-Caveat Lector-

This article comes courtesy of the World Socialist Web Site. The

original is at: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/nov2001/afg-n12.shtml




The killing fields of Afghanistan


By Richard Tyler

12 November 2001


The first month of the war being prosecuted by the richest and most

powerful military state on the planet has seen America unleash a

terrible arsenal of destruction against one of the world’s poorest

countries. The full panoply of modern airborne munitions is being

deployed against a land that has already been ravaged by war and civil

war for over 20 years.


The US bombardment includes the use of fuel-air explosives (FAE),

cluster bombs, bunker-busting bombs and carpet-bombing. The skies high

above Afghanistan have been filled by the smoke trails of the B-52, the

world’s largest bomber, notorious for its missions over Vietnam and

other parts of Indo-China more than 25 years ago.


According to the United Nations, one civilian was killed and another

injured in Eshaq Zulaiman Zai village after touching a cluster bomb

dropped from a B-52, and two children were seriously injured after

picking up a bomb near the village of Qala Shaker.


Pakistani newspaper The News wrote October 26 that the UN “has sounded

an alarm over the use of cluster bombs by American aircraft attacking

Afghanistan, saying eight people died in a Herat village by dozens of

unexploded orange coloured ‘bomblets’ littering roads and fields.” A

November 3 article in the Toronto Globe & Mail reports on the bombing of

the village of Chowkar-Karez, where the Taliban say between 90 and 100

civilians, almost the entire population of the farming village, were

killed by US warplanes on October 22. According to the article, “The

Pentagon says the community was supporting terrorists from the al-Qaeda

network and deserved its fate.”


Another article in the Dawn from Pakistan reports the death of 40 people

in an October 25 bombing raid on Kandahar, including the killing of 19

members of one family. The bombing also injured 35 people in Daman Borai

village, 50 kilometres west of Kandahar. “‘Where are my children, bring

them,’ moaned Siddiqua Bibi, a 70-year-old injured woman who lost all

members of her family” the paper writes. She was the only surviving

member of her family, which included two sons, a daughter-in-law and

children.


Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf is visiting London and Washington

to ask for a halt in the bombing of Afghanistan during Ramadan, the holy

month when Muslims fast between dawn and sunset. Speaking in London on

November 8, Musharraf told Prime Minister Tony Blair, “It is perceived

in the whole world as a war against the poor, miserable and innocent

people of Afghanistan. Continuing during Ramadan will have negative

fallout.”


Musharraf’s plea is not motivated so much by concern for innocent

Afghans as for the stability of his own military regime. The US-led war

against the Taliban is deeply unpopular in Pakistan and has sparked

continuous protests. On Friday, police shot dead three protesters in

southwest Pakistan, during a day of strikes and blockades called by a

coalition of Islamic groups and parties.


The request to halt the bombardment had been raised earlier by

Musharraf, when he stopped over in Istanbul during his six-day

diplomatic mission.


But his appeal was rejected. Although the bombing is being conducted

exclusively by US aircraft, with British forces providing some

logistical and refuelling support, Blair said the attacks “must continue

until the objectives are secured.”


The day before, answering prime minister’s questions in the Commons,

Blair defended the use of cluster bombs, saying they were “legal and are

necessary in certain circumstances”. UK Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon

claimed the weapons were being used only against military targets and

were “not being used against the civilian population.”


During a November 6 Pentagon briefing, Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld

said sorties by US warplanes had escalated to 120 a day. Already

undoubtedly hundreds if not thousands of Taliban soldiers as well as

civilians have been killed.


The most recent “weapon of mass destruction” deployed against

Afghanistan is the so-called “Daisy Cutter” bomb. The 15,000-pound

BLU-82 is the world’s biggest conventional bomb. It is as large as a

small car but much heavier, creating a 600-yard radius blast area in

which virtually no living thing can survive.


The Daisy Cutter, named after the shape of the crater it leaves, is a

fuel-air weapon, which exploits the devastating potential of almost any

dust to explode in air. Before hitting the ground, the bomb releases a

cloud of highly explosive ammonium nitrate, aluminium dust and

polystyrene slurry into the air, which is then ignited, producing an

intense fireball and a rapidly expanding blast wave many times greater

than that from conventional explosives.


Dropped from MC-130 aircraft, the Daisy Cutter causes a firestorm that

incinerates an area the size of five football fields, consumes oxygen,

and creates a shock-wave and vacuum pressure that destroys the internal

organs of anyone within range.


“As you would expect, they make a heck of a bang when they go off,”

General Peter Pace, vice-chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff told a

press conference, “The intent is to kill people.”


Human rights groups say fuel-air weapons are so indiscriminate that

their use in populated areas would violate international norms of war.


Terrorism expert Mike Yardley said: “This is an awesome device. It

immediately kills everything within range, and anyone nearby will be

left psychologically traumatised.


“The Taliban are difficult to get at in their network of shelters and

tunnels and Daisy Cutters will be used as a means of destroying those.

But with all the pictures of burnt babies that are already shown on

Al-Jazeera TV on a daily basis, one wonders if this is going to be in

our interests, because it is almost inevitable that innocent people will

be caught up in one of these exploding.”


According to a 1993 study by the US Defence Intelligence Agency: “The

[blast] kill mechanism against living targets is unique—and

unpleasant.... What kills is the pressure wave, and more importantly,

the subsequent rarefaction [vacuum], which ruptures the lungs. If the

fuel deflagrates but does not detonate, victims will be severely burned

and will probably also inhale the burning fuel.” (Defence Intelligence

Agency, Fuel-Air and Enhanced-Blast Explosive Technology—Foreign, April

1993. Obtained by Human Rights Watch under the US Freedom of Information

Act.)


A Central Intelligence Agency study found that “the effect of an FAE

explosion within confined spaces is immense. Those near the ignition

point are obliterated. Those at the fringe are likely to suffer many

internal, and thus invisible injuries, including burst eardrums and

crushed inner ear organs, severe concussions, ruptured lungs and

internal organs, and possibly blindness.”


Because it has such effects one recent paper published by the Foreign

Military Studies Office at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas says FAEs “can have

the effect of a tactical nuclear weapon without residual radiation.”


                             Carpet-bombing


US planes involved in the carpet bombing are being deployed from

carriers off the Pakistan coast or from the British territory of Diego

Garcia in the Indian Ocean.


November 1, Rear Admiral John Stufflebeem, deputy director of operations

for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that the B-52s were

carpet-bombing targets “all over the country, including Taliban forces

in the north.”


At a press briefing, Rumsfeld and Air Force General Richard Myers,

chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the United States had

every right to use deadly cluster bombs, which rain dozens of explosive

‘bomblets’ onto a target, after the September 11 terror attacks. “They

are being used on front-line Al-Qaeda and Taliban troops to try to kill

them, it is why we’re using them, to be perfectly blunt,” Rumsfeld said.


The CBU-87/B “combined effects munition” is the standard air-delivered

cluster bomb used by the US. It weighs 950 lbs (430 kgs) and contains

202 BLU-97/B bomblets. Dropped from 40,000 ft, it can unleash its deadly

cargo on a target area about nine miles away, covering an area of up to

eight football pitches. The explosive charge contained in each of the

separate bomblets, which is scored to create up to 300 shrapnel pieces,

is capable of piercing armour to a depth of about 7 inches (17cms), with

a blast radius of as much as 250 feet (76 metres).


At least five percent do not explode on impact, lying on the ground

where the bright yellow drinks can-sized bombs are frequently picked up

by children, or those mistaking them for the similarly coloured food aid

parcels.


“It is unfortunate that the cluster bombs, unexploded ones, are the same

colour as the food packets,” said General Myers, who explained that

leaflets in local languages have since been dropped over Afghanistan

pointing out the differences between the Humanitarian Daily Ration

packages and the bomblets.


“They were probably yellow because they were very visible and people

could see them lying around, same for the cluster bombs,

unfortunately—they get used to running to yellow,” Myers said, adding

that the colour of the food aid would be changed to blue, but this would

take “some time”.


Washington’s arsenal also includes the use of the 5,000lb GBU-28 “Deep

Throat” bunker-buster, which burrows down through as much as 20ft of

rock before exploding inside the cave. Its “smart” fuse can tell the

difference between rock, concrete, earth and air.


During World War II, 70 percent of bombs were aimed at individual

targets—usually military or key industrial facilities—while 30 percent

were dropped in “areas,” territory in which distinctions between

civilians and military were meaningless. In Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia,

where “carpet-bombing” and “saturation bombing” predominated, 80 percent

of bombs fell on “areas”, and not on individual targets. Washington is

now returning to the same tactics in using B-52s over Afghanistan.


The war in Vietnam (1961-75) killed one million Vietnamese combatants,

according to some estimates, with 20,000 civilians being systematically

assassinated in the CIA’s Operation Phoenix Program. During the bombing

of Cambodia (1969-73), the US dropped the equivalent of three times the

bomb tonnage used against Japan in World War II, killing hundreds of

thousands of people, and creating over a million refugees.


American involvement in Latin America saw 200,000 killed in the war

against Nicaragua (1982-91) and 5,000 were killed in the 1990 invasion

of Panama. The Health Education Trust estimates that 200,000 Iraqis died

during the Gulf War and its immediate aftermath. The US-imposed

sanctions against Iraq have since caused the deaths of hundreds of

thousands more, including many children. To these figures can be added

many more who died in Washington’s covert operations carried out in El

Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Kampuchea, Angola, Mozambique, Iran,

Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, etc.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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