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Shoot first, find out later!

20 November 2007CE | 10 Dhul-Qadah 1428AH

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[LONDON, July 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies]

Prominent British-based journalist John Pilger took a front-page swipe at Washington Thursday, July 4, saying that the U.S. is a “rogue state” and charging that its bombs have claimed more Afghan civilian lives than those lost in the World Trade Center.

Britain’s mass-selling Daily Mirror headlined Pilger’s article “Mourn on the Fourth of July”, in which he accused U.S. President George W. Bush of undermining international law by his policy of “shoot and bomb first, and find out later” in Afghanistan.

Pilger, an award-winning journalist and filmmaker, wrote that the “systematic murderous way the U.S. military has operated in Afghanistan… now qualifies it as the world’s leading rogue state.”

Pilger quoted a study by the University of New Hampshire in the U.S. saying that at least 3,767 civilians were killed by American bombs between October 7 and December 10, an average of 62 a day, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.

This was now estimated to have passed 5,000 civilian deaths, Pilger said, “almost double” the number who died on September 11.

More than 2,800 people were killed when the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York collapsed after each was hit by separate hijacked passenger planes, AFP reported.

Pilger also questioned Washington’s true motive behind its military interventions in Afghanistan.

“Potential vast energy resources in Central Asia have become critical for the deeply troubled U.S. economy, and for the Bush administration, which is dominated by oil industry interests, notably the Bush family itself,” he wrote.

“If there was a map of American military bases established in the region … what would be immediately striking is that it would follow almost exactly the route of a projected oil pipeline to the Indian Ocean.”

Pilger also dismissed the role of Royal Marines from Britain, America’s closest ally in its war on , as “a farcical operation as mercenaries of the United States.”

“There is no evidence that a single leader of Al-Qaeda (the organization led by chief suspect Osama bin Laden) has been captured or, to anyone’s knowledge, killed,” Pilger said of the military campaign.

As joint U.S. and Afghan team arrived in an Afghan village Wednesday, July 3, to probe a deadly air raid which Afghan officials say killed 40 civilians during a wedding Monday, July 1, Pilger said the deaths were a result of the U.S. “shoot first” policy.

Pilger is a prolific writer, and was among the first journalists to expose the horrors of the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia, and point the finger at Pol Pot’s western backers, AFP said.

His work on the fate of East Timor after it was annexed by Indonesia also shook his native Australia.

A relentless campaigner who has sought to highlight aspects of western foreign policy that most people would prefer not to hear, he has also recently turned his attention to the deaths of ordinary Iraqi’s caused by crippling international sanctions.

After the September 11 attacks, Pilger was quick to juxtapose the terror of ordinary Americans with the daily toll on civilians in Iraq, western arms sales to repressive regimes, the CIA’s covert funding of fundamentalists within the Afghan mujahedin, and the planet’s unbalanced distribution of wealth, AFP said.

Two days after the attacks, he wrote that they were “almost inevitable”, and lamented what he described as a mass that has totally failed to question Washington’s “War on Terror”.

Hundreds, possibly thousands, of Afghan civilians have been killed or wounded since the U.S. began air raids against Al-Qaeda and the Taliban regime last October, according to Afghan sources and humanitarian agencies.

The United States has acknowledged that a number of bombs have gone “astray” but has not provided any figures for civilian casualties.

Independent confirmation of reports of civilian deaths by the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) news agency has been generally unavailable.

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