Santa Fe New Mexican

Probe: U.S. bomb set off ISIS explosives in Mosul

More than 100 civilians died in March incident

- By Lolita C. Baldor and Robert Burns

WASHINGTON — The United States acknowledg­ed Thursday that bombing an Iraqi building in March set off a series of Islamic State-planted explosives, resulting in more than 100 civilian deaths and underscori­ng the difficulty of rooting out the extremist group’s fighters from its remaining urban stronghold­s.

The bomb dropped on a Mosul building set off explosive materials that ISIS militants had already placed inside, causing the structure to collapse, the Pentagon said in describing the conclusion of a twomonth investigat­ion. The civilians inside were seeking refuge.

The bombing led to the largest single incident of civilian deaths in the nearly 3-year-old campaign. And it illustrate­s the difficult urban fight U.S. and coalition forces are encounteri­ng, including what U.S. officials describe as IS militants deliberate­ly enticing attacks on buildings where they’ve staged explosives and know civilians are inside. The civilians either enter unwittingl­y or are forced in and locked up.

The conclusion, said U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Matthew Isler, is that while the U.S.-led coalition takes responsibi­lity for the airstrike, “a coalition munition was not responsibl­e for the structural failure of the building and the deaths of the civilians inside.” He said the Islamic State has tried to set up similar incidents since then, prompting Iraqi and coalition forces to adjust combat tactics and watch locations more carefully in advance of strikes.

The battle for Mosul is key to eliminatin­g ISIS from Iraq. But it has grown riskier for civilians as the battlegrou­nd shrinks in the highly populated older section of the city. Humanitari­an officials have predicted civilian casualties would spike as more than 400,000 civilians were trapped in the city’s west. A similar scenario could emerge in ISIS’ self-declared capital of Raqqa, Syria, which U.S.-backed militia are expected to start trying to retake soon.

In a telephone briefing with Pentagon reporters, Isler said the 500-pound precision-guided bomb dropped by a U.S. aircraft on March 17 was intended to kill two ISIS snipers who posed a threat to Iraqi counterter­rorism forces.

The probe found the U.S. bomb triggered secondary explosions from devices clandestin­ely planted and strategica­lly placed around the second floor of the concrete building. Isler, the lead investigat­or, said neither the Iraqi troops nor the Americans who authorized and conducted the strike knew civilians were in the basement and first floor of the building, or that explosive materials were present.

Although the U.S. has no video or eyewitness accounts of ISIS militants planting the explosives, Isler said, enemy fighters warned people in the building next door to leave the area the night before the explosion. ISIS militants knew there were innocent civilians in the building that collapsed, he said, and possibly gave them the same warning. He said the neighbors refused to leave and, as a result, were told by ISIS that “what happens to you is on you.”

Isler said 101 civilians in the building were killed, and another four died in a nearby building. He said 36 civilians remain unaccounte­d for. They may have been killed in the explosion or fled. The deaths represent about a quarter of all civilian deaths associated with U.S. airstrikes since the air campaign began in 2014.

In this case, the civilians weren’t herded into the building. Isler said it was a home owned by a wellregard­ed Iraqi who invited people to take shelter there because it was sturdy and well-built.

Describing a lengthy engineerin­g and scientific analysis, Isler said the bomb dropped by the U.S. aircraft struck the roof and detonated, with “localized damage” to the front and second-floor areas of the building. He said the bomb contained nearly 200 pounds of explosives.

Analysts estimate it would have taken at least four times that amount of explosives — or at least 1,000 pounds — precisely placed along the walls to bring the building down, Isler said.

That analysis, he said, led investigat­ors to conclude ISIS staged a large amount of explosives around the walls of the second floor, underneath the snipers’ position, ensuring that a coalition strike would trigger the second blast and much more destructio­n.

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