Hit
& Run author Jon Stephenson responds to ‘wrong village’ claim
from NZ Defence Force
By
Toby Manhire
28 March, 2017
In Hit
& Run,
published a week ago today, Nicky Hager and Jon Stephenson lay out
what they believe, based on a range of sources in Afghanistan and New
Zealand, took place in Operation Burnham, a “revenge attack” on
two villages in Baghlan Province on August 22-23, 2010.
According
to the book, six civilians were killed and 15 wounded in attacks on
Naik and Khak Khuday Dad, villages in the Tirgiran Valley. The
operations were led and commanded – and all appear to agree on this
point – by New Zealand’s SAS special forces, supported by Afghan
troops and American helicopter gunships. Hager and Stephenson’s
account contradicted the official position of the NZ Defence Force,
which long maintained, in line with an investigation by the Nato-led
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), that complaints of
civilian deaths were “unfounded”.
In
a bolt from the blue, however, on Sunday afternoon the NZDF issued
a statement saying:
“the central premise of Nicky Hager and Jon Stephenson’s
book, Hit
and Run,
is incorrect”. New Zealand forces had never
operated in these villages.
In
a press conference yesterday, Lieutenant General Tim Keating
elaborated (read our summary of the major
points of difference between the book and the NZDF here),
saying not only was the revenge attack claim wrong, SAS officers had
never been to the villages named. Video footage, he said, proved this
to be “irrefutable”: “[It is] geo-referenced so it gives the
location of where those engagements occurred.”
LIEUTENANT-GENERAL
TIM KEATING AT TODAY’S PRESS CONFERENCE. SCREEN GRAB: RNZ
Keating
said, “It seems to me that one of the fundamentals [should be] to
tie the alleged perpetrators of a crime to the scene of a crime,”
and that the Defence Force’s reputation was at stake. “It’s not
only the New Zealand Defence Force reputation, it’s the New Zealand
reputation. The clear contrast to me between the book and what
actually happened during Operation Burnham was in all respects the
conduct of the NZ ground forces was exemplary.”
It
has further
emerged that
Jon Stephenson, in a
2014 item for Native
Affairs,
said he had “been told that the mission took place in Tirgiran –
a village in Baghlan”, albeit a “sprawling village”. Two of the
men he spoke to for the 2014 piece, Mohammad Iqbal and Said Ahmad,
are named in Hit
and Run as
hailing from Khak Khuday Dad.
So
is it Tigiran village, as Stephenson in 2014 and Keating today both
stated? Or Khak Khuday Dad and Naik as described in Hit
and Run?
Does this critically undermine Stephenson and Hager’s account?
Asked
about the discrepancy, Stephenson last night said, via email, “When
I first met the villagers in early 2014 they explained that they came
from ‘Tirgiran’. When I subsequently spoke to them in more
detail, they explained that the villages which were attacked were
Naik and Khak Khuday.”
Stephenson
added that, having undertaken “a close analysis of Tim Keating’s
media conference” he was of “no doubt that New Zealand SAS
troopers were in Tirgiran, at both Naik and Khak Khuday Dad”.
JON
STEPHENSON ON NATIVE AFFAIRS, 2014
Below,
Jon Stephenson’s response in full …
‘There is no doubt that New Zealand SAS troopers were in Tirgiran, at both Naik and Khak Khuday Dad’
“When
I first met the villagers in early 2014 they explained that they came
from ‘Tirgiran’. When I subsequently spoke to them in more
detail, they explained that the villages which were attacked were
Naik and Khak Khuday.
“It
is possible there was a slight misunderstanding in translation. The
point is, Tirgiran is more a general area – a name for the valleys
that run off the Tirgiran river. It could be described as a sprawling
village with numerous small settlements – two of which are Naik and
Khak Khuday Dad. But my interpreter referred at the initial meeting
to Tirgiran as their village, in the same sense that someone might
refer to a town as a village which has smaller hamlets within it.
“One
point is clear to me, following a close analysis of Tim Keating’s
media conference: there is no doubt that New Zealand SAS troopers
were in Tirgiran, at both Naik and Khak Khuday Dad.
“The
name of the operation they were involved in that night – 22 August,
2010 – was Operation Burnham. We revealed this in the book, but it
was previously secret. The NZDF has confirmed that operation was
named thus.
“We
have been told, and the NZDF has confirmed, that there was only one
Operation Burnham that night.
“The
main targets of the operation were several insurgent leaders
identified as being responsible for the attack in Bamiyan that had
killed Lt. Tim O’Donnell – Maulawi Naimatullah and Abdullah
Kalta. This appears to have been confirmed by the NZDF.
The
NZDF compiled a “target package” and had Maulawi Naimatullah and
Abdullah Kalta placed on the Joint Prioritized Effects List (JPEL),
allowing for their capture or killing on sight. I was given the
details, and those of the other Tirgiran insurgents who the New
Zealanders placed on the list. It is published in the book. The NZDF
have not denied this (indeed, they cannot deny it).
The
targets of Operation Burnham were Maulawi Naimatullah and Abdullah
Kalta, both from Naik (spelt Dehane Nayak on the JPEL list). Another
insurgent from Naik, Abdul Hakim, was also on the list. He was
reportedly in Pakistan, acting as an ideological leader for the
Taliban.
“Both
Abdullah Kalta’s house and that of Maulawi Naimatullah were
attacked during the raid. This is stated in our book, and it is
clear, if you read the accounts in our book, that our description of
the raid on Maulawi Naimatullah’s house (where we say the SAS found
RPG warheads and small arms ammunition, and blew up his house)
matches the NZDF account.
“If
you look at our description of the raid on Abdullah Kalta’s house,
you’ll find similarities there between our account and that of the
NZDF. For instance, we say that an SAS trooper was injured there when
a wall of his guesthouse, weakened by fire from an Apache helicopter,
collapsed on that trooper, Mo. We describe minute details from people
at the scene, who carried him on a stretched to be airlifted to
hospital by a Blackhawk helicopter.
That account matches the NZDF’s
account, and a separate
account of
David Fisher in the Herald.
“It
is incontestable that Maulawi Naimatullah and Abdullah Kalta lived at
Naik. And it seems fairly obvious that their neighbours and fellow
villagers, who’ve assisted with research, know the name of their
own village
“Moreover,
SAS members on the raid have described the name of the target village
as ‘Naik’.
“All
the SAS and CRU [the Crisis Response Unit, Afghan counterterrorism
police officers] members on the ‘first’ Chinook have given
accounts of their landing and operations at the neighbouring village,
Khak Khuday Dad, that are compatible with information by the
villagers. For example, the commandos have described landing at Khak
Khuday Dad in a wheat field; it left a strong impression on them,
because the wheat was very high – up to their chests. The villagers
describe a wheat field being flattened by the Chinooks, and said that
its wheels left a major indentation in the ground. They measured this
indentation and it matched a Chinook’s wheelbase specifications
precisely.
“The
villagers of Khak Khuday Dad describe a 22-year-old graduate teacher
being shot, apparently by sniper fire. He had three small entry
wounds to his chest – all with larger exit wounds. This is
consistent with the wounds from an assault rifle or sniper rifle, but
not with the sort of wounds that would be caused by fire from a 30mm
Apache cannon.
“The
NZDF say they shot someone during Operation Burnham, and their
description of the location they shot that person is not inconsistent
to our description of the location he was shot in. However, they say
he was an insurgent, not a civilian. (This is a common special forces
ruse to disguise civilian deaths; basically, any ‘military-aged
male’ between certain ages can be is considered an insurgent.) But
what they have not asserted is that he was carrying or presented a
weapon at them – and ISAF almost always points that out if they
can.
“The
NZDF have also, to the best of my knowledge, not claimed that any of
the other residents presented weapons at them or fired upon them.
“The
villagers claim Apache helicopters fired relentlessly on Khak Khuday
Dad, damaging or destroying many homes. Shell casings from a 30mm
cannon were found everywhere.
“After
the SAS and Afghan commando assault teams had finished at Khak Khuday
Dad, they walked through the lush fields, on either side of the
stream, down to Naik, where they joined SAS and Afghan commandos from
the ‘second’ Chinook. They were not walking in a dry river bed;
Nail and Khak Khuday Dad were probably the ‘lush’ area described
at the NZDF media conference.
“The
kicker is that, according to the villagers, Khak Khuday Dad village
is in a side valley off (the main) Tirgiran valley. Surely the
villagers, who drew a map of this, would know that. And the maps we
have appear to clearly confirm that. Yet the NZDF claim the operation
they took part in, two kilometres from Naik and Khak Khuday Dad,
involved two villages that were both on the river – not with one
village up a side valley as the villagers of Khak Khuday Dad have
described (and photographed) their home.
“Given
that we know from multiple sources that SAS and Afghan commandos
raided the homes of Maulawi Naimatullah and Abdullah Kalta, given
their village is at Naik, and given that the accounts of what
happened at Khak Khuday Dad and Naik are almost all consistent with
the NZDF accounts, Nicky and I are confident that the villages the
NZSAS raided were those two villages.
“In
short, we are very confident our account of Operation Burnham is
correct.”
MAPS
FROM HIT AND RUN
MAPS
RELEASED BY NZDF
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