{UAH} AFGHANS SOMBER BUT NOT SUPRISED AS AMERICA CALLS DRONE STRKE A TRAGIC MISTAKE
Friends
As this “administration” walks this path of apologizing, I need all of us to recognize that lives were lost, and I need men like Edward Pojim that have been feeding on beating on Trump to realize that it is okay to stand up and denounce this murder. And that is exactly what it is, they murdered babies and the blood of those babies is on their hands. This is the time I would even call on the loud mouth in Ottawa to denounce this murder for the victims were all actually Moslems. Having stated that, I am at a level of being incensed about Afghanistan issues for I have followed it very closely, and these are not the first babies to be murdered, I am kind of used to it. I have friends that are Afghanis I work with many in this city, thus I am way informed about the murders that happen in their country to even be affected by this very stupid murder of children. Afghanistan has never been a country with a dark cloud hovering above it than it was during the Obama administration, Obama blew up day cares, wedding convoys, Horse farms, Donkey feeding station, under Obama everything moving was a target.
What raises this murder to me, is the absolute lie that the “Administrations” did. When you murder babies and lie about it, you now qualify for my attention. Let us go back to where it all started, the fraudulent mangles up the exit out of Afghanistan, American soldiers lose their lives at the airport attack, in looking for diversion he creates this impromptu attack that murdered babies, whose pictures I posted early in the day. Half hour from that attack, some of us started to get message that it was a murder. The fraudulent was making speeches of how he stopped an eminent attack as our phones and computers were banging with he is lying through his firkin teeth, he has murdered innocent people. When you are in information, than the Edward Pojims that play paparazzi for life to go after Trump, you wait for the facts to walk in, we needed to know what the administration is stating, then we make a judgement on who to believe. Anthony Blinken the Secretary of state and General Mark Milley the Chairman of the joint chief of Staff both made several rounds, claiming how they used a drone to blow up an approaching vehicle and how they got a secondary explosion on it.
That term “secondary explosion” is important, for when you instruct the drone to fire a missile, that Missile hits the car by exploding, after exploding, that explosion forces the bombs in the car to explode. The difference between the two explosion is under 10 seconds, but the cameras on the drone capture it and send it to the system the Blinkens use to make the statements. When you get a secondary explosion you have hit the attacking car or a car with bad intentions. How did they get a secondary explosion from car carrying babies? Was it their heads exploding? No they lied, they blew up a car with small babies and lied that they had a secondary explosion, which means the car was carrying bombs and they exploded, to cut those of us that follow issues closely off, Which makes you wonder what else do they lie? CNN did not report this. These families have been defended by Arab televisions every day until when the fraudulent caved in to this apology.
I took an oath to never demand for the fraudlent’s impeachment, thus I will not call for his impeachment over this murder of babies, but Anthony Blinken and General Mark Milley need to be firkin fired and for a good cause.
======================================
Afghans Somber but Not Surprised as U.S. Calls Drone Strike a ‘Tragic Mistake’
Afghans expressed a familiar anger at the Pentagon’s admission that an attack killing 10 civilians was a mistake, one of many such errors during the 20-year war.
Pentagon Admits It Made a ‘Tragic Mistake’ in Kabul Drone Strike
Following a New York Times investigation, the Pentagon acknowledged that a U.S. drone strike in Kabul on Aug. 29 was a “tragic mistake” that killed 10 civilians, including an aid worker and seven children.
A comprehensive review of all the available footage and reporting on the matter led us to a final conclusion that as many as 10 civilians were killed in the strike, including up to seven children. At the time of the strike, based upon all the intelligence and what was being reported, I was confident that the strike had averted an imminent threat to our forces at the airport. Based upon that assessment, I and other leaders in the department repeatedly asserted the validity of this strike. I’m here today to set the record straight, and acknowledge our mistakes. I will end my remarks with the same note of sincere and profound condolences to the family and friends of those who died in this tragic strike. We are exploring the possibility of ex-gratia payments. And I’ll finish by saying that while the team conducted the strike did so in the honest belief that they were preventing an imminent attack on our forces and civilian evacuees, we now understand that to be incorrect.
Following a New York Times investigation, the Pentagon acknowledged that a U.S. drone strike in Kabul on Aug. 29 was a “tragic mistake” that killed 10 civilians, including an aid worker and seven children.CreditCredit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
Sept. 18, 2021, 11:22 a.m. ET
The Pentagon’s public apology and admission of having made a “tragic mistake” in killing an Afghan aid worker and seven children from his extended family in a drone strike was broadcast Saturday on Afghan television, but appeared to bring little solace to the family members left behind.
Images on Afghan television and social media showed some relatives holding up photos of the lost children to reporters, including of a child as young as 2 who died in the blast. Another image showed several of the somber-faced relatives seated on the dusty, rocky hillside where the family members were buried. In total, 10 civilians were killed in the strike.
On social media, Afghans expressed anger and frustration, but little surprise, at the Pentagon’s mistake, although they demanded compensation for the family. Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the head of U.S. Central Command, said the military was discussing the possibility of payments.
For more than two weeks, the United States military had insisted the attack on Aug. 29 was warranted and that the aid worker, Zemari Ahmadi, who helped provide basic food items to impoverished Afghans, was connected to the Islamic State. One general called the attack “righteous” and insisted there had been secondary explosions, implying that explosives had been in the vehicle.
After a deeper review by the Pentagon, which followed a New York Times investigation casting doubt on Mr. Ahmadi’s connection to ISIS and on any explosives being in his vehicle, the military concluded that there had been a series of mistakes.
“We now know that there was no connection between Mr. Ahmadi and ISIS-Khorasan, that his activities on that day were completely harmless and not at all related to the imminent threat we believed we faced, and that Mr. Ahmadi was just as innocent a victim as were the others tragically killed,” said Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III in a statement.
Far from being an enemy of the United States, Mr. Ahmadi was hoping to emigrate there.
The aid organization he worked for over the past 15 years, Nutrition and Education International, or NEI, was based in Pasadena, Calif. It was founded by a nutrition scientist who had observed firsthand the malnutrition in Afghanistan’s Balkh Province while lecturing there in 2003, according to the organization’s website, and he started the nonprofit to encourage Afghan farmers to grow soybeans.
A relative of Zemari Ahmadi near the car that was destroyed in the U.S. air strike last month.Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
The organization helped establish processing facilities — Mr. Ahmadi worked on setting up 11 of them — so that the beans could be made ready for cooking. Staff members then distributed the harvest to needy families.
On its website, the organization has a tribute to Mr. Ahmadi noting that “Zemari was well respected by his colleagues and compassionate towards the poor and needy.”
Updates on Afghanistan Sign up for a daily email with the latest news on the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan. Get it sent to your inbox.
NEI had begun the process of filing refugee forms so that Mr. Ahmadi could emigrate with his family to the United States.
While the drone strike has received considerable attention, in part because it came in the last 48 hours the United States was in Afghanistan, it was a familiar sequence for Afghans and those who track civilian casualties.
Over much of the last 20 years, the United States has repeatedly targeted the wrong people in its effort to go after terrorists. While it has killed many who were connected in one way or another to organizations that threatened the United States, there is a well-documented record of strikes that killed innocent people from almost the very first months of its presence in Afghanistan, starting in December 2001 and ending with the death of Mr. Ahmadi and members of his family.
In the years in between, the United States killed dozens of civilians at a wedding and more than 100 civilians, many of them children, in Farah Province in 2009. In 2016, the military mistakenly bombed a Médecins Sans Frontières hospital in Kunduz Province that killed 42 doctors, patients and medical staff.
“The U.S. military has admitted to hundreds and hundreds of ‘mistaken’ killings over nearly 20 years of airstrikes, typically only after initially denying problems and then only investigating after public exposure by media or other independent observers,” John Sifton, the Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, wrote in a Twitter post on Friday, shortly after the military took responsibility for the mistake.
“The U.S. has a terrible record in this regard, and after decades of failed accountability, in the context of the end of the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. should acknowledge that their processes have failed, and that vital reforms and more independent outside scrutiny is vital,” he said.
Sami Sahak, Wali Arian and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting.
Alissa J. Rubin is a former Kabul Bureau Chief who spent more than seven years in Afghanistan and is a Pulitzer Prize winner for her work there. @Alissanyt
A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 19, 2021, Section A, Page 11 of the New York edition with the headline: Afghans Angered by U.S. Admission Of ‘Tragic Mistake’ in Drone Strike. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
EM -> { Gap at 46 } – {Allan Barigye is a Rwandan predator}
On the 49th Parallel
Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika machafuko"

0 comments:
Post a Comment