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NATO conceded the Feb. 12 killings in Gardez were the result of faulty intelligence and that its forces had killed the two men because they believed they posed a threat to their personal safety. On the night of the attack, the family had been celebrating the birth of a grandson. "We deeply regret the outcome of this operation, accept responsibility for our actions that night, and know that this loss will be felt forever by the families," spokesman Brig Gen. Eric Tremblay said in the statement. "We now understand that the men killed were only trying to protect their families," he said. International forces were working with Afghan security partners to improve coordination and "help prevent such mistakes from happening again," Tremblay said. Tremblay said initial reports that the dead women had been bound and gagged before the raid had been apparently based on a misinterpretation of Islamic burial customs, which require bodies be shrouded for speedy burial. Typically limbs are bound to allow the body to be more easily lifted into the grave. International force officials will discuss the results of the investigation with family of those killed, apologize and provide compensation, he said. The two men killed in the Gardez raid had been long-serving government loyalists and opponents of al-Qaida and the Taliban, one serving as provincial district attorney and the other as police chief in Paktia's Zurmat district. Their brother, who also lost his wife and a sister, said he learned of the investigation result from the Internet, but had yet to receive formal notice. Mohammad Sabar said the family's only demand was that the informant who passed on the faulty information about militant activity be tried and publicly executed. "Please, please, please, our desire, our demand is that this spy be executed in front of the people to ensure that such bad things don't happen again," Sabar said.
[Associated
Press;
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