7-25-10 Secret files: Wikileaks reveals 'unseen war' |
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By Anna Doble and Ed Fraser From Channel 4 | Original Article EXCLUSIVE: A major security breachreveals alleged "execution squads", an apparent plot to kill the Afghan president and previously unreported civilian deaths. Wikileaks editor Julian Assange speaks to Channel 4 News about his decision to leak the secret files online. Channel 4 News has seen the classified documents but has been unable to independently verify its authenticity.
Secret Afghanistan files: revealed for the first time
The files reveal previously classified information about civilian deaths, a mysterious "assassinations squad" named Task Force 373, an alleged Pakistani plot to kill President Karzai, evidence of suspected foreign support for the Taliban and countless daily incidents in which Nato troops are engaged by Taliban forces.
Click here to visit wikileaks.org
The data gives a graphical record of the war from 2004 until the end of 2009, detailing thousands of US military operations. The leaks contain "cables" filed by US units, often within a couple of hours of combat.
The records contain logs of both civilian and military "kills" - pinpointing when and where a death happened. More than 20,000 deaths have been recorded overall.
Leaked files: death toll Wikileaks editor Julian Assange, in an exclusive interview withChannel 4 News said he believes this is "the most comprehensive history of a war ever to be published - during the course of the war".
Read more from our exclusive interview with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange
The White House has issued a statement to the New York Times "condemning" the leak. The US newspaper is focusing on Pakistan's alleged connections with Taliban insurgency.
It reads: "We strongly condemn the disclosure of classified information by individuals and organisations, [it]puts the lives of the US and partner service members at risk and threatens our national security.
"Wikileaks made no effort to contact the United States government about these documents, which may contain information that endangers the lives of Americans, our partners, and local populations who co-operate with us."
The 'underreporting' of civilian deaths by coalition forces
In 2008, a AC-130 "Spectre" gunship carried out a ground attack on the village of Azizabad in Herat Province. The target was a Taliban commander. The report at the time said that no civilians had died. It only refers to 30 insurgents killed in action.
In fact, according to a UN report, 90 civilians died - 60 of them children as well as 15 women.
Meanwhile in September 2006, troops taking part in Operation Medusa moved into a large area around Panjwayi, west of Kandahar, and a known Taliban stronghold.
A Nato report found that 31 civilians had died - 20 of them from the same extended family following an airstrike. The leaked documents record 181 civilian deaths.
(US army paratroopers battle militants in northwest Afghanistan - Getty Images)
Top secret black-ops unit targeting Taliban and Al Qaeda leaders on 'capture/kill lists'
Julian Assange told Channel 4 News: "There are many reports discussing the assassination lists that the US military have - hundreds, maybe thousands, of people are on these lists."
(Revealed: a US military report details a failed attempt to kill a senior member of al-Qaida, which left seven children dead in June 2007)
Alleged plot by Pakistani intelligence to kill Afghan President Hamid Karzai
There is a log on an alleged plot by ISI spies to assassinate Afghan President Hamid Karzai in August 2008. The log describes a "suicide mission" at the presidential palace, but concedes: "There was no information as to how or when this was to be carried out".
(Revealed: details of an alleged Pakistani plot to assassinate President Hamid Karzai)
Statement from the White House in full:
Who leaked the data?
The information copied by that insider has now been placed on the internet by Wikileaks.
Wilikeaks say they have cut out some references to sources of intelligence – to avoid them being killed by the Taliban. They call it "harm minimisation" but it is, of course, a form of censorship – a new departure for this group.
Parallels with the 'Pentagon Papers'
(Field Artillery fire a 155mm Howlitzer at a Taliban observation point in Kandahar)
Military acronyms and abbreviations: what they mean
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