Leaked
‘Kill List’ Shows
US Military Knew It Was Killing Children
Video
Drawing information from top secret
documents spirited away by former NSA
analyst Edward Snowden, Der Spiegel reports
that the “kill list” used by NATO forces in
Afghanistan included low-ranking members of
the Taliban along with drug dealers
suspected of supporting them.
Posted
January 03, 2014 -
The Young Turks
Leaked ‘kill list’
shows NATO killed Afghan children, civilians
in pursuit of
low-level Taliban fighters
By Tom Boggioni
----------- Drawing information from top
secret documents spirited away by former NSA
analyst Edward Snowden,
Der Spiegel reports that the “kill list”
used by NATO forces in Afghanistan included
low-ranking members of the Taliban along
with drug dealers suspected of supporting
them.
As the war in Afghanistan
draws to a close after 13 years, new
information is becoming available describing
NATO conduct in the war-torn nation.
According to the newly released documents,
NATO maintained an extensive list —
including up to 750 names at times – of
Afghans (found
here) slated for death, including mid-
and lower-level Taliban operatives along
with drug dealers who allegedly supported
the insurgents.
Drawing on field reports
and internal documents, Der Spiegel
documents an attempted attack on a Taliban
member named Mullah Niaz Mohammed —
nicknamed “Doody” in reports — in 2011 that
instead resulted in the death of a nearby
child, while critically injuring the child’s
father.
“Doody,” who was number
3,673 on the kill list, had been designated
as a priority level three on a scale of one
to four by NATO, meaning he wasn’t
particularly important within the Taliban
leadership structure. Spotted on the ground
by the crew of a British Apache combat
helicopter, the pilot and gunner were given
the go-ahead to kill him, however poor
visibility resulted in a launched Hellfire
missile striking the child and his father
instead. Realizing they had missed their
target, the Apache pilot then fired 100
rounds at “Doody” with his 30-mm gun,
critically injuring the man.
According to reports, the
U.S. changed tactics in Afghanistan after
President Barack Obama assumed office,
focusing on fighting the Taliban insurgency
with targeted attacks on Taliban members
rising to between 10 and 15 a night. Those
attacks were based upon lists maintained by
the CIA and NATO, in a strategy called
“escalate and exit” by the White House.
Under General David
Petraeus, NATO forces focused on a three
part strategy: a cleansing phase, in which
the enemy leadership is weakened, followed
by local forces regaining control of the
captured areas. The third phase was focused
on reconstruction.
When describing the
“cleansing” phase, Michael T. Flynn, head
of the International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) intelligence in Afghanistan,
reportedly told a group of German officials:
“The only good Talib is a dead Talib.”