Sometimes you wonder about the chutzpah of US.
So maybe the Sri Lankan government should have called Nandikaddal a “tactical mistake” and sent some goats to Jaffna.
In February 2010 a night raid by special operations forces in Afghanistan killed seven civilians including two pregnant women and two children.
Defense Department investigators concluded that “the amount of force
utilized was necessary, proportional and applied at appropriate time.”
The investigation did acknowledge that “tactical mistakes” were made.
U.S. soldiers dug the bullets out of the women’s bodies. “They were
putting knives into their injuries to take out the bullets,” Sabir told
me. I asked him bluntly, “You saw the Americans digging the bullets out
of the women’s bodies?” Without hesitation, he said, “Yes.” Tahir told
me he saw the Americans with knives standing over the bodies. “They were
taking out the bullets from their bodies to remove the proof of their
crime.”
A press release published by NATO in Afghanistan soon after the raid
asserted that a joint Afghan-international operation had made a
“gruesome discovery.” According to NATO, the force entered a
compound near the village of Khataba after intelligence had “confirmed”
it to be the site of “militant activity.” As the team approached, they
were “engaged” in a “fire fight” by “several insurgents.” The Americans
killed the insurgents and were securing the area when they made their
discovery: three women who had been “bound and gagged” and then executed
inside the compound. The U.S. force, the press release alleged, found
the women “hidden in an adjacent room.” The story was picked up and
spread throughout the media. A “senior U.S. military official” told CNN
that the bodies had “the earmarks of a traditional honor killing.”
Documents provided to The Intercept contain substantial redactions, particularly in areas dealing with allegations
of a cover-up of the circumstances of the killings.
But the raid quickly gained international infamy after
survivors and local Afghan investigators began offering a completely
different narrative of the deadly events that night to a British
reporter, Jerome Starkey, who began a serious investigation of the
Gardez killings.
The Pentagon investigation stands in stark contrast to an independent
investigation conducted by a United Nations team, which determined that
the survivors of the raid “suffered from cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment by being physically assaulted by U.S. and Afghan forces,
restrained and forced to stand bare feet for several hours outside in
the cold.” The U.N. investigation added that witnesses alleged “that
U.S. and Afghan forces refused to provide adequate and timely medical
support to two people who sustained serious bullet injuries, resulting
in their death hours later.” The Pentagon investigation did note that
three of the survivors detained stated they had been “tortured by
Special Forces,” but that allegation was buried below
statements attributed to other survivors who said being held by the
American forces “felt like home not like prisoner” and they were treated
“very well.”
In the end, the commander of the Joint Special Operations Command, Vice
Adm. William McRaven, visited the compound in Gardez accompanied by a
phalanx of Afghan and U.S. soldiers. He made an offer to the family to
sacrifice a sheep, which his force had brought with them on a truck, to
ask forgiveness.
https://theintercept.com/2016/06/01/pentagon-special-ops-killing-of-pregnant-afghan-women-was-appropriate-use-of-force/
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