The Phnom Penh Post

Mosul civilian deaths rank high

- Thomas Gibbons-Neff

EVEN though Iraqi civil defense workers are still sorting through the rubble, the March 17 US airstrike in West Mosul, if confirmed, could potentiall­y rank among one of the most devastatin­g attacks on civilians by American forces in more than two decades.

Residents from the neighbourh­ood where the strike occurred said that 137 civilians were killed, while Iraqi officials have said that upward of 80 people had been pulled from the rubble. Chris Woods, the director of the monitoring group Airwars.org, said the range of dead have been reported from 101 to 511, though the likely numbers are somewhere between 130 and 230.

On Monday, Colonel John Thomas, the spokesman for the US command that overseas the wars in Iraq and Syria, said that the US military was investigat­ing the March 17 bombing in addition to a number of other strikes that happened during the same time in roughly the same area.

The battle for West Mosul, which began earlier this year, has been marked by heavy fighting in dense urban terrain. Islamic State fighters have used residents as human shields around their defensive positions and relied heavily on booby traps, roadside bombs and suicide vehicles to delay the US-backed Iraqi advance. Even before Iraqi forces moved into the western part of Mosul, there were multiple allegation­s of civilian casualties during the four months it took to take the eastern side of the city.

There have been numerous US air attacks that have killed dozens since the Gulf War. These include two potential strikes in Syria just this month, the 2015 Kunduz Hospital strike in Afghanista­n, and roughly a dozen errant wedding party strikes in Iraq, Afghanista­n and Yemen over the years. Yet there are only a handful of US-aerial bombardmen­ts that have killed more than a hundred civilians in a single event.

Some of these strikes below:

At the direction of German ground forces, US F-15 multirole fighters bombed a column of suspected Taliban tanker trucks, killing anywhere between 91 and 172 civilians. Fearing an attack from the aircraft, the Taliban had abandoned the trucks in a river bed before the bombs struck. Instead of striking a large number of Taliban fighters, US aircraft targeted locals that were siphoning off gas from the trucks. According to a 2010 report in the German publicatio­n Der Spiegel, the German army identified 102 families that would receive condolence payments for the strikes – 91 killed and 11 seriously injured. A German-based lawyer for the victims maintained that 179 had been killed. After a firefight with Afghan soldiers, policemen and American troops, a group of Taliban retreated into the village of Granai. The US forces called for air support, and soon after, a combinatio­n of fighters and bombers, including what was believed to be a B-1 strategic bomber, dropped thousands of pounds of bombs on the village killing an estimated 140. According to a Reuters article from time, the Afghan investigat­ion into the strike found that of the 140 victims, 93 were children and only 22 were adult males. Pentagon estimates put the civilian dead at a much lower, saying the majority of those killed were insurgents. The US attack on Granai forced General Stanley McChrystal – then the commander of US forces in Afghanista­n – to heavily restrict the criteria for airstrikes in Afghanista­n. That criteria – decried by many ground troops and commanders – has served as the basis for the current rules of engagement in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n.

The attack on the Amiriyah air-raid shelter during the Gulf War by US stealth aircraft resulted in the loss of anywhere between 200 and 300 civilians, according to a Human Rights Watch report from 1991. Later news reports said that more than 400 had been killed. The shelter was packed with civilians when bunker busting bombs penetrated the roof at around 5am. According to the report, the Pentagon said it had intercepte­d military communicat­ions from the building and that military personnel were stationed near it. The US military, however, also knew the building had been used as a shelter during the IranIraq war. Lawyers in Belgium accused former president George HW Bush, Dick Cheney and Colin Powell of war crimes because of the Amiriyah strike, but in 2003 the country’s highest court dismissed the complaints.

The contrast is stark between the loss of life from the 1991 bombing campaign at the outset of the Gulf War and the opening salvos of Operation Iraq Freedom in 2003. A monthlong Human Rights Watch investigat­ion following the invasion found that “in most cases, aerial bombardmen­t resulted in minimal adverse effects to the civilian population”.

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP ?? An Iraqi man sits amid the rubble of destroyed houses in Mosul on March 26 following airstrikes in which civilians have been reportedly killed during an ongoing offensive against IS.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP An Iraqi man sits amid the rubble of destroyed houses in Mosul on March 26 following airstrikes in which civilians have been reportedly killed during an ongoing offensive against IS.

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