U.S. military doubles the number of civilians it admits killing in anti-ISIS fight

Smoke
billows after a reported airstrike by the U.S.-led military coalition
on Feb. 3 in the area of east Ramadi, Iraq. (Ahmad Al-Rubaye/AFP/Getty
Images)
The U.S. military on Friday acknowledged
killing 20 civilians and wounding 11 more in recent airstrikes in Iraq
and Syria, more than doubling the number of civilian fatalities it has
admitted causing in the military campaign against the Islamic State.
The
nine errant airstrikes occurred between Sept. 10 and Feb. 2, U.S.
Central Command said in a statement. Six of the strikes occurred in
Iraq, and three occurred in Syria, U.S. military officials said.
“We
deeply regret the unintentional loss of life and injuries resulting
from those strikes and express our deepest sympathies to the victims’
families and those affected,” the military’s statement said.
[U.S. military changes how it discloses civilian casualties in Iraq and Syria]
The Pentagon had previously acknowledged killing an additional 15 civilians and wounding 15 in earlier airstrikes.
The latest disclosure came after Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter
announced this week that he would authorize sending an additional 200
military advisers to work with Iraqi military and deploy both Apache
gunship helicopters and rocket artillery strikes in a planned offensive
to reclaim the northern Iraqi city of Mosul from the Islamic State.
The
casualties also were announced after Col. Steve Warren, a military
spokesman in Baghdad, said Wednesday that the authority to launch
airstrikes that could cause civilian casualties has been delegated to
lower levels than when the military campaign began. Initially, those
strikes had to be approved by the top commander for Central Command, but
authority has since been given to Army Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, the
top U.S. commander in Baghdad, or one of his deputy commanders, Warren
said.
The most significant strike involving civilian fatalities
acknowledged Friday occurred Oct. 5 in Atshanah, Iraq, near the city of
Al Huwayjah, U.S. military officials said. Eight civilians were killed
in a strike the U.S. military characterized as targeting a known
position used by Islamic State fighters to launch mortars.
Five more civilians were killed Dec. 12 in the Iraqi city of Ramadi
during an airstrike on what U.S. military officials described as a known
Islamic State checkpoint after the civilians “unexpectedly moved into
the target location after weapons already were in flight.” Another
civilian in Ramadi died Nov. 12 during an airstrike targeting Islamic
state fighters, U.S. officials said.
The other strikes that
resulted in fatalities occurred in Kubaysah, Iraq, Sept. 10; near Raqqa,
Syria, Dec. 10; in Tishreen, Syria, Dec. 24; in Mosul, Iraq, Jan. 11;
and in Al Ghazili, Syria, Feb. 2. Two civilians died in the Kubaysah
strike, and one each was killed in the other locations, U.S. military
officials said.
U.S. military doubles the number of civilians it admits killing in anti-ISIS fight
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