Texarkana Gazette

Civilian casualties undercut victories in Iraq and Syria

- By Susannah George and Zeina Karam

BAGHDAD—Islamic State group and al-Qaida-linked militants are quickly moving to drum up outrage over a sharp spike in civilian casualties said to have been caused by U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, posting photos online of a destroyed medical center and homes reduced to rubble. “This is how Trump liberates Mosul, by killing its inhabitant­s,” the caption reads.

The propaganda points to the risk that rising death tolls and destructio­n could undermine the American-led campaign against the militants.

During the past two years of fighting to push back the Islamic State group, the U.S.-led coalition has faced little backlash over casualties, in part because civilian deaths have been seen as relatively low and there have been few cases of single strikes killing large numbers of people. In Iraq—even though sensitivit­ies run deep over past American abuses of civilians— the country’s prime minister and many Iraqis support the U.S. role in fighting the militants.

But for the first time anger over lives lost is becoming a significan­t issue as Iraqi troops backed by U.S. special forces and coalition airstrikes wade into more densely populated districts of Iraq’s second-largest city, Mosul, and U.S. -backed Syrian fighters battle closer to the Islamic State group’s Syrian stronghold of Raqqa. That has the potential to undercut victories against the militants and stoke resentment­s that play into their hands. At least 300 civilians have been killed in the offensive against IS in the western half of Mosul since mid-February, according to the U.N. human rights office— including 140 killed in a single March 17 airstrike on a building. Dozens more are claimed to have been killed in another strike last weekend, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal, and by similar airstrikes in neighborin­g Syria in the past month.

In Syria, as fighting around Raqqa intensifie­d, civilian fatalities from coalition airstrikes rose to 198 in March—including 32 children and 31 women—compared to 56 in February, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which documents Syria’s war. Over the course of the air campaign, from September 2014 through February, an average of 30 civilians were killed a month, according to the Observator­y.

The U.S. military is investigat­ing what role the U.S. played in the March 17 airstrike in Mosul, and American and Iraqi officials have said militants may have deliberate­ly gathered civilians there and planted explosives in the building. The blast left an entire residentia­l block flattened, reducing buildings to mangled concrete. Among those who lost loved ones, resentment appears to be building toward the U.S.-led coalition and the ground forces it supports.

“How could they have used this much artillery on civilian locations?” asked Bashar Abdullah, a resident of the neighborho­od known as New Mosul, who lost more than a dozen family members in the March 17 attack. “Iraqi and American forces both assured us that it will be an easy battle, that’s why people didn’t leave their houses. They felt safe.”

U.S. officials have said they are investigat­ing other claims of casualties in Syria and Iraq.

Islamic State group fighters have overtly used civilians as human shields, including firing from homes where people are sheltering or forcing people to move alongside them as they withdraw. The group has imposed a reign of terror across territorie­s it holds in Syria and Iraq, taking women as sex slaves, decapitati­ng or shooting suspected opponents and destroying archaeolog­ical sites. Mass graves are unearthed nearly every day in former IS territory.

Now, the group is using the civilian deaths purportedl­y as a result of U.S.-led airstrikes in its propaganda machine. Photos recently posted online on militant websites showed the destructio­n at the Mosul Medical College with a caption describing the Americans as the “Mongols of the modern era” who kill and destroy under the pretext of liberation. A series of pictures showing destroyed homes carried the comment: “This is how Trump liberates Mosul, by killing its inhabitant­s under the rubble of houses bombed by American warplanes to claim victory. Who would dare say this is a war crime?”

In Syria, IS and other extremist factions have pushed the line that the U.S. and Russia, which is backing President Bashar Assad’s regime, are equal in their disregard for civilian lives.

U.S. “crimes are clear evidence of the ‘murderous friendship’ that America claims to have with the Syrian people, along with its claimed concern for their future and interests,” said the Levant Liberation Committee, an al-Qaida-led insurgent alliance.

Some Syrian opposition factions allied with the U.S. have also criticized the strikes, describing them as potential war crimes. An analysis by the Soufan Group consultanc­y warned that rumors and accusation­s of coalition atrocities “will certainly help shape popular opinion once Mosul and Raqqa are retaken, thus serving a purpose for the next phase of the Islamic State’s existence.”

Criticism has also come from Russian officials, whose military has been accused of killing civilians on a large scale in its air campaign in Syria, particular­ly during the offensive that recaptured eastern Aleppo from rebels late last year.

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