Quote of the day: General Allen on the success of night ops in Afghanistan


Here is an excerpt from the testimony yesterday of Gen. John
Allen, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, to the Senate Armed Services
Committee:




This last year we had about 2,200 night
operations. Of those 2,200 or so night
operations, in 90 percent of them we didn't fire a shot. On more than 50 percent of them, we got the
targeted individual, and in 30 percent more we got the next associate of that
individual as well. So 83 percent,
roughly, of the night operations we got either the primary target or an
associate.



In all of those night operations, even with
10 percent where we fired a shot, there was less than 1.5 percent civilian
casualties. Now, I don't diminish any civilian casualties by reducing it to a
percentage point. Every one of those is tragic. But after 9,200 night operations, 27 -- 27 -- people were killed or wounded
in night operations. That would argue
for the power of night operations preserving life and reducing civilian
casualties in all other kinds of operation than necessarily being a risk of
creating additional civilian casualties. That's in my mind, sir, as we go through the
process of negotiating
an outcome for the Afghanization, if you will, of
night operations.


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Published on March 23, 2012 03:12
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