JNN 13 Mar 2012 Kabul : Sixteen Afghans, including women and children, were killed in their homes by a U.S. soldier in a pre-dawn massacre on Sunday.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the massacre as “unforgivable,” AFP reported.
“When Afghan people are killed deliberately by U.S. forces, this action is murder and terror and an unforgivable action,” Karzai said in statement.
The deranged U.S. soldier entered the homes of civilians in the southern province of Kandahar and killed 16 people, including nine children and three women, the statement said.
It quoted a wounded 16-year-old, who was shot in the leg, as telling Karzai by phone that the U.S. soldier entered their home in the dark, woke up his family members, and then shot them.
“The government and the people of Afghanistan demand an explanation from the United States government of this incident,” Karzai said.
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said it had arrested a soldier over the incident, and the commander of ISAF forces, General John Allen, condemned “this deeply appalling incident.”
He also vowed to hold “fully accountable” anyone found responsible for the killing spree.
“I cannot explain the motivation behind such callous acts, but they were in no way part of authorized ISAF military activity,” his deputy, Lt. Gen. Adrian Bradshaw, said in a statement as the U.S. rushed to offer condolences.
“The United States extends deepest condolences to the families of today’s tragic shooting and we’re saddened by this violent act against our Afghan friends,” a State Department spokeswoman said.
The U.S. Embassy in Kabul sent out an alert to its citizens in Afghanistan warning that as a result of the shooting “there is a risk of anti-American feelings and protests in coming days.”
An AFP reporter at the scene of the killings counted the bodies of 16 people, including women and children. In one house, an elderly woman screamed, “May God kill the only son of Karzai, so he feels what we feel.”
Western sources said the massacre began after a U.S. soldier walked off his base in the early hours of Sunday morning, apparently heavily-armed and carrying night-vision equipment.
He was arrested outside the base after the shooting by members of the Afghan National Army, the army corps commander in southern Afghanistan, Abdul Hameed, told AFP.
The massacre was the latest in a series of incidents that have badly frayed U.S.-Afghan relations, complicating negotiations on a strategic partnership agreement between the two countries for when U.S. combat operations end in 2014.
The treaty would likely cover the legal status of any U.S. troops remaining in Afghanistan to help Kabul with intelligence, air power, and logistics in the campaign against the Taliban.
In Iraq, Washington abandoned its pursuit of a strategic partnership deal and pulled out all its troops, leaving no residual force, after failing to convince Baghdad to grant its soldiers legal immunity.
Relations plunged to an all-time low last month after the Quran desecration at a military base near the Afghan capital, sparking anti-U.S. demonstrations in which 40 people died and forcing U.S. President Barack Obama to apologize.
During the demonstrations, six U.S. soldiers were killed when Afghan colleagues turned their weapons against them.
But there was no word on what might have motivated the soldier’s actions in Kandahar.
An Afghan government official, who described Karzai as “very angry” over the incident, said the president had dispatched the army chief of staff to head an investigation.
Pingback: American Massacres Have Been Common for Centuries by Jack D. Douglas « ~ BLOGGER.GUNNY.G.1984+. ~ (BLOG & EMAIL)
Pingback: MILITARY SERIAL KILLER MURDERS AFGHAN UNARMED & SLEEPING MEN, WOMEN & KIDS IN HOME INVASIONS-16 DEAD? « THE WORD WARRIOR Bonju Blog
Pingback: SOLDIER MURDERS AFGHANS, GENERALS MURDER SOLDIERS: It Was Only a Matter of Time… « ~ BLOGGER.GUNNY.G.1984+. ~ (BLOG & EMAIL)
Pingback: A Lone US Army Butcher? No Way, Say Afghan Witnesses! | Social & Human Rights Issues