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Afghanistan Pays Heavy Price for U.S. 9/11 Vengeance    

“The United States, who did this, is a rich country, so why don’t they come and help us now?”

KABUL, October 6 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Arefa, a 33-year-old widow, blinks away tears as she surveys the pulverized ruins of her house in the Bibi Mahrow district of Kabul and recalls the night one year ago when a single U.S. bomb destroyed her family.

“Eight people from my family, everything we owned was gone in a second. A disaster, a total disaster,” she said, barely able to form the words.

Arefa lost her husband and her only son, Ramazan, in the blast which also killed her husband’s second wife and her five daughters. Two members of another family were also killed, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

The bomb, one of many dropped on the Afghan capital after the October 7, 2001, launch of a U.S.-led campaign against the hard-line Taliban regime and its Al-Qaeda associates, was apparently aimed at radar antennae on a nearby hill.

Arefa herself was staying with a neighbor on the night she lost her husband, who had only just returned from Iran to protect his family from the air strikes.

Her family was among scores of ordinary Afghans who perished under the “friendly fire” of U.S. forces in Afghanistan in what Washington has hailed as its most careful military campaign ever.

A study published earlier this year by U.S. pressure group Global Exchange claimed that 812 Afghan civilians had died in 11 of the country's 31 provinces as a result of the bombing campaign.

Nilfur Shuja, a Kabul-based spokesman for the group which aims to seek compensation for the victims of the bombing, said most of the victims were ordinary Afghan villagers.

“They were people who the coalition forces claimed lived near Taliban or Al-Qaeda compounds. But in most cases we saw little evidence of this,” he said.

“Often the targets were just schools and mosques or in some cases where there was Taliban involved, the bombs hit 30 yards (meters) away from their intended target.”

In what is considered the most damning blot on the Washington’s military record in Afghanistan, an attack by U.S. aircraft on a wedding in remote Uruzgan province left 48 people dead and 118 wounded.

The United States claims the bombing was prompted by hostile anti-aircraft guns in the area, and that coalition aircraft attacked targets near the wedding village only after they were fired on.

While the Pentagon accepts that the military operation resulted in civilian casualties, it has been unwilling to go along with Afghan figures over the number of casualties.

Other deeply embarrassing targets of the U.S. campaign have included a warehouse containing aid supplies and the Kabul office of the Al-Jazeera television network.

Even the United States’ coalition allies have suffered under the misdirected fire of its Afghanistan campaign.

In April this year two F-16 jets fired a 500-pound (225 kilo) laser-guided bomb on Canadian ground forces engaged in a live-fire exercise near the southern Afghan city of Kandahar.

Four Canadian soldiers were killed in the incident, which has resulted in manslaughter charges against two U.S. pilots.

According to U.K. newspaper, the Observer, at least 3,600 Afghan civilians are believed to have been killed since the conflict began a year ago.

Ten thousand tons of bombs were dropped, 16 Americans died in combat while 23 were killed in aircraft crashes or on other duty. Three British soldiers have died, one by friendly fire, two in an argument. Eight foreign journalists were killed.

Opium production, banned under the Taliban, has risen from 185 tons in 2001 to 2,700 this year, the Observer reported.

Although $15 billion in Western aid is needed for reconstruction $4.8 billion has been pledged but so far only $1.8 billion has arrived - most of which has been spent preventing seven million Afghans from dying of hunger, the Observer said.

Despite the death toll, Washington insists its operations in Afghanistan will go down in history as its least controversial foreign military exercise.

“The focus on minimizing civilian casualties was intense from the beginning,” U.S. Defense Undersecretary Douglas Feith claimed during a recent visit to the Afghan capital.

“I think it is fair to say, and students of military history will bear this out, that the campaign here in Afghanistan was probably the most careful campaign with the minimum amount of collateral damage in military history.”

In the back streets of Bibi Mahrow, Arefa will take some convincing.

“I know they were targeting the Taliban and not us, but it was us they bombed and they are responsible.

“I lost my house, I lost all the wealth we had and I do not have anybody to work to support me.

“The United States, who did this, is a rich country, so why don’t they come and help us now?”.

 

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