Los Angeles Times

‘Human errors’ blamed in Syria airstrike

Coalition raid killed at least 15 troops, U.S. investigat­ors say. Russia says 62 died.

- By W.J. Hennigan william.hennigan @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — A U.S. military investigat­ion has found that “unintentio­nal human errors” led to a coalition airstrike that mistakenly killed dozens of Syrianback­ed troops this fall, but it did not recommend disciplini­ng anyone for the deadly attack.

The Sept. 17 air raid on a garrison in the eastern Syrian town of Dair Alzour is one of the worst coalition errors to emerge since the Obama administra­tion began an air war against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria in mid-2014.

The attack, which was in an area also frequented by Russian forces, led to sharp criticism from Moscow after it emerged that Russian attempts to use a communicat­ions hotline to stop the attack were not answered for nearly half an hour.

Russia’s Defense Ministry has said the attack killed 62 Syrian troops, wounded 100 more and opened the way for an Islamic State offensive in the area. It also helped destroy an already fragile U.S.-Russian cease-fire.

A four-page redacted summary of the investigat­ion that was released Tuesday concluded that the botched bombing did not violate internatio­nal laws of armed conflict.

Warplanes from the United States, Australia, Denmark and Britain bombed and strafed what the pilots thought was a concentrat­ion of Islamic State fighters for nearly an hour.

Air Force Brig. Gen. Richard Coe, the lead investigat­ing officer, told reporters at the Pentagon that the ground forces “looked and acted like” militants, but were probably Syrian government troops or militias aligned with President Bashar Assad. The ground forces were not wearing formal military uniforms that would clearly establish their identity, Coe said.

“We concluded based upon post-strike analysis that a number of human factors resulted in incorrect identifica­tion of forces on the ground,” Coe said.

U.S. investigat­ors said at least 15 people were killed, but Coe acknowledg­ed that estimate may be low. He said U.S. investigat­ors did not have access to the site and could not be certain of the total.

The error began after U.S. reconnaiss­ance drones began tracking a vehicle believed to belong to an Islamic State militant. The vehicle drove through militant-held territory in eastern Syria before arriving at the garrison in Dair Alzour.

The early assessment “colored” later analysis and resulted in “invalid assumption­s” that led to faulty identifica­tion of the ground forces, Coe said.

One analyst had concluded that the ground forces, based on their behavior and equipment, were not likely to be Islamic State fighters. But that dissent did not reach commanders who authorized the airstrike.

U.S. analysts watched the site for two days, and the target underwent what the military calls a thorough assessment, review and validation process, Coe said.

U.S. and coalition commanders at the air operation center in Qatar decided it was an Islamic State target and ordered an attack with F-16s, F/A-18s, A-10s and armed drones.

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