In keeping with the McCain campaign’s announced strategy of smearing Sen. Barack Obama, here’s an ad from the McCain team portraying Obama as slandering the
“„[Shows a slide of himself at a meeting of Afghan villagers] The picture in the bottom center, if I could dwell on that for just a second, yes, that’s myself with my back turned to you, at a province that doesn’t need to be named, and it has to do with civilian casualties. It’s an episode — and I’d like to dwell on civilian casualties with you for a minute.
“„We take great measures to try to avoid civilian casualties. But when a mistake is made and inadvertently there is a loss of civilian life unintentionally, we try to make sure that we get out with the truth as quickly as we can. We have a hard time beating the insurgent to the story because he’s not concerned with the truth.
“„But in this particular case I went to this location and talked with a group of tribal elders in an area where we think we inadvertently caused some civilian casualties. And to tell you what an incredible sort of population lives in Afghanistan, that fellow sitting in the middle of the picture there, he lost seven members of his family.
“„Yet he came and talked to me that day, allowed me to apologize to him, allowed us to have a shura, allowed us to talk and, at the end of the day, he professed that he did not want the Taliban back in power — that he supported the presence of international forces.
“„I don’t think that would happen in our country, in the United States of America. I don’t think someone that lost seven members of their family would come sit down with somebody in the military and even have a discussion.
“„But it tells you about the resiliency of that population. But I hope you ask me something else about civilian casualties, because that’s something we try to go to great lengths to avoid in that country. …
“„[Reporter asks question about civilian casualties]… First of all, it’s important that ISAF, that the military, try to come out with the truth as quickly as possible. But we inherently play catch-up to anybody that reports a number or an event. We do try at least to get a truthful accounting in the media.
“„It’s very difficult to come up with numbers in Afghanistan after there’s been a military operation. A lot of that’s cultural, because people generally are taken away and buried quite quickly in that culture, so it’s not like you can exploit a site for a period of time and come up with an accurate number, so a lot of it’s based on estimates.
“„And then, finally, I won’t go into specifics on rules of engagement, but I’ll say that principles such as positive identification of targets to the best of our ability, the concept of proportionality, precise planning considerations on type of weapons and use of weapons — all of that is factored in, all of that is attempted to be disciplined in units before they even come to the theater.
“„But when you fight a counterinsurgency, by the nature of an insurgency, where the enemy mixes in with the population, it is virtually impossible to completely avoid civilian casualties in that kind of environment.