Los Angeles Times

A slap on the wrist

A U. S. assault killed 42 civilians in an Afghanista­n hospital but resulted in no criminal charges.

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The heavily redacted Pentagon report on last year’s deadly attack on a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanista­n, affirms, as early accounts had suggested, that it was the result of a chain of errors, many of them avoidable. But because the deaths of the 42 civilians — doctors, staff and patients alike, some of them incinerate­d in their beds — were deemed to be unintentio­nal, the Pentagon has decided the punishment­s for the perpetrato­rs should be administra­tive, and that none of those involved will face criminal prosecutio­n for their misdeeds.

That is inadequate. These deaths weren’t the result of a single error that led to dropping a bomb in the wrong place, which, although regrettabl­e, also is inevitable in a theater of war. This attack, on a building complex that had been repeatedly reported to the military command as a hospital, lasted more than an hour, even as the crew of the AC- 130 gunship expressed confusion over exactly what they were being asked to do, and uncertaint­y over the target. And the attack continued even though Doctors Without Borders contacted American officials within 12 minutes of its onset. Why did it continue? Because, according to the Pentagon report, which was released Friday, the military officials couldn’t confirm for themselves that they were firing at a hospital, not a building full of Taliban fighters.

We won’t pretend to substitute our knowledge for the Pentagon’s, but the military’s own report suggests serious violations of the rules of war. Gen. Joseph L. Votel, the head of the military’s Central Command, acknowledg­ed Friday that the report found that troops involved did not “comply with the rules of engagement in the law of armed conflict.” Critics argue that such an egregious failure to follow the rules of engagement should have led to criminal charges, yet the Pentagon’s recommende­d response is administra­tive discipline — reassignme­nts, letters of reprimand, stalled and possibly ended careers.

Doctors Without Borders, Human Rights Watch and other internatio­nal rights organizati­ons have called for an independen­t investigat­ion. They’re right. As American forces continue to engage in Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria, Somalia and, through the logistical support of Saudi Arabian bombers, Yemen, the U. S. government continues to feed the belief in parts of the world that, rather than being a force for stability and peace, it is heedless or reckless when it comes to protecting civilian lives. An internal review that determines, in effect, “nope, we committed no crimes here, so move along,” does not help.

President Obama should order an independen­t investigat­ion into this horrific tragedy, and if that analysis recommends criminal charges against any of the troops involved, then the cases should be brought. To do otherwise is to f lout justice, to work against the nation’s best interests and to feed cynicism about the Pentagon’s respect for its own rules of engagement.

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