From
Iraq to Kunduz, US Civilian Killings Are No
Accident -
They're Policy
By Peter Van Buren
October 12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MEE"
- America
and its allies make modern war in a way that assures "mistakes"
destroy hospitals, and civilian lives are taken by drones and bombs.
These horrors are all too often strategic
decisions, or the
result of the profligate use of needlessly destructive weapons. They
are typically far from accidents. The attack on a Doctors without
Borders (MSF)
hospital in Kunduz,
Afghanistan, is only the latest. It is important as a clear example
of a sordid policy.
Target Kunduz
The series of cascading explanations the United
States offered for striking Kunduz hospital ignore the larger story
of how such "accidents" really happen.
An American
AC-130, a flying gunship, conducted the strike. A retired Air Force
Special Operations officer explained to me the AC-130 is considered
a "first hit" weapon; its
ordnance hits where it is designated to hit on the first try. The
targeted hospital was marked by a US Special Forces operator on the
ground alongside the Afghans. The AC-130 fired on the hospital for over
one hour,
in 15-minute paced barrages, even as Doctors Without Borders
representatives frantically sought to contact American officials.
The US should have known the target was a
hospital. The Afghans had controlled Kunduz alongside their American
allies for some time. It was a mature battlefield, with landmarks
such as the hospital well-known on the ground. It is a large,
distinctive building as seen from the air; take a
look.
In addition, NGOs employ
organisations like
the International NGO Safety and Security Association (INSSA)
specifically to coordinate with armed forces, to include providing precise
GPS coordinates to avoid "accidental" targeting. Doctors Without
Borders also directly provides combatants their locations;
in Kunduz, as recently as
29 September.
The latter details are especially important in
evaluating strikes against hospitals and other civilian targets.
Unlike in WWII when planes flew over cities hoping to hit a target
only as precisely defined as "Tokyo," modern ordnance is delivered
using laser designation, satellite coordination and GPS systems.
America blew up exactly what it aimed at in
Kunduz.
America's other hospitals
Kunduz was not the first protected facility
America attacked.
In 2001 the United States bombed the
Red Cross in Kabul, twice. The US also bombed other targets in
Iraq; a maternity facility in Baghdad,
a hospital in Rutbah, stormed another in Nasiriya,
and shelled the Al
Yarmuk Hospital in Iraq in 2003. A hospital in Belgrade,
former Yugoslavia, was bombed in the 1990s. In Hanoi,
the United States struck the Bach Mai hospital – twice - during the
infamous 1972 "Christmas Bombing".
America bombed the Al Jazeera broadcast facilities
in Baghdad and
Kabul and also destroyed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade in
1999. Civilian infrastructure, such as water and sewer plants, were
targeted in Iraq in 1991 and again in 2003.
There are always investigations following such
incidents, though in the history of modern American warfare none
have ever deemed such devastation as intentional. Yet hospitals do
make attractive targets. Destroying them results in fighters dying
of their wounds, and increases the burden on healthy soldiers,
pulling them from the battlefield to care for their own wounded. In
military terms that is known as a "soft kill".
Accidents emerge in war, but so do patterns.
Civilian deaths and the drone war
The killing of
civilians as a result of American war is not limited to attacks on
hospitals. The global drone war continues to take innocent lives, in
what has come to be known without shame as collateral damage.
The Council on
Foreign Relations assesses that 500 drone strikes outside of Iraq
and Afghanistan killed 3,674
civilians as of 2014. The
count measures kills
outside of Iraq and Afghanistan specifically because only those
places were considered active war zones by the United States when
the tally was made.
There is a
commonality to the growing death toll: the inevitable civilian
deaths are caused by the profligate use of horrifically destructive
indiscriminate weapons.
Civilian casualties overall in America's 2003-2011
Iraq war were anywhere from 140,000 dead
to upwards of 500,000,
with many killed by artillery, aerial bombs and depleted uranium
munitions, indiscriminate weapons unique to American forces.
In Yemen, in just one specific example, American
drone strikes aimed at 17 named men actually killed 273
people, at least seven of them children, including the American
citizen son of al-Qaeda propagandist Anwar
al-Awlaki.
For its drone strikes, the US uses Hellfire
missiles, armed with warheads originally designed to burn through
tank armour.
Aiming them at a person inevitably will kill those nearby; the US
claimed al-Awlaki's son was killed inside a car, seated next to the
actual target. Such deaths are closely tied to America's policy of "signature drone
strikes," where a missile is aimed at a "profile:" a suspect
cell phone, a car matching some description, or a suspicious
gathering.
America's allies - Israel and Saudi Arabia
America's
allies, equipped with American weapons, follow a similar pattern in
making war.
Saudi Arabia in Yemeni cities, and Israel in urban
Gaza, employ cluster
munitions. Such munitions are known as "area denial weapons,"
causing indiscriminate destruction over swathes of territory.
Documented munitions used inside Yemen include American-made CBU-52
cluster bombs, each loaded with 220 "anti-material"
bomblets. Imagine the use of such weapons in central London, or on a
Manhattan street.
Though not confined to cluster munitions alone,
the deployment of these US-made weapons by the Saudis in Yemen has
only added to the carnage.
Almost 4,000 people have been killed, with 19,000 injured.
In Gaza in 2009, the Israelis used cluster
munitions, white phosphorus - a flesh burning agent also used by
the US in Iraq - as well as standard artillery, all against dense
urban areas. The UN estimates over
1,400 civilians, of whom 495 were children, were killed in the
attacks. The Israelis also destroyed a hospital in
Gaza, attacked two others,
and shelled UN-run
schools in 2014.
Policy? The US, Israel and Saudi Arabia are among
the countries that
refuse to sign the Convention on Cluster Munitions banning such
weapons.
The cost of modern war
Accountability remains in the hands of those with
the weapons. America and Israel conduct self-investigations, and stymie independent
ones, to clear their military of blame - the Saudis do not even
bother. At the UN, the United States blocks action
critical of Israel. In Yemen, the US claims it cannot control how
the Saudis choose to employ American weapons, and has stated the
Saudi actions only "border on" violations of international law;
Amnesty International labels them
war crimes. NATO and the EU are deathly silent on the
substantive issues, even in places where their own forces are on the
ground.
Modern war as conducted by the United States and
its allies in the Middle East has as a known outcome massive
civilian casualties. The sites precisely targeted can be civilian,
in violation of all known standards of international law. With
indiscriminate weapons, the collateral kills are foreseeable - and
thus preventable - consequences. To label the destruction of one
hospital in isolation a war crime is to think too small. The
civilian deaths are policy.
Kunduz was no accident. It was simply another
example.
- Peter Van Buren is
a retired 24-year veteran of the US Department of State, including
service in Iraq. He is the author of We
Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of
the Iraqi People. His latest
book is Ghosts
of Tom Joad: A Story of the 99 Percent.
He lives and writes from New York City.