Kill Them All – US
Strike on Afghan Hospital
By Finian
Cunningham
October 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "SCF"
- The deadly US airstrike on an Afghan hospital has been downplayed
by Washington as a «tragic mistake» committed in the «fog of war».
But recently disclosed documents on the secret policy of drone
assassinations by the Pentagon reveals a cold-blooded calculus to
«kill all» within a designated strike zone, even resulting in 90 per
cent «collateral damage» of «unintended targets».
The US airstrike on
the Kunduz hospital did not reportedly involve unmanned aerial
drones – it was carried out by a warplane. Nevertheless, the same
mentality of wiping out non-combatants to «finish» an intended
target seems to have been at work.
The director of the
medical charity whose hospital was hit by the US warplane has said
that the attack was a «premeditated massacre» and amounts to a war
crime. The official line from Washington is that the strike on the
hospital was a «mistake» and that the death of civilians was a
tragic case of «collateral damage».
But evidence points to
a deliberate attempt by US forces to take out suspected targets
within the facility – even if that meant killing all inside the
hospital, including civilian patients and medical staff.
Meinie Nicolai, the
president of Doctors Without Borders, said the facility near Kunduz
in northern Afghanistan was targeted with «deliberate intent» by US
forces. The bombing and heavy cannon strafing of the hospital on
October 3 by an American AC-130 warplane resulted in 22 dead and
dozens others seriously injured. Three children were among the
fatalities. The Intensive Care Unit appeared to be the focus of the
attack, as other buildings in the complex incurred much less damage.
US military and their
Afghan coalition partners in the locality were given clear GPS
coordinates of the hospital, the only major facility in and around
the remote city of Kunduz. The last forwarded coordinates for the
hospital was made on September 29 – the day before the attack –
according to the doctors. Even as the airstrike was being carried
out, hospital staff made frantic telephone calls to the US forces
alerting them of the «mistake», but the bombing and firing continued
for at least another 30 minutes.
The medical charity,
also known by its French name Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), is
calling for an independent international inquiry into the incident –
one of the worst single civilian death tolls in the 14-year-old
US-led war in Afghanistan. Washington has refused to comply with the
request for such an independent probe, saying that its Department of
Defence is conducting its own investigation about what happened.
The Pentagon’s
credibility to come clean was undermined this week after a US tank
forced its way into the charred hospital compound. MSF has accused
the United States military of «destroying evidence» at the site.
What were US forces
looking for when they violated – for the second time – the grounds
of the hospital? Could they have been trying to retrieve the body of
a Pakistani Taliban operative whom they claim was hiding in the
facility? The Pakistani man was reportedly acting as an intelligence
agent helping to coordinate Taliban insurgents fighting against the
US-Afghan coalition forces.
MSF officials and
their local staff have strenuously denied that the facility was
being used by Taliban fighters. Doctors and a security guard working
at the hospital said that on the night of the attack there was no
fighting near the medical compound. MSF has also categorically
rebutted initial claims that Taliban militants were using the
facility to launch attacks on US or Afghan forces. The international
aid agency has confirmed too that none of its staff in Kunduz were
Pakistani nationals.
MSF has said, however,
that its hospital – as with all its international facilities – had a
normal policy of treating unarmed combatants as well as civilians.
It noted that under international law all individuals are entitled
to medical treatment, including combatants. The hospital in Kunduz
conducted a strict policy of ensuring that patients are admitted on
condition that they are unarmed and that any weapons that might be
in the possession of wounded combatants are excluded from being
taken into the facility.
A report by Associated
Press this week said that the hospital in Kunduz was being monitored
by US military intelligence during the days before the airstrike.
The incident occurred only a week after the Taliban made a
spectacular military gain by taking the city – which was seen as a
huge propaganda blow to the US-led Afghan forces.
If the US military
believed that Taliban fighters or the alleged Pakistani operative
were being treated in the MSF hospital then the decision to launch a
strike on the facility may have been made to take out the targets
regardless of the civilian casualties.
That scenario
contradicts the statement by General John F Campbell, the top US
commander in Afghanistan, who claimed that the strike was a mistake
and that his forces would «never deliberately target a civilian
facility».
Washington’s official
account of the incident has flipped suspiciously. Initially, the US
claimed that it was unaware that the facility was a hospital, then
it changed tack and said that its forces on the ground had come
under fire from Taliban militants in the vicinity, for which the
AC-130 air gunship was called in. That version of events has been
firmly contradicted by staff at the hospital who said there was no
militant action in the surrounding area that night. Moreover, the
MSF medics say that the warplane made several attack runs over the
hospital before it finally launched its deadly firepower.
On a separate but
pertinent issue of US military policy was a report on October 16 by
The Intercept on the secret use of assassination drone strikes. The
information was based on a whistleblower’s in-depth knowledge of
Pentagon drone operations in Afghanistan, Somalia and Yemen. Those
operations are overseen at the highest level of US government, with
President Obama being the ultimate authority to sign off on
assassinations.
Relevant to the Kunduz
massacre is the policy of «find, fix and finish» which Washington’s
drone «assassination complex» employs.
Under the heading,
‘Strikes often kill many more than the intended target’, The
Intercept report notes the following from its insider source: «The
White House and Pentagon boast that the targeted killing program is
precise and that civilian deaths are minimal. However, documents
detailing a special operations campaign in northeastern Afghanistan,
Operation Haymaker, show that between January 2012 and February
2013, US special operations airstrikes killed more than 200 people.
Of those, only 35 were the intended targets. During one five-month
period of the operation, according to the documents, nearly 90
percent of the people killed in airstrikes were not the intended
targets».
In other words,
Washington – both the White House and Pentagon chiefs – are using a
«kill them all» policy, whereby high levels of civilian casualties
are deemed acceptable in order to neutralise an individual suspected
combatant.
The Kunduz hospital
hit was reportedly carried out by an AC-130 gunship, armed with
missiles and Gatling-type machine-guns, heavy enough to penetrate
brick walls. Drones were not apparently involved, but the operation
was conducted in the same northeast area of Afghanistan where US
drones are used with a policy of «kill them all».
US General John F
Campbell has acknowledged that the Kunduz hospital strike was
carried out «within the US chain of command».
The stark conclusion
is that the hospital was bombed and strafed by US forces to take out
a suspected militant at the facility, with the deliberate knowledge
that civilians would also be taken out in the operation. That puts
the prima facie war crime at Kunduz in a totally different and much
more serious context, going right up the highest level of
culpability.
© Strategic Culture Foundation