American special forces knew they were bombing a hospital, according to the Associated Press. The bombings claimed the lives of 22 doctors, nurses
and patients while wounding 37 others.
The US chose to move forward with the airstrike because they
believed a Pakistani was holding heavy weapons in storage and using the
hospital as a command center, according to the AP’s source who spoke on a
condition of anonymity. However, no evidence has surfaced publicly suggesting a
Pakistani died in the attack, and Doctors without Borders, the international
organization that ran the hospital, says none of its staff was Pakistani.
Doctors without Borders has acknowledged that it treated
wounded Taliban fighters at the Kunduz hospital in accordance with their
standard practice, but it insists no weapons were allowed in. Afghans who
worked at the hospital have told the AP that no one was firing from within.
The U.S. airplane made five separate strafing runs over an
hour, directing heavy fire on the main hospital building, which contained the
emergency room and intensive care unit. Surrounding buildings were not struck,
they said. This was not a stray shell, an error of judgement in a fierce fire-fight. There was no fog of war. Typically, pilots flying air support
missions have maps showing protected sites such as hospitals and mosques.
If commanders concluded that enemies were operating from a protected site, they
would follow procedures designed to minimize civilian casualties. That would
generally mean surrounding a building with troops, not blowing it to bits from
the air.
MSF President Meinie Nicolai said the new details suggest
that the hospital was intentionally targeted.
"This would amount to a premeditated massacre...
Reports like this underscore how critical it is for the Obama administration to
immediately give consent to an independent and impartial investigation by the
International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission to find out how and why US
forces attacked our hospital...[staff] reported a calm night and that there
were no armed combatants, nor active fighting in or from the compound prior to
the airstrikes.”
ADDENDUM
ADDENDUM
A US tank has forced its way into the shell of the Afghanistan hospital destroyed in an airstrike 11 days ago, prompting warnings that the US military may have destroyed evidence in a potential war crimes investigation. “Their unannounced and forced entry damaged property, destroyed potential evidence and caused stress and fear,” MSF said.
NBC News has learned that the crew in the C-130 gunship that carried out a strike against a hospital in Afghanistan questioned whether it was legal.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/cockpit-crew-in-doctors-without-borders-strike-questioned-legality-545354307855