Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

Afghanistan War 10th Anniversary: Protests, Vigils, Exhibits

October 1, 2011

Express your opposition to the continuing Afghanistan (not to mention Iraq, Libya, and Yemen) at the peace rallies and marches to be held around the US this coming week. [See financial cost of wars.]

!0th Anniversary Afghanistan War Events

  • Albuquerque, NM, Sat Oct 8, 11 am, UNM Bookstore, Anti-war protest, sponsored by ANSWER Coalition.
  • Boston, MA, Sat Oct 15, 4:30 pm, Park Street Station at Boston Common (Park & Tremont), Ant-war rally. [More info]
  • Los Angeles, CA, Fri Oct 7, 4:30 pm, Westwood Federal Building, 11000 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90024, vigil, die-in, march, sponsored by Answer Coalition. [More info]
  • Minneapolis, MN, Fri Oct 7, 4:30 pm, Anti-war vigil, Hennepin/Lyndale Ave. at Vineland & Oak Grove, Minneapolis, sponsored by Minneapolis Peace Action Coalition. [More info]
  • NY City, NY, Fri Oct 7, all day, Outreach and Flyering, sponsored by ANSWER Coalition. [Sign up online]
  • San Francisco, CA, Thu Oct 6, 3 pm, Federal Bldg plaza, 7th & Mission, Anti-war sponsored by October2011 coalition. Speakers include Kevin Danaher (co-founder Global Exchange); Michael Eisenscher (Nat’l Coordinator, US Labor-assemblies Against the War); Henry Clark (Executive Director, West County Toxics Coalition); Ed Holmes (SF Mime Troupe actor, AKA “Dick Cheney”); Patty Bennett (Military Families Speak Out); Carol Denney (Berkeley singer/songwriter). Afterwards, convene at SF Public Library, Koret Aud, for discussion. [Email for more info]
  • San Francisco, CA, Thu Oct 6, 5 pm, University of San Francisco, “Windows and Mirrors: Reflections on the War in Afghanistan”, Interfaith peace vigil 5 pm in Kalmanovitz Amphitheater, followed by Opening Night Reception 5:50 – 7 pm in McLaren 251, sponsored by AFSC, Islamic Culteral Center of N. CA, and USF. [More info]
  • San Francisco, CA, Fri Oct 7, 4:30 pm, Federal Bldg plaza, 7th & Mission, vigil, die-in, march, sponsored by ANSWER Coalition. [More info]
  • Seattle, WA, Fri Oct 7, 4:30 pm, Seattle Central Community College, Broadway and Pine, vigil and march to Westlake, sponsored by ANSWER Coalition.
  • Trenton, NJ, Fri Oct 7, 12 noon – 1 pm, Statehouse Steps, 125 W. State Street , followed by vigil on Morrisville side of the Trenton Makes Bridge, sponsored by Coalition for Peace Action. [More info]
  • Washington, DC, Thu Oct 6, 9 am, Freedom Plaza, Anti-war rally, sponsored by October2011 Coalition. [More info]
  • Washington, DC, Thu Fri 7, War Voices Art Show, sponsored by United for Peace and Justice. [More info]

Related Previous Peace Pundit Posts

Cost of US Wars is Unknown

August 23, 2011

Congress appointed a “super-committee” that is charged with figuring out how to balance the budget, by early December, or else significant percentage cuts across the board will supposedly be triggered. Obviously, the US military budget should be cut, but by how much? It is hard to know, when much of the actual cost of fighting at least three wars in the middle-east and Central Asia is unknown, according to a Brown University study published recently.

True Cost of US Wars Unknown

Nancy A. Youssef, McClatchy Newspapers, 16 Aug 2011

When congressional cost-cutters meet later this year to decide on trimming the federal budget, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq could represent juicy targets. But how much do the wars actually cost the US taxpayer?

Nobody really knows.

… Congress has allotted $1.3 trillion for war spending through fiscal year 2011 just to the Defense Department. … In a recent speech, President Barack Obama assigned the wars a $1 trillion price tag.

But all those numbers are incomplete. Besides what Congress appropriated, the Pentagon spent an additional unknown amount from its $5.2 trillion base budget over that same period. According to a recent Brown University study, the wars and their ripple effects have cost the United States $3.7 trillion, or more than $12,000 per American.

Lawmakers remain sharply divided over the wisdom of slashing the military budget, even with the United States winding down two long conflicts, but there’s also a more fundamental problem: It’s almost impossible to pin down just what the US military spends on war.

According to Defense Department figures, by the end of April, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan … had cost an average of $9.7 billion a month, with roughly two-thirds going to Afghanistan. That … is roughly the entire annual budget for the Environmental Protection Agency.

… NASA could have launched its final shuttle mission in July, which cost $1.5 billion, six times for what the Pentagon is allotted to spend each month in those two wars.

What about Medicare Part D, … which cost a Congressional Budget Office-estimated $385 billion over 10 years? The Pentagon spends that in Iraq and Afghanistan in about 40 months.

In Afghanistan … the US military spent $1.5 billion to purchase 329.8 million gallons of fuel for vehicles, aircraft and generators from October 2010 to May 2011. That’s a not-unheard-of $4.55 per gallon, but it doesn’t include the cost of getting the fuel to combat zones and the human cost of transporting it through hostile areas, which can hike the cost to hundreds of dollars a gallon.

Just getting air-conditioning to troops in Afghanistan, including transport and maintenance, costs $20 billion per year, retired Brig. Gen. Steve Anderson told National Public Radio recently. That’s half [of what] the federal government has spent on Amtrak over 40 years.

In the early years of the wars Congress didn’t even demand a true accounting of war spending, giving the military whatever it needed. Now, at a time of fiscal woes and with the American public weary of the wars, the question has become how much the nation’s largest bureaucracy should cut.

“It used to be that asking how much the wars cost was unpatriotic. The attitude going into the war is you spend whatever you cost. Now maybe asking is more patriotic.”

Still, deep cuts to the Pentagon remain unpalatable to many lawmakers. The debt limit deal that Congress passed earlier this month calls for $350 billion in “defense and security” spending cuts through 2024, but that’s expected to be spread across several government agencies, sparing the Pentagon much of the blow.

However, if the 12-member bipartisan “super-committee” of lawmakers can’t agree on further federal budget cuts later this year, the law mandates across-the-board cuts of $1.2 trillion over 10 years, with half of that coming from the Pentagon. The prospect of such deep defense cuts is thought to provide a strong incentive for deficit hawks to compromise and spread the pain more broadly.

… Reducing troop levels doesn’t necessarily yield commensurate cost reductions, given the huge amount of infrastructure the military still maintains in each country.

In Afghanistan, the cost per service member climbed from $507,000 in fiscal year 2009 to $667,000 the following year, according to the Congressional Research Service. Fiscal year 2011 costs are expected to reach $694,000 per service member, even as the US military begins drawing down 33,000 of the 99,000 troops there.

In Iraq, even with the overall costs of the war declining and the US military scheduled to withdraw its remaining 46,000 troops by the end of this year, the cost per service member spiked from $510,000 in 2007 to $802,000 this year.

In fiscal year 2011, Congress authorized $113 billion for the war in Afghanistan and $46 billion for Iraq. The Pentagon’s 2012 budget request is lower: $107 billion for Afghanistan and $11 billion for Iraq.

Adm. Mike Mullen, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has called the national debt the biggest threat to US national security. Before leaving office last month as defense secretary, Robert Gates ordered his department to find ways to cut $400 billion from the defense budget over 12 years, under Obama’s orders.

“The ripple effects on the US economy have also been significant, including job loss and interest rate increases, and those effects have been underappreciated,” wrote a team of Brown University experts who authored a June report called “Costs of War.”

[Read Entire Article]

Related News Article: US Troops May Stay in Afghanistan Until 2024.

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NATO-Afghan Relations Sour Over Airstrikes

June 3, 2011

NATO airstrikes and nightime ground raids that killed Afghan civilians are sparking a backlash against NATO and US military forces, even though UN tallies show that most civilian deaths there are caused by those fighting NATO and the Karzai government. Afghan President Hamid Karzai even threatened to retaliate against NATO.

Three recent news reports chronicle this trend. Excerpts below:

Afghan Protest of NATO Raid Leaves 12 Dead

Ray Rivera, Sangar Rahimi, NY Times, May 19, 2011

Kabul, Afghanistan — A normally peaceful northern Afghan city erupted in violence Wednesday as thousands of protesters clashed with security forces after a NATO night raid that local officials claim killed four civilians. NATO defended the night operation and said the four people who were killed, two of them women, were armed insurgents …

At least a dozen people were killed as protesters armed with Kalashnikov rifles, axes, grenades and gasoline bombs battled with the police on the streets of Taloqan … in the northeast, then assaulted a small NATO base on the city’s outskirts…

Two German soldiers and three Afghan guards were also wounded in the attack, said Abdul Jabar Taqwa, the provincial governor. … Taqwa condemned the NATO raid that precipitated the riot but also blamed Taliban agents for stirring up the crowd of 3,000 to 4,000 people during what was intended to be a peaceful demonstration.

Night raids have been a source of tension between NATO and Afghan officials, including Karzai, who has said they frequently lead to civilian casualties and deepened popular distrust of the government and NATO forces.

[Read entire story]

NATO Denies Airstrike Killed Only Civilians

Ray Rivera, NY Times, May 30, 2011

Kabul — Afghan officials said Sunday that a NATO air strike killed 14 civilians, all of them women and children, in the southern province of Helmand. …

But … a … NATO official said … that nine civilians were killed in the strike, which was aimed at five insurgents who attacked a coalition foot patrol and killed a Marine. The insurgents continued to fire from inside a compound when NATO forces called in the strike.

“Unfortunately, the compound the insurgents purposefully occupied was later discovered to house innocent civilians,” the official, Maj. Gen. John Toolan, commander of NATO forces in the Southwest region, said in a statement. The general apologized for the civilian deaths on behalf of all coalition forces, … and said an investigation into the episode was continuing.

President Hamid Karzai … called the deaths in Helmand “shocking.”

[Read entire story]

Karzai Threatens NATO over Attacks on Civilians

Joshua Partlow,Javed Hamdard, Washington Post, June 1, 2011

Kabul — President Hamid Karzai on Tuesday issued an ultimatum to NATO forces to stop air strikes on Afghan homes and warned that if they don’t, the Afghan people would drive them out as they have occupying armies in the past. …

The immediate provocation was a coalition air strike on Saturday in southern Afghanistan’s Helmand province that killed nine civilians, including children. …

“From this moment, air strikes on the houses of people are not allowed,” Karzai said at a news conference at the presidential palace.

“Afghanistan is an ally, not an occupied country. And our treatment with NATO is from the point of view of an ally. If it turns to … an occupation, then of course the Afghan people know how to deal with that,” he said. Karzai added that “history is a witness how Afghanistan deals with occupiers,” and declared that if NATO air strikes continue, Afghanistan will take “unilateral action.” …

Karzai has regularly called for an end to civilian casualties, night raids by U.S. Special Operations forces, and all unilateral NATO operations in Afghanistan. But he has rarely spoken so directly about NATO forces being a potential enemy of the Afghan people.

Estimates from both NATO and other organizations, such as the United Nations, attribute the majority of civilian casualties to the insurgents rather than NATO forces.

[Read entire story]

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Taliban Defiance Undiminished by bin Laden’s Death

May 14, 2011

For those who thought the death of Osama bin Laden would help pacify the Afghan Taliban, a news report from Bloomberg news agency (excerpted below) may be disappointing.

Taliban Defiance Grows after Death of bin Laden

Eltaf Najafizada, James Rupert (Bloomberg), Friday, May 13, 2011

(05-13) 04:00 PDT Kabul — Taliban attacks and warnings of a stepped-up offensive following the death of Osama bin Laden may dampen US hopes that the al Qaeda leader’s death will encourage the militants to negotiate an end to the war in Afghanistan.

Bin Laden’s “martyrdom” will give a “new impetus” to the Taliban’s fight, the movement said May 9 in a statement on the Ansar Al-Jihad website it uses for announcements.

The declaration coincided with the group’s most ambitious attacks this year, including a two-day battle in Kandahar, the country’s second-biggest city, which killed 19 people.

US leaders have said bin Laden’s death … underscores their message to his former Taliban hosts that they should abandon violence and embrace negotiations. That’s unlikely, say analysts and former Taliban members, who point to the group’s commitment to expelling foreign forces and desire to prove that its military capability remains undiminished.

Taliban spokesmen say the movement will consider peace talks only when US-led NATO troops withdraw and Afghans are running their own country.

While the Taliban offered bin Laden shelter after his 1996 expulsion from Sudan, the 9-year-old war sparked by the Sept. 11 attacks led them gradually “to abandon al Qaeda and fight in their own land against forces they see as non-Muslim occupiers,” said Waheed Mujda, an Afghan who, with bin Laden, battled the Soviets with US support.

[Read Entire Story]

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Osama bin Laden is Dead. Bring the Troops Home.

May 5, 2011

Early reports of the US raid in Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden said that he was armed and “engaged in a firefight” with US troops, but more recent reports from the Obama administration say that he was unarmed.

It’s hard to know what was possible in the confusion of the night raid, but if bin Laden was in fact unarmed, it is too bad he was killed rather than captured.

Bringing bin Laden to justice, as President Obama said he wanted to do, would have involved putting him on trial in every country where his organization carried out terrible acts of mass murder and destruction: Indonesia, Kenya, Tanzania, Yemen, the US, and others. In Kenya and Tanzania, for example, he would have had to face hundreds of Kenyans who lost relatives or were maimed or blinded in Al Qaeda’s attack on the US embassies. In the US, he would have had to face families of those killed in the 9/11 attacks, as well as first responders. He would have been treated like the criminal he was.

But he’s dead, so let’s move on. Moving on means, among other things, ending the US-led war on Afghanistan, which was launched to punish the Afghan Taliban regime for harboring bin Laden and his cohorts and refusing to turn them over to the US. Both stated reasons for being in a war in Afghanistan are gone: 1) the Afghan Taliban are no longer harboring bin Laden and his cronies (and, it turns out, haven’t been for years), and 2) we caught bin Laden, killed him, and took possession of his body. It’s over. Time to move on.

We have about 100,000 troops in Afghanistan now, plus thousands of military security contractors (aka mercenaries). It costs about $1 million per year to keep one US soldier in Afghanistan, and that doesn’t include the cost of caring for those troops after they come home with physical and psychic trauma. The war also costs many US and Afghan lives each month. We cannot afford these terrible costs. Moving on means withdrawing the vast majority, if not all, of our troops from Afghanistan.

We don’t need 100,000 troops there.

  • We don’t need 100,000 US troops there to hunt down remaining Al Qaeda leaders. The handful that remain are probably in Pakistan — not Afghanistan — anyway. Wherever they are, our regular troops won’t find them. Bin Laden was located by CIA intelligence analysts piecing together tiny shreds of evidence over a decade, and he was killed by Special Forces troops, in this case Navy SEALs. Regular troops were not involved at all.
  • We don’t need 100,000 US troops there to keep Afghanistan from exploding into civil war. True, the west should not simply abandon Afghanistan as it did after ousting the Soviets. But peacekeeping is better done by trained peacekeepers than by trained combat soldiers. Bring in United Nations peacekeepers, as in the Yugoslavian breakup conflicts.
  • We don’t need 100,000 US troops there to fight the Taliban. They only fight us because we are there. If we leave, they will stop fighting us. Unlike Al Qaeda, they have no international terrorism agenda.

We do not need 100,000 US troops in Afghanistan.

Bring them home.

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US Drone Strikes in Pakistan Incite Resistance There and Here

April 24, 2011

As the US continues and intensifies its use of unmanned Predator drone aircraft (flown remotely by operators in the US) to strike at targets in Pakistan, resistance is increasing both in Pakistan and in the US.

Predator drone firing missile

Predator drone firing missile

On March 17, a US missile strike fired from a drone killed more than 40 people in Pakistan’s North Waziristan region. Pakistani officials claim that the dead were civilian tribal elders meeting to resolve a mining rights dispute, but the US military claims that those killed were Taliban militants.

The Pakistani government has protested the drone-strikes as a violation of their sovereignty.

Recently, two high-level meetings between US military and Pakistani intelligence officials — one in Washington DC between the US CIA Chief and the Pakistani ISI Chief and one in Pakistan between US Admiral Mike Mullen (Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff) and General Khalid Shameem Wynne (Pakistani military chief) — took place to discuss the issue.

Two days after the CIA/ISI meeting, while the Mullen/Wynne meetings were taking place, another US drone strike killed 25 or more people in North Waziristan. According to officials, those killed included 18 suspected militants, three women, and four children.

Both drone strikes sparked protests by Pakistani citizens as well as official protests from Pakistani government officials. The protests by Pakistani citizens included a mass demonstration that shut down critical NATO military supply shipments from Pakistan into Afghanistan.

Some Pakistani intelligence officials, in frustration over US drone strikes, disclosed that the US has personnel in Pakistan to refuel and relaunch the drones but may now be shutting down that operation. US officials deny the existence of military or CIA personnel in Pakistan but otherwise refuses to discuss the matter.

Meanwhile, in the US, protesters blockaded Hancock Air Base in upstate New York to protest the US military’s use of drones, resulting in 37 arrests.

Other Drone-Related News and Analysis

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Rally/March Against the Wars, April 9 (NYC) and April 10 (SF), 2011

April 6, 2011

Express your opposition to the continued wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya, at the peace rallies and marches to be held in New York City and San Francisco this coming weekend. [See financial cost of wars]

Event details:

San Francisco: Rally and March: assemble 11 am, Dolores Park; 12 noon rally; march at 1:30, [More Info]

New York City: Rally and March: 12 noon, Union Square at 14th St & Broadway; march to Foley Square at 2:30; second rally at Foley Square until 5 pm. [More Info]

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Photos from San Francisco Anti-war Rally 3.19.11

March 23, 2011

In San Francisco on March 19 2011, a large anti-war and worker-solidarity rally and march took place. Like the Interfaith Peace Vigil described in the previous post, the main purpose of the rally/march was to protest the continuation of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars/occupations, as well as to show support for workers in San Francisco around the US who are fighting to retain hard-earned collective-bargaining rights. However, in light of the attacks by the US, France, and England on Libya that same day, the rally took on an additional purpose: to protest the launching of a third costly US-led war in the Middle East.

The rally began at noon at United Nations Plaza, in intermittent rainfall. Speakers from several sponsoring organizations spoke over the course of about an hour, then the crowd of 1500 – 2000 people headed down Market Street toward several large hotels where workers’ rights are currently being contested.

Here are some photos from the San Francisco rally. Click on photos to see them larger.

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Photos from San Francisco Interfaith Peace Vigil 3.19.11

March 20, 2011

March 19, 2011, on the eighth anniversary of the start of the US-led Iraq War and the day when the US, France, and Britain launched attacks on Libya, about 200 people representing many different faith-traditions assembled in a light rain at 10:30 am in San Francisco’s Civic Center to express their opposition to the wars.

The vigil was organized by Rev. Israel Alvaran, a Methodist minister and Local 2 labor leader, and endorsed by a large number of churches, synagogues, and other houses of worship throughout SF.

Program

  • Gathering Music: Rick Phillips
  • Welcome: Dolores Perez-Priem, First Unitarian Universalist Society of SF
  • Centering Prayer: Rev. Jana Drakka, the Zenkei Sangha
  • Moment of Remembrance: Natasha Kanhai, Park Presidio United Methodist Church
  • Opening Song: “We Are a Gentle, Angry People”, Rick Phillips
  • An Invitation to Peace and Justice: Biship Otis Charles, Episcopal Church, Diocese of California
  • Passing Greetings of Peace
  • Centering Poem: Emerald O’Leary, City of Refuge, United Church of Christ, SF
  • A Responsive Litany for Peace: Rev. Donna Wood, Park Presidio United Methodist Church
  • Reflections on Peace and Justice: Rev. Jeremiah Kalandae, First Unitarian Universalist Society
  • The Word in Music: Ubi caritas et amor, Dues ibi est (Where charity and love are, God is present.)
  • Prayers for Peace and Justice:
    • Imam Khaled Hamoui, Occidentalists for the vicitims of the City of Hama
    • Peter Gabel, Network for Spiritual Progressives / Tikkun
    • Rev. Norman Fong, Minister, Presbyterian Church-USA
    • Tho Thi Do, St Boniface Roman Catholic Church
  • The Challenge of Peace and Justice: Rev. Fr. Kirk Ullery, Our Lady of Lourdes Roman Catholic Church
  • Closing Song: “Let There Be Peace on Earth”
  • Closing Prayer and Blessing: Rev. Dr. Dorsey Blake, The Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples
  • Sung Response: “Dona NobisPacem” (Grant us peace)

Below are photos from the vigil. Click on photos to see them larger.

Photos from the Anti-War rally and march that was held later the same day will be posted here in a few days.

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Show Your Opposition to the Wars, Sat. March 19, 2011

March 13, 2011

Saturday March 19, 2011 is the eighth anniversary of the US-led war in Iraq and the tenth of the war in Afghanistan. On that day, to express opposition to continuing these horrible wastes of human lives and resources, people in cities around the US will take to the streets and plazas to express opposition to the continuation of these wars.

Officially (excluding CIA personnel and military contractors), 4757 coalition troops have died in Iraq. Another 2363 have died in Afghanistan. [Source: Iraq Coalition Casualty Count] Officially, US involvement in combat operations has ended in Iraq, but actually at least 50,000 US troops remain there and many are still involved in combat operations.

According to a new United Nations report, over 8800 civilians have died in Afghanistan. The number of Afghan civilians killed in the war has increased over the past four years, reaching a new high of 2777 deaths in 2010, a 15 percent increase over 2009.

The number of civilians killed in the Iraq war is disputed. Estimates range from 109,000 to over a million.

The monetary cost? At the time of this posting, it stood at about $1,165,000,000,000 total; $779,088,000,000 for Iraq and $385,908,000,000 for Afghanistan. Check CostOfWar.com to see where the cost stands now.

Sick of it? Show your disagreement with the wars!

Attend one or more of the marches, rallies, interfaith vigils, and many other events being held around the US on Saturday March 19.

If the citizens of Egypt and Tunesia can effect major change in their countries by ignoring their disagreements, focusing on their common goal, and demonstrating in large numbers, so can we.

San Francisco

  • Interfaith Prayer Circle for Peace and Justice: 10:30 am, Civic Center Plaza (across from SF City Hall) [More Info]
  • Rally and March to Resist the War Machine: 12 noon, UN Plaza (7th & Market Streets), [More Info]
  • Los Angeles

  • Rally and March to Resist the War Machine: 12 noon, Hollywood & Vine, [More Info]
  • Chicago

  • Rally Against the Wars: 12 noon, Michigan & Congress, [More Info]
  • Washington, DC

  • Verteran-Led Rally and March to White House: 12 noon, Lafayette Park, [More Info]
  • Other Cities

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