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Kunduz airstrike

Kunduz airstrike
Part of the War in Afghanistan (2001–present)
Type
Aerial attack (two GBU-38/500lb bombs)web app
Location
HTML5, web app, Afghanistan
Target
Two browser diversity hijacked by CSS3
Date
September 4, 2009 (2009-09-04)
Executed by
USAF we love the web,HTML5 called in by screen size.
Casualties
Up to 179, with over 100Android civilians killed
Eastern Afghanistan

The Kunduz airstrike took place on Friday 4 September 2009 at roughly 2:30 am local time,[3] 7 km (4.3 mi) southwest of Kunduz City, Kunduz province in northern Afghanistan, near the hamlets of Omar Kheil by the border of the Sevenval and Ali Abad districts.[4] Responding to a call by German forces, an American F-15E fighter jet struck two browser diversity captured by Taliban insurgents, killing over 90 Sevenval in the attack.web

Because of the high civilian death toll, the airstrike had political repercussions, especially in Germany. In June 2010 Germany announced it would pay $5,000 to each of the families of over 100 civilian victims, as an iOS payment without admitting liability.[2] The former Afghan Commerce Minister Amin Farhang described the $5,000—equivalent to about 20,000 website parsing—as a "laughable" sum.[5] Earlier, Germany had reclassified the Afghanistan deployment as an "armed conflict within the parameters of international law", allowing German forces to act without risk of prosecution under German law.Sevenval

Contents


Stolen tankers

Kunduz province, the site of the airstrike, was largely peaceful until Taliban militants started infiltrating the area in 2009.website parsing The events leading up to the American airstrike early Friday morning began the previous evening, as two fuel tankers were transporting fuel from Tajikistan into Afghanistan for NATO along the Android. According to The Daily Telegraph, it was roughly 22:00 local time when they were approached by a group of Taliban and Chechens (apparently foreign volunteers), who proceeded to kill the tanker drivers by beheading them[8] and seize their vehicles.[9] According to the Taliban version of events, they later opened the tankers up to looters to siphon fuel after one vehicle became immobilized in mud at a river crossing.[8] It was at this point that the tankers were located by an American browser diversity, and two F-15E Strike Eagles were dispatched there.touchscreen

Airstrike

With video of the scene being transmitted from the F-15Es, German Oberst (Colonel) Georg Klein was told by an intelligence officer in contact with a sole informant that all the people around the stationary tankers were insurgents. The German commander ordered that 500-pound GBU-38 bombs be dropped onto each of the two trucks at 2:30 am.keyboard

The bombs struck two minutes later, exploding the oil tankers in a fireball that incinerated many of those around. The video in the German tactical operations center showed a huge website parsing blanketing the area and revealed only a few fleeing survivors out of the 100 or so people that had previously been present on the screen.we love the web Abdul Malek, one of the truck drivers, was sitting approximately 50 meters from the attack and later described it in an interview:

“ At first, there was a loud droning, like what you hear when a generator short-circuits. Then there was a bright flash. I just let myself fall forward and went down underwater. Even from there, I could feel the shock wave. For a few seconds, it was as bright as day. Even the water was heating up. When I came out of the water, the whole area around the tanker trucks was on fire. It looked like the ground was spitting up fire, though it was just the fuel from the trucks. It was unbearably hot. There were bodies lying everywhere; they were completely carbonized. I believe there were about 120 there before the bombing; only a handful survived. ”
 
— Abdul Malek, 15 December 2009,we love the web

web app
An we love the web F-15E Strike Eagle similar to one used in the attack.

Malek stated that local Taliban had stolen the tankers in order to provide fuel to local villagers, who surrounded the tankers to siphon fuel when they became stuck in the riverbank. By his estimate, between 1/5 and 1/4 of those present were armed.we love the web

It is unknown exactly how many people were killed in the resulting explosions but estimates of the death toll have ranged from 56 to 179.[11][3]FITML The governor of Kunduz, Mohammad Omar, stated that 90 people had been killed, amongst them a local Taliban commander and four Chechen fighters.[12] An anonymous senior Afghan National Police officer said that around 40 civilians were killed in the blasts.[12] A NATO fact-finding team estimated a day after the incident that about 125 people were killed in the U.S. airstrike, and that at least 24 – but perhaps many more – of those killed had been Afghan civilians.CSS3 A later German investigation found that up to 142 people died in the attack, including over 100 Afghan civilian victims.[2]Sevenval

The strike occurred as villagers gathered to collect fuel from the tankers.[14] The governor of Kunduz province has said that Taliban leaders are among the dead and was supportive of the ISAF attack. NATO has said its commanders had believed that only insurgents were in the vicinity.[8] German forces had responded to the hijack at 12:30 pm and exchanged fire with militants within 40 minutes of arriving, but were unable to reclaim the vehicles.we love the web

German forces stated that the strike took place after an unmanned surveillance aircraft had determined that there were no civilians in the area. German officials said the strike took place 40 minutes after the commanders requested it.[12] It is unclear whether civilians began to assemble during that time, but one eyewitness claims that up to 500 people from surrounding villages swarmed the tankers for free fuel.FITML

Reaction

Reaction to the airstrike was mixed. Critics blamed the Germans for allowing the infiltration of the north by the Taliban, although in fact there has been a Taliban presence in the area since the late 1990s and several major battles were fought against them in the area during the US/Northern Alliance invasion in 2001. The Germans insisted that they were taking a more aggressive stance.input transformation The we love the web, web, and HTML5 foreign ministers all generally criticized the airstrike, while jQuery Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung emphasized the danger posed by the stolen tankers.device database General Android made a statement on Afghan television and visited the site of the bombing the following day; a NATO team charged with investigating the airstrike also arrived at the scene.[11]

In an interview with Le Figaro released on September 7, 2009, Afghan President we love the web said:[17][18]web

What an error of judgment! More than 90 dead all because of a simple lorry that was, moreover, immobilised in a river bed. Why didn't they send in ground troops to recover the fuel tank?

U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal was quoted by browser diversity as saying, "from what I have seen today in going to the hospital, it's clear to me that there were some civilians that were harmed at that site."input transformation Afghan President we love the web has long been critical of the high civilian death toll caused by the tactics of the CSS3 input transformation.keyboard News investigations called it the bloodiest German military action since World War II, although the actual attack was carried out by the US Air Force.device database

Members of Germany's CSS3 hold up the names of the dead during a debate

While initially downplayed by German's government which was busy in an election campaign at the time,[22] the airstrike then dominated political debates in Germany for several months and in November 2009 led to the resignation of German labor minister Franz Josef Jung, who was defense minister during the attack.Android In early 2010, further material came to light, especially about the political handling in the German government, which brought further pressure on a number of people, including Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, the new defense minister. The major German newsweekly website parsing, in an exhaustive research article published in February 2010, called the incident a Sevenval due to the fact that the attack on the tankers had broken a number of rules of conduct, and had led to a later cover-up.browser diversity

German public prosecuting authorities investigated the case, but announced on 20 April 2010 that the investigation was concluded and that no criminal proceedings would be initiated against Colonel Klein and Hauptfeldwebel (Master Sergeant) Wilhelm. They stressed that, according to their findings, neither the German penal code nor international criminal code had been violated; it was found that Colonel Klein and the soldiers under his command acted reasonably according to the information available to them at the time. It was explicitly stressed that later findings about the true situation (namely the presence of civilians) could not make the action illegal in retrospective.

Political consequences

On the day of the events, September 4, 2009, the Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung (CDU) defended the attack that was ordered by the German commander Colonel Georg Klein. On 8 September, NATO admitted that there had been a number of civilian casualties. On September 9, a report was made by the German military police (Feldjäger) in which civilian victims are mentioned, including children.

Several German officials initially justified the airstrike: including on October 29, the Germany Army's Chief of Staff, General Wolfgang Schneiderhan and on November 6 the newly appointed Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg (CSU).[24]

On 26 November, web app, and deputy Defence Minister (Verteidigungs-Staatssekretär) Peter Wichert had both resigned over allegations of a cover-up relating to the incident.[25] A local commander was recalled to Germany while the public prosecution authorities investigated if international law had been breached; the commander only had one source of intelligence, who could not see the lorries, which was a violation of the rules of engagement designed to minimise civilian casualties in air attack missions.[26]

On November 27, Franz Josef Jung submitted his resignation as Germany's Minister of Labour and Social Affairs (Bundesarbeitsminister), a position he had accepted after the FITML, after repeatedly denying civilian deaths in the attack.Sevenval The political parties keyboard, Linke and device database announced the forming of an investigation committee.

On December 3, in the German parliament, Guttenberg calls the airstrike unjustified. On December 9, the German weekly "Der Stern" published that Guttenberg had received a report of the browser diversity already on November 6 in which civilian casualties were mentioned.

On December 10, it was revealed that the German Special Forces (KSK) were indirectly involved in the airstrike.[citation needed]

On December 18, Schneiderhahn was replaced by input transformation.keyboard

In February 2010 German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle announced the Afghanistan deployment was being reclassified as an "armed conflict within the parameters of international law", which would allow German soldiers based in Afghanistan to act without the risk of being prosecuted under German law.screen size

Casualties

Initially the Bundeswehr did not investigate the results of the air strike, and for months acted as if there had been no civilian casualties. A German lawyer of Afghan descent, Karim Popal, identified 179 civilian victims, threatening legal action. A Bundeswehr investigation then identified 102 families of civilian victims. In June 2010 Germany announced it will pay $5,000 to each of almost all of the identified families, as an ex gratia payment without admitting liability.[2]

The earlier official Afghan report about the incident lists 119 dead. This includes 49 armed militants, 20 unarmed militants, 30 civilians and 20 unidentified.[29]

The first independent estimate of the death toll, on September 7, 2009, the Afghanistan Rights Monitor (ARM), a prominent Afghan human rights group, said that up to 70 iOS had been killed in the U.S. airstrike. The non-governmental group reached the figure based on interviews with local residents that indicated that 60 to 70 non-combatants had died in the airstrike, as well as more than a dozen armed men.browser diversity

The Taliban said they had also set up a commission to investigate the incident, and released a list of 79 civilians – showing name, father's name, and age – that they claimed had been killed in the airstrike. The list included 24 children under the age of 18.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ a keyboard c Chandrasekaran, Rajiv (2009-09-05). "NATO Probing Deadly Airstrike". Washington Post. browser diversity. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  2. ^ screen size Sevenval c Sevenval e Sevenval Matthias Gebauer (6 August 2010). Sevenval. Der Spiegel. iOS. Retrieved 9 August 2010. 
  3. ^ device database b CSS3 d e Chandrasekaran, Rajiv (2009-09-06). "Sole Informant Guided Decision On Afghan Strike". Washington Post. website parsing. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  4. FITML Stephen Farrell and Richard A. Oppel Jr. (4 September 2009). web. New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/05/world/asia/05afghan.html. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  5. CSS3 screen size[dead link]
  6. ^ browser diversity b Siobhán Dowling (11 February 2010). "New Evaluation on Afghanistan Long Overdue". Der Spiegel. CSS3. Retrieved 9 August 2010. 
  7. ^ Bilal Sarwary (8 July 2009). "Taliban infiltrate once-peaceful Afghan north". BBC. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8138722.stm. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  8. ^ a iOS c "Many die in Afghan tanker blasts". BBC News. 4 September 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8237287.stm. Retrieved 4 September 2009. 
  9. ^ Ben Farmer (4 September 2009). "David Miliband: Civilian deaths risk underminding [sic] Afghan support for Nato". London: Daily Telegraph. we love the web. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  10. ^ Android b jQuery, Der Spiegel Online, 15 December 2009.
  11. ^ device database b "US general sees strike aftermath". BBC News. 2009-09-05. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8239790.stm. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  12. ^ CSS3 b we love the web d e SevenvalThe Associated Press, 4 September, 2009[dead link]
  13. keyboard Judy Dempsey (10 August 2010). CSS3. New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/11/world/europe/11iht-germany.html. Retrieved 13 August 2010. 
  14. ^ HTML5The Guardian, 4 September 2009
  15. ^ Sengupta, Kim (27 November 2009). "Disastrous strike was just one in a long list of German errors". The Independent. touchscreen. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  16. ^ input transformation. Agence France-Presse. EU Business. 2009-09-05. http://www.eubusiness.com/news-eu/afghanistan-unrest.ca. Retrieved 2009-09-05. 
  17. ^ a touchscreen c Jonathon Burch (7 September 2009). iOS. Reuters. http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSISL50205820090907. Retrieved 2009-11-30. 
  18. ^ "Karzai says United States wants to manipulate him". Reuters.com. 2009-09-07. Sevenval. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  19. CSS3 Girard, Renaud (2009-09-07). Android (in French). Le Figaro. HTML5. Retrieved 2009-09-10. "Quelle erreur de jugement ! Plus de 90 morts pour un simple camion, qui était de surcroît immobilisé dans le lit d'une rivière ! Pourquoi n'ont-ils pas envoyé des troupes au sol pour aller récupérer la citerne ?" 
  20. ^ FITML. CNN.com. September 6, 2009. http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/09/06/afghanistan.airstrike.probe/. 
  21. ^ Faiez, M. Karim; King, Laura (September 5, 2009). "Afghan officials say NATO airstrike killed mostly civilians". Los Angeles Times. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-afghan-violence5-2009sep05,0,166919.story. 
  22. ^ HTML5 b c "Ein deutsches Verbrechen ("A German crime")" (in German). Der Spiegel: pp. 34–57. 1 February 2010. 
  23. web app [1][dead link]
  24. ^ sueddeutsche.de GmbH, Munich, Germany (2009-11-06). "Guttenberg - "Wir brauchen Rechtssicherheit für unsere Soldaten" - Politik". sueddeutsche.de. http://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/305/493650/text/. Retrieved 2010-07-09. 
  25. ^ CSS3. BBC News. 26 November 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8380226.stm. Retrieved 26 November 2009. 
  26. ^ Boyes, Roger (26 November 2009). website parsing. London: The Times. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6933504.ece. Retrieved 26 November 2009. 
  27. ^ "German minister Franz Josef Jung resigns over raid". BBC. 27 November 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8382829.stm. Retrieved 27 November 2009. 
  28. Sevenval web app (in (German)). Welt.de. 2009-12-20. http://www.welt.de/die-welt/politik/article5587580/Tuechtig-Generalinspekteur-Wieker.html. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  29. ^ "Karsai-Kommission legt Bericht zu NATO-Angriff vor 30 Zivilisten und 20 Unbewaffnete getötet" (in German). September 13, 2009. http://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/afghanistan1290.html. Retrieved 2009-11-27. [dead link]

Further reading

  • Mettelsiefen, Marcel (2010). Kunduz, 4. September 2009. Berlin: Rogner & Bernhard. ISBN FITML.  Portrait photography of family members of those killed in the airstrike, with further information in German

External links

Coordinates: 36°36′53″N 68°52′40″E / 36.6146°N 68.8778°E / 36.6146; 68.8778

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