What stupidity!  Why in the world would someone have such an ignorant policy
to bar attacks on targets in cemeteries?  Afraid of 'collateral damage'?
 
Bruce
 
 
http://www.nypost.
<http://www.nypost.com/news/worldnews/taliban_gets_bury_lucky_worldnews_ian_
bishop.htm>
com/news/worldnews/taliban_gets_bury_lucky_worldnews_ian_bishop.htm
 
TALIBAN GETS BURY LUCKY 
By IAN BISHOP 
September 13, 2006 -- WASHINGTON - Taliban terror leaders who had gathered
for a funeral - and were secretly being watched by an eye-in-the-sky
American drone - dodged assassination because U.S. rules of engagement bar
attacks in cemeteries, according to a shocking report. 
U.S. intelligence officers in Afghanistan are still fuming about the recent
lost opportunity for an easy kill of Taliban honchos packed in tight
formation for the burial, NBC News reported. 
The unmanned airplane, circling undetected high overhead, fed a continuous
satellite feed of the juicy target to officers on the ground. 
"We were so excited. I came rushing in with the picture," one U.S. Army
officer told NBC. 
But that excitement quickly turned to gut-wrenching frustration because the
rules of engagement on the ground in Afghanistan blocked the U.S. from
mounting a missile or bomb strike in a cemetery, according to the report. 
Pentagon officials declined comment and referred The Post to Central Command
officers in Afghanistan, who did not respond to a request for comment or
explanation. 
Agonizingly, Army officers could do nothing but watch the pictures being fed
back from the drone as the Taliban splintered into tiny groups - too small
to effectively target with the drone - and headed back to their mountainside
hideouts. 
Military experts told The Post that rules of engagement are constantly
adjusted on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq, depending on the severity of
the threat posed by the enemy. 
In Iraq, gun battles have raged inside cemeteries in Fallujah, and
once-off-limits mosques are now subject to U.S. searches. 
The lost opportunity in Afghanistan came amid a spike in Taliban activity in
Afghanistan - a craggy country roughly the size of Texas that poses problems
for U.S. troops hunting fighters in remote mountain areas. 
Taliban militants have launched their deadliest attacks since the terrorist
regime was toppled by U.S.-led forces in late 2001 for providing a sanctuary
for Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda camps. 
U.S. troops and NATO allies recently reclaimed territory in southern
Afghanistan from Taliban fighters following a bloody 11-day operation. 
NATO leaders announced yesterday the hard fighting killed at least 510
Taliban insurgents. 
And American and Afghan forces stormed a fortified compound in the Wardak
province to arrest a dozen Taliban leaders who were planning a new wave of
attacks. 
"Five years ago, the Afghan national army was zero," Maj. Gen. Robert
Durbin, who heads the training of Afghan soldiers and police, told CNN. 
"We now have sufficient forces - that's why there is some tough fighting
down in Kandahar." 
With Post Wire Services 
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