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RPT-Crack US Marine unit recalled after Afghan deaths
24 Mar 2007 19:19:38 GMT
Source: Reuters

(fixes typo in effectively in paragraph 3)

WASHINGTON, March 24 (Reuters) - An elite U.S. Marine Corp unit accused of killing 10 Afghan civilians has been called home early after commanders decided they could no longer operate effectively, an spokesman said on Saturday.

The order to remove the 120-member unit came from Maj. General Francis Kearney, who commands U.S. Special Operations forces in the Middle East and central Asia, after local anger over the March 4 fighting hampered their mission.

"General Kearney assessed that the relationship was damaged to the point that the unit could not as affectively conduct counterinsurgency operations, so he moved them out," said spokesman Lt. Col. Lou Leto.

Hundreds demonstrated against the U.S. military after the incident in eastern Afghanistan and President Hamid Karzai condemned the Marines' action.

The U.S. military at the time cited a "complex" Taliban ambush involving a suicide car bombing and gunfire in a populated area outside Jalalabad city near Pakistan.

The military said the Marines, members of a highly trained special operations force, fired in self-defense and 16 civilians died in the suicide raid and subsequent fighting.

No provincial or central Afghan government official has confirmed the U.S. military's account that the convoy came under rebel attack. Analysts say the killing of civilians by NATO and U.S. troops is sapping public support for the foreign mission in Afghanistan.

Two provincial Afghan government officials said at the time that 10 civilians were killed and more than 25 wounded. Some of the hospitalized injured said U.S. soldiers just opened fire.
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Pakistani tribesmen patrol in Wana, the main town of the South Wziristan region bordering Afghanistan, March 26, 2007. Al Qaeda-linked militants and Pakistani tribesmen fired rockets, mortar shells and automatic weapons on March 31, 2007 in a region where officials say up to 177 people have been killed since last week. Picture taken March 26, 2007. BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE