Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
09-19-2021, 09:41 AM
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/afghan-family-ravaged-by-u-s-drone-strike-mistake-wants-headstones-for-the-dead-and-possible-new-life-in-america/ar-AAOAGXD?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531
The Washington Post
Afghan family ravaged by U.S. drone strike mistake wants headstones for the dead — and possible new life in America
Sudarsan Raghavan 11 hrs ago
a group of people standing in front of a crowd: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Members of the Ahmadi's family look at the mangled remains of the car where Zemarai Ahmani was targeted on Aug. 29 in a U.S. drone strike, which the Pentagon now says was carried out after numerous miscalculations by commanders. Ten people were killed. Samim Ahmadi, right, stepson of Zemarai, was in the house when the attack happened but suffered only minor injuries. Ajmal Ahmadi, brother of Zemarai, and his son Imran, center, were outside.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Members of the Ahmadi's family look at the mangled remains of the car where Zemarai Ahmani was targeted on Aug. 29 in a U.S. drone strike, which the Pentagon now says was carried out after numerous miscalculations by commanders. Ten people were killed. Samim Ahmadi, right, stepson of Zemarai, was in the house when the attack happened but suffered only minor injuries. Ajmal Ahmadi, brother of Zemarai, and his son Imran, center, were outside.
KABUL —By the time the American apology arrived, the lives of the Ahmadi family were already upended. And being falsely accused by the U.S. military of ties to the Islamic State was not the worst part of the ordeal.
There was their shattered family house. There were the nightmares, the bouts of crying and the screams triggered by the memory of a U.S. drone strike on Aug. 29 that killed 10 of their relatives, including seven children.
There were the fresh fears of persecution by the Taliban after the media spotlight on the family noted that some members, including survivors, worked for U.S.-based entities or the former Afghan security forces.
The Hellfire missile — the weapon used in the Pentagon’s capstone attack at the end of a two-decade war — also killed the family’s only breadwinner, Zamarai Ahmadi.
“We didn’t have money to bury our relatives,” said his 32-year-old brother Emal on Saturday, steps away from the mangled carcass of a white Toyota sedan. “We had to borrow the funds.”
[U.S. military: ‘Horrible mistake’ led to drone strike that killed 10]
Without doubt, the Pentagon’s mea culpa Friday — that a series of miscalculations led to the wrongful targeting of Zamarai Ahmadi, an aid worker with a U.S.-based group — has lifted a heavy weight off the family.
“The Americans kept emphasizing they killed an ISIS-K terrorist,” said Emal, referring to the Islamic State’s Afghanistan branch. “Now we are happy they have acknowledged their mistake and confirmed that they killed innocent people.”
What the family seeks now is to exit their American-made hell. Family members in interviews on Saturday expressed no visible animosity toward the U.S. government for killing their loved ones. But forgiveness may be too strong a word.
a person sitting in front of a curtain: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imal ahmadi, brother of Zamarai Ahmadi, who was killed in the Aug. 29 U.S. drone strike, sits in one of the rooms of the house in Kabul where the attack took place.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imal ahmadi, brother of Zamarai Ahmadi, who was killed in the Aug. 29 U.S. drone strike, sits in one of the rooms of the house in Kabul where the attack took place.
Rather, the Ahmadis grasp onto a sense of pragmatism. They want compensation from the U.S. government and help in leaving Afghanistan and getting resettled in the United States or another safe country, family members said.
“You can see the situation in Afghanistan is not good,” said Samim Ahmadi, 24, the step son of Zamarai. “Whether in America or another country, we want peace and comfort for our remaining years. Everyone makes mistakes. The Americans cannot bring back our loved ones, but they can take us out of here.”
Pentagon admits Kabul drone strike likely only killed civilians
On Saturday came further worrisome signs from Afghanistan. A series of blasts rocked the eastern city of Jalalabad, potentially targeting Taliban vehicles, killing at least three people and wounding 20. There was no initial claims of responsibility, but the province is a bastion of the Islamic State.
Before last month’s drone strike, both Emal and Zamarai had applications in process to acquire special visas to enter the United States because of their work with American companies, said family members.
[Political battles grow over general’s push to keep troops in Afghanistan]
The drone strike has heightened the urgency to leave, they added.
“We are worried,” said Ajmal Ahmadi, another brother. “We feel under threat because we are so exposed to the public by the media. Everyone got to know that we have worked for foreigners, served in the Afghan army as well as the Afghan intelligence agency.”
They also want justice. Those responsible for their tragedy, such as the commander who oversaw the strike, the drone operator or anyone else who had visuals on the ground, need to be held accountable in a U.S. court, family members said.
“The U.S. government must punish those who launched the drone strike,” said Emal Ahmadi, slim and bearded, his firm voice at times softening with emotion. “They knew and saw there were children on the ground. Can anyone bring them back?”
Yet so far, family members said, they have had no contact with U.S. officials from any branch of the government, not even to offer their apology personally.
“They should have contacted us and at least asked us about our situation,” said Emal, shaking his head.
a dirty old room: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: The car targeted in the Aug. 29 drone strike, which claimed 10 lives.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: The car targeted in the Aug. 29 drone strike, which claimed 10 lives.
Until Friday, the Pentagon had defended last month’s operation as a “righteous strike.” Defense officials said they had tracked a white Toyota sedan for hours after it left a suspected Islamic State safe house and destroyed it to prevent an imminent suicide attack.
Surveillance video shows Zamarai Ahmadi the day he was killed
Click to expand
In reality, the car’s driver, Zamarai Ahmadi, was a longtime employee of Nutrition and Education International, a charity based in California. He was carrying large water canisters that were apparently mistaken for bombs, officials acknowledged, echoing earlier investigations by The Washington Post and other media outlets that raised questions about the attack.
Analysis of a ‘righteous’ strike
Just before the drone strike, Ahmadi had pulled into his gated family compound, where he and his three brothers grew up in a working-class enclave west of Kabul’s airport. Now, they were all living there with their own families. Their kids played with each other every day in the courtyard.
On this evening, several jumped into Ahmadi’s car. That’s when the missile struck, a pinpoint attack that eviscerated the sedan and sprayed shrapnel into doors and walls, shattering windows.
a young boy standing in front of a curtain: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imran, 8, nephew of Zemarai Ahmadi, was in a house nearby when the drone strike hit.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imran, 8, nephew of Zemarai Ahmadi, was in a house nearby when the drone strike hit.
Zamarai and three of his sons — Zamir, 20, Faisal, 16, and Farzad, 11 — were killed. The three children of another brother — Arween, 7, Binyamin, 6 and Ayat, 2 — also died, along with Emal’s 3-year-old daughter, Malika, and his nephew Nasser, 30. A cousin’s infant daughter, Sumaiya, was also among those killed.
The entire family depended on Zamarai’s $500 monthly salary, said Emal. With their house destroyed, the remaining 15 family members moved to his sister’s small, four-room home, an hour’s drive away.
“Every night we sleep on the roof because there is not enough space in the house,” said Ajmal Ahmadi. “For the first 15 days, I could not sleep. I kept having flashbacks of my brother, my nieces and nephews.”
[As Afghan newspaper struggles to survive — a beating, and a Taliban apology]
The wives of Emal and another relative, Romal, are more traumatized, said family members. Both women witnessed the deaths of their children. “They have constant nightmares, often waking up screaming at night,” said Emal.
His 7-year-old daughter, Ada, still asks when her sister, Malika, will return home.
“I can’t bear to tell her that her sister is dead,” said Emal. “I’ve told her Malika is at the hospital and one day she will come back.”
Imran, 8, Ajmal’s son, recalled how he would ride bikes and play soccer with his cousins. They would pluck fresh grapes from vines for snacks.
“Now,” he said, “they are in the next world.”
The entire world knows that this murder was a political act to try to show that idiot biden was aware and a fighter- using force to punish terorists there that wer threatening our nation and our citizens there. And how idot biden must have scream-- hell kil someone ther and we sat tety were engaged in terrorism against us!!!
EXCEPT THAT THESE WERE NOT THE BAD GUYS AND THEY IN A MAD RUSH TO EXECUTE THE POLITICAL MOVE, THEY MURDERED INNOCENT PEOPLE, INNOCENT CHILDREN!
Just one disaster/ffkk-up after another with this incompetent ffing scum and his-- traitorous, invisble handlers.
Things occuring that they can not hide,,,-Tyr
The Washington Post
Afghan family ravaged by U.S. drone strike mistake wants headstones for the dead — and possible new life in America
Sudarsan Raghavan 11 hrs ago
a group of people standing in front of a crowd: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Members of the Ahmadi's family look at the mangled remains of the car where Zemarai Ahmani was targeted on Aug. 29 in a U.S. drone strike, which the Pentagon now says was carried out after numerous miscalculations by commanders. Ten people were killed. Samim Ahmadi, right, stepson of Zemarai, was in the house when the attack happened but suffered only minor injuries. Ajmal Ahmadi, brother of Zemarai, and his son Imran, center, were outside.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Members of the Ahmadi's family look at the mangled remains of the car where Zemarai Ahmani was targeted on Aug. 29 in a U.S. drone strike, which the Pentagon now says was carried out after numerous miscalculations by commanders. Ten people were killed. Samim Ahmadi, right, stepson of Zemarai, was in the house when the attack happened but suffered only minor injuries. Ajmal Ahmadi, brother of Zemarai, and his son Imran, center, were outside.
KABUL —By the time the American apology arrived, the lives of the Ahmadi family were already upended. And being falsely accused by the U.S. military of ties to the Islamic State was not the worst part of the ordeal.
There was their shattered family house. There were the nightmares, the bouts of crying and the screams triggered by the memory of a U.S. drone strike on Aug. 29 that killed 10 of their relatives, including seven children.
There were the fresh fears of persecution by the Taliban after the media spotlight on the family noted that some members, including survivors, worked for U.S.-based entities or the former Afghan security forces.
The Hellfire missile — the weapon used in the Pentagon’s capstone attack at the end of a two-decade war — also killed the family’s only breadwinner, Zamarai Ahmadi.
“We didn’t have money to bury our relatives,” said his 32-year-old brother Emal on Saturday, steps away from the mangled carcass of a white Toyota sedan. “We had to borrow the funds.”
[U.S. military: ‘Horrible mistake’ led to drone strike that killed 10]
Without doubt, the Pentagon’s mea culpa Friday — that a series of miscalculations led to the wrongful targeting of Zamarai Ahmadi, an aid worker with a U.S.-based group — has lifted a heavy weight off the family.
“The Americans kept emphasizing they killed an ISIS-K terrorist,” said Emal, referring to the Islamic State’s Afghanistan branch. “Now we are happy they have acknowledged their mistake and confirmed that they killed innocent people.”
What the family seeks now is to exit their American-made hell. Family members in interviews on Saturday expressed no visible animosity toward the U.S. government for killing their loved ones. But forgiveness may be too strong a word.
a person sitting in front of a curtain: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imal ahmadi, brother of Zamarai Ahmadi, who was killed in the Aug. 29 U.S. drone strike, sits in one of the rooms of the house in Kabul where the attack took place.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imal ahmadi, brother of Zamarai Ahmadi, who was killed in the Aug. 29 U.S. drone strike, sits in one of the rooms of the house in Kabul where the attack took place.
Rather, the Ahmadis grasp onto a sense of pragmatism. They want compensation from the U.S. government and help in leaving Afghanistan and getting resettled in the United States or another safe country, family members said.
“You can see the situation in Afghanistan is not good,” said Samim Ahmadi, 24, the step son of Zamarai. “Whether in America or another country, we want peace and comfort for our remaining years. Everyone makes mistakes. The Americans cannot bring back our loved ones, but they can take us out of here.”
Pentagon admits Kabul drone strike likely only killed civilians
On Saturday came further worrisome signs from Afghanistan. A series of blasts rocked the eastern city of Jalalabad, potentially targeting Taliban vehicles, killing at least three people and wounding 20. There was no initial claims of responsibility, but the province is a bastion of the Islamic State.
Before last month’s drone strike, both Emal and Zamarai had applications in process to acquire special visas to enter the United States because of their work with American companies, said family members.
[Political battles grow over general’s push to keep troops in Afghanistan]
The drone strike has heightened the urgency to leave, they added.
“We are worried,” said Ajmal Ahmadi, another brother. “We feel under threat because we are so exposed to the public by the media. Everyone got to know that we have worked for foreigners, served in the Afghan army as well as the Afghan intelligence agency.”
They also want justice. Those responsible for their tragedy, such as the commander who oversaw the strike, the drone operator or anyone else who had visuals on the ground, need to be held accountable in a U.S. court, family members said.
“The U.S. government must punish those who launched the drone strike,” said Emal Ahmadi, slim and bearded, his firm voice at times softening with emotion. “They knew and saw there were children on the ground. Can anyone bring them back?”
Yet so far, family members said, they have had no contact with U.S. officials from any branch of the government, not even to offer their apology personally.
“They should have contacted us and at least asked us about our situation,” said Emal, shaking his head.
a dirty old room: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: The car targeted in the Aug. 29 drone strike, which claimed 10 lives.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: The car targeted in the Aug. 29 drone strike, which claimed 10 lives.
Until Friday, the Pentagon had defended last month’s operation as a “righteous strike.” Defense officials said they had tracked a white Toyota sedan for hours after it left a suspected Islamic State safe house and destroyed it to prevent an imminent suicide attack.
Surveillance video shows Zamarai Ahmadi the day he was killed
Click to expand
In reality, the car’s driver, Zamarai Ahmadi, was a longtime employee of Nutrition and Education International, a charity based in California. He was carrying large water canisters that were apparently mistaken for bombs, officials acknowledged, echoing earlier investigations by The Washington Post and other media outlets that raised questions about the attack.
Analysis of a ‘righteous’ strike
Just before the drone strike, Ahmadi had pulled into his gated family compound, where he and his three brothers grew up in a working-class enclave west of Kabul’s airport. Now, they were all living there with their own families. Their kids played with each other every day in the courtyard.
On this evening, several jumped into Ahmadi’s car. That’s when the missile struck, a pinpoint attack that eviscerated the sedan and sprayed shrapnel into doors and walls, shattering windows.
a young boy standing in front of a curtain: KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imran, 8, nephew of Zemarai Ahmadi, was in a house nearby when the drone strike hit.© Lorenzo Tugnoli/for The Washington Post KABUL, SEPT. 18, 2021: Imran, 8, nephew of Zemarai Ahmadi, was in a house nearby when the drone strike hit.
Zamarai and three of his sons — Zamir, 20, Faisal, 16, and Farzad, 11 — were killed. The three children of another brother — Arween, 7, Binyamin, 6 and Ayat, 2 — also died, along with Emal’s 3-year-old daughter, Malika, and his nephew Nasser, 30. A cousin’s infant daughter, Sumaiya, was also among those killed.
The entire family depended on Zamarai’s $500 monthly salary, said Emal. With their house destroyed, the remaining 15 family members moved to his sister’s small, four-room home, an hour’s drive away.
“Every night we sleep on the roof because there is not enough space in the house,” said Ajmal Ahmadi. “For the first 15 days, I could not sleep. I kept having flashbacks of my brother, my nieces and nephews.”
[As Afghan newspaper struggles to survive — a beating, and a Taliban apology]
The wives of Emal and another relative, Romal, are more traumatized, said family members. Both women witnessed the deaths of their children. “They have constant nightmares, often waking up screaming at night,” said Emal.
His 7-year-old daughter, Ada, still asks when her sister, Malika, will return home.
“I can’t bear to tell her that her sister is dead,” said Emal. “I’ve told her Malika is at the hospital and one day she will come back.”
Imran, 8, Ajmal’s son, recalled how he would ride bikes and play soccer with his cousins. They would pluck fresh grapes from vines for snacks.
“Now,” he said, “they are in the next world.”
The entire world knows that this murder was a political act to try to show that idiot biden was aware and a fighter- using force to punish terorists there that wer threatening our nation and our citizens there. And how idot biden must have scream-- hell kil someone ther and we sat tety were engaged in terrorism against us!!!
EXCEPT THAT THESE WERE NOT THE BAD GUYS AND THEY IN A MAD RUSH TO EXECUTE THE POLITICAL MOVE, THEY MURDERED INNOCENT PEOPLE, INNOCENT CHILDREN!
Just one disaster/ffkk-up after another with this incompetent ffing scum and his-- traitorous, invisble handlers.
Things occuring that they can not hide,,,-Tyr