more of our troops to death in order to keep from admitting his mistakes.

The fighting in Afghanistan is getting uglier every day as well, even though there is no concerted effort to bring it to an end yet.

At least 30 civilians were killed during recent fighting in the Afghan province of Herat, police and government officials say.

They say that women and children were among the victims.

Nato-led forces have said that at least 135 Taleban fighters were killed in the clashes in the district of Shindand on Sunday and Friday.

On Monday Nato said it had used land and air strikes in Shindand and had no reports of any civilian casualties.

'Various sources'

Afghan officials and local people have told the BBC's Pashto service that more than 30 civilians died in the exchanges.

And Herat police chief Mohammad Shafiq Fazli told the AFP news agency: "There were at least 30 civilians including women and children among those killed in Shindand's fighting."

He said his information was based on "reports from various sources" from the area.

Shindand Governor Khodadad Erfani also said there were civilians among the dead, "but we don't have the number".

Meanwhile in the eastern city of Jalalabad, there has been a third day of protests against the alleged killing of civilians by US-led forces.

Hundreds of people - mostly students - briefly blocked a main road into the provincial capital and repeated calls for President Hamid Karzai to step down.

'Carelessness'

The death of civilians has been a major issue in Afghanistan, with Nato saying in January that its biggest mistake in 2006 had been the killing of innocent people.

The alliance has been accused of carelessness over civilian lives when attacking Taleban fighters.


In December President Karzai tearfully accused coalition forces of "killing our children".

Nato said afterwards that efforts were under way to reduce civilian deaths in military operations.

But it said that it killed far fewer people in 2006 than the Taleban, who launched more than 100 suicide attacks.
[emphasis added]

We badly need to back off from the killing, and get into the policy realm of foreign affairs. Each death is making the United States into the very dream of any al Quaeda member trying to recruit from the populations of Middle East countries. We are acting out the part that we should stay farthest away from, the "Great Satan" of Ayatollah Khomeini's accusations.

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