Saturday, January 2, 2010

Difficulties Are Becoming Evident In Covering The Afghan War

ARRIVING IN AFGHANISTAN - U.S. Marines and sailors disembark a C-17 cargo plane on Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, Dec. 15, 2009, to support Operation Enduring Freedom. For many, this is their first deployment, and in many cases their first time outside of the United States. The Marines and sailors are assigned to the 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment. DoD photo

We Don't Know What Really Happened in Kunar -- War And Peace/Change.org

What follows is a cautionary tale, in timeline form, about the perils of investigating, reporting on, and responding to civilian casualty incidents in armed conflict.

Dec. 26 – An incident took place in a small village in Kunar province, northeastern Afghanistan, and Afghans were reportedly killed.

Dec. 27 - Local authorities claimed an airstrike by foreign forces had killed nine or ten civilians. The International Security Assistance Force, NATO’s command in Afghanistan, said the incident did not involve an airstrike and the Afghans killed in the operation were insurgents who had been planting improvised explosive devices.

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Hat Tip: War Is Boring

My Comment: Another clear example on why we are losing the "propaganda" war.

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