U.S. special forces knew the target bombed in Kunduz, Afghanistan, was a
hospital, according to a new report from the Associated Press. Soldiers
tracked a Pakistani intelligence operative suspected of working with
the Taliban to the protected medical facility run by Doctors Without
Borders, also known by its French initials MSF. U.S. forces had
assembled a dossier on the area, including maps showing the facility was
a hospital. “This would amount to a premeditated massacre,” a MSF
official told AP of the Oct. 3 attack that killed 22. It is unclear if
U.S. forces told their commanders the target was a hospital before an
AC-130 gunship opened fire. A U.S. account from the scene claimed
gunfire was coming from the hospital, but Afghans and MSF say that was
not the case. |
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