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No Good Men Among the Living

Page 33

by Anand Gopal


  “Whoever is responsible should be executed”: Ibid.

  both pieces of intelligence from the rival camps: Charles H. Briscoe, Richard L. Kiper, and James A. Schroder, Weapon of Choice: U.S. Army Special Operations Forces in Afghanistan (Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press, Military Bookshop, 2003).

  a mission designated as AQ-048: Ibid.

  “there are no friendlies at the site”: Ibid.

  Aziz Mansour was staying indoors: “Aziz Mansour” is a pseudonym.

  “We never even spoke to Ghilzais in those days”: Interview with Dan Green, Washington DC, 2010.

  “Two of the four aircraft commandeered by terrorists”: Alex Belida, “US Troops Uncover al-Qaida Weapons, Model of 757 Airplane,” State Department, September 23, 2002.

  I asked Eckart Schiewek: Interview, 2009.

  Coburn found a similar dynamic in his study of Istaliff: Noah Coburn, Bazaar Politics: Power and Pottery in an Afghan Market Town (Redwood City, CA: Stanford University Press, 2011), 146.

  7 • BLACK HOLES

  Noor Agha could feel the shackles: Noor Agha’s story is based on interviews, Paktia, 2011; Anand Gopal, “America’s Secret Afghan Prisons,” Nation, January 28, 2010.

  to end his “armed defiance of the interim administration”: “Eastern Afghan Militants Wanted Peaceful Resolution: Commander,” Agence France-Presse, March 6, 2002.

  anyone caught opposing Kabul would have his house burned down: Kathy Gannon, “Guantanamo Prisoner Returns, and Is Arrested Again,” Associated Press, February 7, 2009.

  a probe into a reported theft of $3,000: Interviews, Paktia, 2011; and WikiLeaks Guantanamo Files—ISN 1001.

  “operational and logistical support for al Qaeda operations”: WikiLeaks Guantanamo Files—ISN 1001.

  “They stripped me naked, out in the open”: Nancy A. Youssef, “Did ‘Returning’ Terrorists Become Extremists in Guantanamo?,” McClatchy Newspapers, May 26, 2009.

  “We were without hope”: “Prisoners: Guantanamo: Muhammad Naim Farooq (Released),” Cage Prisoners website, http://old.cageprisoners.com/prisoners.php?id=465, accessed November 4, 2013.

  Parre was forced to kneel on stones: Craig Pyes, “A Torture Killing by U.S. Forces in Afghanistan,” Crimes of War Education Project, http://www.faculty.umb.edu/gary_zabel/Courses/Morals%20and%20Law/M+L/news-tortureafghan.html, September 20, 2004; Craig Pyes and Kevin Sack, “Deaths Were a Clue That ‘Something’s Wrong,’” Los Angeles Times, September 25, 2006.

  if he sided with those “opposing the Coalition”: Pyes, “A Torture Killing.”

  “They didn’t allow us to sleep”: Gopal, “America’s Secret Afghan Prisons.”

  “This is Guantanamo! You are in Guantanamo!”: Ibid.

  accused of supporting the followers of Hekmatyar: WikiLeaks Guantanamo Files—ISN 798.

  “If somebody is a leader of a tribe”: Guantanamo Administrative Review Board Round 2 Transcripts.

  “why are you here?”: Guantanamo Administrative Review Board Round 1 Transcripts, http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/798-haji-sahib-rohullah-wakil/documents/2, accessed November 4, 2013.

  “All I can tell you is that I fought”: Guantanamo Combatant Status Review Tribunal Transcripts.

  “one of the wealthiest men in eastern Afghanistan”: U.S. Embassy Cable 06KABUL5008.

  “For six years, I was ready to go to court”: Nancy Youssef, “Where’s Pentagon ‘Terrorism Suspect’? Talking to Karzai,” McClatchy Newspapers, July 7, 2009.

  “key affiliate of the al Qaeda network” had been killed: Heidi Vogt and Rahim Faiez, “Saber Lal Melma, Ex-Gitmo Detainee, Killed in Afghanistan,” Associated Press, September 3, 2011.

  caught up in this universe of rivalry and intrigue: Gopal, “America’s Secret Afghan Prisons.”

  supporting the political organization of Ahmed Shah Massoud: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-000949DP.

  alleged to have been a member of Herakat-i-Inqilabi: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-000007DP.

  “defected to the Taliban in 1998”: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-OOO453D.

  Abdullah Khan found himself in Guantanamo: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-00095ODP; Wikileaks Guantanamo File US9AF-000952DP; Andy Worthington, The Guantanamo Files: The Stories of 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (Ann Arbor, MI: Pluto Press, 2007).

  Swat Khan’s internment stemmed from an accusation: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-000933DP.

  Hajji Bismillah, the director of transportation: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File US9AF-000968D.

  Abdul Rahim al-Janko, a Syrian: Details on al-Janko are drawn from Al Ginco v. Obama, 626 F. Supp. 2d 123 (D.D.C 2009) Official Traverse; Spencer S. Hsu, “Freed Guantanamo Detainee Sues U.S. Military over Alleged Torture,” Washington Post, October 6, 2010; Andy Worthington, “Judge Orders Release from Guantanamo of Al-Qaeda Torture Victim,” Huffington Post, June 24, 2009, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andy-worthington/judge-orders-release-from_b_219959.html, accessed November 4, 2013; Tim Golden, “Expecting U.S. Help, Sent to Guantanamo,” New York Times, October 15, 2006.

  Perhaps the unluckiest of this lot is Hamidullah: WikiLeaks Guantanamo Files US9AF-001119DP.

  Mohebullah, a bus driver detained in Uruzgan Province: WikiLeaks Guantanamo Files US9AF-000974D.

  “I am very happy to be in the Tribunal”: Combatant Status Review Tribunal Transcripts.

  10 • BACK TO WORK

  all sixty-five members of the police force: Robert Kluijver, “Study of Sub-national Administrative Structures in Afghanistan, Wardak Political Context and Security Structures,” wardak.de, accessed February 2012.

  Muhammad Haqqani, a former Taliban deputy minister: Sami Yousafzai, “The Taliban in Their Own Words,” Newsweek, September 25, 2009.

  in return for amnesty, he would pledge loyalty: See, for example, Malcolm Garcia, “Seven Senior Taliban Officials Freed After Questioning by U.S.,” Kansas City Star, January 10, 2002.

  “there was insufficient evidence to connect detainee”: WikiLeaks Guantanamo File USAF-001043DP.

  the case of Mullah Ahmed Shah: Gopal, “The Battle for Kandahar.”

  the simple mud house of Feda Muhammad: Ibid.

  “I still get flashbacks”: James Fergusson, Taliban: The Unknown Enemy (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2011), 319. For an alternative (and confused) account, see Jason Meszaros, Interrogation of Morals: The Truth About Courage and Integrity (St. Michael, MN: J. P. Hewitt Press, 2008).

  11 • THE TANGI

  There was Yunis, his closest friend: The names in this paragraph are all pseudonyms.

  a friendship he had made with a man named Pir Mohmand: “Pir Mohmand” is a pseudonym.

  officials had logged more than five thousand security incidents: Data courtesy of Sami Kovanen, Indicium Consulting.

  a few nights away from home with his friend Ismael: “Ismael” is a pseudonym.

  12 • NO-MAN’S-LAND

  as told by Rahim, a Taliban fighter: All descriptions and quotes from Rahim’s story are taken from an account of his interview with Ghulam Sarwar. His account also appears in “One Talib: I’m Fed Up of Jihad,” Larawbar.com, October 23, 2008. “Rahim” is a pseudonym.

  “They tied our hands behind our backs”: “Purported Survivor Recounts Horror of Afghan Bus Ambush,” Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty, October 22, 2008.

  “Nothing you see here in this country belongs to us”: This section is adapted from Anand Gopal, “Uprooting an Afghan Village,” Progressive 73, no. 6 (June 2009): 24–27.

  a man named Qadir, hailed from Garloch: See Abdul Moeed Hashimi and Najib Rahman Enqilabi, “Laghman, Sarobi Bordering Areas Bombed,” Pajhwok Afghan News, October 19, 2008; author interviews, Laghman, 2009.

  “This Time Sheep Mistaken as Enemy Combatants”: Najibullah Inqilabi, “This Time Sheep Mistaken as Enemy Combatants,” Pajhwok Afghan News, December 3, 2008.

  “That’s what our lives are worth to you Americans”: Author interview, Laghman, 2009
; see also Kim Barker, “Embittered Afghans Blame U.S. for Civilian Deaths,” Chicago Tribune, February 17, 2009.

  13 • STEPPING OUT

  In a sequence captured by a documentary filmmaker: Taliban Country, directed by Carmela Baranowska (Eight Mile Plains, Queensland: Marcom Projects, 2007), digital video.

  14 • THE LEADER

  Heela caught Dr. Ishan leering at her: “Dr. Ishan” is a pseudonym.

  “We’ve shot an amazing number of people”: Richard A. Oppel Jr., “Tighter Rules Fail to Stem Deaths of Innocent Afghans at Checkpoints,” New York Times, March 26, 2010.

  “If you ask me what I worry about at night”: Majority Staff of the House Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs, Warlord, Inc.: Extortion and Corruption Along the U.S. Supply Chain in Afghanistan (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, June 2010).

  “No one leaves without paying”: Ibid., 29.

  the Australian firm Compass: WikiLeaks War Log, Kandahar Province Incident Report, “Illegal Checkpoint,” November 22, 2009.

  Dozens were taken hostage and executed: Author interviews, Kabul, Kandahar, and Uruzgan, 2010.

  EPILOGUE

  Jan Muhammad was sitting on a couch: Interviews; also, Julius Cavendish, “Killing of Karzai’s Advisor Takes Another Hit at the President’s Circle,” Time, July 18, 2011.

  Of the $557 billion that Washington spent: Amy Belasco, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11, CRS Report RL33110 (Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, March 29, 2011), table 3.

  As a result, the state became criminalized: This line of argument was first developed in Matthieu Aikins, Contracting the Commanders: Transition and the Political Economy of Afghanistan’s Private Security Industry (New York: Center on International Cooperation, New York University, 2012).

  “Under Taliban rule, only 1.2 million students were enrolled”: Allied Command Services, “ISAF Spokesman Discusses Progress in Afghanistan,” news release, July 26, 2011, http://www.aco.nato.int/page424205131.aspx.

  740 schools listed by the education ministry: Mohammad Hasan Hakimi, “Afghanistan: The Ghost Teachers of Ghor,” Institute for War and Peace Reporting, March 29, 2012.

  “just because every state in the US had a hospital”: Aunohita Mojumdar, “An Inflated Claim of Health Success in Afghanistan Exposed,” Christian Science Monitor, December 5, 2010.

  contract called Host Nation Trucking: Majority Staff of the House Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs, Warlord, Inc.

  60,000 to 80,000 armed private security employees: Belasco, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abbas

  Abbas, Mullah

  Abdo Khan, Hajji

  Abdullah Khan

  Achekzai, Ahmed Shah

  Achekzai, Heela. See Heela

  Achekzais

  Adaam, Mullah

  Afghan Health and Development Services

  Afghanistan

  al Qaeda in

  anti-Americanism

  civil war in, see civil war

  Communist leadership

  constitution (2004)

  first presidential elections (2004)

  future of

  gender segregation

  geography

  international aid to

  mujahedeen rule

  of 1950s–60s

  of 1970s

  -Pakistan rivalries

  post-Taliban

  second presidential elections (2009)

  Soviet invasion

  Taliban insurgency in, see Taliban insurgency

  Taliban rule

  tribal elders

  US-backed mujahedeen

  US invasion of

  US war in, see Afghanistan war

  Afghanistan war (2001–present)

  Afghans mistaken for Taliban by US forces

  air strikes

  in Chak District

  civilian casualties

  construction projects and US patronage

  false intelligence

  first presidential elections (2004) and

  in Garloch

  Guantanamo and

  Khas Uruzgan raids

  in Korengal Valley

  in Maiwand

  NATO troops

  Northern Alliance and

  Obama policy

  Operation Anaconda

  program to eradicate poppy cultivation

  resupplying of American bases

  roadside bombings

  Sherzai network and

  suicide bombings

  surge

  Taliban and

  Taliban insurgency and

  in Tirin Kot

  US failure in

  US fatalities

  US invasion (2001)

  US torture of Afghans

  US withdrawal

  in Uruzgan

  in Wardak

  in Zurmat

  Afghan National Army

  Afghan National Police

  Afshar

  Agha, Noor

  Agha, Tayeb

  agriculture

  harvest season

  poppy cultivation

  Ahmed, Noor

  Ahmed Shah, Mullah

  Aikins, Matthieu

  air strikes

  Akbar Gul

  background of

  in Bagram prison

  civil war and

  as governor of Chak District

  in Pakistan

  return to Kabul

  in Taliban insurgency

  Akhund, Hajji

  Akhundzada, Abdul Ghaffar

  Akhundzada, Sher Muhammad

  Ali, Abdul

  Ali, Ghulam

  Alingar River

  Alizais

  al-Janko, Abdul Rahim

  Almas, Hajji

  al-Qaeda

  in Afghanistan

  Afghans mistaken for, by US forces

  Amerine, Jason

  anti-Americanism

  Armitage, Richard

  Asadullah

  Ashcroft, John

  Atta, Muhammad

  Azmi, Hajji

  Babakarkhel, Zubair

  Bagram

  Bala Hisar

  Balkh

  Baluchistan

  Band-i-Timor

  Barakzais

  Bashar, Hajji

  BBC

  Behsud

  bin Laden, Osama

  Taliban and

  US search for

  Bismillah, Hajji

  Blackwater

  Bonn

  Brosnan, Andy

  Brzezinski, Zbigniew

  Buddha sculptures, demolition of

  Burget Khan, Hajji

  Bush, George W.

  invasion of Afghanistan

  war on terror

  Cable, Mullah. See Akbar Gul

  Canadian Joint Task Force 2

  Carter, Jimmy

  cell phones

  photography

  CENTCOM

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

  mujahedeen backed by

  Chak District

  Taliban insurgency in

  US forces in

  Chaman

  Charles, Bobby

  chemical weapons

  Christianity

  civil war (1992–96)

  end of

  jihad

  mujahedeen factions

  outbreak of

  rape

  refugees

  US policy and

  CNN

  Coburn, Noah

  Cold War

  end of

  Communism

  Compass

  constitution (
2004)

  contractors

  Dai Chopan

  Daud, General

  Daud Khan

  Delta Force

  Dil, Hajji Shirin

  Dil Agha, Mullah

  Dostum, Rashid

  Doucet, Lyse

  drugs

  drug lords

  opium

  Dubai

  Dutch troops

  education

  closing and destruction of schools

  post-Taliban

  school construction

  underground

  of women

  Ehsan, Hajji

  Fahim, Marshal Muhammad

  Fallujah

  Faryab

  Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

  Field Detention Sites

  Fifth Special Forces Group

  Firozi, Khalilullah

  French troops

  fuel transport

  Gardez

  Garloch

  US forces in

  Gayawa

  Taliban attack on

  Gelam Jam

  gender segregation

  Germany

  Ghazni city

  Ghazni Province

  Ghilzais

  US operations and

  Ghor

  government

  civil war and

  Communist

  election fraud

  first presidential elections (2004)

  Karzai

  lawless mountains

  parliamentary elections

  political killings

  post-Taliban

  second presidential elections (2009)

  Taliban

  women in

  Great Britain

  Green, Dan

  Green Berets

  Tirin Kot battle

  Grenier, Robert

  Guantanamo Bay

  Afghans sent to

  closure debate

  Taliban in

  Guevara, Che

  Gulalai, Hajji

  Gulf War (1991)

  Hafizullah

  Hamdam, Asadullah

  Hamidullah

  Hanifi

  Haqqani, Muhammad

  Haroun, Muhammad

  harvest season

  Hayatullah, Mullah

  Hazaras

  Hazrat, Malek

  Heela

  abduction of her son

  dispute with police

  dreams of

  elected to provincial council

  escape from Kabul

  escape from Uruzgan

  first presidential elections

  in Kandahar

  pilgrimage to Mecca

  second presidential elections (2009)

  as senator

  Taliban and

  in Tirin Kot

 

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