"CNN PRESENTS"
(Attn. Producer)
CNN
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Producer
I watched your presentation (August 3) about the "prison uprising" at
Qila Jhangwi in northern
Afghanistan
during the last week of November 2001.
Your presentation seems to have failed to prove its intent and went
entirely
against its thesis. Your thesis was as follows:
1. General Dostum gave safe passage to Al-Qaida and Taliban prisoners.
2. The prisoners, while imprisoned in the fort, rose up in armed
rebellion and had to be suppressed by force.
3. The tragedy of the whole incident was that a
CIA
officer named Spann
was killed by the prisoners and the anticlimax was that another
American,
John Walker Lindh,
was found among the Taliban prisoners.
I watched carefully and there can be little doubt that the thesis was
not
proven and in fact the program backfired leaving behind serious issues
which
need to be investigated.
The program showed as follows:
1. The prisoners, on promise of safe passage, were disarmed and taken
to Qila Jhangvi.
2. We are shown the prisoners being tied up and lined up.
3. We are told that the prisoners tried to snatch weapons from their
nothern alliance captors (not on camera).
4. We watch a CIA officer saying that he has killed 5 prisoners with
his hand
gun and that the other CIA man, Spann, too had killed three or more who
went for him clawing at his skin (obviously unarmed prisoners).
5. We are told that the prisoners had found guns in the fort and were
fighting back.
6. U.S. special forces are seen arriving and they order air strikes on
the prisoners in the fort.
7. The U.S. air strikes hit repeatedly. The next day MASSIVE BOMBING of
the
prison is shown. The camera team man reporting the bombing finds the
huge explosion from the 2000 pounders "beautiful."
8. After the air strikes, the northern alliance (Dostum's men) are sent
in to kill the few prisoners who survived the bombing.
9. The Dostum men are shown shooting into the fort as if carrying out a
turkey shoot.
10. One Taliban got out of the fort: we see him dimly in the background
before he is killed. We are told that he had come out shouting "Allahu
Akbar."
11. The prisoners, about 400, are all killed. Their bodies litter the
ground.
A few survive in the tunnels under the fort and are flushed out by
pouring
gasoline in and setting it alight. Miraculously a handful still survive
and
the channels they are hiding in are flooded with cold water. Almost
dead,
they surrender. Among them is the "American Taliban." He is still
"high" from his horrendous experience and talks about his desire to embrace
martyrdom.
Quite obviously a massacre of prisoners of war was carried out,
ruthlessly and systematically. Even if we concede that a few Taliban
grabbed
the guns of their captors, that could have happened out of desperation
as the
prisoners saw that they were to be killed. {At the end of the program
you did
accept the fact that the intent to kill the prisoners was implied in
the
words of the CIA officers.}
In such a situation, the northern alliance forces could have just
waited
outside the fort and the starving and cold Taliban would have soon had
to
surrender. The BOMBING from the air of a prison was surely meant to
decimate
the prisoners. The turkey shoot after the bombing was quite clearly
meant to
ensure that no one survived.
You showed a certain naivete in trying to imply that General
Dostum
meant well by his offer of safe passage to the prisoners. It was a
trick
meant to disarm the prisoners and to ensure their destruction. At the
conclusion you try to make a folk hero out of Dostum whose good
intentions
did not work out, although Dostum has shown throughout the conflict
that he
is not to be trusted and his troops are rapists and murderers. {See the
Washington Post, of June 16, 2002, p.A23, for the gang rape of an
international aid worker in the area under Dostum's control. The local
authorities refused to take action against the seven men who gang raped
this
woman.}
Obviously the message of your report is that the only thing bad which
happened during that massacre was the death of a CIA officer.
Sincerely
Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
410-638-5965
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2002-08-04 Sun 13:01ct