KABUL,
July 2 (IslamOnline & News agencies) - Afghan Foreign Minister
Abdullah Abdullah Tuesday deplored as unjustifiable the U.S.
bombardment of a wedding party in a remote village, where local
officials said 40 people were killed. Whereas U.S. military officials
claim that the 2,000 pound bomb dropped by a B-52 bomber hit an
unpopulated area and not an Afghan village, news agencies reported.
"It
is understandable that there are possible civilian casualties in
military operations, but an incident with such magnitude and such
casualties under such conditions is by no means justifiable,"
Abdullah told a press conference in the Afghani capital Kabul,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
His
blunt criticism comes as Afghan and U.S. officials, at odds over what
led to Sunday night's strike on a village in Dehrawad district in
central Uruzgan province, conduct a joint investigation into the
botched raid.
Afghani
President Hamid Karzai asked U.S. forces to take "every necessary
measure" to avoid further civilian deaths, the Minister said.
Karzai
urged the United States "to fully stop the repetition of such
awkward incidents, and ensure that military operations aimed at
finding terrorists do not harm civilians."
Abdullah
also called for "strong measures" to avoid further civilian
casualties.
"It
has been a tragic event, a very tragic event, a very regrettable
event," he said.
Uruzgan
officials said the bomb hit "a wedding party in which some people
were firing in jubilation and the Americans misunderstood and
bombarded the place."
However,
the United States, for its part, rejected such accounts, insisting
their planes came under heavy direct attack. In apparent
contradiction, U.S. officials later claimed that they did not hit a
village, but the bomb hit a deserted area.
"A
ground observer actually watched it drop, and it did not drop on a
populated area," a U.S. official told AFP on condition of
anonymity.
The
errant bomb was one of seven 2,000-pound laser guided bombs dropped by
a B-52 bomber in a strike on a cave and bunker complex in the area of
Tarin Kowt, U.S. military officials said.
The
targets - two bunker complexes and five cave complexes - were
designated by observers on the ground equipped with laser devices,
officials said.
A
U.S. special forces AC-130 gunship also went into action that night
when U.S. and coalition special forces on the ground reported they
came under heavy machinegun fire during a reconnaissance mission, U.S.
military officials said.
U.S.
military spokesmen claimed the AC-130 returned fire when it came under
anti-aircraft fire.
However,
a second Pentagon official, also speaking on condition of anonymity,
said that the ground observer's report that the errant bomb landed in
an unpopulated area "certainly makes less likely the possibility
that that was the cause."
"That
still leaves the other two causes we've talked about before, which is
the AC-130 gunship or the following triple-A (anti-aircraft artillery)
fire," the official said.