90% of Petraeus’s Captured ‘Taliban’ Were Civilians
During his intensive initial round of media interviews as commander in Afghanistan in August 2010, Gen. David Petraeus released figures to the news media that claimed spectacular success for raids by Special Operations Forces: in a 90-day period from May through July, SOF units had captured 1,355 rank-and-file Taliban, killed another 1,031, and killed or captured 365 middle- or high-ranking Taliban.
The claims of huge numbers of Taliban captured and killed continued through the rest of 2010. In December, Petraeus’s command said a total of 4,100 Taliban rank and file had been captured in the previous six months and 2,000 had been killed.
Those figures were critical to creating a new media narrative hailing the success of SOF operations as reversing what had been a losing U.S. strategy in Afghanistan.
But it turns out that more than 80 percent of those called captured Taliban fighters were released within days of having been picked up, because they were found to have been innocent civilians, according to official U.S. military data.
Even more were later released from the main U.S. detention facility at Bagram airbase called the Detention Facility in Parwan after having their files reviewed by a panel of military officers.
The timing of Petraeus’s claim of Taliban fighters captured or killed, moreover, indicates that he knew that four out of five of those he was claiming as “captured Taliban rank and file” were not Taliban fighters at all.
Checking on the claims of the number of Taliban commanders and rank and file killed is impossible, but the claims of Taliban captured could be checked against official data on admission of detainees added to Parwan.
An Afghan detained by U.S. or NATO forces can only be held in a Forward Operating Base for a maximum of 14 days before a decision must be made about whether to release the individual or send him to Parwan for longer-term detention.
IPS has now obtained an unclassified graph by Task Force 435, the military command responsible for detainee affairs, on Parwan’s monthly intake and release totals for 2010, which shows that only 270 detainees were admitted to that facility during the 90-day period from May through July 2010.
That figure also includes alleged Taliban commanders who were sent to Parwan and whom Petraeus counted separately from the rank and file figure. Thus, more than four out of every five Afghans said to have been Taliban fighters captured during that period had been released within two weeks as innocent civilians.
When Petraeus decided in mid-August to release the figure of 1,355 Taliban rank and file allegedly captured during the 90-day period, he already knew that 80 percent or more of that total had already been released.
Major Sunset R. Belinsky, the ISAF press officer for SOF operations, conceded to IPS last September that the 1,355 figure applied only to “initial detentions.”
Task Force 435 commander Adm. Robert Harward confirmed in a press briefing for journalists Nov. 30, 2010, that 80 percent of the Afghans detained by the U.S. military during the entire year to that point had been released within two weeks.
“This year, in this battle space, approximately 5,500 individuals have been detained,” Harward said, adding the crucial fact that “about 1,100 have come to the detention facility in Parwan.”
Harward did not explain the discrepancy between the two figures, however, and no journalist attending the Pentagon briefing asked for such an explanation.
Petraeus continued to exploit media ignorance of the discrepancy between the number of Taliban rank and file said to have been “captured” and the number actually sent to the FDIP.
In early December, ISAF gave Bill Roggio, a blogger for The Long War Journal Web site, the figure of more than 4,100 “enemy fighters” captured from June 1 through Nov. 30, along with 2,000 rank-and-file Taliban killed.
But during those six months, only 690 individuals were sent to Parwan, according to the Task Force 435 data—17 percent of the 4,100 Taliban rank and file claimed captured as “Taliban.”
The total of 690 detainees also includes an unknown number of commanders counted separately by Petraeus and a large number of detainees who were later released from Parwan. Considering those two factors, the actual proportion of those claimed as captured Taliban who were found not to be part of the Taliban organization rises to 90 percent or even higher.
Three hundred forty-five detainees, or 20 percent of the 1,686 total number of those who were detained in Parwan from June through November, were released upon review of their cases, according to the same Feb. 5, 2011, Task Force document obtained by IPS. The vast majority of those released from the facility had been sent to Parwan in June or later.
Detainees are released from Parwan only when the evidence against them is so obviously weak or nonexistent that U.S. officers cannot justify continuing to hold them, despite the fact that the detainees lack normal procedural rights in the “non-adversarial” hearing by the Task Force’s Detainee Review.
The deliberate confusion sowed by Petraeus by referring to anyone picked up for interrogation as a captured rank-and-file Taliban was a key element of a carefully considered strategy for creating a more favorable image of the war.
As Associated Press reporter Kimberly Dozier wrote in a Sept. 3, 2010, news analysis after an interview with Petraeus, he was very conscious that “demonstrating progress is difficult in a war fought in hundreds of small, scattered engagements, where front lines do not move and where cities do not fall.”
SOF raids, however, could be turned into a dramatic story line. “The mystique of elite, highly trained commandos swooping down on an unsuspecting Taliban leader in the dead of night plays well back home,” wrote Dozier, “especially at a time when much of the news from Afghanistan focuses on rising American deaths and frustration with the Afghan government.”
Petraeus made sure the impact of the new SOF narrative would be maximized by presenting the total of Afghans swept up in SOF raids as actual Taliban fighters.
The deceptive nature of those statistics, as now revealed by U.S. military data, raises anew the question of whether the statistics released by Petraeus on killing of alleged Taliban were similarly skewed.
(Inter Press Service)
Read more by Gareth Porter
- SOF Troops Still in Wardak as Joint US-Afghan Probe Continues – March 11th, 2013
- Former Insiders Criticize Iran Policy as US Hegemony – February 25th, 2013
- Bulgarian Revelations Explode Hezbollah Bombing ‘Hypothesis’ – February 17th, 2013
- Iranian Bomb Graph Appears Adapted from One on Internet – December 13th, 2012
- News Media Misled by IAEA Data on Sensitive Iranian Stockpile – November 20th, 2012





thedissenter
June 12th, 2011 at 9:03 pm
Gitmo is full of them. No surprise here.
montaigne
June 13th, 2011 at 2:13 am
Good for Petraeus, that he lives in a country that is safe for liars! Especially officials!
kelley v
June 13th, 2011 at 2:42 am
This is huge news, especially of the media's failure to catch this and report it earlier. thank goodness for gareth!
VietnamWarVet
June 13th, 2011 at 6:24 am
'It is the merit of a general to impart good news and to hide the truth" – said by a Roman offical some 2000 years ago.
Petraeus is a LIAR and a danger to America!
skulz fontaine
June 13th, 2011 at 6:30 am
This sounds like a redo of Guantanamo. You know, Camp X-Ray DeathCamp Gulag-in-a-Tropics.
Where nine out of ten 'detainees' were Afghan farmers and/or children. Herr Generale Davy is a lying tool and he now goes to the dark-heart mother of lying.
Hey, did you know that CIA was beating Afghan farmers, at Bagram Air Base, prior to sending them to the Cuban Deathhouse? Oh it's true. Why, one enterprising CIA goony even hung his intended victim by his wrist using chains. In a cargo container no less. Beat that Afghan farmer to DEATH!
As I remember, that little war crime was reported out first, right here at Antiwar.com. Yup.
Damn, a nation can tally one mountain of immoral war crimes in ten freaking years.
zapatatio
June 13th, 2011 at 7:48 am
The fascist police state that is amerika extends to all of its far flung empire ! As was with Rome, the fascist amerikan empire is so overextended, and so obsessed with killing and torture that its collapse assured !
Jamal
June 13th, 2011 at 10:15 am
Senator Ron Paul…, it is not a question of siding with any foreign government regarding what is happening in Libya or Syria.., US, England and some other European countries built what is called NATO.., a militarism regime supposed to defend Europe when there was a communist Russia.., now there is no such regime exist so why do US and NATO militarism are acting the way they do.., and why do we have NATO while there is no communist threat from anywhere in this world.., and if there is.., non of them would dare to attack us.., every nation tries to be on their own and defending themselves in one way or other., by US and NATO being managed as a militarism regime therefore the American people so as Europeans are still at war and or creating wars for NATO to be engaged, here beside the costs in continuing these wars there is also the cost of humans binning killed by US and EU pretending that they consider these facts yet we are short in having money to educate our kids and asking them to pay more for their educations.
So which side is right or wrong is not the question, but one thing is for sure, the side of people and for the people is always been the government responsibility and government have a obligation to chose the right side for its people because the government is by the people.., now I am not talking about Libya or Syria but here I rather side with American people because you.., senator.., are for the people wanting to take care of social economic problems that nation is facing. In regard to Gats notes regarding people being killed in Syria.., people are killed daily by the US drones in Afghanistan and people been killed in Iraq by the thousands and still people being killed by these little wars here and there which US and NATO is involved. Thank you Senator.., we need more people like you everywhere.
US and NATO is a militarism regime.., there is no such thing as democracy it is said to be that way and in practical terms there is no such thing.., Being a militarism regime you then need to act as one. US and EU have proven the notion in Iraq and they are doing it in Afghanistan and elsewhere.., look people.., sooner or later this trend will develop to a open fascism social political system.., US is almost halfway there by being a police state.
Tom Mauel
June 13th, 2011 at 11:00 am
The number of civilians killed would likely be around 90%. That is the number of Taliban reported killed would include 90% civilians. That number would be consistent with past estimates.
jeff_davis
June 13th, 2011 at 11:53 am
"The deceptive nature of those statistics… raises …the question of whether the statistics …on killing of alleged Taliban were similarly skewed."
Translation: If Petraeus lied about 90% of the captured, what about those that were killed? How many of them were innocents brutally and carelessly slaughtered? Sixty, seventy, eighty, ninety percent? What else can a reasonable person conclude?
Recall the words of Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal “We have shot an amazing number of people, but to my knowledge, none has ever proven to be a threat.”
ML3
June 13th, 2011 at 1:15 pm
"The deliberate confusion sowed by Petraeus by referring to anyone picked up for interrogation as a captured rank and file Taliban was a key element of a carefully considered strategy for creating a more favourable image of the war."
And he was rewarded for his efforts – incoming CIA Director
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