Some thougts
What do we know for sure?
Two stolen fuel trucks stuck on the sandbank of a rivercrossing roughly 6-7 km south of theGerman QRT in Kunduz were destroyed by guided 500 pound bombs dropped from an US F-15 in the midst of the night on the order of the German officer in charge. Many persons died in this attacks which happened according to most at around 0230 LCT 2 km away from the nearest village.
The pictures
What is unclear?
An interesting fact is that it seems that part of the victims were not announced in the usual fashion through the mosque. According the the source already quoted, shame plays here a vital role, as they died while stealing, even if driven by poverty. The interviewed Afghani blamed mostly the persons who went out at night to steal.
The story is riddled by a myriad statements and comments. I will try to analyze the event:The German magazine Spiegel reports the following.
According to the Bundeswehr the two trucks got stuck in a dry riverbed.
There they were localized by a German UAV (I assume a KZO drone) and a scout troop mounted on a Fennek was directed to the scene.
They confirmed that the crowd around the trucks was armed and organized.
After a second comfirmation a USAF F-15 dropped two GBU-38 onto the trucks.
56 insurgents got killed and 11 got away.
So far the Bundeswehr says that there were no civilians at the scene.
What do we know for sure?
Two stolen fuel trucks stuck on the sandbank of a rivercrossing roughly 6-7 km south of theGerman QRT in Kunduz were destroyed by guided 500 pound bombs dropped from an US F-15 in the midst of the night on the order of the German officer in charge. Many persons died in this attacks which happened according to most at around 0230 LCT 2 km away from the nearest village.
The pictures
What is unclear?
The Timeflow of the events
]The thieves attacked the trucks before 2300 and not after midnight as the speaker of the German MoD stated - perhaps he confused it the moment the decision to attack was taken. At least one source point towards some hours before 2100. Seemingly it became know rather rapidly that stolen fuel was available and many tried to get some. The people trickled in on different times on foot, mules, tractors and motorcycles.
]The thieves attacked the trucks before 2300 and not after midnight as the speaker of the German MoD stated - perhaps he confused it the moment the decision to attack was taken. At least one source point towards some hours before 2100. Seemingly it became know rather rapidly that stolen fuel was available and many tried to get some. The people trickled in on different times on foot, mules, tractors and motorcycles.
The victims
The thieves planned to tractor away at least part of the fuel, and seemed to have offered fuel to a loosely restriced circle of villages and/or persons. We can not now if those who came were supporters, insurgents, or members of an ethnic group or friends or relative of the the former. At least some of the persons around the trucks carried weapons and almost all seem to agree that "the Taliban" had organized the theft and the partition of the fuel. Around 2300 a great amount of persons were around the trucks, with many getting fuel, according to local media. This number lessened and lessened the later the hour. Still some were still coming, according to the (German and local) source quoted above. It seems that the Taliban were not too concerned to be attack, perhaps because bombings from the air have been quite rare around Kunduz and possibly the fact that civilians were around.
The circumstances of the bombing
The forces of ISAF seem to have localized the position of the truck thanks to drones or possibly due to informants. A Fennek might also have been part of the operation, but this is also unclear. The boming was likely also ordered because on informant said that there were only Taliban left nearby the trucks. The crux here is that we don't know if this information was correct and if it was confirmed by a drone and how much time elapsed between this input of the information, the order of the attack and the attack itself. Since the Bundeswehr has ordered very few airstrikes the interaction between them and the counterparts might have been slow.
The thieves planned to tractor away at least part of the fuel, and seemed to have offered fuel to a loosely restriced circle of villages and/or persons. We can not now if those who came were supporters, insurgents, or members of an ethnic group or friends or relative of the the former. At least some of the persons around the trucks carried weapons and almost all seem to agree that "the Taliban" had organized the theft and the partition of the fuel. Around 2300 a great amount of persons were around the trucks, with many getting fuel, according to local media. This number lessened and lessened the later the hour. Still some were still coming, according to the (German and local) source quoted above. It seems that the Taliban were not too concerned to be attack, perhaps because bombings from the air have been quite rare around Kunduz and possibly the fact that civilians were around.
The circumstances of the bombing
The forces of ISAF seem to have localized the position of the truck thanks to drones or possibly due to informants. A Fennek might also have been part of the operation, but this is also unclear. The boming was likely also ordered because on informant said that there were only Taliban left nearby the trucks. The crux here is that we don't know if this information was correct and if it was confirmed by a drone and how much time elapsed between this input of the information, the order of the attack and the attack itself. Since the Bundeswehr has ordered very few airstrikes the interaction between them and the counterparts might have been slow.
An interesting fact is that it seems that part of the victims were not announced in the usual fashion through the mosque. According the the source already quoted, shame plays here a vital role, as they died while stealing, even if driven by poverty. The interviewed Afghani blamed mostly the persons who went out at night to steal.
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