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US apologizes after errant rocket strike kills 10 civilians in Afghanistan | An errant US rocket hit a compound sheltering Afghan civilians in the last Taliban stronghold in Helmand Province on Sunday, killing at least 10 people, including five children.
According to US military officials, the strike came after American Marines and
Afghan soldiers had been taking intense small-arms fire from a mud-walled
compound
in the area. The military said in a statement that coalition troops were aiming
at a compound from which Taliban militants were firing on Western and Afghan
forces,
but the two rockets missed their target by about 300 yards, instead hitting a
compound where civilians were sheltering. Captain Joshua Biggers, the commander
of Company K, Third Battalion, Sixth Marines, which had been engaged in the
battle,
accepted the mistake made by their troops and said: "The compound that was hit
was not the one we were targeting." Avoiding such civilian deaths has been a
cornerstone
of the war strategy by the top American commander, General Stanley A.
McChrystal,
who later apologized to Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai. "We deeply regret
this tragic loss of life," The New York Times quoted Gen. McChrystal, as saying.
Officers said that the barrage had been fired from Camp Bastion by a weapons
system
known as Himars, an acronym for High Mobility Artillery Rocket System. Its
munitions
are GPS-guided and advertised as being accurate enough to strike within a yard
of their intended targets. General McChrystal further said in a statement that
he was suspending use of the weapon system "until a thorough review of this incident
has been conducted." The Marja operation is the first major military confrontation
since US President Barack Obama ordered the deployment of an additional 30,000
US troops late last year. The main thrust of the offensive is to ease the way
for permanent government rule in the area, which has remained a durable Taliban
stronghold in the years since the 2001 American invasion. Despite the heavy fighting,
reports of allied casualties have been low. The casualty included a non-American
soldier, who was killed on Sunday by a homemade bomb in southern Afghanistan.
A senior Afghan commander, Gen. Sher Mohammed Zazai, said that there had been
no deaths of Afghan troops, who make up the bulk of the combined force. One
American
Marine and one British Marine were reported killed on the first day. |
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