"Them boys over in 'Vitnam' can't bomb an outhouse without my permission." - Lyndon Baines Johnson (circa 1966)
"Hey, hey, LBJ! How many boys did you kill today?" - Hippie chant of the sixties
Marines can't fight back against terrorists because of new orders
ALFRED de MONTESQUIOU- Associated Press Writer - 8/13/2009
DAHANEH, Afghanistan- The British jet called in by the U.S. Marines had the
Taliban position in sight, but the pilot refused to fire, a decision that
frustrated Marines on the ground but one in line with new orders by the top U.S.
commander to protect civilians.
The Marines themselves didn't attack terrorists shooting at them Wednesday
because women and children were in the compound, an approach meant to avoid
civilian casualties at all costs.
"They did that on purpose," sniper platoon leader 1st Lt. Joseph Cull, 28, of
Delafield, Wisconsin, said of the Taliban. "They are trying to bait us."
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, has
made protecting Afghan civilians his top priority. The approach is a shift away
from a military mindset whose traditional first response has been to kill as
many militants as possible. By holding fire McChrystal hopes to avoid the
massive civilian casualty cases of past months and years and help win over
Afghan villagers.
U.S. Marines have been locked in battle with insurgents in Dahaneh in Helmand
province after they stormed into the Taliban-held town early Wednesday.
Militants have been lobbing rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and heavy machine
gun fire at the U.S. troops.
The troops hope to break the Taliban grip in Dahaneh, sever smuggling routes and
protect civilians from Taliban reprisals so Afghans can vote here during the
Aug. 20 presidential election, which the Taliban have vowed to disrupt.
The Marines locked in on a Taliban position Wednesday in a cave in a nearby
mountain, from which militants were firing heavy weapons. The troops called for
an airstrike against the position, but the British Harrier jet that responded
refused to fire its missiles because British rules of engagement require the
pilot himself to identify the target, not just troops on the ground.
Each country in the more than 40-nation NATO-led coalition in Afghanistan has
its own rules of engagement that apply to specific battle situations, but
McChrystal's order to protect civilians applies to all forces in the country.
"Sure, that's frustrating, but we've got to deal with it," said Capt. Zachary
Martin, commander of Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines.
Some 400 Marines and 100 Afghan troops moved into Dahaneh early Wednesday by
helicopter and ground convoy. The troops took heavy fire from insurgents for
most of the day, killing up to 10 militants after calling in an airstrike on an
insurgent position.
But even that airstrike was carried out with great care.
Militants first started firing from the position about 5 a.m. Ground commanders
wanted an airstrike called in on the position to help protect Marines receiving
fire. But superior officers wanted to be certain there were no civilians there.
Once Martin had established with near certainty that there were not, an
airstrike hit the compound _ hours after the Marines first received fire.
The Marines say they can avoid civilian casualties with the help of the
sophisticated surveillance technology they have. Strict orders have also been
issued for the Marines to use proportional response when attacked.
But many of the riflemen voiced frustration at the limited options they were
left with when trying to expand control of the town on Wednesday. The orders to
hold fire appeared to have slowed their advance in Dahaneh, where after a full
day they held only a small foothold outpost.
On Thursday the Marines expected another day of intense combat as they pushed
deeper into the town. Insurgents seemed unwilling to fight overnight, when they
can't match the Marines' night vision capabilities. But after the sun came up
early Thursday, the first rounds of fire erupted.
"Right on cue!" shouted Sgt. Ryan Kelsey, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as the
first shots rang out.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan, two separate roadside blasts in southern Afghanistan
killed 14 civilians, including three children, underscoring the high price paid
by ordinary people in the conflict with the Taliban, officials said Thursday.
Officials blamed the blasts on Taliban militants, who have made roadside
bombings their primary weapons.
A blast on a road in the Gereshk district of Helmand province ripped through a
vehicle carrying a family on Wednesday, killing 11 people, including two women
and nine men, said Daud Ahmadi, the spokesman for the provincial governor.
In neighboring Kandahar province, three children were killed after they started
playing with another bomb which they had found on the side of the road west of
the provincial capital, police official Mohammad Shah Khan said. The victims
were between 8 and 12 years old.
Southern Afghanistan is the center of the Taliban-led insurgency, where
thousands of additional U.S. troops were deployed this year to try to reverse
the militants' gains and create conditions for next week's presidential
election.
According to figures from the U.S.-based Joint Improvised Explosive Device
Defeat Organization, the number of incidents from IEDs soared to 828 last month,
the highest level of the war and more than twice as many as in July 2008. The
majority of the victims in such attacks have been civilians.
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Marines and Army sources have also reported being attacked by insurgent forces wearing "burkas" (the islamic woman's head to toe robe with face covering veil). This causes confusion and hesitation to return fire, and results in American casualties. You can talk to a Vietnam or Korean War veteran to learn about similar violations of the Laws of Armed Conflict by the enemy. It seems that the United States wears the "white hat" and fights fair but the other side doesn't have to.
In fact we go well beyond fighting fair. We handicap ourselves by imposing politically-inspired Rules of Engagement on our fighting men which stack the deck against them, give the enemy an unfair advantage, and endanger their lives.