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Today's Top News
The Afghan War’s Nine Lives
Eight youths, tending their flock of sheep in the snowy fields of Afghanistan, were exterminated last week by a NATO airstrike. They were in the Najrab district of Kapisa province in eastern Afghanistan. Most were reportedly between the ages of 6 and 14. They had sought shelter near a large boulder, and had built a fire to stay warm. At first, NATO officials claimed they were armed men. The Afghan government condemned the bombing and released photos of some of the victims. By Wednesday, NATO offered, in a press release, “deep regret to the families and loved ones of several Afghan youths who died during an air engagement in Kapisa province Feb. 8.” Those eight killed were not that different in age from Lance Cpl. Osbrany Montes De Oca, 20, of North Arlington, N.J. He was killed two days later, Feb. 10, while on duty in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. These nine young, wasted lives will be the latest footnote in the longest war in United States history, a war that is being perpetuated, according to one brave, whistle-blowing U.S. Army officer, through a “pattern of overt and substantive deception” by “many of America’s most senior military leaders in Afghanistan.”
(U.S. Air Force | Staff Sgt. Andy M. Kin)
Those are the words written by Lt. Col. Danny Davis in his 84-page report, “Dereliction of Duty II: Senior Military Leaders’ Loss of Integrity Wounds Afghan War Effort.” A draft of that report, dated Jan. 27, 2012, was obtained by Rolling Stone magazine. It has not been approved by the U.S. Army Public Affairs office for release, even though Davis writes that its contents are not classified. He has submitted a classified version to members of Congress. Davis, a 17-year Army veteran with four combat tours behind him, spent a year in Afghanistan with the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force, traveling more than 9,000 miles to most operational sectors of the U.S. occupation and learning firsthand what the troops said they needed most.
In a piece he wrote in Armed Forces Journal (AFJ) titled “Truth, lies and Afghanistan,” Davis wrote of his experience, “What I saw bore no resemblance to rosy official statements by U.S. military leaders about conditions on the ground.” Speaking out is strongly discouraged in the U.S. military, especially against one’s superiors. His whistle-blowing was picked up by The New York Times and Rolling Stone, whose reporter, Michael Hastings, told me, “The fact is that you have a 17-year Army veteran who’s done four tours—two in Afghanistan and two in Iraq—who has decided to risk his entire career—he has two and a half more years left before he gets a pension—because he feels that he has a moral obligation to do so.”
Davis interviewed more than 250 people—U.S. military personnel and Afghan nationals—in his recent year in the war zone. He compared what he learned from them with optimistic projections from the likes of David Petraeus, former head of the military’s CENTCOM and of the U.S. military in Afghanistan, and now head of the CIA, who told Congress on March 15, 2011, that “the momentum achieved by the Taliban in Afghanistan since 2005 has been arrested in much of the country, and reversed in a number of important areas.”
In his AFJ piece, Davis wrote, “Instead, I witnessed the absence of success on virtually every level ... insurgents controlled virtually every piece of land beyond eyeshot of a U.S. or International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) base."
His observations concur with the death of Osbrany Montes de Oca. His girlfriend, Maria Samaniego, told the New York Daily News, “He was walking out of the base and he was immediately shot.”
The number of U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan approaches 2,000, which is about the number of civilians killed there annually. Nic Lee, the director of the independent Afghanistan NGO Safety Office, wrote in his year-end report for 2011, “The year was remarkable for being the one in which the US/NATO leadership finally acknowledged the unwinnable nature of its war with the Taliban.”
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta recently remarked, “Hopefully by the mid- to latter part of 2013 we’ll be able to make a transition from a combat role to a training, advise and assist role.” Petraeus countered, saying the U.S. remains committed to ending the combat mission by the end of 2014. Meanwhile, images surface of U.S. Marines urinating on Afghan corpses, or posing with a Nazi SS flag, and the drumbeat continues, death by death. Lt. Col Davis wrote, “When having to decide whether to continue a war, alter its aims or to close off a campaign that cannot be won at an acceptable price, our senior leaders have an obligation to tell Congress and the American people the unvarnished truth.”
Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
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43 Comments so far
Show AllThe "unvarnished truth" is the last thing the "senior leaders" or the "congress" or the administration will allow.
Nixon's administration was (despite its efforts) the last clear glimpse we had of what drives most of these corporate power-worshippers.
Image before Truth. This is the real meaning of the corporate driven pledge of allegiance.
Those who (like Col. Davis) take it upon themselves to challenge this worship of false and deathly idols are held in disdain by their so-called "superiors." The "leaders" in the corporate religion are incapable of recognizing any "obligation" beyond their perverse love of displays of power.
Davis should be commended for being honest, but his values should not be lauded since he has not realized the USA should have never attacked Iraq/Afghanistan/ Iran/Libya/Somalia/Yemen/Syria/Pakistan in the first instance.
Amy,Please, we all know this so-called war is unwinnable. To have a war you must have opponents. Afghan"s have no army ,navy or air force. This is controlled slaughter. But Amy, why not "out" the raison d'etre for this war, i.e. the false flag of 911. Right in your hometown. Too toxic a subject to contemplate that our govt is so corrupt that it allow its own citizens to be killed for a war.? We have , as have the Israeli govt, killed our own. The examples are many. Let us truth-out 911 and let loose the revolution that Jefferson called for.
Amy,Please, we all know this so-called war is unwinnable. To have a war you must have opponents. Afghan"s have no army ,navy or air force. This is controlled slaughter. But Amy, why not "out" the raison d'etre for this war, i.e. the false flag of 911. Right in your hometown. Too toxic a subject to contemplate that our govt is so corrupt that it allow its own citizens to be killed for a war.? We have , as have the Israeli govt, killed our own. The examples are many. Let us truth-out 911 and let loose the revolution that Jefferson called for.
Amy,Please, we all know this so-called war is unwinnable. To have a war you must have opponents. Afghan"s have no army ,navy or air force. This is controlled slaughter. But Amy, why not "out" the raison d'etre for this war, i.e. the false flag of 911. Right in your hometown. Too toxic a subject to contemplate that our govt is so corrupt that it allow its own citizens to be killed for a war.? We have , as have the Israeli govt, killed our own. The examples are many. Let us truth-out 911 and let loose the revolution that Jefferson called for.
"Too toxic of a subject to contemplate that our govt is so corrupt that it allows its own citizens to be killed for a war"?
Seems like Amy Goodman's Democracy Now! Has been intimitated and told not to go there. According to Susan Lindauer, who was just recently released from jail and a CIA asset, who has documented information on the inside job of 911. Linda said she offered her story to Amy and was told by Democracy Now! NO WAY!
You're kidding, right?
I assume he was being facetious. Three's nothing really funny about it, though. Kind of like Nixon's 'secret plan' to end the war in Viet Nam - bomb Cambodia. It was no secret to the Cambodians.
It's sheer idiocy, in today's world, to start a war without an easily attained end plan. Now the American people are hopefully re-learning the fact that some wars are simply unwinnable and include vast amounts of deleterious consequences. Sadly, in America, these kinds of wars must plod on and on until the VAST majority are so sick of the utter futility and waste that the right-wing warmonger's voices are finally muted.
I would amend Greg R's statement "that some wars are simply unwinnable" by pointing out the title of David Swanson's book which notes that War Is A Lie. The government and military believe that the U.S. must continue to remain in Afghanistan because they apparently think that, as in Vietnam, victory is supposedly just around the corner and that is because they can allegedly see the light that is at the end of the tunnel. But as former British politician, writer and social activist Arthur Ponsonby [1871-1946] accurately observed:
"When war enters a country it produces lies like sand."
The hope is that Colonel Davis will not only testify before congress very soon in order to inform them of the deplorable situation that is occurring in Afghanistan but that he will also be invited to air his views on the Sunday talk shows. But the latter assumes that the corporate media is actually concerned about doing their job and that of course would be carrying out what would appear to be the antiquated notion of telling the American people the truth about Afghanistan and the U.S. war machine.
oh, yeah! "the lies people tell, now" an even better way to amend 'greg r's' post:
~It's sheer idiocy in today's world to start a war!~
Unless you can reap huge profits. Members of the 99% worry about such things as truth and justice, while the 1% know that only profits matter.
Worrying about truth/justice seems to be a good thing. But while attached to the matrix, the worrying doesn't result in any positive action. The people have to detach from the matrix and channel their energy into the alter-society. Else they may as well be numb.
There never was a plan other than “getting” bin Laden and stamping out terrorism—the war on a noun—two absurd reasons for invading a country. My best guess is that we have won, in terms of poppies, geopolitical strategy, and encouraging terrorism and extremism, giving us reason to continue our brutal military crusades. Halliburton, GE, Lockheed, et al. have done quite well, the Pentagon has an excuse to suck the US populace dry, and the US has a great jobs program for unemployed youth. The Amerikan people have become well-used to permanent war; it's the new normal. So all that's a huge win, isn't it?
The 'plan' should have been to simply get bin Laden and then leave. NOTHING more. After 9-11 the American Colossus felt wounded and angry. We needed revenge. We had al Qaeda to target and that should have been that. Instead we went to war with 2 nations. The majority of Americans now see the foolishness. Every day a few more see the utter waste.
You call the invasion foolishness. I’d say a sociopathic lust for murder and profit, but the foolishness was in the Amerikan people's blindness to what was going on. Few questioned the barbarity, the costs. The fear factor was enough for them to readily accept bogus reasons for bogus war, and NOW, after a decade, "every day a few more see the utter waste." Great, but other huge wins have been the build-up of a vast surveillance/police state right here at home and a shredding of our rights, so what are we gonna do about it? The police teargas and pepper spray protesters, and the public either yawns or thinks twice about voicing their outrage. Send a little battalion of so-called anarchists into Occupy, and most people think the police have a good excuse.
Well said! The MIC doesn't want this gravy train to end.
for some time i've listened to dn! five days a week. of late i experience lotsa problems. usually, the broadcast begins just fine until at some point buffering begins and never ends. happened yesterday only moments after michael hastings began to speak.
i'm trying to figure out if the problem comes from adobe flash reader, my search engine, weather or solar flares. i use internet explore except when checking gmail and have to switch to their chrome.
frustrating!
suggestions? anyone?
hummingbird, you can download them for free on I tunes podcast. Both audio and video.
When I worked, I always had DN on my touch, but you can listen to them on your computer, or if you have any ipod.
THANKS!!!!!
will give my i-tunes a whirl!
What really gets to me in this piece is that somehow we've become a culture, or country, where it's acceptable to say "I'm sorry", or "We regret", the death of eight children as a result of a military airstrike. We are talking about children here. "I'm sorry?" This is fricking insanity. We killed eight children ranging in age from six years old to fourteen. Accountability doesn't exist and something as shallow and perfunctory as "we regret" suffices as acceptable? They're dead. Forever.
More and more in this age of computer everything and the dehumanization of the human, it's become just another day on the job to murder the earth, our non human neighbors (meaning the flora and fauna) and finally, our children, our elderly, our pets, our "whoever" who just happen to be in our strike zone. Shame, shame, SHAME on us.
Those of us who wonder what this world could be if we embraced peace instead of war are not "naive or ignorant or idealistic" as we are often called. We understand that the Afghani parents of these murdered children loved their children as much as American parents love their own. Can you imagine what would happen if another country took out eight American school children here in the U.S. and then just casually issued a statement, "Gee, we're sorry. We regret our mistake"?
Why can't we learn empathy? I guess the real problem is that peace doesn't make money or issue military medals. (except to the wrong leaders as in the case of Obama's Nobel Peace Prize). Winning and money have become the almighty, omnipotent gods of the world. Silly me, who cares about real lives.
Elizabeth T. incisively notes that "We killed eight children ranging in age from six years old to fourteen. Accountability doesn't exist and something as shallow and perfunctory as 'we regret' suffices as acceptable? They're dead. Forever."
As former English poet and novelist Elroy James Flecker once observed:
"The dead know only one thing. It is better to be alive."
This statement is also quite germane to what the United States is doing overseas:
"The world is drenched in mutual slaughter... Held to be a crime when committed by individuals, homicide is called a virtue when committed by the state."-Saint Cyprian [3rd century], Carthaginian bishop and early Christian writer
- the Afghan War -
I say yet again that this 'war' is part of the global insanity of DAFT, the Defense against Future Terrorism, started by Public Law 107-40.
This author is talking about the 'Afghan War' that is also fought in Pakistan, and against the same enemy that we fight in Yemen and Somalia and other places.
At this rate, this author will soon be protesting 195 separate wars against the same enemy. That will be job security for her, and nothing for us.
This global insanity is DAFT. This war is not meant to be won, but to continue. It's been 10 years, I'd say it is continuing well.
The government has a war that they can ratchet up whenever the need arises, or slow down whenever they need it to seem as if peace is coming.
I suggest again that one thing that you can do, is to use the term DAFT.
This war is DAFT and insane.
Anybody who wants more war is DAFT and insane.
I suggest, point out the insanity of this war and those who promote it. They are insane.
It's all DAFT.
Occupy language.
Yet another article and comments that do not mention the primary issue behind the illegal occupation of Afghanistan which is the TAPI pipeline and other resources within Afghanistan. Even "progressive" writers fail to report on this fact.
And what a surprise, the TAPI pipeline is in competition with the IPI (beginning in Iran) pipeline project. Big Oil is already operating in Central Asia and needs pipelines to market that energy throughout S. Asia. It may be a long occupation.
TAPI gas pipeline project edges forward:
http://www.livemint.com/2012/01/25230737/TAPI-gas-pipeline-project-edge.html
"The pipeline, proposed in the early 1990s, has been delayed by political and economic issues. The main issue has been security because it passes through Afghanistan and Balochistan (Pakistan), both considered to be unstable areas where the project may face the risk of sabotage. India joined the project in April 2008. Responding to a question about the security threat in Afghanistan, Reddy said, “When we agree on economic issues, that generates its own positive dynamics. It contributes to the feeling of goodwill on both sides.” The pipeline’s construction was earlier expected to start in 2012 with the project to be commissioned by 2016. A consortium is expected to be formed to implement the pipeline project with bids to be invited from potential anchor investors to share the risks involved in the project. This group will be responsible for laying, owning and operating the pipeline.
The other pipeline project India has been involved with has been delayed over price and transportation fees India would have to pay Pakistan. Talks on the 2,300km Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline started in 1995, but with India clinching the civilian nuclear agreement with the US, the process slowed."
Good points. The whole lie about fighting terrorism serves to cover up the naked theft of resources by the USA. People with public voices like Amy Goodman should talk about this every time the discuss Afghanistan.
Yep, very good points. This has always been why the US has gone to war or engaged in coups. For the corporations.
But they are very smart. They gage it as War against......... and the sheep line up and send their sons and daughters to go fight for the corporations.
Saddam and many others that we put in power used to be friends to the US until they changed the rules. Then the whole GD military and complex is needed to take them out.
Naked theft, indeed.
“deep regret to the families and loved ones of several Afghan youths who died during an air engagement in Kapisa province Feb. 8.”
"engagement"? How about murder? The language is so carefully crafted to sanitize the bloody slaughter.
The language is just another expression of the vapid, vacuous, hollow technobarbaric authoritarian bullshit culture from which it arises.
See: "Your call is important to us."
tip o' the hat to Jeopardy, and that fab Canuck, Alex Trebek...
I'll take profitable crimes for 800, Alex:
Answer: This country currently supplies ~90% of the world's heroin.
What is Afghanistan?
Correct...select again...
Profitable crimes for 1,000, please, Alex:
Answer: This country's leaders, usurping the government and military, invaded Afghanistan several years ago and have been profiting from heroin ever since.
What is the United States?
Correct...
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/17/us-usa-russia-afghanistan-heroin-idUSTRE7AG2LM20111117
Right. Exactly. But you'll rarely hear a journalist say it, even on "progressive" sites.
Concerning these wars, I prefer the reportage of veterans. Those returning from Afghanistan are wild-eyed and greatly disturbed. Many of them report it's all about the poppies; few that don't have any coherent answer for why they were there, unless they're babbling incoherently about 911 or Shariah Law..
"Concerning these wars, I prefer the reportage of veterans. Those returning from Afghanistan are wild-eyed and greatly disturbed. Many of them report it's all about the poppies; few that don't have any coherent answer for why they were there"
True for some, but many do understand it is about energy resources. I recently did some drinking with a Afghanistan vet. I mentioned the pipeline issue and he did not dispute this fact but actually thought the resources were for American energy requirements thus thinking he was doing something for the nation. He was quite surprised when I explained that the TAPI pipeline would serve India and possibly Pakistan where there are over a billion consumers. He was even more stunned when I bluntly said our soldiers were dying for corporate profit.
Colonel Davis is a TRUE hero; the rest of the high ranking military brass are a bunch of spineless bastards who continue to feed us BS propaganda and feed our young gullible recruits to the war machinery to be shot up and otherwise destroyed in this horrific occupation.
I think Petraus, Paneta, and Obama should be made to put on a soldiers uniform, pick up a rifle, and see what its really like in the middle of this nightmare.
Thank you Colonel Davis for being a man of conscience and a true Patriot. God bless you and keep you well.
And yes, the heroin trade is part of the occupation. America moves in and the heroin trade takes off.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=5514
Heroin is "Good for Your Health": Occupation Forces support Afghan Narcotics Trade
Multibillion dollar earnings for organized crime and Western financial Institutions
by Prof. Michel Chossudovsky
"The Afghan trade in opiates (92 percent of total World production of opiates) constitutes a large share of the worldwide annual turnover of narcotics, which was estimated by the United Nations to be of the order of $400-500 billion.
Based on 2003 figures, drug trafficking constitutes "the third biggest global commodity in cash terms after oil and the arms trade." (The Independent, 29 February 2004).
Afghanistan and Colombia (together with Bolivia and Peru) consitutes the largest drug producing economies in the world, which feed a flourishing criminal economy. These countries are heavily militarized. The drug trade is protected. Amply documented the CIA has played a central role in the development of both the Latin American and Asian drug triangles."
And below is a summary of other resources within Afghanistan such as natural gas, oil, coal, and vast mineral reserves.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=19769
The War on Afghanistan is a Profit driven "Resource War".
by Michel Chossudovsky
"The 2001 bombing and invasion of Afghanistan has been presented to World public opinion as a "Just War", a war directed against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, a war to eliminate "Islamic terrorism" and instate Western style democracy.
The economic dimensions of the "Global War on Terrorism" (GWOT) are rarely mentioned. The post 9/11 "counter-terrorism campaign" has served to obfuscate the real objectives of the US-NATO war.
The war on Afghanistan is part of a profit driven agenda: a war of economic conquest and plunder, "a resource war".
While Afghanistan is acknowledged as a strategic hub in Central Asia, bordering on the former Soviet Union, China and Iran, at the crossroads of pipeline routes and major oil and gas reserves, its huge mineral wealth as well as its untapped natural gas reserves have remained, until June 2010, totally unknown to the American public."
Perhaps I'm missing something here but there is a qualitative difference between a soldier being shot while he illegally occupies a foreign country and the children of that country being shot in a field where they were picking up firewood.
Write on Archie !
Whether they know it or not, all American soldiers operating in Afghanistan are participating in corporate imperial war crimes. And they signed up for the job, and that is to go to developing nations with resources and kill people on command. The vet I have mentioned was interested in education benefits. The funniest story he told me (as I almost fell of my stool) was that his group found huge amounts of opium in a village search. I asked him what they did. He replied that they smoked as much of it as they could and sold the rest back to the Taliban. Most of the grunts in Nam were drinking American beer or smoking reefer, or both. And heroin, crank and acid were available. Heroin was often shipped to the U.S. in coffins from Nam , a flag over the coffin and drugs under the body. And of course when our military was in Nam, S.E. Asia was the global source for heroin. But at least the Nam "grunts" had the common sense to "frag" (kill deliberately under combat conditions) their officers. Etc.
What our corporate imperial military does around the world is sick beyond your wildest imagination. And "progressive" media clowns like Goodman present a censored version of the "reality", complete with "emotions", providing delusional entertainment for those who would like to see a more enlightened world free of the vilolent pathology of the 1% (or rather the 01%.)
Tell this to your friends, let the truth go viral.
What if one day all of the troops decided that they had it with this bulls--t & went on a sit down strike & told the officers, politicians & CEO's to fight their wars. Life is too short to fight against, who we are told are our enemies and kill common people in other countries who are fighting for or against the same things we are trying to acheive.
Look at the returning troops. Many are broke and broken and many can't even afford a blanket to cover themselves on the street. The corporate, political and military "leaders" don't even care about the "cannon fodder" that they have used up. They just continue their rhetorical lies so they can justify buying more bodies from our goofy congress to use up for their corporate bottom line and political contributions to their next election campaign. "The land of the free and the home of the brave (dummies)" indeed.
The Afghan war will go on in some form for decades. Afghanistan has trillions of $ worth of rare earth mineral deposits, including Lithium.....needed for our electric storage future....which is the next generation's oil. Google Rare Earth Mineral Deposits. We ain't gonna let that shit get away, now, are we?
Our Imperialism only "brings democracy" to countries that have something we want.....just like our foreign aid is either a lever, a bribe or a payback for services rendered.
War should be opposed but not just because it can't be won, but also and just as crucially that it's wrong. Martin Luther King Jr had it right all the way. Dr King was onto the real deal.