Bangkok Post

Pentagon responds to Mosul deaths, blames IS

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WASHINGTON: The Pentagon on Thursday said it would soon release a video showing Islamic State militants herding civilians into a building in the Iraqi city of Mosul and then firing from it, the US military’s latest response to an outcry over a separate explosion thought to have killed scores of civilians.

The US military has acknowledg­ed that the US-led coalition probably had a role in the March 17 explosion, but said the Islamic State could also be to blame.

Local officials and eyewitness­es have said as many as 240 people may have died in the Al-Jadida district when a blast made a building collapse, burying families inside.

Rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal and Pope Francis have both called for better protection for civilians caught in war zones in Iraq.

The Pentagon does not regularly release images or videos from operations. However, it has had to do so once already this month after it denied striking a mosque in Syria, releasing an aerial image to show the mosque was intact. That incident is under investigat­ion.

A spokesman for the US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State told reporters on Thursday he was working to declassify a video showing militants hiding civilians in a building in west Mosul to “bait the coalition to attack”.

“What was see now is not the use of civilians as human shields ... For the first time we caught this on video yesterday as armed ISIS fighters forced civilians into a building, killing one who resisted and then used that building as a fighting position against the [Counter Terrorism Service],” Colonel Joseph Scrocca said. He was using an acronym for the Islamic State.

Mr Scrocca said Islamic State tactics have led to adjustment­s in procedures, adding that about 1,000 Islamic State fighters remained in west Mosul, but did not give details of these changes. He added that an in-depth investigat­ion into the strikes had been opened on March 17.

On Tuesday, Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, the senior US commander in Iraq, told reporters by teleconfer­ence it was “a little disappoint­ing” that questions during the briefing focused on US-led air strikes.

“ISIS is slaughteri­ng Iraqis and Syrians on a daily basis. ISIS is cutting off heads. ISIS is shooting people,” he said.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has said the high civilian toll in Mosul suggests US-led coalition forces have failed to take adequate precaution­s to prevent civilian deaths.

Pope Francis on Wednesday said it was “imperative and urgent” to protect civilians in Iraq.

At his weekly general audience in St Peter’s Square, Francis said he was “concerned about civilian population­s trapped in the neighbourh­oods of western Mosul”.

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