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pequet said...
@ 2001-11-05 15:22:00


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    Collateral Damage?
    Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2001 22:47:01 -0600
    From: Steve McAlexander
    To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net
    Subject: Collateral Damage?

    [via nettime-bold@nettime.org]

    Collateral Damage?

    This is a personal testimony written by a U.S. citizen living in India.
    It's long, and emotional but definately worth reading...

    -----Original Message-----
    Dear friends,

    Everything I hear from "back home" suggests that visual images of the pale
    corpses of seven (need I say civilian?) babies and children killed two
    days ago by yet another US "smart bomb" explosion in residential Kabul are
    not making it onto American television screens. Nor the visual coverage of
    Jalalabad, Kabul and Kandahar hospitals presently flooded with innocent
    Afghan civilians burned, maimed, disfigured and dying from direct US bomb
    explosions on their homes. Nor the picture of an orphaned Afghan baby
    whose face is half skin, half shrapnel from a US bomb, that greeted me on
    the Telugu news station (not a CNN affiliate) when I woke up this morning.

    Everything I hear coming out of the US seems to support Harper's Magazine
    publisher John Macarthur's recent comment that the current US aggression
    in Afghanistan is "the most censored war." When I turn on CNN (we do have
    a television in the flat where I live in Hyderabad, but the neighborhood
    monkeys sometimes tear up the wires, so it doesn't always work), I see
    affirmation of that which is rapidly making the US "free press" the shame
    of the international media community. Parochialism of fantastic
    proportions, 10 second soundbytes at the expense of context and substance,
    all-terror-all-the-time (as one friend of mine put it), and most insidious
    in the current context, shameful dependence on and uncritical acceptance
    of Pentagon handouts instead of substantial, critical coverage of the
    ground situation in Afghanistan.

    The US corporate media seems to be muting any talk of civilian casualties
    first by framing any such news with "Taliban claims that" and then happily
    putting the matter to rest with Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman's
    conclusive remark, "I would put very low credibility in any Taliban
    report." Thus the matter is safely disposed of and we can return to
    anthrax, fear, and how we might be attacked next.

    So let's humor Bryan Whitman for a minute. Setting aside all Taliban
    claims, here are just a few of the reports from the ground in Afghanistan,
    from non-Taliban survivors, eye-witnesses, independent journalists, UN
    officials present on site, the Pentagon's own occasional admissions of
    guilt, and residents of the affected areas. I can cite and forward to you
    every one of my sources if you are interested.


    Since October 7, the US has:


    Killed four Afghan UN workers engaged in clearing the countryside of
    landmines, and destroyed the building of their NGO, Afghan Technical
    Consultants, in Kabul. Oct 8.

    Bombed a civilian area near the Jalalabad airport, blowing the leg and
    fingers off of 16-year-old Afghan ice cream vendor Assadullah, wounding
    numerous others, and destroying homes. Oct 8.

    Bombed a populated residential area in central Kabul near a joint
    military-civilian hospital, destroying homes and inflicting uncertain
    numbers of civilian casualties. Oct 8.

    Killed a 12 year old child and destroyed several homes in the village of
    Qala-e-Chaman near the Kabul airport. Oct 11.

    Destroyed 60-70 homes in the village of Khrum, near Jalalabad, killing
    "definitely above 150" civilians, possibly many more, and wounding large
    numbers. Oct 10. A journalist who visited the mass graves and destruction
    at Khrum recounted, "I meet Rahmatullah, a callow 16-year old. There's
    only one survivor in his family of six," a sister, who's hospitalized in
    Jalalabad. I talk to Rahmatullah. It's pointless. Numbed with shock, he
    only shakes his head." Later, in a hospital in Jalalabad where the
    survivors of Khrum are being treated, "There's Gul Khan, a three-year-old
    child, with a head injury. His younger sister is unconscious. Rahmat Bibi,
    three, is crying inconsolably, writhing in pain, her legs smashed. She
    wants her mother. But her mother is rotting under the rubble of Khrum. I
    meet Tooray, the only survivor in a family of eight. "'What's there for me
    to live?' he moans."

    Dropped a 2,000-pound bomb onto a residential complex in Kabul, killing
    unspecified numbers of civilians. This one is a Pentagon admission. Oct
    13.

    Destroyed the international telephone exchange in Kabul, cutting off
    civilians from contact with the outside world and helping restrict media
    coverage. Oct 13.

    Reduced to rubble the historic, Mughal period Balahisar Fort, one of
    Kabul's celebrated heritage sites. Oct 14.

    Dropped a "smart bomb" onto another residential area in Kabul, killing
    unspecified numbers of civilians. Oct 14.

    Bombed a hospital in Kandahar, killing five civilians. Oct 15.

    Bombed with a "direct hit" a boy's school in Kabul. Oct 17.

    Bombed and destroyed civilian homes and a bus in Kandahar, killing
    unspecified numbers of civilians. Oct 19. A journalist in Kandahar
    reporting on the destruction wrought by the favorite toy of every
    adolescent video-game addict boy, "the US military's AC-130 'Spectre'
    wrote, "the devastation was enormous. When I visited a house nearby, I saw
    the horribly mutilated remains of at least one woman. "Later, we visited
    the still-smoking remains of a bus. The Taliban claimed 18 civilians had
    been on board. The bodies had long since been removed. The effect of these
    devastating attacks on the morale of the inhabitants of Kandahar was
    shattering." People had been leaving for more than a week, driven out not
    just by fear of bombs but by a shortage of water "caused by a direct
    American hit last weekend that took out the water pumping system. Any hope
    it could be repaired was dashed four days ago, when the main power station
    was destroyed, leaving people to queue with buckets for hours at wells."

    Killed eight members of a single family all at once, along with other
    unspecified numbers of civilian casualties, by bombing their homes in
    Kabul. Two of the children might have been saved, reported their surviving
    uncle, were it not that Kabul's crowded hospitals now have a blood
    shortage. Oct 21.

    Dropped a "smart bomb" on Herat's second largest hospital, killing at
    least 70 patients and around 100 people altogether. Oct 22.

    Bombed and killed unspecified numbers of civilians in a mosque and a
    clinic in Paktia. Oct 22.

    Dropped "cluster bombs" on Herat, trapping and killing at least nine
    civilians. Oct 22.

    Admitted (the Pentagon) "US warplanes mistakenly dropped a 1,000 pound
    bomb near a home for the elderly in Afghanistan and two 500 pound bombs in
    a residential area outside the capital Kabul," causing unspecified numbers
    of civilian casualties. Oct 24.

    Killed at least 20 civilians, including nine children, as they tried to
    flee Tarin Kot, a town under attack by US warplanes. Oct 25.

    Killed large numbers of civilians and destroyed their homes in Tarin Kot.
    Oct 25. One journalist wrote of an Afghan man named Ullah who lost all of
    his immediate family in the US bombing. "SIn the 11 hours between the
    explosion and the moment when he finally regained consciousness, the
    bodies of Ullah's wife, his four children, his parents, and five of his
    brothers and sisters had been lifted from the rubble and buried. What do
    you say to a stranger who tells you he has just lost every member of his
    immediate family? All you can decently do is ask questions. When did it
    happen? On Friday night or early Saturday morning. Where? In a suburb of
    Tarin Kot, capital of the Afghan province of Oruzgan. And why? But Ullah,
    who is not familiar with the phrase 'collateral damage' or 'just war' does
    not have an answer." The journalist goes on to describe a woman in the
    hospital burned, maimed and blinded by the explosion of a US bomb in her
    home.

    Killed at least 15 civilians, mostly children, several babies, and
    destroyed homes in Qali Hotair, a residential area of northeast Kabul. Oct
    28. One surviving woman sobbed, "They killed all of my children and
    husband. What shall I do now? Look at their savageness."

    And in a spectacular display of America's profound humanitarian concern
    for the plight of starving and soon to be freezing Afghans, US jets bombed
    two warehouses of the International Committee of the Red Cross, destroying
    large quantities of wheat, blankets and other supplies on Oct 16. Ten days
    later, on Oct 26 US jets again "accidentally" bombed the Red Cross, this
    time striking six warehouses, including the two from before, and again
    destroying humanitarian supplies. Recall that all of the above, and this
    is by no means an exhaustive list, just a sampling of what's been
    available from the free press on this side of the world ?are confirmed by
    eye-witnesses, survivors, families of the victims, journalists, residents,
    UN activists present, and the humble Pentagon itself. In fact, though
    Rumsfeld might not care to hear it (and certainly would rather not the
    American public hear it), what the journalists are finding and what the
    eye-witness survivors of the bombing are reporting confirms that the
    Taliban claims are? pretty accurate. Around 200 civilians killed in Khrum?
    Well, yes. Likewise the carnage in Herat. In Kabul. In Kandahar. Slowly
    but surely, the reports of fleeing survivors and international journalists
    are confirming the Taliban claims. Definitely hundreds, and probably more
    than a thousand innocent Afghan people have been killed directly by US
    bombs in the last 23 days.

    Consistently, in response to the almost daily reports of civilian deaths,
    Don Rumsfeld has been repeating "we don't target civilians." Rear Admiral
    John Stufflebeem recently elaborated that "what hits that may have
    occurred in residential areas are rare mistakes, or rare errors is
    probably more appropriate." First of all, I would think language like
    Stufflebeem's "hits that may have occurred" immediately following his
    public admission that such hits are confirmed realities, would insult the
    intelligence of the thinking American public. Then there is the matter of
    these events being "rare," when in fact incidents of the US bombing
    residential areas average more than one a day, if one doesn't count any of
    the Taliban claims. More at the heart of the matter, though, is the basic
    thrust of Rumsfeld's and Stufflebeem's assertions, that civilian deaths
    are not intentional, they are mistakes or errors, regrettable, but
    inevitable in the pursuit of our "just cause."

    To those whose family members have been mangled and buried under rubble,
    it doesn't matter whether the perpetrators intended to commit the murder
    or not. From the words of civilian Afghan survivors of the US bombing, it
    seems that Afghans are no more comforted by Rumsfeld's assurances that the
    US 'smart bombs? raining on residential homes are all accidents than
    survivors of WTC would have been if the hijackers had left a note saying
    "sorry about the civilian casualties, but you must understand that our
    primary goal was simply to bring the buildings down." Before we accept
    justification for the murder of innocent people "it's regrettable, say
    Rumsfeld and Bush, but hard to avoid in the pursuit of our just cause"
    before we accept this dangerous line of reasoning, recall that the
    hijackers, too, evidently felt that theirs was a just cause, one worth
    dying for, as Bush would like our soldiers to be. No matter how righteous
    the hijackers' anger toward American imperialism might have been, nothing
    can justify the atrocities they committed. But we cannot have it both
    ways: if the killing of innocent civilians is condemnable and wrong, then
    the killing of innocent civilians is condemnable and wrong. Slaughter is
    slaughter. Terror is terror. It was an unspeakable crime against humanity
    in New York on September 11, and it is an unspeakable crime against
    humanity in Afghanistan today.

    Two enormous differences: one, the perpetrators of September 11 did not
    claim democratic representation of an entire country. The US government,
    however, does claim to represent you and me as it decimates and terrorizes
    the Afghan civilian population (while failing to make any significant
    headway in finding bin Laden or hurting the Taliban). Two, the
    perpetrators of September 11 did not have the resources of the most
    extensive, comprehensive, colossal propaganda machine in the world in
    their hands. The perpetrators of the current atrocities in Afghanistan do,
    as was made embarrassingly evident when all five major US television news
    networks grovellingly obliged Condoleeza Rice's "request" to censor bin
    Laden and al-Jazeera, when major newspapers began censoring comics
    critical of George Bush, when Barnes and Noble began canceling readings of
    books critical of George Bush, when a cable show cancelled Carol Wells'
    appearance because her anti-war posters were not approved, when anti-war
    activists found words stuffed in their mouths by the New York Times in its
    remarkably titled article "Protestors in Washington urge Peace with
    Terrorists," etc.

    Many of you have written to me about the sorry state of affairs when
    pillars of the American "free press" publicly state, with a straight face,
    that it is their "patriotic duty" to exercise censorship. But I've also
    been hearing from several of you who are solidly in agreement with the
    general consensus now enjoyed by the mainstream media, the current
    administration, and a majority of the US population. I briefly wanted to
    address a couple of concerns you have conveyed to me.

    "The US strikes in Afghanistan are defensive in nature." The policy idea
    is that the strikes are "defensive" in the sense that their express
    purpose is to destroy al-Qaeda, an aggressive terrorist outfit that
    attacks Americans. I agree that the policy idea sounds good and fits
    cleanly into the understanding of the war that Bush's speeches present to
    us nicely packaged every few days. The problem is that the packaged
    understanding, however appealing, is terribly divorced from the ground
    reality: al-Qaeda remains vigorously intact, the Taliban are dancing and
    cheering to the sound of missiles, and bin Laden continues to elude.
    Meanwhile what the policy makers call defensive strikes, and what the
    American public understandably wants to think of as defensive strikes, are
    inflicting the same kind of carnage, terror and suffering on innocent
    Afghans that hijackers inflicted on innocent citizens of the US and many
    other countries on September 11. If you'd like to assert that the US
    strikes in Afghanistan are supposed to be defensive, well fine; but that's
    not going to hold any water with the 16-year-old ice cream vendor whose
    leg was blown off by a US missile on day one. Nor should it.

    "Anti-war language like yours is just what the terrorists want from
    Americans now." This point and its obvious response have both been
    repeated ad nauseam in recent weeks so I won't dwell on it. Anyone can say
    anything is "just what the terrorists want": the statement alone hardly
    constitutes an intellectually sustainable criterion for discrediting an
    argument. And the obvious response is that terrorism thrives on the
    escalation of violence. Every day that the US continues to massacre
    innocent Muslims in Afghanistan, uncountable numbers of young people will
    ideologically join ranks with Osama. Violent US aggression gives
    legitimacy and moral standing to its opponents. State terrorism breeds
    non-state terrorism.

    "What we do to the Afghans cannot be as bad as what the Taliban is doing."
    This one is invariably followed up with the equation with Hitler and Nazi
    Germany. That the Taliban are purveyors of massive violence and oppression
    is not in doubt. That being buried under rubble, having one's children all
    killed, or having one's face torn apart by shrapnel constitutes a better
    deal than living with the whips, stonings, suppression and other horrors
    of the Taliban is an interesting assertion that I propose we debate not
    amongst ourselves in standard parochial American fashion, but rather take
    up with the people of Afghanistan. We might do well to note that western
    journalists in Afghanistan are encountering increasing hostility and
    resentment from Afghan civilians devastated by the bombings ("First you
    bomb us, then you come to take pictures!" said an angry old man in Khrum).
    Or that non-Taliban Afghan women, so often invoked by Americans as reasons
    why we must destroy the Taliban, are marching in huge numbers in the
    streets of Pakistan's cities and refugee camps denouncing US aggression,
    carrying banners that read "Stop the killing of innocent Afghan Muslims".
    If everything went according to the rosy vision of Bush's speeches, the
    famous 'burqa-clad women" of Afghanistan would be weeping with gratitude
    as every next Anglo-American commando parachuted onto Afghanistan's dusty
    surface. But in fact that doesn't seem to be the case; women and children
    ?as usual the worst hit in wartime ?are increasingly raising their voices
    against the US bombing. They don't support the Taliban, they don't support
    the US bombing. The idea that those are the only two options is not only
    dimly conceived, but also insulting to the dignity and intelligence of the
    Afghan people.

    Finally, one other concern I have with the "what we're doing cannot be as
    bad" thesis is that it represents a symptom of a larger illness, that is,
    the mainstream American public's general disbelief that what "our"
    government (and our businesses, our banks, our US-trained military allies,
    etc.) does in the rest of the world can really be as bad as what voices
    from ravaged "developing countries" say. This is a huge issue so I won't
    try to address it here, except to say that even if the current state of
    the media and public discourse in the US shows little promise of it,
    people in places like South Asia are nonetheless still hoping that the
    sensitive, thinking American public will respond to current world crises
    by rising out of its somnolence (the corporate media is the opiate) and
    holding its government accountable for its actions. As an American living
    abroad I would like to see the US less hated. This cannot be accomplished
    by shouting, "We're good! We're good! We're a peaceful nation! Why don't
    you poor countries understand!" while killing and terrorizing and smashing
    the homes of innocent people, who have absolutely nothing to do with
    either state terrorism or non-state terrorism, in one of the poorest
    countries in the world. This can be accomplished (along with the lessening
    of terror in the world) by radically changing US foreign policy in ways
    that actualize, rather than make a mockery of, our Constitution's ideals
    of freedom and democracy. Though less spectacular and less profitable for
    Lockheed-Martin et al, working with the people of Afghanistan and the
    United Nations to responsibly negotiate a political solution to
    Afghanistan's current crisis, using the instruments of international law
    to pursue justice in the context of September 11, would be a good start.

    _______________________________________________
    Nettime-bold mailing list
    Nettime-bold@nettime.org
    http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold


(Post a new comment)


vaguerant
2001-11-05 06:36 (link)
Finally something a little more critical without the hype at either end of the spectrum. I am so glad you're putting this stuff out.

I'll definitely be looking forward to more info

(Reply to this)

Ugh !
ankh156
2001-11-05 07:10 (link)
One or two points

- Anyone can say
anything is "just what the terrorists want": the statement alone hardly
constitutes an intellectually sustainable criterion for discrediting an
argument. -

This kind of wasteful and unjustified attck is EXACTLY what the 'terrorists" want. It'll justify their actions for generations to come.

- "What we do to the Afghans cannot be as bad as what the Taliban is doing."
This one is invariably followed up with the equation with Hitler and Nazi
Germany. -

Well, we're undertaking a 'Blitzkreig' by any normal understanding of the term.

I'm profoundly disgusted.

Thanks for posting this. I'm putting a link into my lj.

Bravo.

(Reply to this)


(Post a new comment)