Los Angeles Times

U.S. denies mosque hit in bombing

Military disputes claims that scores of civilians were killed in Syrian attack.

- By W.J. Hennigan william.hennigan@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The U.S. military launched an airstrike at a building in northern Syria targeting what it says were senior Al Qaeda militants and is investigat­ing reports that scores of civilians were killed or injured in the attack, the Pentagon said Friday.

Photos and videos on social media showed bloodied people emerging or being carried from a smoldering building in Aleppo province that local officials said was a mosque filled with worshipers at evening prayer.

The U.S. military insists dozens of militants were killed and denied bombing a mosque.

The Pentagon released a black-and-white aerial photo of a compound that it said showed a small mosque still standing. A much larger building across the road was reduced to rubble.

“We had tracked this building for some time,” Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said Friday. “We know it was being used by Al Qaeda, but at this particular time its purpose was to host this meeting of very senior people in Al Qaeda.”

After the Pentagon released the photo, some Syrians said on social media that the building destroyed was a newly opened mosque and that the standing structure was an older place of worship.

The military is investigat­ing whether civilians were inadverten­tly killed or injured, Davis added, but he said the photo showed the mosque was “relatively unscathed.”

“As of the moment, we’re not aware of any credible allegation­s of civilian casualties,” he said.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britishbas­ed monitoring group with a network of activists in Syria, reported Thursday that an airstrike hit the mosque in Al Jinah village and at least 42 people were killed. The group did not specify who launched the air attack.

“Some people [are] in critical situation and others are still missing,” the group’s report said, adding that the “search for missing, dead bodies and survivors under the rubble of the destructio­n caused by the bombing is still taking place.”

Al Jazeera news agency reported that the attack occurred during “evening prayer so the mosque was full of worshipers, with local activists saying up to 300 people were inside at the time.”

Syrian Civil Defense, a volunteer rescue group better known as the White Helmets, shared a video of rescuers searching for survivors in the rubble and injured people being loaded into ambulances.

The incident is the latest example of the gulf in reporting that exists between the Pentagon and Syrian human rights and humanitari­an aid groups on the impact of deadly airstrikes.

Obtaining accurate independen­t figures is difficult because of the challenges of reporting on the ground in the Syrian civil war.

The Pentagon estimates that at least 220 civilians have been killed in more than 18,900 airstrikes launched by the U.S. and its allies in Iraq and Syria since the air war against Islamic State began in mid-2014.

Independen­t monitoring groups say, however, that errant bombs or poor targeting have caused thousands of civilian casualties.

‘We’re not aware of any credible allegation­s of civilian casualties.’ — Capt. Jeff Davis, Pentagon spokesman

 ?? Omar Haj Kadour AFP/Getty Images ?? VOLUNTEERS dig through the rubble of a building in Al Jinah, Syria, following an airstrike. The U.S. said missiles hit a building where militants were meeting, but rights groups say the building was a mosque.
Omar Haj Kadour AFP/Getty Images VOLUNTEERS dig through the rubble of a building in Al Jinah, Syria, following an airstrike. The U.S. said missiles hit a building where militants were meeting, but rights groups say the building was a mosque.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States