A Short History of U.S. Bombing of
Civilian Facilities
By Jon Schwarz
October 08, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept" - On
October 3, a U.S. AC-130 gunship attacked a hospital run
by Médecins Sans Frontières in Kunduz, Afghanistan,
partially destroying it. Twelve staff members and
10 patients, including three children, were killed, and
37 people were injured. According to MSF, the U.S. had
previously been informed of the hospital’s precise
location, and the attack continued for 30 minutes after
staff members desperately called the U.S. military.
The U.S.
first claimed the hospital had been “collateral
damage” in an airstrike aimed at “individuals” elsewhere
who were “threatening the force.” Since then, various
vague and contradictory explanations have been offered
by the U.S. and Afghan governments, both of which
promise to investigate the bombing. MSF has called the
attack a war crime and demanded an independent
investigation by a commission set up under the Geneva
Conventions.
While the international outcry has
been significant, history suggests this is less because
of what happened and more because of whom it happened
to. The U.S. has repeatedly attacked civilian facilities
in the past but the targets have generally not been
affiliated with a European, Nobel Peace Prize-winning
humanitarian organization such as MSF.
Below is a sampling of such incidents
since the 1991 Gulf War. If you believe some significant
examples are missing, please
send them
our way. To be clear, we’re looking for U.S. attacks
on specifically civilian facilities, such as hospitals
or schools.
Illustration: Matt Bors
Infant Formula Production Plant,
Abu Ghraib, Iraq (January 21, 1991)
On the seventh day of Operation Desert
Storm, aimed at evicting Iraq military forces from
Kuwait, the U.S.-led coalition bombed the Infant Formula
Production Plant in the Abu Ghraib suburb of Baghdad.
Iraq declared that the factory was exactly what its name
said, but the administration of President George H.W.
Bush
claimed it was “a production facility for biological
weapons.” Colin Powell, then chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff,
chimed in to say, “It is not an infant formula
factory. It was a biological weapons facility — of that
we are sure.” The U.S. media chortled about Iraq’s
clumsy, transparent propaganda, and CNN’s Peter Arnett
was attacked by U.S. politicians for touring the damaged
factory and reporting that “whatever else it did, it did
produce infant formula.”
Iraq was telling the truth. When
Saddam Hussein’s son-in-law, Hussein Kamel, defected to
Jordan in 1995, he had every incentive to undermine
Saddam, since he hoped the U.S. would help install him
as his father-in-law’s successor — but he told CNN
“there is nothing military about that place. … It only
produced baby milk.” The CIA’s own investigation later
concluded the site had been bombed “in the mistaken
belief that it was a key BW [Biological Weapon]
facility.” The original U.S. claims have nevertheless
proven impossible to stamp out. The George W. Bush
administration, making the case for invading Iraq in
2003, portrayed the factory as a symbol of Iraqi deceit.
When the Newseum opened in 2008, it included Arnett’s
1991 reporting in a section devoted to — in the
New York Times’ description — “examples of
distortions that mar the profession.”
Air Raid Shelter, Amiriyah, Iraq
(February 13, 1991)
The U.S. purposefully targeted an air
raid shelter near the Baghdad airport with two
2,000-pound laser-guided bombs, which punched through
10 feet of concrete and killed at least 408 Iraqi
civilians. A BBC journalist
reported that “we saw the charred and mutilated
remains. … They were piled onto the back of a truck;
many were barely recognizable as human.” Meanwhile, Army
Lt. Gen. Thomas Kelly of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff
said: “We are chagrined if [civilian] people were hurt,
but the only information we have about people being hurt
is coming out of the controlled press in Baghdad.”
Another U.S. general
claimed the shelter was “an active
command-and-control structure,” while anonymous
officials said military trucks and limousines for Iraq’s
senior leadership had been seen at the building.
In his 1995 CNN interview, Hussein
Kamel said, “There was no leadership there. There was a
transmission apparatus for the Iraqi intelligence, but
the allies had the ability to monitor that apparatus and
knew that it was not important.” The Iraqi blogger
Riverbend
later wrote that several years after the attack, she
went to the shelter and met a “small, slight woman” who
now lived in the shelter and gave visitors unofficial
tours. Eight of her nine children had been killed in the
bombing.
Al Shifa pharmaceutical factory,
Khartoum, Sudan (August 20, 1998)
After al Qaeda attacks on U.S.
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, the Clinton
administration targeted the Al Shifa factory with 13
cruise missiles, killing one person and wounding 11.
According to President Bill Clinton, the plant was
“associated with the bin Laden network” and was
“involved in the production of materials for chemical
weapons.”
The Clinton administration
never produced any convincing evidence that this was
true. By 2005, the best the U.S. could do was say, as
the New York Times
characterized it, that it had not “ruled out the
possibility” that the original claims were right. The
long-term damage to Sudan was enormous. Jonathan Belke
of the Near East Foundation
pointed out a year after the bombing that the plant
had produced “90 percent of Sudan’s major pharmaceutical
products” and contended that due to its destruction
“tens of thousands of people — many of them children —
have suffered and died from malaria, tuberculosis, and
other treatable diseases.” Sudan has repeatedly
requested a U.N. investigation of the bombing, with no
success.
Train bombing, Grdelica, Serbia
(April 12, 1999)
During the U.S.-led bombing of Serbia
during the Kosovo war, an F-15E fighter jet fired two
remotely-guided missiles that hit a train crossing a
bridge near Grdelica, killing at least 14 civilians.
Gen. Wesley Clark, then Supreme Allied Commander Europe,
called it “an unfortunate incident we all regret.”
While the F-15 crew was able to control the missiles
after they were launched, NATO released footage taken
from the plane to demonstrate how quickly the train was
moving and how little time the jet’s crew had to react.
The German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau later
reported that the video had been sped up three times.
The paper quoted a U.S. Air Force spokesperson who said
this was accidental, and they had not noticed this until
months later — by which point “we did not deem it useful
to go public with this.”
Radio Television Serbia, Belgrade,
Serbia (April 23, 1999)
Sixteen employees of Serbia’s state
broadcasting system were killed during the Kosovo War
when NATO intentionally targeted its headquarters in
Belgrade. President Clinton gave an
underwhelming defense of the bombing: “Our military
leaders at NATO believe … that the Serb television is an
essential instrument of Mr. Milosevic’s command and
control. … It is not, in a conventional sense,
therefore, a media outlet. That was a decision they
made, and I did not reverse it.” U.S. envoy Richard
Holbrooke
told the Overseas Press Club immediately after the
attack that it was “an enormously important and, I
think, positive development.” Amnesty International
later stated it was “a deliberate attack on a
civilian object and as such constitutes a war crime.”
Chinese Embassy, Belgrade, Serbia
(May 7, 1999)
Also during the Kosovo war, the U.S.
bombed the Chinese embassy in Serbia’s capital, killing
three staff and wounding more than 20. The defense
secretary at the time, William Cohen,
said it was a terrible mistake: “One of our planes
attacked the wrong target because the bombing
instructions were based on an outdated map.” The
Observer newspaper in the U.K.
later reported the U.S. had in fact deliberately
targeted the embassy “after discovering it was being
used to transmit Yugoslav army communications.” The
Observer quoted “a source in the U.S. National
Imagery and Mapping Agency” calling Cohen’s version of
events “a damned lie.”
Prodded by the media watchdog organization Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting, the New York Times
produced its
own investigation finding “no evidence that the
bombing of the embassy had been a deliberate act,” but
rather that it had been caused by a “bizarre chain of
missteps.” The article concluded by quoting Porter Goss,
then chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, as
saying he believed the bombing was not deliberate –
“unless some people are lying to me.”
Red Cross complex, Kabul,
Afghanistan (October 16 and October 26, 2001)
At the beginning of the U.S-led
invasion of Afghanistan, the U.S. attacked the complex
housing the International Committee of the Red Cross in
Kabul. In an attempt to prevent such incidents in the
future, the U.S. conducted detailed discussions with the
Red Cross about the location of all of its installations
in the country. Then the U.S.
bombed the same complex again. The second attack
destroyed warehouses containing tons of food and
supplies for refugees. “Whoever is responsible will have
to come to Geneva for a formal explanation,” said a Red
Cross spokesperson. “Firing, shooting, bombing, a
warehouse clearly marked with the Red Cross emblem is a
very serious incident. … Now we’ve got 55,000 people
without that food or blankets, with nothing at all.”
Al Jazeera office, Kabul,
Afghanistan (November 13, 2001)
Several weeks after the Red Cross
attacks, the U.S. bombed the Kabul bureau of Al Jazeera,
destroying it and damaging the nearby office of the BBC.
Al Jazeera’s managing director said the channel had
repeatedly informed the U.S. military of its office’s
location.
Al Jazeera office, Baghdad, Iraq
(April 8, 2003)
Soon after the start of the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq, the U.S. bombed the Baghdad office of
Al Jazeera, killing reporter Tarek Ayoub and injuring
another journalist. David Blunkett, the British home
secretary at the time,
subsequently revealed that a few weeks before the
attack he had urged Prime Minister Tony Blair to bomb Al
Jazeera’s transmitter in Baghdad. Blunkett argued, “I
don’t think that there are targets in a war that you can
rule out because you don’t actually have military
personnel inside them if they are attempting to win a
propaganda battle on behalf of your enemy.”
In 2005, the British newspaper The
Mirror reported on a British government memorandum
recording an April 16, 2004, conversation between Blair
and President Bush at the height of the U.S. assault on
Fallujah in Iraq. The Bush administration
was infuriated by Al Jazeera’s coverage of Fallujah,
and according to The Mirror, Bush had wanted to
bomb the channel at its Qatar headquarters and
elsewhere. However, the article says, Blair argued him
out of it. Blair subsequently
called The Mirror’s claims a “conspiracy
theory.” Meanwhile, his attorney general threatened to
use the Official Secrets Act to prosecute any news
outlet that published further information about the
memo, and, in a secret trial, did in fact
prosecute and send to jail a civil servant for
leaking it.
Palestine Hotel, Baghdad, Iraq
(April 8, 2003)
The same day as the 2003 bombing of
the Al Jazeera office in Baghdad, a U.S. tank fired a
shell at the 15th floor of the Palestine Hotel, where
most foreign journalists were then staying. Two
reporters were killed: Taras Protsyuk, a cameraman for
Reuters, and Jose Couso, a cameraman for the Spanish
network Telecinco. An
investigation by the Committee to Protect
Journalists concluded that the attack, “while not
deliberate, was avoidable.”
This story has been updated to
include the April 8, 2003, attack on the Palestine Hotel
in Baghdad.
Jon
Schwarz - Before joining First Look, Jon Schwarz
worked for Michael Moore’s Dog Eat Dog Films and was
Research Producer for Moore’s Capitalism: A Love
Story.
He’s contributed to many publications, including
The New Yorker, The New
York Times, The Atlantic,
The Wall Street Journal, Mother Jones and
Slate, as well as NPR and “Saturday Night Live.”