Albuquerque Journal

US to make ‘condolence payments’ to families of drone strike victims

Mistake killed 10 Afghan civilians

- BY ADELA SULIMAN

The United States has pledged to make undisclose­d “ex gratia condolence payments” to the families of 10 Afghan civilians — including seven children — who were killed in a mistaken drone strike in August, as American troops were exiting the country, the Pentagon said in a statement late Friday.

The statement follows a meeting Thursday between U.S. officials and the head of a California-based charity that employed Zamarai Ahmadi, the Afghan man targeted and killed in the drone strike on Aug. 29.

Ahmadi, a father of four, was an aid worker with the U.S. nonprofit organizati­on, which was working to alleviate malnutriti­on in Afghanista­n. He had just returned home to his family compound in a neighborho­od west of Kabul’s Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport when a Hellfire missile strike was conducted.

U.S. military officials said they had tracked Ahmadi’s white Toyota sedan for hours after the vehicle left what U.S. officials thought was an Islamic State-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, safe house. The Pentagon later issued a mea culpa and said the strike was a result of a chain of miscalcula­tions by U.S. commanders, who wrongly thought the aid worker was carrying explosives in his car, they said.

Thursday’s virtual meeting took place between Colin Kahl, the U.S. undersecre­tary of defense for policy, and Steven Kwon, the founder and president of Nutrition & Education Internatio­nal, the charity that employed Ahmadi, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said in the statement Friday.

“Dr. Kahl noted that the strike was a tragic mistake and that Mr. Zemari Ahmadi and others who were killed were innocent victims, who bore no blame and were not affiliated with ISIS-K or threats to U.S. forces,” Kirby said. (The Pentagon and The Washington Post use different spellings of Ahmadi’s first name.)

Kahl also reiterated Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin’s “commitment to the families, including offering ex gratia condolence payments,” the statement added.

During the meeting, Kwon paid tribute to Ahmadi’s work over many years “providing care and lifesaving assistance” to Afghans, according to Kirby’s statement.

The Defense Department had initially defended the drone operation as a “righteous strike.” However, in September, Austin said in a statement: “We now know that there was no connection between Mr. Ahmadi and ISIS-Khorasan, that his activities on that day were completely harmless and not at all related to the imminent threat we believed we faced.”

Austin apologized for Ahmadi’s death, describing him and others as innocent victims and pledged “to learn from this horrible mistake.”

Last month, members of the Ahmadi family told The Post that the attack had upended their lives, shattered their home and cast a dangerous spotlight on them as having worked with foreigners, in addition to giving rise to false accusation­s that the family had ties to the Islamic State.

“We are happy they have acknowledg­ed their mistake and confirmed that they killed innocent people,” Zamarai Ahmadi’s 32-year-old brother Emal told The Post.

The drone strike on the compound that Ahmadi shared with his three brothers and their families killed Zamarai and three of his sons, ages 20, 16 and 11.

 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Afghan inspects the damage at the Ahmadi family house in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sept. 13 after a U.S. drone strike killed 10 Afghan civilians.
BERNAT ARMANGUE/ASSOCIATED PRESS An Afghan inspects the damage at the Ahmadi family house in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sept. 13 after a U.S. drone strike killed 10 Afghan civilians.

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