Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S.-led coalition: 229 collateral deaths since ’14

- MICHAEL R. GORDON

WASHINGTON — Facing mounting pressure over civilian casualties in U.S. airstrikes, the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria said Saturday that it was likely that at least 229 civilians had been unintentio­nally killed since the start of the operations in August 2014.

In February, the last month covered by the report and the first full month of the Trump administra­tion, four such civilians were killed, the coalition said. The assessment, issued monthly, does not include the March 17 strike on a building in Mosul in which more than 200 people are believed to have been killed. That strike is under investigat­ion.

The coalition’s overall count is far less than estimates by some human-rights groups. Airwars, a nongovernm­ent organizati­on that monitors reports of civilian casualties in internatio­nal airstrikes, has asserted that at least 2,831 civilians are likely to have been killed by the coalition’s air attacks since August 2014.

The worries about civilian casualties have grown as Iraqi forces push to take western Mosul from the Islamic State with the help of U.S. and allied air power, rockets and artillery. President Donald Trump has vowed to step up the fight against the militants, though the basic strategy in Mosul was set by U.S. commanders during the Obama administra­tion.

“We take the issue of civilian casualties seriously, every day, not just when it makes news,” said Col. John Thomas, spokesman for the U.S. Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East. Thomas added that the command, in an effort to be “fully transparen­t,” was sharing informatio­n on unresolved cases and was even describing episodes that military personnel had reported up the chain of command but had not previously received public attention.

Chris Woods, director of Airwars, asserted that while the Central Command had been working to improve its casualty counts, it was still lagging behind.

“Certainly, both [Central Command] and the coalition have put a lot of effort into improving their casualty monitoring process, and we have been in extensive dialogue with them,” Woods said in a telephone interview from London.

“But despite these improved resources, both [Central Command] and the coalition appear unable to keep up with the number of allegation­s,” Woods added. “Given the intensity of operations in Mosul and around Raqqa, that gap continues to grow.”

Raqqa, in Syria, is the Islamic State’s self-declared capital.

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