Officials in the Afghan government have provided additional details about their decision to expel US Special Forces from the Wardak Province, saying that the decision came after both the US and NATO repeatedly ignored complaints about abuses by the troops in the province.
Residents of the Wardak Province had been complaining for months, pressing human rights groups to do something about the disappearances, torture and harrassment by US troops. It was only when Governor Abdul Majid Khogyani presented evidence to the Afghan Security Council, including evidence of a student taken in a night raid who turned up dead two days later, that the national government actually took the matter seriously.
NATO, for its part, is shrugging off the matter, saying they’ve seen no evidence of any wrong-doing by US special forces in the province. Despite claims of a “thorough review,” the fact that they kept ignoring Afghan complaints suggests they didn’t necessarily look all that hard for evidence in the first place.
Wardak Provincial MP Sher Bazon criticized the decision to expel US troops, though he did concede there had been considerable complaints about torture and killings by those troops. He insisted that officials felt more insecure with the occupation forces gone. The same cannot be said for the civilians that were getting killed by them, however.
Middle-East has the most violence — Because it has the most wealth
Likewise, Empire USA is the most brutal and terrorizing because it hoards
the most wealth.
Likewise, the voting majority in USA being the 51% most wealthy, do they
not always vote for the politicians best qualified to give them the best wars
of aggression that money can buy?
For morality is a learning process, as it is written, “The logic being that
planet earth is a wasteland of meaningless fiction, and though the
Creator is in submission, not by choice. For he does it so that through
his subjection, during that time, full trust in him be established.” Romans 8:20