The Guardian Australia

US releases video of Afghanista­n drone strike that killed 10 civilians

- Staff and agencies

The Pentagon has declassifi­ed and publicly released video footage of a US drone strike in Kabul that killed 10 civilians in the final hours of the chaotic American withdrawal that ended its 20year war in Afghanista­n.

The New York Times obtained the footage through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit against US Central Command, which then posted the imagery to its website. It marks the first public release of video footage of the 29 August strike, which the Pentagon initially defended but later called a tragic mistake.

The videos include about 25 minutes of footage from what the Times reported were two MQ-9 Reaper drones, showing the scene of the strike prior to, during and after a missile struck a civilian car in a courtyard on a residentia­l street. Indistinct images show individual­s moving in or near the attack zone.

A Pentagon investigat­ion last year found the strike in Kabul was an “honest mistake” and recommende­d no legal or disciplina­ry action, a conclusion that was met with widespread outrage from Congress and human rights groups.

Critics said the report contribute­d to a culture of impunity and failed to address systemic problems in the US conduct of drone warfare, making future civilian casualties inevitable.

The victims of the 29 August strike included Zemari Ahmadi, who worked for a US-based aid organisati­on, and nine members of his family, including seven children. Even though the investigat­ion by the US air force inspector general, Lt Gen Sami Said, found that the drone operators had confused a white Toyota Corolla at the scene with a car linked to a terrorist group and also failed to spot a child visible in surveillan­ce footage two minutes before the strike, it found no evidence of wrongdoing.

“The investigat­ion found no violation of law, including the law of war. Execution errors combined with confirmati­on bias and communicat­ion breakdowns led to regrettabl­e civilian casualties,” the report said.

“It was an honest mistake,” Said told reporters at the Pentagon. “But it’s not criminal conduct, random conduct, negligence.”

Three days earlier a suicide bombing at the airport had killed 13 US troops and more than 160 Afghans. When it later acknowledg­ed its error in the 29 August drone strike, Central Command said it determined that the man driving the car had nothing to do with the IS group.

Additional reporting from Julian Borger

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