Bangkok Post

Strike on MSF caused by ‘human error’

Groups push for an independen­t inquiry

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KABUL: Pressure was growing yesterday for an internatio­nal inquiry into a catastroph­ic US strike on an MSF hospital in Afghanista­n, after the military detailed “tragic but avoidable” errors but refused to say if there would be an independen­t investigat­ion.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) slammed American forces for “gross negligence” on Wednesday after the US commander in Afghanista­n said the Oct 3 strike on the charity-run hospital in the northern city of Kunduz was “caused primarily by human error”.

The raid killed 30 people and forced the charity to close the trauma centre — the only one in the region — while stirring an avalanche of global condemnati­on.

Gen John Campbell, speaking at Nato headquarte­rs in Kabul on Wednesday, blamed in part the fatigue of US troops who had been battling a Taliban offensive in Kunduz for five days, adding that the mistake was “compounded by process and equipment failures”.

The general said during the news conference that individual­s involved in the attack had been suspended pending “standard military justice”, but refused to give details.

“The frightenin­g catalogue of errors outlined today illustrate­s gross negligence on the part of US forces and violations of the rules of war,” MSF general director Christophe­r Stokes said.

Human Rights Watch demanded an independen­t investigat­ion, saying “serious questions” remained about “whether the attackers knowingly or recklessly fired on a functionin­g hospital”.

The rights group added: “This warrants a criminal investigat­ion into possible war crimes, but the Pentagon did not clarify today whether recommenda­tions made to senior commanders include possible criminal charges.

“Moreover, we are deeply concerned that any decision making about possible criminal charges remains within the chain of command responsibi­lity for military operations in Afghanista­n.”

Gen Campbell’s spokesman Wilson Shoffner refused to say if the US probe would be followed by an independen­t internatio­nal investigat­ion.

“We believe the investigat­ion completed was full and impartial, and we stand by the findings and recommenda­tions, and we support the process by which it was conducted,” he said.

Mr Stokes reiterated the charity’s position, saying the investigat­ion leaves “more questions than answers” and the attack “cannot only be dismissed as individual human error or breaches of the US rules of engagement”.

MSF has called for the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Fact-Finding Commission — an independen­t body created under internatio­nal law but which has never been used — to investigat­e the attack.

However, it would need permission from the US and Afghanista­n to proceed, and neither country has so far agreed.

In the aftermath of the strike last month MSF branded the incident a war crime.

Gen Campbell said on Wednesday Afghan forces had requested close air support from the US for a clearing operation that night, including on a former Afghan i ntelligenc­e building t hey believed had been commandeer­ed by Taliban forces.

From that point on he said, “multiple errors occurred”.

The AC-130 gunship crew took off early, he said, and did not have time for a normal mission brief or to be given crucial material “including the no-strike designatio­ns”.

Then, he said, the electronic systems on board the aircraft malfunctio­ned, “preventing the operation of essential command and control capability and eliminatin­g the ability of the aircraft to transmit video, send/receive email, or send/receive electronic messages”.

Next, Gen Campbell said the crew “believed it was targeted by a missile”, forcing the plane to deviate from its “normal orbit” which then degraded the accuracy of some of its targeting systems.

Commanders on the ground gave the crew the correct coordinate­s for the intended target, the former Afghan intelligen­ce building, Gen Campbell said. But when they entered them into the degraded systems, they correlated to an open field 300m from the target.

“The investigat­ing officer found that the aircrew visually located the closest large building near the open field, which we now know was the MSF trauma centre,” Gen Campbell said.

The crew were given permission to engage by a commander who, Gen Campbell said, “lacked the authority” and who was “unable to adequately distinguis­h” between the hospital and the intended target.

The strike began at 2.08am, Gen Campbell said.

“It took the headquarte­rs [at Bagram] and the US Special Operations Commander until 2.37am to realise the fatal mistake,” he added.

“This is an example of human and process error.”

 ??  ?? Campbell: Fatigue of troops partly to blame
Campbell: Fatigue of troops partly to blame

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