Secret documents obtained from the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), the National Security Agency (NSA) and Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) show that the so-called Kill List also included up to 750 “minor” fighters, such as drug dealers, who were included only for their alleged support of the insurgents.
Drawing on field reports and internal papers, Der Spiegel recounts an attempted attack on a Taliban member named Mullah Niaz Mohammed, nicknamed “Doody”, who was number 3,673 on the NATO Kill List in 2011. Instead of killing the target, the bombing resulted in the death of a nearby child, while critically injuring the child’s father.
On December 28, the US-led coalition formally ended its 13-year military campaign in Afghanistan. However, the longstanding military confrontation with the Taliban has not led to a victory over steadily-expanding Islamic extremism in the region, according to a US State Department report released in April 2014.
According to UN estimates, the death toll among peaceful civilians is on the rise: this year it totaled over 3,100, while in 2007 it amounted to 1,523. Experts estimate that by the end of 2014, the overall number of civilian deaths will reach 10,000.