A pile of seized drugs is destroyed guarded by Afghan police in the Kandahar, Afghanistan.   Photo AP A pile of seized drugs is destroyed guarded by Afghan police in the Kandahar, Afghanistan.  Photo AP

Nato commanders clash on orders to kill

Published: 29 January 2009 16:34 | Changed: 4 February 2009 11:25

The approach to combating the drug mafia in Afghanistan has spurred a public rift inside Nato. Top Nato commander John Craddock wants the alliance to kill opium dealers, even without proof of connection to the insurgency. Nato commanders, however, do not want to follow the order.

By Susanne Koelbl for Der Spiegel

  

A dispute has emerged among Nato high command in Afghanistan regarding the conditions under which alliance troops can use deadly violence against those identified as insurgents. In a classified document, obtained by Spiegel, the top commander, US general John Craddock, has issued a "guidance" providing Nato troops with the authority "to attack directly drug producers and facilities throughout Afghanistan."

According to the document, deadly force is to be used even in those cases where there is no proof that suspects are actively engaged in the armed resistance against the Afghanistan government or against Western troops. It is "no longer necessary to produce intelligence or other evidence that each particular drug trafficker or narcotics facility in Afghanistan meets the criteria of being a military objective," Craddock writes.

The directive was sent on 5 January to Egon Ramms at Nato command in Brunssum, Netherlands, which is currently in charge of the Nato mission in Afghanistan. He also sent it to David McKiernan, the commander of the peacekeeping force there. Neither want to follow it. Both consider the order to be illegitimate and believe it violates both the mission's rules of engagement and international law, the "Law of armed conflict."

A classified letter issued by McKiernan's Kabul office in response claims that Craddock is trying to create a "new category" in the rules of engagement for dealing with opposing forces that would "seriously undermine the commitment ISAF [the UN mission to Afghanistan] has made to the Afghan people and the international community ... to restrain our use of force and avoid civilian casualties to the greatest degree predictable."

The commander has long been frustrated by the reluctance of some Nato member states to take aggressive action against those involved in the drug trade. Craddock rationalises his directive by writing that the alliance "has decided that (drug traffickers and narcotics facilities) are inextricably linked to the opposing military forces, and thus may be attacked." In the document, Craddock writes that the directive is the result of an October 2008 meeting of Nato defence ministers in which it was agreed that Nato soldiers in Afghanistan may attack opium traffickers.

A valuable crop

The equivalent of 50 percent of Afghanistan's gross national product is generated through the production and trade of opium and the heroin that is derived from it. Of those earnings, at least 100 million dollars (over 76.3 million euros) flow each year to the Taliban and its allies, which is used to purchase weapons and pay fighters. That is the estimate given by the UN's Office on Drugs and Crime.

But the chain of people profiting from the drug trade extends further - reaching day labourers in the fields, drug laboratory workers. It goes all the way up to police stations, provincial governments and high-level government circles that include some with close proximity to president Hamid Karzai. If Craddock's order were to go into effect, it would lead to the addition of thousands of Afghans to the description of so-called "legitimate military targets" and could also land them on so-called targeting lists.

The Taliban are still responsible for the majority of civilian victims in Afghanistan. According to a United Nations report, more than half of the approximately 2,000 citizens killed last year died as a result of suicide attacks, car bombs and fighting with extremists. Nevertheless, relations between the Americans and the local population are extremely tense due the rising number of US-led air strikes and the dramatic increase in the number of civilian casualties.

Afghan villagers complain of the increase in the deaths of relatives who were mistakenly killed during military operations carried out by the Americans and their allies, such as the one carried out recently in Masamut, a village in the eastern Afghan province of Laghman. The US army announced that it had "eliminated" 32 Taliban insurgents. However, survivors claim that 13 civilians had been killed during the search for a Taliban commander. In the eyes of many Afghans the former liberators have long become ruthless occupiers.

Nato general Ramms made it perfectly clear in his answer to General Craddock that he was not prepared to deviate from the current rules of engagement for attacks, which reportedly deeply angered Craddock. The US general has already made his intention known internally that he would like to relieve any commander of his duties who doesn't want to follow his instructions to go after the drug mafia.

Back in December, central command in Florida, which is responsible for the US armed forces deployment in Afghanistan, yet again watered down provisions in the rules of engagement pertaining to the protection of civilians. According to the new rules, US forces can now bomb drug labs if they have previous analysis that the operation would not kill "more than 10 civilians."

More Features
More Spiegel
More World
Background

Privacy

Fingerprints of all Dutch citizens will be stored in their passports and a database.

Glasses

Self-adjustable glasses can change the lives of people who have no access to an optician.

GHB

Party drug GHB (or 'alcohol without the hangover') is easy to make at home.