Monday, March 12, 2012

US Soldier Opens Fire on Civilians....Killing Sixteen...Kandahar



A US soldier has killed at least 16 civilians after opening fire on them near a US military base in Kandahar. There are nine children among the victims, Afghan authorities say. Afghan President Hamid Karzai qualified the incident as an “assassination” and demanded an explanation from Washington, reports the Associated Press.
"This is an assassination, an intentional killing of innocent civilians and cannot be forgiven," Karzai said in a statement.

US defense secretary Leon Panetta has condemned the Afghanistan shooting and offered his condolences to President Karzai. The White House has also issued a statement expressing its concern over the incident.
"We are deeply concerned by the initial reports of this incident and are monitoring the situation closely," said White House National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden.

An official from the Panjwai district of Kandahar told The New York Times that the US soldier broke into three houses near the military base, killing 11 in the first and four in the second. He wounded a further five. According to one of the villagers the soldier acted alone and there was no fighting, adding that one of the houses raided belonged to a tribal elder.

The serviceman allegedly handed himself in to US authorities following the incident. The motive behind the attack remains unclear. NATO forces spokesman Capt. Justin Brockhoff has confirmed that a US serviceman has been detained and is currently being held at a military base pending a joint US-Afghan investigation into the "deeply regrettable incident.” The suspect has been identified as an Army staff sergeant from Fort Lewis, Washington.
Brockhoff said those wounded in the incident were receiving treatment at a NATO medical facility. Friction has been building between the allied forces and Afghan government after US soldiers burned copies of the Koran triggering uproar throughout the country last month.  The ensuing protests killed 30 people, including six American soldiers.  President Obama made a formal apology to the people of Afghanistan for what NATO dubbed a “tragic blunder.”

The US embassy in Kabul warns of anti-American reprisals. After Americans burnt Muslim holy books on a base in Afghanistan in February, some 30 people, including six US service members, died in violence that has only just begun to calm down. NATO pulled out all of its advisors from Afghan government organizations after two US officers were shot dead by an Afghan colleague. Violence between the two allied forces has been on the up recently with 18 per cent of the 60 NATO personnel deaths this year thought to be the work of Afghan compatriots.

Is this an isolated incident?? There are 100,000 troops occupying Afghanistan. There have been angry demonstrations  over the burning of the Koran not just because of the offense to Islam but also because of the occupation itself.  There is bitter resentment toward  the US troops who run nightly raids on civilian homes looking for alleged terrorists. If this soldier was involved in the raids, it raises the question: Exactly how are the Americans treating the  occupied population?

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