From the Los Angeles Times
Afghan President Karzai visits scene of deadly American-led raid
He
assures villagers that those responsible for civilian deaths will be
punished. His government and the U.S. military continue to differ over
the toll in the Aug. 22 strike.
By M. Karim Faiez and Laura King
Special to The Times
1:09 PM PDT, September 4, 2008
KABUL,
Afghanistan —
President Hamid Karzai paid a condolence visit today to a remote
western region that was the scene of a controversial American-led raid
last month, pleading for forgiveness and assuring villagers that those
responsible for civilian deaths would be punished.
The president's visit to the Shindand district of Herat province
underscored the lingering ill will over the Aug. 22 strike, official
accounts of which remain at wide variance. The U.S. military has
acknowledged killing 35 insurgents and seven civilians in the Special
Forces strike carried out jointly with Afghan forces in the village of
Azizabad; the United Nations and the Afghan government say 90 people
were killed, about two-thirds of them children.
Investigations into the incident continue, but none of the parties has
substantially altered initial assessments of the number and nature of
the casualties.
Across the border in Pakistan, angry protests continued over an unusual
cross-border incursion by U.S. troops early Wednesday in which as many
as 20 people were killed, many of them thought to be civilians. The
Pakistani parliament passed a resolution today condemning the raid in
South Waziristan, a day after the Pakistani government lodged a strong
diplomatic protest with the U.S. ambassador.
But the strike appeared to signal growing U.S. determination to
unilaterally strike at militant targets in Pakistan's largely
ungoverned tribal areas.
Underscoring that, villagers and officials in North Waziristan today
reported a missile strike they said they believed was carried out by a
U.S. aircraft, an unmanned Predator drone. The attack reportedly killed
eight people, five of them identified by local officials as
"foreigners." That term is often used to describe Al Qaeda militants
from Arab countries or Central Asia. It was not immediately known
whether any was a high-profile insurgent figure.
In Afghanistan, Karzai has been facing plummeting popularity caused in
part by disillusionment over the country's slow pace of recovery and
continuing violence in the nearly seven years since the fundamentalist
Taliban movement was toppled by a U.S.-led invasion.
Facing an election contest next year, the Afghan leader has sought to
distance himself from some actions by Western troops who are battling
an increasingly powerful insurgency, but also inadvertently causing
growing numbers of civilian deaths.
"It has been five years that I have been working days and nights to
avoid such incidents, but I was not successful," the president's office
quoted him as telling villagers at a mosque in the Shindand district,
not far from the site of the raid.
"If I had been successful, the sons of Azizabad would not be steeped in
their own blood," added Karzai, who repeated the government's previous
assertion that 90 people had been killed in the strike.
The president's office also disclosed today that the Afghan leader had
spoken with President Bush a day earlier and said that Bush expressed
sorrow over the Azizabad deaths.
"Both presidents discussed ways of preventing civilian casualties," the
statement said. Karzai told villagers that those responsible for the
strike "will be brought to justice and punished" but offered no details.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times