Did US strike on Afghan clinic exceed combat
authority?
Doctors Without Borders, which believes
the attack may have been a war crime, wants an independent and impartial
investigation.
US officials have declined to discuss most
circumstances of the attack in Kunduz, which killed 22 civilians, because
American and Afghan investigations are underway.
Gen. John F. Campbell, the top US commander in
Afghanistan, told a Senate committee on Tuesday that as a result of the strike,
he is requiring that every US service member in Afghanistan be retrained on the
circumstances in which US firepower can be used."To prevent any future
incidences of this nature, I've directed the entire force to undergo in-depth
training in order to review all of our operational authorities and rules of
engagement," he said.
Campbell did not elaborate, but his statement
suggested that the US attack mission was undertaken in error, even if the target
had not been a hospital and there had been no civilian casualties.
Campbell said Afghan forces fighting to retake Kunduz
from the Taliban had requested US air power, and that a US special operations
unit in the "close vicinity" was communicating with the crew of the
heavily armed AC-130 gunship that pummeled the hospital.US forces do not have
blanket authority to fulfill every Afghan request for US firepower.When
President Barack Obama ended the US combat mission, he directed the remaining
US forces to focus on training and advising Afghan security forces and on
counterterrorism missions. Authority to use force was limited to three
circumstances: "force protection," or the defense of US and allied
troops; support of missions targeting remnants of al-Qaeda in Afghanistan; and
assisting Afghan forces in extreme situations where they faced mass
casualties.It's not clear whether any of those three criteria applied to
Kunduz. Campbell has said that US forces were not directly threatened at the
time, and there is no indication that al-Qaeda was present.In a report to
Congress in June, the Pentagon said US forces were no longer authorized to
target individuals based on affiliation with the Taliban or any group other
than al-Qaeda. It said US forces are permitted to take action against
individuals that "pose a direct threat" to US and coalition
forces."For example, US forces no longer target individuals solely on the
basis of their membership in the Taliban; however, if a member of the Taliban
threatens US or coalition forces, or provides direct support to al-Qaeda, US
forces may take appropriate action," the report said.Campbell told the
Senate Armed Services Committee that although Afghan forces requested US air
power, final responsibility lay with US forces."To be clear, the decision
to provide [airstrikes] was a US decision, made within the US chain of
command," Campbell said. "The hospital was mistakenly struck. We
would never intentionally target a protected medical facility."Defense
Secretary Ash Carter, who was traveling in Europe on Tuesday, issued a
statement promising a full and transparent investigation. "We will do
everything we can to understand this tragic incident, learn from it and hold
people accountable as necessary," he said.
Doctors Without Borders, which believes the attack may
have been a war crime, wants an independent and impartial investigation.
The group's international president, Joanne Liu,
called for an impartial and independent investigation of the facts and
circumstances of the attack, "particularly given the inconsistencies in
the US and Afghan accounts of what happened over recent days." Liu added,
"We cannot rely on only internal military investigations by the US, NATO
and Afghan forces," she said.
Robert Burns, Associated Press, Washington
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