
One
year ago, on July 28, 2011, Ahmad Omaid
Khpalwak,
25, was killed by American troops during a brutal close-quarters battle with a Taliban
suicide squad backed by gunmen. Khpalwak was one of 22 people killed in the hours-long
siege on government buildings that included the governor's office and police
headquarters in Tarin Kot, capital of Uruzgan province. A reporter for the
BBC, Pajhwok Afghan News, and several other organizations, Khpalwak died with
11 bullet wounds in his body. He was shot in a government-run newsroom while waving
his press card and declaring in English that he was a journalist. It's fair to
ask, one year after Khpalwak died, if any lessons have been learned. The odds that
a journalist could be killed by U.S. forces' fire seem, unfortunately, to be as
high as ever.