I am the Afghanistan Blogging Fellow for Brave New Foundation. You can read my work on Firedoglake or at Rethink Afghanistan. The views expressed here are my own.

After

Before
A few weeks ago, Rep. Darrell Issa, the new Chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and the House GOP’s self proclaimed “chief watchdog,” released his agenda for upcoming investigations in the new congress. Some of the issues he intends to focus on are dubious and partisan, but others slated for investigation are very serious.
One of these serious issues is the war in Afghanistan. Politico reported at the time:
Rep. Darrell Issa is aiming to launch investigations on everything from WikiLeaks to Fannie Mae to corruption in Afghanistan in the first few months of what promises to be a high-profile chairmanship of the top oversight committee in Congress. [...]
The sweeping and specific hearing agenda shows that Issa plans to cut a wide swath as chairman, latching onto hot-button issues that could make his committee the center of attention in the opening months of the 112th Congress. By grabbing such a wide portfolio — especially in national security matters — Issa is also laying down a marker of sorts, which could cement his panel as the go-to place for investigations.
Great, if there’s one thing we need, it’s a “go-to place for investigations” in congress, especially concerning national security. And certainly most everyone agrees that “corruption in Afghanistan”, referring here to waste, fraud, and abuse by US military contractors, could benefit from much stronger oversight in congress.
But here’s the problem: the bloody occupation of Afghanistan has been dragging on for ten long years now, the long-term cost is estimated to be in the trillions. The catastrophes we’re facing are much, much worse than losing a million or two here or there in graft.
Take a look at what Paula Broadwell, a close advisor to General Petraeus, wrote about one mission on Tom Ricks’ blog.
The artillery unit, acting as a provisional infantry battalion, went on the offensive to clear a village, Tarok Kalache, where the Taliban had conducted an intimidation campaign to chase the villagers out, then create a staging base to attack 1-320th’s outposts. The village of Tarok Kalache was laden with IEDs and homemade explosives (HME) comprised of 50-gal drums of deadly munitions. Special Operations forces conducted a successful clearing raid on the village. Then Flynn introduced the Mine Clearing Line Charge (MICLIC), a rocket-projected explosive line charge which provides a “close-in” breaching capability for maneuver forces. The plan was for one team to clear a 600-meter path with MICLICs from one of his combat outposts to Tarok Kalache. “It was the only way I could give the men confidence to go back out.”
On October 6, Flynn’s unit approved use of HIMARS, B-1, and A-10s to drop 49,200 lbs. of ordnance on the Taliban tactical base of Tarok Kalache, resulting in NO CIVCAS. Their clearance of Babur, Khosrow Sofla, Charqolba Sofla, and other villages commenced October 7, aided by USSF, ABP, and an additional infantry company from B/1-22 IN. Not long after, Flynn shared one insight into the burden of command: “I literally cringed when we dropped bombs on these places — not because I cared about the enemy we were killing or the HME destroyed, but I knew the reconstruction would consume the remainder of my deployed life.”
Basically, they completely obliterated entire villages in order to “save” them. That’s disgusting and horrifying on a purely human level, but it doesn’t end there.
Joshua Foust, Research Fellow at the American Security Project, writes that these horrors might be even worse:
Nowhere in this account is there a sense that the villagers felt any ill-will toward the Americans beforehand—rather, Broadwell explicitly describes the village as being victimized by the Taliban first, then being completely obliterated by the Americans. In other words, rather than actually clearing the village—not just chasing away the Taliban but cleaning up the bombs and munitions left over—the soldiers got lazy and decided to destroy the entire settlement… “to give the men confidence.” This sounds bad enough—like a nightmare from before there was a Fourth Geneva Convention that prohibited the collective punishment and expulsion of civilians from conflict zones—but it gets worse. [...]
Look, war is hell. I have no illusions about that. But what is happening right now in Southern Afghanistan is inexcusable. There were rumors of this policy of collective punishment in the Arghandab before (see this overwrought Daily Mail story that stops right before the village actually was destroyed for an idea of what is going on), and I’m really struggling to see how such behavior does not violate Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention—that is, how this behavior is not a war crime, especially given the explicit admission that such behavior is merely for the convenience of the soldier and not any grander strategy or purpose.
This sort of abhorrent behavior is not limited to the Arghandab, either. Broadwell explicitly states that it has the Petraeus stamp of approval, and Pahjwok has reported U.S. Marines in Helmand province explicitly warning local villagers of collective punishment if insurgents hide out in their settlements. It is probably a safe assumption to say that this is a widespread phenomenon.
Staggering, isn’t it? We’re not talking about one bad moment, one soldier losing his cool and committing a crime. We might be looking at a top-down, leadership-approved policy of violating the Geneva Conventions in Afghanistan. War crimes.
We have to be careful to keep this in context. Petraeus has dramatically escalated the violence of the occupation, increasing special forces raids, air strikes, and even deploying tanks and other heavy weapons. But again, this doesn’t appear to be an isolated incident amidst the fog of war, it looks like policy.
Broadwell has attempted to walk back her piece, of course, but it just doesn’t stand up to the facts. And frankly, it’s too late for that anyway. You can’t un-tell a story, and Broadwell’s glib recounting of a village razing has already succeeded in raising serious and disturbing questions about our policy in Afghanistan.
What exactly is our policy on village razing in Afghanistan, and how does it reconcile with our stated “hearts and minds” approach to counter-insurgency? How does it reconcile with the Geneva Conventions dealing with collective punishment and expulsion of non-combatants?
Who is responsible, and accountable, for this policy in Afghanistan? Did President Obama, Secretary Gates, or General Petraeus approve the collective punishment of Afghan civilians? If not, who did? As Foust notes, “you do not call in 20+ air strikes on an uninhabited village to turn it into dust without some higher approvals.” Who’s giving these approvals?
Which brings us back to Rep. Issa and his oversight committee. He has claimed national security and our war in Afghanistan as part of his portfolio, and now it’s time to live up to that responsibility.
Our soldiers are not toys for politicians and hacks, they are not to be ordered into these situations for the sake of someone’s career, or for flashy headlines about “progress” and “rebuilding”. The people need a “chief watchdog” to investigate the occupation and ensure that anyone issuing or approving orders to commit war crimes is held accountable.
This is not about scoring political points or shaving a few bucks off the budget deficit. This is about politicians, our elected representatives, committing “waste, fraud, and abuse” of our soldiers. We need to know what’s happening, why it’s happening, and who is responsible for it.
We have clear evidence that there may be an ongoing policy of collective punishment and expulsion, war crimes under international and US law, happening in Afghanistan, and it’s time for the House oversight committee to investigate.
Contact Representative Issa here, post this article on his Facebook wall, link him to it on Twitter, or just call his office at (202) 225-3906. Tell him we need this issue investigated, and as “chief watchdog”, it’s his responsibility.



27 Comments

I don’t follow. I just see a lot of military jargon. Where are the facts that constitute the crime and what are the specific portions of the GCs violated?
Click through and read Joshua Foust’s piece(s) for the complete argument laid out.
http://www.registan.net/index.php/2011/01/13/the-unforgivable-horror-of-village-razing/
http://www.registan.net/index.php/2011/01/16/revisiting-the-village-razing-policies-of-isaf-in-kandahar/
It’s collective punishment, jpe12.
Regards, Steve
I checked the underlying post, and quite a bit of the argument is left out. What GC provisions were violated, which *specific* actions were violations: neither were delimited.
The article tells us that the village was converted into the Taliban’s armory. Destruction of materiel is a legitimate military goal.
Again, see both pieces.
From the second…
“For example, I still have a hard time believing that the Taliban would go to the expense and trouble of lining every vertical and horizontal surface with explosives in a town they had already spent a lot of money to occupy without violence. It’s just so… wasteful, and while the Taliban are many kinds of evil they are not profligate. I don’t understand where they would see the utility in doing this, at least to the extent she says. Furthermore, there is the appeal to sympathy—Flynn, the U.S. commander, was gun-shy because he lost some men under him. Without minimizing that—and I know how this sounds—but war sucks. It sucks hard. Losing men in war sucks even worse, and I am not in any way ignoring or writing off the grief and pain that causes. But that does not give you an excuse to burn a village to the ground. Part of what makes war suck, especially for Americans, is that we do not scorch the earth when we suffer losses, however tempting it may be.”
And
“I think there is a lot more to this story of what’s going on with the razing of villages to the ground. As the story evolves—as people like Broadwell realize they should actually describe what happened instead of fronting for the COIN cheerleaders—it doesn’t improve the story. I still don’t get how they square “this village is key terrain we must secure and protect” with “we must burn this to the ground and rebuild it elsewhere.” I still don’t see how it is a good idea to hand the DSG the power of titling and property deeds in an area that never had them before, or why they think that isn’t an incredibly corrupt process that is victimizing marginal and poor people in the area. Most puzzlingly of all, dropping 49,000 pounds of bombs on the village won’t necessarily destroy all the IEDs and HMEs that are in the area… and will mostly likely leave additional UXO (unexploded ordinance) behind—which is even more of a headache, since it’s often buried under rubble and difficult to remove and defuse. This only makes sense if your primary concern is the safety of your men—not the mission, not the Afghans, not the long-term consequences of wiping out villages when the Taliban occupy them. I just don’t understand it.”
This is not open and shut, my post is not intended to convict anyone, and you shouldn’t look for it to do that.
What we need is an investigation, we need all the questions answered, and we need all the evidence to be made public. That’s the point here.
Thanks for the background. I found the fact pattern kinda confusing, and don’t know a whole lot about international law.
War Crimes in Afghanistan? Time To Investigate
I am hoping that when the republicans take office next cycle they will take their power and investigate obama for war crimes
yes, they are so depraved they will investigate obama and not bush/cheney
I say GOOD
I say obama needs to be punished for being a willing, knowledgeable accessory
man I sure hope he loses, the democrats can mount a good defense against corporate policies when it’s a republican promoting them, when it’s a democrat it becomes impossible
Great news, finally someone with gonads to find out what happened to the three missing thoraxes from the autopsies from the three” suicides” at camp no, on the same night.
Then may-be follow up on the 108 suspects who died trying to come up with an answer their personal torturer/murderer wanted to hear.
You go darrell
When did the mission stop being a fight against Al Quaeda and becoming a fight against the Taliban? This is hopeless. As to Issa, he is on a fishing expedition and will throw away any fish that doesn’t have an O-Stamp. They want to redo the Starr commission gambit. This has nothing at all to do with national security. Issa’s problem is that he is opening a can of worms, or rather snakes, and some will come back to bite him.
Like Issa is really going to investigate Afghan “corruption” or war crimes. The GOP is only interested in partisan witch-hunts that embarrass the presidenct, not substantive looks at our wars…
http://sunstateactivist.org/ssablog/
~~~Mod Note: Only one blog whore per day~~~
If you believe Issa will do ANYTHING that puts the military in the slightest bad position, you must also believe in unicorns. He has one goal, and that is to harass the Obama Administration. Anything that falls outside that goal will not be considered.
Given that, Obama should take the Bush way out and not allow anyone to testify before his committee, nor supply them with documents unless ordered to do so by Obama. Let Issa try and enforce his petty subpoenas, and good luck with that. Even SCOTUS won’t get involved, or if they do, Obama can tell them to pound sand, just as Bush did.
I didn’t have a problem with this. It seems to be pretty clear.
So we are destroying entire towns just to run out a few Taliban and then WE have to pay to rebuild it?
OMG! I’ll say it again, Gates and Petraeus need to go. It should not take almost 10 years to root out Al Quaeda.
Probably when they figured out that al Qaeda had left the area, and the Taliban were the only people they could claim were enemies.
At this point, I wouldn’t blame people in Afghanistan for deciding that the Taliban are less trouble than the US military.
I wish that the Spainairds did not take bribes or political sweet talk from Obama and his Administration. THe real investigations and trials will not be held in the US or within our Government.
Agreed. Unfortunately, the Bush/ Cheney cartel’s crimes will never be exposed.
I really don’t expect the extreme right to be too interested in investigating what they started.
Obama has singlehandedly destroyed the democratic brand. perhaps forever.
It is not about AQ. Taliban are not AQ. It’s always been about world domination and oil and construction of strategic bases. No Taliban or Afghan attacked the US.
Issa is a strange dude, tho
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/17/old-smoke-gets-eyes-issas-stardom/
I figure the mob has completely taken over our country
Especially since WE set them up in the first place to fight the USSR.
FUBAR
But, but, Osama is there! Notice he hasn’t even been putting our fake videos anymore?
They don’t need him. They accomplished the take-down of America and he’s a footnote
“Time to investigate.”
Not with George Bu….errr, I mean, Barack Obama, bein’ the deciderer.
I tried reading it, but after about the sixth or seventh abbreviation I gave up. Please provide an English/Military jargon interpreter.
There’s a war on? Really? I haven’t heard anything about that in the media. There must be no deaths or casualties to report if it’s not in the media. As a matter of fact, rarely is it even discussed on the blogs anymore. Was thinking maybe all the wars ended when Obomba was elected. Don’t hear very many liberal/progressive sites discussing this at all. Wonder why…….
Hey, if Issa has the balls to do what the Dems should have been doing to Bush, all the power to him. Recklessly bombing with drones is disgusting. War crimes trials all around. And once that ball starts rolling, keep going Issa. Right back to the start of these aggressive oil grabs.
“Kennedy was informed about the anger of the South Vietnamese peasants and was shocked to learn that membership of the NLF had increased, according to US Intelligence, by 300% in a two year time span – the years when ‘Strategic Hamlet’ was in operation. Kennedy’s response was to send more military advisors to Vietnam so that by the end of 1962 there were 12,000 of these advisors in South Vietnam”
Those of you not familiar with Issa need to google him or wiki him for his past and purpose.
To think that he will have ANYTHING to do with ending wars in AfPak, Iraq, or anywhere else for that matter, is pure ignorance and folly.
Josh, you have NOT done yer homework on Issa, and that’s a great disservice to yer diary, your posits, this forum and us readers.
This asshole will make a big deal about a LOT of dem or
liberal or prog issues, raise a stink, and then back off and shift again.
To actually suggest to me, or any other reader here, that Issa will actually support an investigation that would be in line with antiwar beliefs is just plain . . . bullshit.
Yeah, I’m from CA and I know CA politicians.
You MIGHT want to search ‘Calitics’ blog for Issa info before you fail again . . . .
Sigh . . .
Harumph.
I’m not asking for Issa’s personal opinion or his party platform, I’m asking him to do his job and investigate.
Do you have a better suggestion for seeking answers, or you just wanted to make your feelings known about Issa?