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What to do About Civilian Casulties in Afghanistan?

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Visitor:
13 Mar 12:09pm
I am a driver with all categories,I would like to know how I can find a Work
in Haiti UN or in ONG
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Visitor:
13 Mar 12:09pm
I am a driver with all categories,I would like to know how I can find a Work
in Haiti UN or in ONG
read more
Visitor:
12 Mar 10:33am
It is bureaucratic reshuffling and the budgets are cut further.. all of this
is a well honed manipul
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Onifade Uche:
10 Mar 5:11am
any book about Billings method should be included. Thanks.
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Visitor:
10 Mar 2:18am
parça kontör [1]
[1] http://www.minikontor.com/
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Devi S.:
9 Mar 11:18pm
Beloved by Toni Morrison, A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini, Half
the Sky by Nicholas Kris
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Visitor:
7 Mar 10:37am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
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Visitor:
7 Mar 10:36am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
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Visitor:
7 Mar 10:35am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
3 Mar 7:36pm
It can't be done. It's not about facts; it's about political opportunism.
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Chris de Ocejo:
26 Feb 11:29am
Yes, but the IPCC report is one of many, hundreds of reports which show the
warming trend. It's a bi
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Matthew Cordell:
26 Feb 8:28am
The false claims do not "rely" on the core science, nor are they "purported
to." Publishing a misju
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Chris de Ocejo:
23 Feb 9:32am
Stoning to death (rajm) is not a punishment prescribed by the Qur'an. Several
ahadith exist which su
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Visitor:
18 Feb 7:00pm
You know, I agree with your sense of absolute outrage. But the real reason
that women have these thi
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Visitor:
18 Feb 6:48pm
I am shocked. Not that Muslim women were caned. That was a LIGHT punishment
under Shari-a. The real
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Visitor:
18 Feb 6:37pm
No. We piloted the Nuremburg Courts, and we proved than that this concept can
work. We don't have to
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Visitor:
18 Feb 5:35pm
I wonder why the President of Chad wants the MINURCAT to leave when they are
protecting people???
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Visitor:
11 Feb 1:49pm
The ICC is a good start, but could be strengthened significantly. The fact
that the United States ha
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Mark Leon Goldberg - February 19, 2009 - 8:31 am
Earlier this week, a new United Nations report showed a 40% increase in civilian causalities in Afghanistan. About 55% of those deaths are attributable to the Taliban, meaning that the United States and its NATO and Afghan allies were responsible for a large proportion of civilian deaths. Most (65%) of these allied-inflicted civilian deaths came from U.S. air strikes.
Stories like this, however, tell you what statistics cannot:
This comes from the Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict (CIVIC) in a new report Losing the People: The Costs and Consequences of Civilian Suffering in Afghanistan. The report is a long but fascinating exposé of the haphazard way in which international forces compensate civilian victims of “collateral damage.” It finds that rarely -- if at all -- are compensatory payments made to victims or their families in a timely manner. Obviously, this does not endear local populations to international troops, which in turn harms international forces' ability to win the “hearts and minds” of local Afghans. That said, in the instances where the United States government or one of its NATO allies does pay some form of compensation, victims and their families generally consider the payment as a gesture of condolence and apology.
The lesson here is that coordinating and institutionalizing mechanisms for civilian compensation is not only a humanitarian imperative, but can be a strategic tool in the counterinsurgency toolbox. It would behoove the Pentagon to take note.