The New Zealand Herald

US military confirms deadly airstrike in Mosul

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James Rothwell

and

Rob Crilly

Iraqi government forces halted the fight for Mosul yesterday and promised to review their tactics after reports that hundreds of civilians have been killed in coalition air strikes.

It emerged last week that up to 200 people died in recent days in two air strikes by the US-led coalition, which is fighting to push Isis (Islamic State) out of the city.

“The recent high death toll among civilians inside the Old City forced us to halt operations to review our plans,” said an Iraqi federal police spokesman.

“It’s a time for weighing new offensive plans and tactics. No combat operations are to go on.”

The US promised yesterday to investigat­e the air strikes, which hit the al-Jadidah district of west Mosul on March 13 and 17.

The US military acknowledg­ed for the first time yesterday that it launched an airstrike against Isis in the densely packed Iraqi city of Mosul, where residents say more than 100 people were killed in a single event.

If confirmed, the March 17 incident would mark the greatest loss of civilian life since the US began strikes on Isis (Islamic State) targets in Iraq and Syria in 2014.

An “initial review” showed that the coalition struck Isis fighters and equipment in west Mosul at the request of Iraq forces and “at the location correspond­ing to allegation­s of civilian casualties,” the task force leading the coalition said.

“We are stunned by this terrible loss of life,” said Lise Grande, the UN’s Iraq coordinato­r.

It comes after the Trump Administra­tion pledged to relax its rules of engagement to “unshackle” its forces in Iraq.

Earlier this month, Sebastian Gorka, the President’s deputy assistant, said: “We are going to unshackle our guys. We’re going to remove the incredible, suicidal rules of engagement.

“We’re not going to employ the 8000 mile screwdrive­r which they inherited from Vietnam . . . the idea that you are not allowed to target an Isis convoy unless somebody in Washington on a live video feed signs off on it — that’s insanity.”

The pause on retaking the city, a key battlegrou­nd for Isis, came as civil defence officials warned that many residents were still trapped under rubble in al-Jadidah district.

According to residents and local activists, the air strike detonated an Isis truck loaded with explosives which destroyed several buildings, leading to major civilian casualties.

The US is also looking into a similar incident in Syria on March 16, when an air strike killed dozens of civilians.

US defence officials said the attack in Syria was on a known meeting place for members of al-Qaeda, but it later emerged that the building was near a mosque in Jinna, Aleppo province.

“In Jinna, the attack on the mosque killed 35 civilians, and six of those were children,” said Rami Abdurrahma­n, of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. “There was an attack on a bakery in Al-Tabqa that killed 19 civilians.

The civilian casualties are increasing.”

The US-backed offensive to drive Isis out of Mosul, now in its sixth month, has recaptured the eastern side of Mosul and about half of the west.

But advances have stuttered in the past two weeks as fighting enters the narrow alleys of the Old City, home to the al-Nuri mosque where Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a caliphate spanning swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014. — Telegraph Group Ltd, Washington Post

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