SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (8075)12/7/2003 3:40:38 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
The US now becoming Israel for sure....to kill one....we kill 9 innocents....sound familiar?
Coalition Strike in Afghanistan Kills 9 Children

December 7, 2003
By CARLOTTA GALL and JOHN H. CUSHMAN, Jr.



KABUL, Afghanistan, Sunday, Dec. 7 - United States
warplanes attacking a suspected member of the Taliban
killed nine children in the southeastern province of Ghazni
on Saturday, Afghan and American military officials
confirmed Sunday morning. One man was also killed in the
attack, they said.

In a statement issued early on Sunday from the headquarters
of the American-led military forces at Bagram Air Base near
Kabul, the military said ground forces searching the area
after the attack found the bodies of the children as well
as the body of the suspect.

"Coalition forces regret the loss of any innocent life,"
the statement said. It said the troops remaining in the
area "will make every effort to assist the families of the
innocent casualties and determine the cause of the civilian
deaths."

The statement said a commission was being set up to
investigate the incident. It did not describe the air
attack in any detail.

Maj. Christopher E. West, an Army spokesman at Bagram, said
the aircraft involved was an A-10 attack jet, a type that
flies low and fires guns and rockets in support of
infantry. A-10's are frequently in action over Afghanistan.

Haji Masud, an official in the governor's office in Ghazni,
confirmed the attack and said it had been aimed at Mullah
Wazir, a former member of the Taliban movement. "They
bombed Mullah Wazir's house and civilians were also
killed," he said in a telephone interview on Sunday
morning. He gave no further details and said an official
Afghan delegation had gone to the area to investigate.

A spokesman for President Hamid Karzai in Kabul said that
when first reports arrived from the region, the American
military had denied that the attack occurred. Mr. Karzai
has frequently asked the United States military to take
greater care with bombing raids on civilian areas and with
they intelligence it receives, which has often proved
erroneous. There have been hundreds of civilian casualties
from bombing raids during the past two years. At least 48
people were killed in July 2002 when American planes fired
on a village where a wedding party was in progress.

In another incident, eleven people from one family were
killed when a bomb landed on their house near the Pakistani
border in Paktika Province. The United States military
quickly acknowledged the mistake, saying the attack was
aimed at a group of militants whe were trying to escape
across the border.

On Oct. 30. American planes bombed a village in the
northern province of Nuristan, killing six members of one
family, most of them women and children, and two religious
students in the village mosque. The military has not yet
confirmed that its planes were in the area that night.

In their statement, the United States military said it the
targeted man had been involved in the killings of two
contractors working on Afghanistan's main highway
connecting the capital with the cities of Kandahar and
Herat. There have been no reported killings of contractors.
Several Afghan security policemen were killed in an attack
on the road in September.

An officer at the main headquarters of Central Command in
Tampa, which runs the military operations in Afghanistan as
well as Iraq and elsewhere in the region, referred
questions to the Bagram headquarters.

American and allied forces in Afghanistan "follow stringent
rules of engagement to specifically avoid this type of
incident while continuing to target terrorists," the
statement said.

The aircraft opened fire on the suspect in what whas
described as "an isolated rural site" south of the town of
Ghazni, the statement said.

The attack came about 10:30 on Saturday morning. Ghazni is
about 80 miles southeast of Kabul on the road to Kandahar,
the former stronghold of the Taliban movement that governed
Afghanistan before the United States and Afghan opposition
forces overthrew it two years ago.

The military said the strike on Saturday was carried out
"after developing extensive intelligence over an extended
period of time" that determined the suspect's whereabouts.

Carlotta Gall reported from Kabul and John H. Cushman, Jr.
from Washington.

nytimes.com

CC



To: Patricia Trinchero who wrote (8075)12/8/2003 11:13:06 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
I read an article from a California newspaper awhile back that claimed that the
the main reason for the last space disaster was: we moved the project from
California to Texas AND many scientists who lived in California refused to move to
Texas.

I thought the article was controversial so I never published is here. I wonder if you
have heard the same rumors.