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Raid on Khataba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US attack on Afghan residence in the War in Afghanistan
Raid on Khataba
Part of theWar in Afghanistan
TypeRaid
Location
33°36′00″N69°13′01″E / 33.60000°N 69.21694°E /33.60000; 69.21694
Date12 February 2010 (2010-02-12)
4:00 a.m. (UTC+04:30)
Executed by75th Ranger Regiment
Casualties5 killed
Khataba is located in Afghanistan
Khataba
Khataba
Location of Khataba within Afghanistan
Eastern Afghanistan

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TheRaid onKhataba, also referred to as theraid onGardez, was an incident in theWar in Afghanistan in which five civilians, including two pregnant women and a teenage girl, were killed by U.S. forces on February 12, 2010.[1][2] All were shot whenU.S. Army Rangers[3] raided a house in Khataba village, outside the city ofGardez, where dozens of people had gathered earlier to celebrate the naming of a newborn baby.[4][5] Initially, U.S. Military officials implied the three women were killed before the raid by family members, reporting that the women had been found "tied up, gagged and killed."[6] But investigators sent by the Afghan government reported, based on interviews and pictures of the scene, that the special operation forces removed bullets from the victims' bodies and cleaned their wounds as part of an attempted coverup.[7] NATO denied this allegation, and Afghan investigator Merza Mohammed Yarmand stated, "We can not confirm it as we had not been able to autopsy the bodies."[6] The US military later admitted that the special operations unit killed the three women during the raid.[8]

Response

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NATO and the UN claimed to "not know of such an incident", but press leakage led to a full investigation of the killings, but the bodies of the deceased were buried according to religious tradition before NATO could conduct autopsies to confirm the allegations.[8] Insisting that the deaths were a "terrible mistake",[9]Vice AdmiralWilliam McRaven, head of theJSOC, the command over the unit which conducted the raid, visited Khataba two months after the raid. He apologized, accepted responsibility for the deaths, and made a traditional Afghan condolence offering of sheep.[10] The soldiers that had conducted the raid faced no disciplinary measures since they had followed the "rules of engagement".[11]

In media

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References

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  1. ^Cavendish, Julius (April 9, 2010)."US Special Forces apologise for botched night raid".The Independent. London.
  2. ^Starkey, Jerome (March 15, 2010)."Survivors of family killed in Afghanistan raid threaten suicide attacks".The Times. London. Archived from the original on July 15, 2011.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (login required; )
  3. ^Naylor, Sean. Relentless Strike. St. Martin's Press. New York, NY. 2015. page 369.ISBN 978-1250014542
  4. ^Starkey, Jerome (April 5, 2010)."US special forces tried to coverup botched Khataba raid in Afghanistan".The Times. London. Archived fromthe original on May 31, 2010.
  5. ^The Nation (April 5, 2010)"After denials, US admits Feb. killing of Afghan women"
  6. ^abOppel, Richard A.; Abdul Waheed Wafa (2010-04-05)."Afghan Investigators Say U.S. Troops Tried to Cover Up Evidence in Botched Raid".The New York Times. Retrieved2011-09-02.
  7. ^AllGov.com (April 6, 2010)"NATO Admits U.S. Forces Killed Innocent Pregnant Women in Afghanistan"
  8. ^abTucker Reals (April 5, 2010)."Afghans: U.S. Troops "Covered-Up" Civilian Deaths". CBS News.
  9. ^Staff (April 9, 2010)."Special Forces chief begs forgiveness for killing five innocents". Edinburgh: The Scotsman.
  10. ^Julius Cavendish (April 8, 2010)."US military offers sheep in apology for Afghanistan deaths". Christian Science Monitor.
  11. ^Jeremy Scahill (June 1, 2016),"Pentagon: Special Ops Killing of Pregnant Afghan Women Was 'Appropriate' Use of Force". The Intercept_.
  12. ^"Dirty Wars". 18 October 2013 – via IMDb.

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