Houston Chronicle

As Afghanista­n air war surged, probes of civilian harm plunged

- By Susannah George

KABUL — Last year, American warplanes dropped a record number of bombs on Taliban targets in this country, part of an effort that started in late 2018 to push the group toward a deal to end nearly 20 years of conflict.

In the same period, allegation­s of civilian casualties reviewed by the Pentagon doubled. But the number of in-depth investigat­ions into those allegation­s dropped by half.

Hundreds of charges of Afghan civilian deaths and injuries as a result of airstrikes received only an initial assessment.

“One thing is clear: The U.S. has not learned from its past,” said Larry Lewis, a former State Department official and expert on civilian casualties who last worked in Afghanista­n in 2017.

He said data from inquiries “was key to reducing civilian casualties earlier in the Afghanista­n campaign,” and without that data now, “the civilian toll in Afghanista­n is surely greater as a result.”

The U.S. military command in Kabul, known as Resolute Support, declined to grant an interview and instead responded to some questions submitted by email.

When asked about the drop in investigat­ions, a U.S. military spokesman said the assertion that Resolute Support conducted fewer investigat­ions is “inaccurate.”

“Resolute Support investigat­es every claim of civilian casualties of which we are aware, either through direct reporting, field reporting or reported on social media,” he said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

When an allegation of a civilian casualty resulting from U.S. military action is raised, Resolute Support said, it conducts an initial review within 72 hours to determine whether it is “credible.”

The U.S. military labels an allegation credible if the informatio­n reviewed in that 72-hour window shows it is “more likely than not” civilians were harmed by U.S. strikes.

Of 563 allegation­s, only 74 were deemed credible in 2019. The number of allegation­s reviewed in 2018 was 223. Most credible accusation­s undergo either an assessment called a CCAR or an in-depth investigat­ion.

Resolute Support wouldn’t provide the number of CCARs carried out in 2019, saying one was carried out “in most cases.” But it conducted only 14 in-depth investigat­ions in 2019, down from 23 in 2018, according to U.S. military data provided to the United Nations.

The drop in the number of investigat­ions came after the team tasked with assessing the accusation­s was slashed.

Before 2019, a board of about a dozen U.S. civilian and military officials worked with a group of U.S. military investigat­ors called the Civilian Casualty Mitigation Team to assesses allegation­s.

But Resolute Support dissolved the board during the first half of 2019, citing efficiency concerns, according to the U.N. report. A “backlog” of allegation­s developed as the pace of airstrikes increased, and the board was abolished in an attempt to accelerate the review process, the report said.

The move left only the four people who make up the Civilian Casualty Mitigation Team to process hundreds of allegation­s of casualties.

Resolute Support declined to respond to questions about why the board was cut and instead provided a statement from Gen. Austin “Scott” Miller, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanista­n.

“We use every tool at our disposal to avoid civilian casualties, and we spend more time and resources than any military in the history of warfare trying protect civilians,” Miller said, adding it’s “impossible” to completely avoid civilian casualties.

As the number of in-depth investigat­ions dropped, the gulf grew between U.S. military and U.N. data on civilian casualties.

For 2019, U.N. data on civilian casualties from American bombs is more than five times as high as that collected by the Pentagon.

Ninety-eight civilians were killed by U.S. airstrikes in 2019, according to the Pentagon’s annual report submitted to Congress.

For the same period, U.N. reporting found 546 civilians were killed in airstrikes by “internatio­nal military forces.”

The United States is the only internatio­nal military force that carries out airstrikes in Afghanista­n.

 ?? Lorenzo Tugnoli / Washington Post ?? Asadullah Mubaris, 31, stands near the graves of people whose families say they were killed by a U.S. airstrike in Afghanista­n's Herat province in January.
Lorenzo Tugnoli / Washington Post Asadullah Mubaris, 31, stands near the graves of people whose families say they were killed by a U.S. airstrike in Afghanista­n's Herat province in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States