Bombing the Taleban prisoners
November 28, 2001 8:55 AM Subscribe
"There are hundreds of bodies in there - bodies and bits of bodies, all over the place."
The crush of the Taleban prisoner revolt at the Qala-e-Jhangi fort has Amnesty International asking what happened there... I'd like to know, too. (More here and here and here.)
However, consider what their choices were. Either die fighting, or die by execution after military tribunal. After all, the US has clearly stated that "we are in no position to take prisoners," and that the Taliban soldiers who are captured would be left to local law enforcement/Northern Alliance "justice" (our "non-interventionist" directive at work).
posted by yesster at 9:25 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by th3ph17 at 9:32 AM on November 28, 2001
Although it looks as if the Taliban fighters were shipped off to Mazar under false pretenses, following a deal from the head mullah in Kunduz to change sides, and that they reacted to the appearance of an American journalist, and a pair of CIA agents in the fort on interrogation duty. "Avoidable fiasco" is a good starting point to account for what happened. And of course, since there are no Taliban left to describe what happened, we're left either to accept the official explanation that they got what they deserved (as spouted by on-message pols such as Dana Rohrabacher) or see what inferences can be drawn from what's left of the 500 bodies in the fort.
posted by holgate at 9:39 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by yupislyr at 9:43 AM on November 28, 2001
Couldn't be. If that were true, war would be a horrible enterprise filled with, at best, an unsettling moral ambiguity. No, that's impossible. Keep on smokin' the evildoers out of their holes, boys! Woohoo!
posted by Hildago at 9:46 AM on November 28, 2001
my point is this: why not just go in and wipe them all out with nukes from the start? what's the difference if we're just gonna corral them up and use them for target practice?
we, the u.s., have said we weren't going to take any prisoners --true-- but does our refusal to deal with prisoners automatically give us the right to indescriminately execute and/or bomb [whatever] any captive prisoners that are taken by the n.a.?
posted by blackholebrain at 9:49 AM on November 28, 2001
Where do you get "corralling them up and using them for target practice?" They surrendered and were being treated as prisoners of war instead of combatants, found that change not to their liking, and un-surrendered. Should the N.A. have said "Oh, we know that the last time you surrendered you changed your mind and killed a bunch of our troops, but we'll let you do it again because you're basically good human beings."
And if you read the article, you'd see that some of them did escape.
posted by jaek at 10:08 AM on November 28, 2001
Um... I believe that we corraled them up and then they tried to use us for target practice is the way that it went. They turned it into a suicide revolt, the military reacted to protect themselves and their interests (as the military is supposed to). I just don't see the problem.
posted by eyeballkid at 10:08 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by aramaic at 10:25 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by Mack Twain at 10:25 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by chainring at 10:26 AM on November 28, 2001
"the military reacted to protect themselves and their interests"
well, ok....but given the way our government is now beginning to steamroll civil rights here in the u.s., are you saying that it's ok for the military to *smart bomb* whoever they want to protect themselves and their interests?
if so, perhaps we all should starting looking up?
posted by blackholebrain at 10:35 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by aramaic at 10:38 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by blackholebrain at 10:42 AM on November 28, 2001
Now, like magic, the problem has gone away. I don't think I am alone in thinking this is just too similar to many a 'shot while trying to escape custody' scenario.
They could easily have been surrounded and outwaited. Unless of course there were FBI and ATF folk around!
posted by srboisvert at 10:46 AM on November 28, 2001
besides, how smart of a bomb do you need if your target is fenced in a given area and has no surface-to-air weaponry?
posted by blackholebrain at 10:50 AM on November 28, 2001
Wha? I'm not sure I see the connection. So now the US gov't is going to start smart bombing our communities. I didn't see that in any of the articles.
posted by eyeballkid at 10:53 AM on November 28, 2001
posted by blackholebrain at 10:56 AM on November 28, 2001
...figuratively speaking, that is.
but just like those troops got hit with the smart bomb fragments, you can bet we'll all get hit somehow with shrapnel from emperor asscroft's anti-terror tactics.
same government, different way
posted by blackholebrain at 11:02 AM on November 28, 2001
The other side values life only as a means to an honorable death as the path to paradise. This will happen again before its over.
And wait till you see how the other side treats POWs (especially American POWs).
Its a savage country, a savage war, and if its more than you can stomach, resist the urge to knee-jerk criticize the guys fighting ON YOUR SIDE and just turn off the TV, Browser, whatever. Just quit playin' it like its still the nineties and deal with the fact that its a dif't world these days and civility will get you only so far under arabic rules of engagement.
posted by BentPenguin at 11:12 AM on November 28, 2001
I have trouble seeing the connection with what happened at Qala-e-Jhangi and our civil rights here. Those are two different conversations. Your comment splintered the volleys we had been bouncing back and forth into two different games entirely.
posted by eyeballkid at 11:24 AM on November 28, 2001
My ears just popped. Rapid decompression of credibility.
posted by skyline at 11:33 AM on November 28, 2001
And what, precisely, is that supposed to mean, beyond demonstrating a use of apostrophes better suited to an Eminem lyrics sheet? Are you suggesting that the strategy should resemble an episode of Players?
"Go back to bed America, your government is in control. Here's Love Connection--watch this and get fat and stupid. By the way, keep drinking beer you fucking morons."
posted by holgate at 11:33 AM on November 28, 2001
Frankly, I don't give one hoot what happened there. Those bastards should all be killed. They weren't sitting around peacefully in jail. They were in rebellion. They were killing people. They were in revolt. They deserved what they got.
posted by aacheson at 12:13 PM on November 28, 2001
bentpenguin:
Remember, part of the reasoning behind our "war on terror" is that the wtc terrorists were "attacking civilization itself" and we couldn't just sit back and let that happen.
and sure, the taliban will probably skin alive and then hack to death any pow's they manage to capture... or worse.
but let's see... if what you're saying is true, then in order for the civilized world to fight those hell-bent on destroying civilization as we know it, the civilized world is allowed to throw away the civility rulebook, and just kill whoever, whenever, however and wherever it pleases, right???
hmm... so that explains why we've been feeding them.
aacheson: i don't think you've studied war history very well -- the japanese tortured pows, vietnam pows were tortured... and there's not much the taliban can come up with that would be worse than anything those pows suffered.
posted by blackholebrain at 12:20 PM on November 28, 2001
Let's get this straight: you "don't give one hoot" about what actually happened, but you base your judgement that "they deserved what they got" on apparently knowing exactly what happened? ("They weren't. . . They were. . . They were. . .They were. . .") And you don't see the inherent contradiction between those two positions? Okay, let's try again. . .
If, on the one hand, you really don't care what happened, then the rest of the paragraph is otiose: what they were doing is irrelevant. "Those bastards" could have been playing Twister and they still deserved to get bombed to bits. By adopting that approach, you essentially advocate the US and their proxy troops abandoning the basic humanitarian principles that distinguish them as the defenders of "civilisation". If, on the other hand, you believe (with decent reason) that the specific actions of the Taliban prisoners brought about their own deaths, then you should not only care about what happened, but want to know it with some certainty, and thus be pleased that Amnesty wants to ascertain the real events.
Alternatively, you may just be happy to cope with simplistic, polarising opinions which don't tax your preconceptions, and be glad that there's no-one left to offer a contrary perspective. But you'll still have contradicted yourself.
posted by holgate at 12:54 PM on November 28, 2001
Blackholebrain, in fact, I was a history major and took every single "war" class that was possible to take. You are right, there was a lot of torture in the Vietnam war and the Pacific campaign in WW2. I intentionally didn't bring in the Vietnam war for that reason, and forgot about the torture in WW2. I apologize for being incorrect.
As for "then in order for the civilized world to fight those hell-bent on destroying civilization as we know it, the civilized world is allowed to throw away the civility rulebook, and just kill whoever, whenever, however and wherever it pleases, right???" That is a tough one, and the same conundrum we face over the death penalty. I don't believe it is right to kill POW's outright (like they would,) especially since we're trying to take the higher ground in this conflict. But if they surrender and then decide to rebel, we aren't going to win by being civil. They were, in theory at least, being treated within the "civil" rules of war, and they started fighting with the intention of kill their guards and escaping. It was "kill or be killed" and they were at the losing end of that little battle. I do not weep for them.
posted by aacheson at 1:42 PM on November 28, 2001
Were they revolting? Including the ones apparently tied up? You apparently seem to know more than anyone actually on the scene.
It is not something that keeps me up at night or worries me.
Go back to bed. Your government is in control. Keep drinking beer.
As for your snobby comment of: "happy to cope with simplistic...to offer a contrary perspective." You can get of [sic] your high-horse now. You might want to look in the mirror when you say something like that.
You've already admitted that you're happy not to look too closely at the conduct of those who fight in your name, which suggests that you might not like your own reflection.
posted by holgate at 1:52 PM on November 28, 2001
I can not understand that some of you condone the killing of unarmed prisoners. It would sure bediffreent if you were on the receiving end.
posted by farmen at 2:14 PM on November 28, 2001
Yes, you're right. They should have asked the revolting trojan horsers to kindly 'step aside' from those still bound so that loose and armed ones could be dealt with seperately. Get a dose of reality!
posted by HTuttle at 2:32 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by holgate at 11:33 AM PST on November 28
The link doesn't work, but fuck you anyway, you British Prick.
posted by David Dark at 2:35 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by aacheson at 2:41 PM on November 28, 2001
thus said, we're supposed to be better at *the game* than they are, but apparently we are not.
you see, if we expect captured taliban soldiers---who hate the usa simply for what it represents---to just sit quietly with their legs folded in the corner of the usa-imposed prison like punished little schoolboys, then we are ignorant of the taliban's 'endgame' ...and in war, ignorance of the endgame usually gets you a bullet between the eyes.
and the northern alliance have admittedly executed many taleban on their own---in quite nazi-like fashion, i might add---the same northern alliance we are calling teammates in this game.
and some have said---defending the bombing of the prisoners---that if it were really a massacre, and not just the consequences of a squashed uprising, then northern alliance soldiers would not have been killed in the numbers being reported.
but with our [usa] track record of smart bomb accuracy---and the fact that joe pilot flying an ac-130 gunship might not be able to tell [or care] who is taleban and who is n.a.---my money's on the n.a. deaths being 'collateral damage'.
and hey, i'm not weeping for them either... it's *we* that i worry about.
posted by blackholebrain at 3:13 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by mmarcos at 3:20 PM on November 28, 2001
Feel free to get out the red pen, mmarcos.
posted by David Dark at 3:29 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by Hieronymous Coward at 3:33 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by blackholebrain at 3:51 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by mmarcos at 4:01 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by holgate at 4:05 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by David Dark at 4:11 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by mmarcos at 4:19 PM on November 28, 2001
Short term perhaps, but over the long term I'm less pessimistic.
It was the Islamic Totalitarians' perception of weakness that made the US an attractive target in the first place. A revised perception of US strength, resolve, and harshness will, over time, make the US less of a target. Again, Machiavelli understood this 500 years ago. Or Thucydides: "It must be thoroughly understood that war is a necessity, and that the more readily we accept it, the less will be the ardor of our opponents."
posted by Hieronymous Coward at 4:39 PM on November 28, 2001
Prisoners of war are expected to attempt to escape. They are not expected to attempt to overpower and kill their captors - this returns them to combatant status.
posted by jaek at 4:42 PM on November 28, 2001
my little theory, in the first few minutes of the uprising, people who are actually tied up in some way are caught in crossfire. NA guards are shooting at anything that moves, those taleban who are armed are returning fire. That is chaos. Man running with gun? Shoot him. Man just running? Shoot him, or he will have a gun soon.
I [still] don't believe [hope] this is a planned conspiracy, i just think it was sloppy and probably avoidable to begin with--especially if a CIA officer fired first as mentioned in one article. The battle against the prisoners is justified once they are armed and inflicting casualties, and with enough firepower to perhaps escape.
Me, personally, if i was about to question a prisoner he would be secured for his own safety as well as my own.
Sloppy. War-ish. Yeah. On purpose? probably not. Avoidable, most likely the Scale was avoidable.
and isn't Holgate merely saying that we [amerikans] should care about what happened and why? Why is that high-and-mighty? I want to know why it happened. From a humanitarian standpoint, from a political standpoint of keeping to 'moral' high ground, and lastly, from a Tactical standpoint. It was sloppy and costly...regardless of the Why.
posted by th3ph17 at 5:00 PM on November 28, 2001
There is so much in this war that are on the grey lines of right and wrong. I have so many issues with it. I have issues with giving help and money to the Northern Alliance, who haven't demonstrated in the past that they're much better than the Taliban. I have issues with giving money to Pakistan, who may be helping us now, but I feel that they are a powder keg with a short fuse, and could turn nasty very easily. I have issues with how messy this type of warfare is. Who is bad? Who is good? What about the people who fought for the Taliban and then switched sides when their side started losing? I know what happened in the prison isn't as black and white as I first said, and I should know that MeFi would call me on that. The killings? Definitely sloppy. Perhaps unavoidable. Perhaps on purpose, perhaps by mistake. However, I still feel that the people in prison who started killing people removed themselves from prisoner protection under the "rules of war" and are open season. Perhaps we went overboard. But I still can't find it in my heart to weep for them. They are so hell-bent on our destruction, that I can't feel much pity from theirs.
posted by aacheson at 5:10 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by aacheson at 5:19 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by Zool at 5:56 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by wantwit at 6:50 PM on November 28, 2001
And look: I think it's "cock-up" rather than "conspiracy" here, but we ought to know for certain what went wrong. Because this cannot be repeated in other parts of Afghanistan, simply because while one bloodbath is unfortunate, several of them smack of both carelessness and callousness. Because a policy of "exterminate all the brutes" belongs in Heart of Darkness, not a modern conflict: it's unsustainable to regard everyone with a black turban (including plenty of naive and dimwitted fighters sent across the Pakistan border by their village iman) as the embodiment of evil, "hell-bent on our destruction". (Although it would be something of an ethical relief to believe so.) And because every fiasco like this weakens the moral authority that the September 11th attacks gave the US.
the fact of the matter is that amnesty international is too left wing to ever have a huge impact in the global social conscious.
It's depressing to think that a commitment to such things as ending torture and political detention is considered "too left wing". But I suspect that in the current climate, you're right.
posted by holgate at 7:09 PM on November 28, 2001
We are invited to believe that in the final appalling hours of the prisoners' revolt they were fighting to the death and by then, no doubt they were. But if that had been their intent from the start, why did they not fight to the death defending Kunduz? Were they led into a trap in the fort, then provoked into rebellion once they realised that the promises they had been given were hollow?posted by holgate at 8:11 PM on November 28, 2001
There has been a deafening official silence following the massacre, a silence in which Amnesty International has called for an investigation into how this "prisoners' revolt" began. The Taliban's foreign fighters are not innocent civilians. But how you treat a captive enemy divides the warrior from the war criminal.
posted by raysmj at 10:13 PM on November 28, 2001
posted by raysmj at 10:14 PM on November 28, 2001
Yes, why didn't they? How about some consistency from those Taliban for a change! Why on God's Green Earth would a people surrender one day and fight to the death the next? From the comforts of my office, I just can't fathom the reasoning behind the revolt! It must have been another vicious unprovoked attack by a rich fat stupid Superpower upon a poor innocent starving peaceful group of war prisoners.
Anybody feel like lending his ear to the eyewitness account? Funny, Mr. Perry says it was a British journalist, not an American one who provoked the uprising (holgate), but you know, all those Westerners sure do look alike, don't they? Must've been the beer in his hand that made that Brit seem so Americanesque!
Mr. Perry's words:
There was a guy from London and a woman. They were interviewing Taliban prisoners when the Taliban suddenly just pounced on them. They beat the British guy quite badly, but he was rescued and taken out of the fort. But that's when the Taliban grabbed guns off the Northern Alliance, overpowered them, killed at least twenty and the Northern Alliance lost control of the fort and had to withdraw.
Fucking Americans! This reeks of a staged uprising in order to create a sinister bloodbath in which the bastards could gleefully slay innocents. Honestly, they put a Brit in there? What were they thinking? (We're the hoo-li-gans... Thunk!) ;)
But, to be fair, the eyewitness report is only from a guy who was actually there, he was only reporting the facts as he saw them, and he didn't even impose his own personal morality filter on the situation...
it all seems pretty fishy to me. I don't know, should we trust him?
The part that really gets me rolling is how he seems to be implying that he was afraid to get too close to the Taliban prisoners, as if they were dangerous or something! HA HA HA! What a bonehead! Doesn't he know that these guys just surrendered? They wouldn't even fight to the death to defend Kunduz, which clearly suggests that deep down they're pacifists who now understand the futility of war! They haven't seen Natural Born Killers, which means they can't possibly know that a visit from a journalist is the best time to riot. They're really just a big bunch of teddy bears, it's not like they're going to disarm and execute a CIA agent or detonate a grenade on themselves to take out some NA officers in the process!
Are they? Well, are they?
posted by David Dark at 2:00 AM on November 29, 2001
...I don't see how anyone could not agree that this was a dismal episode, spectacularly unflattering to the U.S. - we smart-bomb trapped hysterics while our ragged 'friends', rimming the outside of what looks like a movie-set coliseum, languidly take protected potshots at whatever quivers within.
This was a mess. My entirely uninformed opinion is that it was an avoidable mess, and further, that once initial errors in judgement begat the damn thing, the U.S. should have immediately distanced itself from the martyr-building process. Instead, we contributed, in storybook fashion, to a massacre which will assuredly ripen into legend.
(On a personal note, trumpeting a talent for sleeping soundly in the midst of far-away death is an inflammatory and remarkably hackneyed twitch, and part of what caused this discussion to implode. Maybe we all could just stop it? Oh, and maybe we could toss "War is Hell" aphorisms into the bin, as well?)
posted by Opus Dark at 5:06 AM on November 29, 2001
And I damn well knew that, mea culpa: from Valdosta, in the bit of south Georgia that makes my girlfriend raise an eyebrow. (She's a native of Albany.) Although he's currently a resident of Mississippi. And yes, his comments on Waco might be applicable at this point in time.
posted by holgate at 5:25 AM on November 29, 2001
Otherwise, I might have to go bang my head against a wall.
posted by rich at 6:41 AM on November 29, 2001
british reporter -- "so tell me, how does it feel to know you have nothing to live for now as a taleban fighter in this prison, knowing at best you will be shamed---possibly tortured and even killed---by osama bin laden for surrendering to the northern alliance.... or perhaps be banished from afghanistan --your 'terrorist mecca'-- and forced to flee just across the border to pakistan where you will be shamed---possibly tortured and even killed---by osama bin laden's loyal fighters there... or even worse, you'll have to stay here and be subjected to interview after interview by arrogant, bad-breath reporters, such as myself, while you are forced to eat the colored happy meals dropped by u.s. airplanes, and then made to gaze upon the over-exposed, smooth, moist white skin of our perfumed, anglo-saxon, female journalists, such as my partner here, as she stares into your eyes, making you wish you could just rip her burqa to reveal her warm curves and free, naked flesh? yes, tell me how it feels???"
taleban prison riot begins.
posted by blackholebrain at 6:57 AM on November 29, 2001
WHETHER it was incompetence, overconfidence or duty that prompted two CIA operatives to interrogate dozens of Taleban on their own will perhaps remain a mystery.anyway, to me it's a very thorough accounting of the whole mess.
A witness said: “The fighting started when the Taleban were being questioned by two men from the CIA. They wanted to know where they had come from and whether they might be al-Qaeda.”
Both CIA operatives were dressed in Afghan robes, had grey beards and spoke Persian. One of them was known as Michael, the other as David.
Michael asked one Taleb why he had come to Afghanistan. He replied: “We’re here to kill you.”
posted by blackholebrain at 8:45 AM on November 29, 2001
Apologies if that was not clear.
posted by David Dark at 10:51 AM on November 29, 2001
I'm a WASP, descended straight from the UK. I'm often sarcastic as well, sorry you missed it. But I'm not afraid of myself, thanks. I'm still on holgate's case for his anti-American statements earlier in the thread. And the debris you speak of followed your first comment, it didn't precede it:
...languidly take protected potshots at whatever quivers within.
I rest my case. Dramatize, much?
the U.S. should have immediately distanced itself from the martyr-building process...
So we should have just given them the fort once they took control of it. Right. Good plan. Remind me to keep your name close at hand when the Secretary of Defense position opens up.
A word to the wise: If you ever find yourself in a prison, military or otherwise, and you try to revolt against the guards, you will be shot. Try to escape from the prison, you will be shot. You may be given a warning shot first if you're lucky, but you're not entitled to one, and if you do not stop running, bound or otherwise, you will be shot. They do not let you go simply because your arms are tied and you're not holding a gun. We all know this, right? We understand the prisoner/guard concept, namely, you can't have more guards than you have prisoners. In an ideal situation, the guards are the only ones who are supposed to be armed, but hey, the world's an imperfect place, isn't it. A prisoner had a grenade hidden in his shorts. Oops. Another couple prisoners had a gun or two, they made a choice to try and take over the fort, and they succeeded, for awhile. Then they were killed.
You can't romanticize this episode into something it's not. If prisoners want to riot, they can. There are always more of them. But even they understand that they are putting their lives on the line and going into battle. If they win, they earn their freedom. If they lose, they lie on the battlefield and have their shoes stolen and their gold teeth removed.
War is Hell.
posted by David Dark at 1:04 PM on November 29, 2001
Context: "if its more than you can stomach, resist the urge to knee-jerk criticize the guys fighting ON YOUR SIDE and just turn off the TV, Browser, whatever." And you think quoting "Go to sleep, America" wasn't justified in response to that? Morality is Hell.
posted by holgate at 1:12 PM on November 29, 2001
He was clearly responding to you, Dark David, and the subset of American thought you subscribe to. Assuming that those who disagree with your simplifications are anti- or un-American is pompous... even blasphemous in a democracy.
posted by skyline at 1:41 PM on November 29, 2001
I knew it! David, I could tell you were from UK stock before you even said it. The subtly understated sarcasm was a dead giveaway!
posted by dlewis at 3:00 PM on November 29, 2001
skyline: He clearly responded to me before I posted? Interesting theory. My head is swimming from the space-time continuum paradox you propose. I suggest you start at the top and read your way down. Things might become clearer. Anyhoo, I didn't assume that anyone who disagrees with my "simplifications" (HA) are anti-American. I assumed that someone sitting across the pond and snarkily quoting an American comedian telling all Americans to "watch Love Connection and keep drinking beer you fucking morons" might have some anti-Americanism lurking somewhere within that evolved spirit. Within the subset of American thought I subscribe to, "them's fightin' words!" But it's clearly not blasphemous to democracy for me to respond in kind. Simple enough for ya?
Perhaps holgate's third eye needs more squeegee-ing. Perhaps mine does, too.
posted by David Dark at 5:08 PM on November 29, 2001
posted by David Dark at 6:03 PM on November 29, 2001
This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments
The CNN site goes on to say that Taliban prisoners had taken over a building and were firing at Alliance soldiers. They also were suspected of having stolen/smuggled in explosives.
And then Alliance soliders go in there with a tank and kill those nice people. I can't believe that. It's so horrible.
posted by eyeballkid at 9:19 AM on November 28, 2001