The Civilian Toll From the War Against ISIS Is
Huge. Why Isn’t the Press Covering It?
The US-led bombing campaign has killed hundreds, according to one
comprehensive report. The Pentagon admits to two.
By Sara Rathod
August 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Nation" -
Eight
months ago, on December 28, a warplane from the US-led coalition
fighting the Islamic State, or ISIS, struck a building in the Syrian
town of al-Bab that had been identified as a local headquarters for
the militant group. It was just one of over a thousand airstrikes
the coalition had launched up to that point. However, this building
wasn’t simply a gathering place for militants or a storehouse for
weapons. It was also being used as a makeshift prison for local
civilians whom ISIS had accused of petty offenses like smoking
cigarettes and wearing jeans.
The jail was a symptom of the harsh rule the
Islamic State had imposed in early 2014. When ISIS took over the
town, in the Aleppo region near the Turkish border, ordinary life
gave way to a
reign of terror. Executions were regularly carried out in the
town square, with the bodies of victims being left out for days,
often with signs hanging from their chests stating their alleged
crimes. Islamic State members would stop children in the street and
ask them if their fathers had gone to prayer. Hundreds of locals
were held in prison at any given time.
When the coalition bomb hit on that December
evening, one witness said, the explosion
shook the entire city. In the hours that followed, there was
shooting in the streets; the Islamic State could be heard making
announcements over loudspeakers; and sirens wailed into the night.
The witness said he could hear women in the town screaming and
crying when they found out that the building where their relatives
were being held had been hit. The prison was leveled, and it was
days before the rubble was cleared and all the bodies were extracted
and returned to the victims’ families. At least 58 civilians were
killed, including a number of teenagers. So far, it is one of the
worst mass-casualty incidents attributed to the US-led coalition.
The Pentagon didn’t disclose the airstrike
publicly, but a week later, reporters at McClatchy got a tip from
one of their partners in Syria. After persistent questioning, the
Pentagon admitted it had carried out the attack. McClatchy published
a story, backed up by photographic evidence, NGO corroboration, and
witness accounts. If it hadn’t been for the doggedness of the
McClatchy reporters, the story might not have been reported at all.
But even after McClatchy’s report, very few news
outlets picked it up. Even the most avid reader of The New York
Times or The Washington Post would never have heard of
the incident. News of the strike apparently did create a stir among
Pentagon reporters when it was first released, but for one reason or
another, the topic was eventually dropped. Roy Gutman, a Pulitzer
Prize–winning foreign correspondent and one of the authors of the
McClatchy piece, says only one reporter ever called him hoping to
follow up on the story.
“The lack of contacts from colleagues was
definitely surprising. It was amazing,” he said, adding, “It’s
absolutely essential that all news organizations follow up on these
things.”
As of this month, the US-led coalition has been
bombing Islamic State targets in Iraq and Syria for one year. So
far, it has carried out over 5,900 strikes. In that time, the
Pentagon has admitted to only two civilian deaths, continually
insisting that its precision weapons have minimized civilian
fatalities to a remarkable level—too remarkable to be believed. In
June, Lt. Gen. John Hesterman, former combined forces air component
commander, called the current air war against ISIS “the most precise
and disciplined in the history of aerial warfare.”
However, in a
report published this month, a monitoring group called Airwars
has documented at least 459 civilian deaths that it says were likely
the result of the coalition bombing campaign—a far cry from the two
deaths that have so far been admitted. Each of these incidents has
been reported by two or more credible sources and occurred in an
area where Airwars confirmed there was a coalition airstrike. Many
are backed up by photographs, videos, and biographical information
about the victims. The revelation is hardly surprising, given the
history of
civilian deaths resulting from US-led air campaigns. In the
first year of the Iraq War, aerial bombing resulted in
over 2,000 deaths.
In Afghanistan,
over
3,000 civilians were killed in the first year of the aerial
campaign. What is most surprising about the bombing of ISIS over the
past year is that even after widely reported mass-casualty incidents
in those previous wars, major media outlets have been slow to
challenge the Pentagon’s unrealistic claims.
Even at a
press conference specifically dedicated to the state of the Air
Force, at which both the Air Force chief of staff and the Air Force
secretary were present and which took place only four days after
McClatchy released its story, none of the correspondents posed a
single question about civilian casualties. According to Chris Woods,
head of the Airwars project and an award-winning investigative
journalist, this falls into a trend of major US news outlets shying
away from challenging the official narrative around civilian deaths.
“When you have such extravagant claims—‘No
civilians or almost no civilians are being killed in war…’—any
journalist who understands war and conflict should know that there’s
going to be something fishy about that,” Woods said. “Are we seeing
enough journalists questioning that? I don’t think we are.”
Mainstream media outlets are not unaware of the
cost of aerial bombardment. In fact, many were reporting some
civilian casualties from coalition bombing in the first few months
of the campaign, issuing early warnings about the dangers of
targeting ISIS in populous areas. This coverage came out around the
same time that thousands of Syrians took to the streets to protest
the airstrikes, in part because of civilian casualties. Early
coverage also seemed to be a reaction to the expansion of the
bombing campaign into Syria, the shift in targeting to include
lucrative oil facilities where civilians were working, and the
movement of Islamic State fighters into more populated areas. These
early warnings proved to be prescient. Since that time, the number
of airstrikes per month has increased—but the reporting hasn’t kept
up.
As a matter of fact, the first three months of the
campaign, when these reports were released, saw relatively low
numbers of civilian deaths compared to the months that
followed—which have included at least three mass-casualty events.
However, the media’s attention soon shifted to the question of
whether there were too many restrictions on the air campaign. Its
previous warnings have yet to translate into a substantial effort to
hold the coalition accountable, even as civilian casualties have
mounted, and especially when it comes to mass-casualty airstrikes.
Reporting of these events has been patchy across the board, with key
news outlets forgoing coverage. The result has been that few of them
have risen to the
infamous status of the Azizabad debacle or the Kunduz massacre,
both of which occurred during the war in Afghanistan.
While the media almost unanimously swarmed around
the Bir Mahli incident—during which a coalition strike on an
ISIS-controlled village in Syria left 64 dead, including women and
children—two other mass-casualty incidents, in al-Bab and Hawija,
have received far less attention. At one Pentagon briefing, an AP
reporter asked about the June airstrike on an IED-making facility in
Hawija, which killed up to 70 civilians. In response, the Pentagon
insisted that the Islamic State was to blame because it planned to
use the deadly explosives against civilians and Iraqi forces.
General Hesterman
told reporters, “If there’re unintended injuries, that
responsibility rests squarely on Daesh [ISIS].”
Even though Washington Post and Wall
Street Journal reporters were present, neither publication
reported on the Hawija bombing. The New York Times
relegated its coverage to the web, republishing a Reuters story. In
fact, even the Bir Mahli incident was only given a brief mention in
the Post.
Deeply reported stories like the one that appeared
in McClatchy are few and far between. The New York Times,
for instance, has reported on civilian casualties mainly by
republishing stories from wire services like AP and Reuters. Much
coverage over the past year has taken the he-said-she-said form:
human rights groups say dozens were killed; the military says it
doesn’t believe any were killed. That kind of story, while better
than nothing, does not draw adequate attention to the growing gap
between what rights groups and witnesses on the ground are saying
and what the coalition is willing to admit.
In recent years, many publications have been under
financial pressure to shrink their foreign desks. However, the
tendency to take Pentagon statements more or less at face value
cannot be chalked up to financial constraints. The Los Angeles
Times has
cut its foreign bureaus from 22 in 2004 to ten as of last year,
but it still managed to report the al-Bab story, complete with
testimony from the head of the Syrian Network for Human Rights.
Meanwhile, due to its merger with the International Herald
Tribune, The New York Times now has more foreign
correspondents than ever before, and it has seven more international
bureaus than it had ten years ago.
The more significant obstacle for news
organizations is the increasing danger of sending reporters into the
field, where there is a possibility that they will kidnapped,
tortured, or even subjected to gruesome public beheadings. Now that
the US-led coalition is fighting militants who are holding territory
that stretches across much of eastern Syria and western Iraq, it is
difficult to send investigative teams to the site of coalition
bombings.
But as Woods points out, it’s still possible to
report these stories in thoughtful ways, as demonstrated by the work
of Airwars and McClatchy. Reporters can contact Syrian NGOs, speak
to refugees, and scour social media. And if anyone has the resources
to do this, it’s the major new outlets.
“These are very, very tough times for
journalists,” Woods said. “We are limited in what we can achieve,
but [Airwars is] a tiny organization that has spent six months
looking at this and we have demonstrably shown that there is a major
volume of material in the public domain alleging significant
civilian casualties in Iraq and Syria. We found that material. We
published that material. The material was always there. I guess the
question is, why haven’t news organizations gone looking for that?”
A more likely explanation for why we have not seen
many scathing critiques of the military’s lack of transparency is a
combination of caution and editorial priorities. Many news outlets
have dedicated their time over the past year to analyzing the
effectiveness of the air campaign, parsing through the web of actors
involved in the conflicts in Syria and Iraq, documenting the plight
of refugees, and explaining the rise of ISIS and its inner workings.
Moreover, many thousands more civilians have been killed by the
governments of Syria and Iraq, along with their associated militias,
as well as by the Islamic State and other militant groups, than have
been killed by coalition bombing. Reporter Eric Schmitt of The
New York Times says the paper has been waiting for more
concrete evidence that the Pentagon has been downplaying civilian
casualty numbers.
There are signs that now the mainstream press may
be more willing to push the military on civilian casualty figures,
whether it has enough intelligence on the ground to choose the right
targets, and who it’s defining as a combatant as opposed to a
noncombatant. Just this month, The New York Times released
a well-reported story detailing a civilian-casualty incident in the
Syrian town of Atmeh. According to Schmitt, there is serious talk at
the Times of taking a broader look at the air campaign over
the past year and challenging the Pentagon’s claims.
“The people who died in al-Bab
and some of the other people who’ve died in these attacks are sort
of nameless, faceless, and voiceless,” Gutman said. “I do think we
have an obligation to try to be the voice of the voiceless if we
can.”