Daily Mail

Military police to review evidence SAS executed Taliban suspects in custody

- By Mark Nicol Defence Editor

EVIDENCE suggesting Special Air Service soldiers executed Taliban suspects in custody is to be reviewed by military police officers.

In a dramatic move last night, the Ministry of Defence announced it was asking those who may have materials or testimony to come forward.

It took the unusual step after SAS troops admitted to the Daily Mail that illegal killings were ‘part of our job’. One soldier said the truth about such incidents in Afghanista­n would ‘rock everything’.

Recently disclosed court documents have also suggested SAS commanders might have attempted to ‘cover up’ the killings by writing misleading reports.

Last night a BBC Panorama documentar­y claimed to have uncovered 54 suspicious killings in Afghanista­n in 2010-2011. It also alleged SAS commander General Sir Mark Carleton-Smith failed to disclose crucial evidence about the deaths.

The MoD issued its request for new evidence hours after General Sir David Richards, a former Chief of the Defence Staff, insisted on a fresh inquiry. He added: ‘If I was still Chief of the Defence Staff I would order a thorough investigat­ion of the events portrayed. I have no doubt that Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, the current CDS, will do this.’

The Royal Military Police’s investigat­ion, Operation Northmoor, closed in 2019.

Last night, the MoD said it was open to considerin­g ‘any new evidence’ without obstructio­n. A statement claimed that the Panorama documentar­y ‘jumps to unjustifie­d conclusion­s from allegation­s which have already been fully investigat­ed’.

It added: ‘We strongly object to this subjective reporting.’

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