Americké drony zneškodnily atentátníka. Je to budoucnost boje s terorismem, domnívá se Landovský
Po útoku sebevražedného atentátníka, jemuž podlehlo na 170 lidí, se americké armádě prý podařilo zneškodnit člena organizace Islámský stát, když se chystal zaútočit na kábulské letiště. V pondělí ráno na letiště zamířilo pět dalších raket, i ty se ale povedlo včas zlikvidovat. „Odpovědnost za ochranu civilistů na letišti je v tuto chvíli hlavně na armádě USA,“ říká velvyslanec při NATO Jakub Landovský (ČSSD).
Ačkoliv vrcholnou platformou pro diskusi o Afghánistánu zůstává Severoatlantická aliance (NATO), o dronových útocích na atentátníka rozhodly Spojené státy samy. Na dohadování na úrovni aliance nebyl čas, myslí si Landovský.
„Domnívám se, že dronové útoky se v budoucnu stanou tím nejdůležitějším příspěvkem v boji proti terorismu – ukazuje se, že spoléhat pouze na možnosti místních sil a podporu místních vlád asi napříště v boji s tak hrozným nepřítelem nebude možné,“ dodává.
A připomíná: „Nikdo tak úplně nepředpokládal, že vůle k boji bude po odchodu spojenců na straně afghánských vojáků tak flagrantně chybět. To je věc, kterou budeme muset dál řešit. Je to věc, která podráží alianci nohy v tom hlavním způsobu boje s terorismem.“
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30. srpna 2021
Český rozhlas Plus
mezitím
Afghanistan: US investigates civilian deaths in Kabul strike
The Pentagon says it can't yet dispute claims that a US drone strike on a suspected suicide bomber in Afghanistan killed a number of civilians.
The strike, near Kabul airport, killed 10 members of one family, including six children, relatives have told the BBC.
The US military said it was targeting a vehicle carrying at least one person associated with the Afghan branch of the Islamic State group.
The US was assessing and investigating reports of civilian deaths, it added.
American commanders said there were "significant secondary explosions" after the drone strike - implying there were explosives at the scene - which may have harmed people nearby.
The youngest child to be killed was two-year-old Sumaya, and the oldest child was 12-year-old Farzad, the family told the BBC.
"It's wrong, it's a brutal attack, and it's happened based on wrong information," Ramin Yousufi, a relative of the victims, said.
He added, tearfully: "Why have they killed our family? Our children? They are so burned out we cannot identify their bodies, their faces."
Another relative, Emal Ahmadi, told the BBC that it was his two-year-old daughter who was killed in the strike.
Mr Ahmadi said he and others in the family had applied for evacuation to the US, and had been waiting for a phone call telling them to go to the airport.
That included one of his relatives, Ahmad Naser, who was killed in the strike and had previously worked as a translator with US forces. Other victims had previously worked for international organisations and held visas allowing them entry to the US.
The US, Mr Ahmadi added, had made "a mistake, it was a big mistake".
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August 30, 2021
BBC News