An internal investigation of the U.S. military’s attack on a hospital in
Afghanistan last month reveals it took commanders 17 minutes to tell an
attack aircraft it was firing on a Doctors Without Borders facility.
Thirty people were killed and 37 injured after a AC-130 gunship fired on
the hospital for a half hour, supposedly mistaking it for a Taliban
garrison. Gen. John Campbell said Wednesday that a special-forces
officer received a call from MSF (the French abbreviation for the
medical organization) saying the U.S. was bombing a hospital. “It took
the headquarters and the U.S. special-operations commander until 2:37 a.m.
to realize the fatal mistake,” Campbell said, adding this was “human
error.” MSF calls it a war crime. The Associated Press reported in
October that U.S. special operators were tracking a Pakistani
intelligence operative, whom they believed was working with the Taliban,
to the hospital; U.S. soldiers knew it was a hospital before they
called in the airstrike, though it’s unclear if they told higher-ups it
was a hospital. |
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