The US army's Talon Anvil strike-cell played
an "outsize role" in dropping over 100,000
bombs across Syria
By News Desk
December 15, 202:
Information Clearing House
-- "The
Cradle" -
The New York Times (NYT) has
revealed that a top secret US cell known as
Talon Anvil sidestepped safeguards and
repeatedly ordered airstrikes that killed an
untold number of civilians in Syria under
the guise of targeting ISIS fighters.
According to the report published on
12 December, the shadowy group operated
from anonymous rooms “cluttered with flat
screens” in three shifts around the clock
between 2014 and 2019.
Among US officials, Talon Anvil was known
to disregard safeguard procedures to
function at the “speed of war,” and obscured
a countless number of civilian deaths
including farmers trying to harvest,
children in the street, families fleeing
fighting, and villagers taking shelter in
buildings.
The NYT report also claims that Talon
Anvil played an “outsize role” in the
dropping of over 100,000 bombs in the
war-torn country.
“They were ruthlessly efficient and good
at their jobs … but they also made a lot of
bad strikes,” a former Air Force
intelligence officer who worked on hundreds
of classified Talon Anvil missions told the
NYT.
Among the many bombing campaigns that
Talon Anvil was responsible for is the
2019 airstrike in the eastern Syrian
governorate of Dayr al-Zawr which killed
over 60 civilians, including dozens of women
and children. This particular attack has
been described as being “part of a pattern
of reckless strikes that started years
earlier.”
US Air Force officials who spoke with the
NYT on condition of anonymity said that over
the years they notified their commanding
officers several times about Talon Anvil’s
disregard for civilian lives. However, the
military leaders seemed reluctant to
scrutinize the strike cell as it was
“driving the offensive” on the battlefield.
According to Larry Lewis, a former
Pentagon and State Department adviser, every
year that Talon Anvil operated in Syria the
civilian casualty rate increased
significantly.
Lewis also claims that US military
commanders “enabled the tactics by failing
to emphasize the importance of reducing
civilian casualties.” He singles out General
Stephen J. Townsend, who commanded US troops
in Syria in 2016 and 2017, as being
“dismissive of widespread reports from news
media and human rights organizations
describing the mounting toll.”
Talon Anvil’s operations were highly
classified and the strike cell as a whole
never existed in an official manner. It was
run by a classified Special Operations unit
called Task Force 9, whose other tasks
included training allied Syrian and Kurdish
armed groups.
The strike cell reportedly worked out of
“bland office spaces” both in Iraq and Syria
and were in control of a “fleet of Predator
and Reaper drones that bristled with
precision Hellfire missiles and laser-guided
bombs.”
They carried out most of their operations
based on tips from allied forces, secret
electronic intercepts, drone cameras, and
other information to find enemy targets.
A former member of Talon Anvil told the
NYT that the strike cell often decided that
something was an enemy target with scant
supporting evidence. But as suspicion
mounted over their tactics, Talon Anvil
began to classify nearly all of its attacks
as defensive – even when targets were 100
miles away from the front lines.
“It’s more expedient to resort to
self-defense,” said Lewis. “It’s easier to
get approved.”
The drone operators were also known to
turn away the drone cameras away from
targets before launching bombs or missiles
to avoid accountability.
The operators also pressured analysts,
who watched drone footage after strikes had
taken place, to report that they had seen
weapons or other evidence that would justify
a strike hit. If they refused, the cell
would simply ask for another analyst.