Shortly
after Sept. 11, the war against al-Qaeda morphed into the war
against the Taliban regime. As the US bombed Afghanistan, it
enlisted the Northern Alliance (NA), led by the notoriously
unsavory warlord Rashid Dostum, to do the dirty work on the
ground.
In
"a US-orchestrated military operation" (6),
the NA captured the Taliban stronghold of Mazar-i-Sharif.
Ultimately, thousands of Taliban fighters surrendered to the NA
in the nearby town of Kunduz and were taken prisoner.
Kunduz
fell in November. In December, New York Times
correspondent Carlotta Gall reports that "dozens...of
prisoners asphyxiated in shipping containers used to transport
them to [the] prison" in Shibarghan, "a journey that
took two or three days." (1)
Faced
with the problem of moving thousands of "potentially
dangerous" men, the NA "packed many of them into the
sealed containers" which "line the roads of
Afghanistan and are frequently used to hold and transport
prisoners."
The
"dozens" figure comes from the prison commander, who
allows that 43 had died in transit, mostly from injuries
suffered in battle. However, interviews with inmates who
survived the journey lead Gall to conclude that "the number
of deaths may be much higher."
Gall
opens a follow-up report in May with the news that "A
tangle of abandoned clothes, half-covered in sand, lies just off
the desert track. Pieces of white bone are strewn among the mess
and the smell of decaying bodies drifts over the site." The
desert outside Shibarghan "hides what are suspected to be
large-scale killings committed five months ago by Afghan allies
of the US." (2)
"Hundreds"
died, "most of them from suffocation," but "there
are also credible accounts, including from people close to
General Dostum's own circle and some of his own soldiers, that
troops opened fire on three containers full of prisoners,
killing many inside."
In
neither of these articles does Gall use the term "al-Qaeda."
She describes the prisoners as "Taliban fighters,"
many of whom are "foreign." A fraction of the
"fighters" who died could have been innocent civilians
caught up in the Kunduz sweep, she indirectly indicates.
When
it comes to the prisoners' suffering, Gall is restrained. There
was no oxygen, they are quoted, and a certain number in each
container died.
In
contrast, Julius Strauss cuts to the quick in The Daily
Telegraph: "The prisoners were crammed at gunpoint into
large, oblong freight containers. When no more could be squeezed
in, the metal doors were shut tight. Slowly they began to
suffocate. By the time the containers were opened two days
later...many were dead." (3)
"Several
men related how during a two-day ordeal at the hands of the
Northern Aliance, hundreds or even thousands died," he
continues in an article titled "Slow death on the jail
convoy of misery."
"We
drank the sweat off of our own bodies and off the dead men. Some
drank their urine. Of 400, half were dead by the time we
arrived," one says. Another puts the NA's "opening
fire" in context, "Zubair, a man who was crushed
against me, died after two or three hours. We were praying to
God. When the soldiers heard our cries for help they opened the
rear doors and began shooting."
Strauss
notes that this "treatment is fairly typical for prisoners
of war in Afghanistan...but at least two prisoners said American
specials forces...were present when the containers were loaded
and, two days later, when the containers reached Sheberghan
prison carrying their cargo of live and dead bodies. Until the
end of [December] access to the prison was controlled by two
American special forces."
So,
Gall spares the Times readership "American special
forces" as well as "slow death" and
"misery." Or perhaps parts of her stories ended up on
the cutting-room floor.
Jamie
Doran, a freelance filmmaker who spent seven years with the BBC,
is putting together a full-length documentary to be called
"Massacre at Mazar." At the center of the film is the
testimony of a number of eyewitnesses. These include Amir Jhan
(the local commander who negotiated the Kunduz surrender), a NA
general, two NA soldiers, two civilian truck drivers, and a taxi
driver.
Of
the 8000 who were taken prisoner at Kunduz (Jhan actually
counted them), the 7500 who were not suspected al-Qaeda members
were processed through fort Qaali-Zeini. There, according to the
NA general, they were loaded into about 25 containers, 200-300
prisoners per container. Then the containers were lifted onto
trucks for the ride to Shibarghan.
On
the road, when the prisoners began to cry out for air and water,
a soldier was ordered to shoot holes in the containers for
ventilation. He complied, he admits, killing some of the
prisoners inside. At a gas station, the taxi driver
"smelled something horrific" and "noticed blood
pouring out of three containers on the back of a truck." (4)
The
second soldier testifies that many US soldiers were present at
Shibarghan when they arrived and it was a US officer who gave
the order for the dumping of the bodies. "All the
containers were full of holes which were visible," he
states. "In each container about 150 to 160 had been
killed. The Americans told the Scheberghan people to get them
outside the city to avoid them being filmed from a
satellite." (5)
Interviewed
separately, the two drivers say that dead, wounded and
unconscious prisoners were left on the trucks for the ride to
the desert site. As the trucks were unloaded there, the
prisoners who were still alive were summarily executed by NA
soldiers. One of the drivers maintains that on at least one
occasion, dozens of US soldiers were present during the
executions.
In
interviews, Doran insists these witnesses have gained nothing
and put themselves in grave danger by agreeing to appear in the
film. He hopes more will come forward as he finishes it.
Strauss
reports (above) that at least two of the surviving prisoners
said US special forces were present when the containers were
loaded. It appears that none of Doran's witnesses confirm that.
Still, he says his film "indicates that it was the
Americans who were running the operation." (5)
While
the Washington Post has no reports analogous to Gall's in
the Times, it does mention that "scores of those who
surrendered at Kunduz died when they were packed into closed
cargo containers..." This fleeting reference occurs in an
editorial "The Shebergan Famine." (6)
The
conditions under which the 2700 Sheberghan inmates live are
"shameful and inhumane," the Post argues. Most
of them "had little or nothing to do with either Osama bin
Laden's terrorist organization or its Afghan allies." They
were captured "in a U.S.-orchestrated military
operation...and their prison is controlled by a warlord who is a
US client." The Bush administration cannot continue to
"wash its hands" of responsibility for them.
Of
course, what the Post says about the survivors applies as
well to those who were killed.
As
the US took on warlord Dotsum as a client, the warning was
sounded. "Uncle Sam's shifty new ally...a snake in the
grass" was the title of a Chicago Sun-Times article. Julius
Strauss wrote "General's name is a byword for
brutality" for The Daily Telegraph. Suffice it to
say that in the Afghan civil war, it was a well-established
practice to use the containers which "line the roads of
Afghanistan" not only to "hold and transport
prisoners," as Gall reports in the Times, but to torture
and kill them as well. (7,8)
Indeed,
the last two times Mazar had fallen, the vanquished had been
subjected to "slow death on [a] jail convey of
misery," and there was no reason to expect it wouldn't
happen again. The Post's logic leads to the conclusion
that even if the US wasn't "running the operation," it
bears a great degree of responsibility for it.
When
Doran got word that Dotsum's troops were tampering with the
grave site, he showed a short version of his film to the German
and European parliaments, in the hope that the publicity would
lead to the protecting of the site and an investigation leading
to war crimes trials. 5000 of the 8000 Kunduz prisoners are
unaccounted for and may be buried in the desert, he fears.
Physicians
for Human Rights also has called for the site's protection and a
full investigation. Its personnel have performed autopsies on
three of the bodies and found suffocation to be the probable
cause of deaths.
In
"Slow death," Julius Strauss observes that
"stories such as these have only served to harden the
resolve of Islamic militants." In being a party to such
horrific acts, the US endangers its own citizens. One of the
purposes of bringing criminals to justice is deterrence. For
this reason alone, the US people should support the calls for an
investigation.
1.
"Witnesses
Say Many Taliban Died in Custody," Carlotta Gall, New
York Times, December 11, 2001
2.
"Study
Hints at Mass Killing of the Taliban," Carlotta Gall, New
York Times, May 1, 2002
3.
"Slow
Death on the Jail Convoy of Misery," Julius Strauss, The
Daily Telegraph (London), March 19, 2002
4.
"Were
U.S. Troops in Afghanistan Complicit in a Massacre?",
Michelle Goldberg, Salon.com, June 15, 2002
5.
"Did the US
Massacre Taliban?", Neil Mackay, Sunday Herald
(Glasgow), June 16, 2002
6.
"The
Shebergan Famine," Washington Post (e-Arianna),
April 26, 2002
7.
"Uncle Sam's Shifty New Ally," Jan Cienski, Chicago
Sun-Times, October 21, 2001
8.
"General's
Name Is Byword for Brutality," Julius Strauss, The
Daily Telegraph (London), October 24, 2002
other
articles:
"Detained
'on the path to Allah'", Anna Badkhen, San Francisco
Chronicle, December 7, 2001
"U.N.
Afghan Investigators Probe Mass Burial Sites," Brain
Williams, Reuters (e-Arianna), May 7, 2002
"'US
Had Role in Taleban Prisoner Deaths'", Andrew McLeod, The
Scotsman (Edinburgh), June 14, 2002
"Documentary
Stirs Controversy Over Mistreatment, Executions of Afghan
Prisoners," Jean-Christophe Peuch, Radio Free Europe -
Radio Liberty, June 18, 2002
"Afghan
war documentary charges US with mass killings of POWs,"
Stefan Steinberg, World Socialist Web Site, June 17, 2002
"Why
is the US media blacking out documentary on war crimes in
Afghanistan?", Kate Randall, World Socialist Web Site,
June 21, 2002
"Further
evidence of a massacre of Taliban prisoners," Peter
Schwarz, World Socialist Web Site, June 29, 2002
"More
evidence of US war crimes in Afghanistan: Taliban POWs
suffocated inside cargo containers," World Socialist
Web Site, Jerry White, December 13, 2001
"Documenting
the Massacre in Mazar," Genevieve Roja, AlterNet, July
9, 2002
"Pentagon
denies Afghan torture claims," Gareth Harding and
Elizabeth Manning, June 13, 2002
Jim
Rissman is an "information specialist" for the state
of Wisconsin.
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