The Delaware Gazette

UN: Drones killed more Afghan civilians in 2012

KIM GAMEL

Asso­ci­ated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan — The num­ber of U.S. drone strikes in Afghanistan rose sharply last year com­pared with 2011, the United Nations said Tues­day. The increase was a sign that unmanned air­craft are tak­ing a greater role as Amer­i­cans try to stream­line the fight against insur­gents while prepar­ing to with­draw com­bat forces in less than two years.

Drones have become a major source of con­tention between the U.S. and coun­tries like Pak­istan, where covert strikes on mil­i­tant lead­ers have drawn con­dem­na­tion and alle­ga­tions of sov­er­eignty infringe­ments as fam­ily mem­bers and other bystanders are killed.

They have not been a promi­nent issue in Afghanistan, how­ever. While drone attacks have occurred, they have largely been in sup­port of ground troops dur­ing oper­a­tions and have not been sin­gled out by Pres­i­dent Hamid Karzai’s admin­is­tra­tion in its cam­paign against inter­na­tional airstrikes.

The steep rise in the num­ber of weapons fired from unmanned aer­ial air­craft — the for­mal term for drones — raises the pos­si­bil­ity that may change as U.S. forces become more depen­dent on such attacks to fight al-Qaida and other insur­gents as com­bat mis­sions are due to end by the end of 2014.

The U.N. mis­sion in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said 506 weapons were released by drones in 2012, com­pared with 294 the pre­vi­ous year. Five inci­dents resulted in casu­al­ties with 16 civil­ians killed and three wounded, up from just one inci­dent in 2011.

Geor­gette Gagnon, the head of human rights for UNAMA, said it was the first year the U.N. had tried to doc­u­ment civil­ian casu­al­ties from drones.

The U.S. Air Force Cen­tral Com­mand also recorded an increase, giv­ing the num­bers of weapons released by drones as 243 in 2009, 277 in 2010, 294 in 2011 and 494 in 2012.

Drones are highly effec­tive and most nations have given Wash­ing­ton at least tacit agree­ment to carry out the attacks.

Peter Singer of the Washington-based Brook­ings Insti­tu­tion noted that the drone pro­gram in Afghanistan is run by the Pen­ta­gon, and there­fore is more trans­par­ent than the CIA drone coun­tert­er­ror­ism pro­gram in Pakistan.

Singer, who has writ­ten exten­sively about drones, said the num­ber of oper­a­tions in Afghanistan is increas­ing, but most are per­formed in sup­port of troops on the ground.

“This is just another sign of how drones are becom­ing the new nor­mal,” he said.

The U.N. fig­ures were released as part of its annual report on civil­ian casu­al­ties in Afghanistan. Over­all, the full-year toll of civil­ian deaths in 2012 declined to 2,754, a 12 per­cent decrease from 3,131 in the same period a year ear­lier. It was the first time in six years that the civil­ian death toll dropped.

But the toll spiked in the sec­ond half of the year as weather improved, com­pared with the same period in 2011, sug­gest­ing that Afghanistan is likely to face con­tin­ued vio­lence as the Tal­iban and other mil­i­tants fight for con­trol fol­low­ing the impend­ing with­drawal of U.S. and allied com­bat forces.

The pop­u­la­tion also faced a sharp increase in assas­si­na­tions and other insur­gent attacks tar­get­ing gov­ern­ment supporters.

Conflict-related vio­lence struck more women and girls last year as well, with 301 killed and 563 wounded — a 20 per­cent increase from 2011, the report said.

The find­ings come as the war is reach­ing a turn­ing point, with inter­na­tional troops increas­ingly tak­ing the back seat in oper­a­tions and Afghan gov­ern­ment forces in the lead.

The total num­ber of civil­ian deaths by airstrikes fell for the year after the U.S.-led coali­tion imple­mented stricter mea­sures to pre­vent inno­cent peo­ple from being killed.

The U.N. said most civil­ian casu­al­ties from drone strikes appeared to be the result of weapons aimed directly at insur­gents, but some may have been tar­get­ing errors. It cited the exam­ple of four boys killed Oct. 20 in Logar province when a drone struck after a clash between pro-government forces and insur­gents a few kilo­me­ters (miles) away from the area.

UNAMA called for a review of tac­ti­cal and oper­a­tional pol­icy on tar­get­ing to ensure com­pli­ance with inter­na­tional human­i­tar­ian law “with the expan­sion of the use of unmanned com­bat aer­ial vehi­cles” in Afghanistan.

George Lit­tle, a Pen­ta­gon spokesman, said the U.S. works hard to pro­tect civilians.

“We take great care with our unmanned sys­tems to con­duct very pre­cise tar­get­ing in Afghanistan, and we will con­tinue to do so. When there are mishaps, we take steps to work closely with the gov­ern­ment of Afghanistan and the affected indi­vid­u­als to express our con­cerns,” he said in Washington.

UNAMA said civil­ian casu­al­ties rose 13 per­cent to 4,431 in the sec­ond half of the year, includ­ing more from road­side bombs in pub­lic areas, com­pared with the same period in 2011.

That included 1,599 peo­ple killed and 2,832 wounded from July 1 to Dec. 31, a jump from 1,556 and 2,832 respec­tively in the same period the pre­vi­ous year.

It cited a grow­ing num­ber in civil­ian casu­al­ties from road­side bombs even as fewer bystanders were hurt in ground engage­ments in the country’s trou­bled south and east.

An Afghan Inte­rior Min­istry spokesman pledged to do every­thing pos­si­ble to stop the insur­gents from attack­ing civilians.

“They’re still using sui­cide bombers, they still use IEDs (road­side bombs) in the very pop­u­lated areas and they still use civil­ians as a shield in the vil­lages,” Inte­rior Min­istry spokesman Sediq Sediqi said. “The impor­tant thing is that civil­ian casu­al­ties should be decreased to zero.”

Most of the vic­tims were killed by Tal­iban mil­i­tants and other armed groups, while the num­ber of civil­ian casu­al­ties at the hands of U.S. and allied forces dropped by nearly 50 per­cent, accord­ing to the report.

“The sit­u­a­tion for civil­ians is still very dif­fi­cult in many com­mu­ni­ties and many thou­sands of Afghans are still affected by the armed con­flict, so we are again call­ing on all con­cerned to redou­ble their efforts, increase their efforts to pro­tect civil­ians,” UNAMA’s Gagnon told reporters in Kabul.

The UNAMA report attrib­uted the over­all drop in civil­ian casu­al­ties for the year to a decline in sui­cide attacks, reduced num­bers of airstrikes and “an unsea­son­ably harsh win­ter which impeded insur­gent move­ments and effects of ear­lier mil­i­tary oper­a­tions against anti-government elements.”

But it expressed con­cern about the spike in tar­geted killings and human rights abuses by armed groups, a wor­ri­some trend as the Afghan gov­ern­ment works to assert con­trol beyond its seat in Kabul.

The Tal­iban and other insur­gents were respon­si­ble for 81 per­cent of the civil­ian casu­al­ties last year, the U.N. said. The report said so-called anti-government ele­ments killed 2,179 civil­ians and wounded 3,952, a 9 per­cent increase in casu­al­ties from 2011.

Of those, 698 were killed in tar­geted attacks, often against gov­ern­ment employ­ees. That was up from 512 in 2011.

The num­ber blamed on U.S. and allied forces, mean­while, decreased by 46 per­cent, with 316 killed and 271 wounded in 2012. Most of those were killed in U.S. and NATO airstrikes, although that num­ber, too, dropped by nearly half last year to 126, includ­ing 51 children.

The death of civil­ians in mil­i­tary oper­a­tions, par­tic­u­larly in airstrikes, has been among a major source of acri­mony between Karzai’s gov­ern­ment and for­eign forces.

The U.S.-led mil­i­tary coali­tion said in June it would only use airstrikes as a self-defense weapon of last resort for troops and would avoid hit­ting struc­tures that could house civilians.

The report came a day after Karzai banned gov­ern­ment forces from request­ing for­eign air sup­port dur­ing oper­a­tions in res­i­den­tial areas amid anger over an airstrike that killed at least 10 civil­ians in north­east­ern Kunar province last week.

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