Military Reports

Military Reports

CJTF–OIR for April 19, 2018 – April 20, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 20, 2018

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Iraq and Syria

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Iraq and Syria.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that work remains to defeat Daesh. Coalition strikes continue to target Daesh throughout Iraq under the leadership of Iraqi authorities. “All Coalition air strikes are carried out with the consent of the Iraqi government,” said Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in a press conference April 1, 2018.

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its intent to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between April 13 and April 19, Coalition military forces conducted 30 strikes consisting of 47 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

On April 19 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed five Daesh-held buildings.

On April 19 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed one Daesh supply route.

On April 18 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of five engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, five strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit and two fighting positions.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on April 18, 2018.

On April 17 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, five strikes destroyed one Daesh headquarters, one VBIED factory, two fighting positions and one Daesh held-building.

On April 17 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• One strike conducted Near Al Qaim.

On April 16 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit, and destroyed one Daesh-held building.

• Near Al Shadaddi, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed one Daesh vehicle.

On April 16 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Al Huwayjah, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed three Daesh tunnels and two Daesh-held buildings.

On April 15 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of 11 engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit, destroyed four Daesh-held buildings, one fighting position and one command and control center.

• Near Al Shadaddi, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed one Daesh vehicle.

On April 15 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Tal Afar, one strike destroyed one Daesh tunnel.

On April 14 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed three Daesh IED’s.

On April 14 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• One strike conducted Near Qayyarah.

On April 13 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh fighting position, IED factory and two command and control centers.

On April 13 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Al Asad, one strike destroyed a Daesh IED factory

• One strike conducted Near Al Qaim.

Report Date

April 20, 2018

Report Summary

  • 30 total strikes
  • 23 in Syria
  • 7 in Iraq

Report Summary

  • 27 total strikes
  • 23 in Syria (15044 – 15066)
  • 4 in Iraq (14209 – 14212)

Confirmed Actions

US

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Iraq and Syria

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Iraq and Syria.

April 1, 2018

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that work remains to defeat Daesh. Coalition strikes continue to target Daesh throughout Iraq under the leadership of Iraqi authorities. “All Coalition air strikes are carried out with the consent of the Iraqi government,” said Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in a press conference April 1, 2018.

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its intent to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

April 13, 2018

Between April 13 and April 19, Coalition military forces conducted 30 strikes consisting of 47 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

April 19, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On April 19 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed five Daesh-held buildings.

On April 19 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed one Daesh supply route.
April 18, 2018
Syria: 5 strikes

On April 18 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of five engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, five strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit and two fighting positions.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on April 18, 2018.

April 17, 2018
Syria: 5 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On April 17 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, five strikes destroyed one Daesh headquarters, one VBIED factory, two fighting positions and one Daesh held-building.

On April 17 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

One strike conducted Near Al Qaim.
April 16, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On April 16 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit, and destroyed one Daesh-held building.
Near Al Shadaddi, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed one Daesh vehicle.

On April 16 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Al Huwayjah, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed three Daesh tunnels and two Daesh-held buildings.
April 15, 2018
Syria: 5 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On April 15 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted five strikes consisting of 11 engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit, destroyed four Daesh-held buildings, one fighting position and one command and control center.
Near Al Shadaddi, one strike engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed one Daesh vehicle.

On April 15 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Tal Afar, one strike destroyed one Daesh tunnel.
April 14, 2018
Syria: 5 strikes
Iraq: 3 strikes

On April 14 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed three Daesh IED’s.

On April 14 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

One strike conducted Near Qayyarah.

On April 13 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged one Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh fighting position, IED factory and two command and control centers.

On April 13 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Al Asad, one strike destroyed a Daesh IED factory
One strike conducted Near Al Qaim.

French MoD for April 19, 2018 – April 20, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 20, 2018

Notes

For April 11th – 17th, France reports Task Force Wagram continued its support for security operations carried out by the ISF in the Euphrates Valley. This week, three shooting missions – two of illumination and one prohibition – were carried out. Air activity focused on supporting the SDF in the Euphrates valley: 28 sorties were carried out but there were no strikes.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE



Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, sur la rive orientale de l’Euphrate, la Coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre les dernières poches de Daech.

La situation n’a pas connu d’évolution notable cette semaine.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

A Bagdad, la sécurisation du pèlerinage d’AL Khadim qui s’est terminé le 13 avril a été un succès indéniable, dans la mesure où aucun incident sécuritaire n’est venu le perturber. Ce succès démontre à la fois le professionnalisme des forces de sécurité irakiennes et l’incapacité de Daech à reprendre l’initiative dans la capitale.

Dans le reste du pays, les forces de sécurité irakiennes ont maintenu un rythme opérationnel soutenu, permettant de continuer à renforcer la sécurisation du territoire.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

La Task force Narvik forme les tireurs d’élite irakiens

Depuis le 10 mars, les instructeurs français de la Task Force Narvik conduisent au côté de leurs homologues polonais, une formation de tireur d’élite au profit des soldats irakiens de l’Iraqi Counter Terrorism Service (ICTS).

Au cours de la formation, leur seront transmis les enseignements de base sur l’infiltration, le renseignement et le tir de précision. Pendant cette formation, les stagiaires approfondissent leurs connaissances en camouflage, infiltration, renseignement et tir de précision.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, trois missions de tirs, deux d’éclairement et une d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 11 au 17 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1651 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 28 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 11 au 17 avril). Aucune frappe n’a été réalisée.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7993 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Report Date

April 20, 2018

Notes

For April 11th – 17th, France reports Task Force Wagram continued its support for security operations carried out by the ISF in the Euphrates Valley. This week, three shooting missions – two of illumination and one prohibition – were carried out. Air activity focused on supporting the SDF in the Euphrates valley: 28 sorties were carried out but there were no strikes.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE



Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, sur la rive orientale de l’Euphrate, la Coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre les dernières poches de Daech.

La situation n’a pas connu d’évolution notable cette semaine.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

A Bagdad, la sécurisation du pèlerinage d’AL Khadim qui s’est terminé le 13 avril a été un succès indéniable, dans la mesure où aucun incident sécuritaire n’est venu le perturber. Ce succès démontre à la fois le professionnalisme des forces de sécurité irakiennes et l’incapacité de Daech à reprendre l’initiative dans la capitale.

Dans le reste du pays, les forces de sécurité irakiennes ont maintenu un rythme opérationnel soutenu, permettant de continuer à renforcer la sécurisation du territoire.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

La Task force Narvik forme les tireurs d’élite irakiens

Depuis le 10 mars, les instructeurs français de la Task Force Narvik conduisent au côté de leurs homologues polonais, une formation de tireur d’élite au profit des soldats irakiens de l’Iraqi Counter Terrorism Service (ICTS).

Au cours de la formation, leur seront transmis les enseignements de base sur l’infiltration, le renseignement et le tir de précision. Pendant cette formation, les stagiaires approfondissent leurs connaissances en camouflage, infiltration, renseignement et tir de précision.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, trois missions de tirs, deux d’éclairement et une d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 11 au 17 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1651 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 28 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 11 au 17 avril). Aucune frappe n’a été réalisée.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7993 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Netherlands MoD for April 18, 2018 – April 19, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 19, 2018

Notes

For April 11th-17th, the Netherlands reported that its F-16s supported ground troops in 9 missions. This happened in the Syrian province Deir Ezzor. No weapons were deployed during these missions.

Weekoverzicht Defensieoperaties

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 9 missies. Dat gebeurde in de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. Tijdens deze missies zijn geen wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 11 tot en met 17 april 2018.

Nederlandse instructeurs gaven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Van begin oktober tot afgelopen week gaven Nederlandse instructeurs samen met Britse, Sloveense, Duitse en Zweedse instructeurs de advanced instructor course. De Peshmerga hebben nu hun eigen instructeurs die in de komende maanden onder supervisie van de instructeurs van de coalitie de Wide Area Security Course gaan verzorgen. Nu verzorgen coalitielanden deze cursus nog, maar het is de bedoeling dat eind 2018 de Irakese militairen de cursus zelf geven.

Report Date

April 19, 2018

Notes

For April 11th-17th, the Netherlands reported that its F-16s supported ground troops in 9 missions. This happened in the Syrian province Deir Ezzor. No weapons were deployed during these missions.

Weekoverzicht Defensieoperaties

Nieuwsbericht | 18-04-2018 | 12:00

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 9 missies. Dat gebeurde in de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. Tijdens deze missies zijn geen wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 11 tot en met 17 april 2018.

Nederlandse instructeurs gaven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Van begin oktober tot afgelopen week gaven Nederlandse instructeurs samen met Britse, Sloveense, Duitse en Zweedse instructeurs de advanced instructor course. De Peshmerga hebben nu hun eigen instructeurs die in de komende maanden onder supervisie van de instructeurs van de coalitie de Wide Area Security Course gaan verzorgen. Nu verzorgen coalitielanden deze cursus nog, maar het is de bedoeling dat eind 2018 de Irakese militairen de cursus zelf geven.

Published

April 13, 2018

Written by

Airwars Staff

The Netherlands Public Prosecution Service has found that Dutch forces killed or injured civilians during anti-ISIS operations in up to three historical incidents in Iraq.

However the country’s military has since told Airwars it is still refusing to divulge when between 2014 and 2016, or exactly where in Iraq the incidents took place for reasons of national and operational security.

The new findings relating to four separate airstrikes — all in Iraq — were released in a progress report on Dutch involvement in the anti-ISIS Coalition, presented to Parliament on April 13th.

While the report found that none of the strikes had violated the laws of war, it did reveal for the first time that Dutch aircraft had caused civilian harm. Until now the Netherlands has denied all such claims.

‘Civilian casualties did occur’

The report described in some detail the sequence of events surrounding each incident. But crucially it omitted the dates and locations for each event – preventing them from being matched against almost 1,000 alleged Coalition civilian casualty incidents in Iraq since 2014. The Netherlands has also given no indication of how many civilians were killed or injured in each event.

In the first case, Dutch F-16s were involved in an attack on a suspected vehicle-borne IED plant. “The IED factory turned out to have more explosives than previously known, or could have been calculated,” said the prosecutor’s office. The prosecutor noted that the attack “ led to the destruction of buildings in the area” and said ”it is very likely that civilian casualties occurred during this attack.”

In a second case – in which the Prosecution Service explicitly found that “civilian casualties did occur” –  Dutch aircraft were involved in attacking a building that had been identified as an “ISIS headquarters” but was later found to be a residential building. Notably, the report to Parliament cited faulty Coalition intelligence. “Before and during the deployment the F-16 pilots had no indication that the information was incorrect,” Parliament was told.

A third case was described as a car driving “suddenly” into the blast area of a strike on a building, during which time “civilian casualties were possible.”

The last case investigated involved the incorrect targeting of a building, which the report said was due to the wrong settings in an F-16 targeting system. No civilian deaths were believed to have resulted, the Dutch government report found.

Though civilian deaths were confirmed or likely in three of the four cases reviewed, the Public Prosecution Service determined that international humanitarian law had not been violated during any of the attacks. Even so, the investigation found that Dutch military actions had led to civilian harm.

‘Dutch government must now step forward’

The Netherlands now takes its place alongside the United States and Australia as the only members of the 13-member Coalition to admit to causing civilian casualties during anti-ISIS operations in Iraq or Syria.

However, unlike Australia or the US, the Netherlands is still refusing to release dates and locations for the strikes in question, making external evaluations of their findings impossible. Airwars asked the Dutch Ministry of Defense why, and was told by a spokesperson that on national and operational security grounds nothing further would be divulged.

Between October 2014 and July 2016, Dutch F-16s fired more than 1,800 munitions in hundreds of airstrikes against ISIS targets in both Iraq and Syria. In January 2018, the Netherlands once again resumed strikes after swapping in with its Benelux partner Belgium.

“With the Netherlands for the first time admitting civilian harm from its actions in the war against ISIS, it is unacceptable that the locations and dates of the airstrikes are still not being released,” said Airwars Dutch advocacy officer Koen Kluessien. “How can affected Iraqis and Syrians ever have accountability for their loved ones? It’s time for the Dutch government to step forward, and take full responsibility for these sad events.”

French MoD for April 12, 2018 – April 13, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 13, 2018

Notes

For April 4th to 10th, France reports that the Wagram Task Force continued its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, five shooting missions – three lighting and two interdiction missions – were carried out. Air activity focussed on supporting the SDF engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, the aircraft engaged in the Chammal operation made 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. No strikes were carried out.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE



Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, sur la rive orientale de l’Euphrate, la Coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre les dernières poches de Daech.

Cette semaine, ces dernières ont repris à Daech une vingtaine de km2 de champs pétroliers, les privant ainsi de sources de revenus.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Elles assurent actuellement la sécurisation du pèlerinage d’Al Khadim, qui se déroule jusqu’au 13 avril et devrait attirer de l’ordre de 8 millions de pèlerins à Bagdad. Jusqu’à aujourd’hui, aucun incident n’est à déplorer, démontrant l’amélioration de la situation sécuritaire en Irak et l’autonomie croissante des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

En parallèle, les opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes se poursuivent à un rythme élevé. Cette semaine, en Ninive, plus de 600 engins explosifs improvisés et 3000 détonateurs ont été détruits, et plusieurs terroristes arrêtés.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE



Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie.

Les instructeurs du pilier formation sont actuellement impliqués dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

La formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes : un effort collectif

Les instructeurs des Task Force Monsabert et Narvik travaillent régulièrement aux côtés des détachements d’instructeurs fournis par les autres membres de la coalition.

Ces dernières semaines la TF Narvik s’est ainsi engagée aux côtés de soldats polonais dans l’instruction d’une quarantaine de tireurs d’élite de l’Iraki Counter Terrorism Service (ICTS).

Dans le même temps, la TF Monsabert, accompagnée de spécialistes de la TF Wagram, a renforcé les instructeurs norvégiens chargés de la formation de la 7e division d’infanterie irakienne pour apporter leur expertise à une campagne de tir de canon 155 mm.

La TF Monsabert réalise également de façon régulière des actions de formations conjointes avec les instructeurs espagnols du Mobile Training Team (MTT), dont la mission est de renforcer ponctuellement les autres équipes d’instructeurs chargés de la formation de la 7e division d’infanterie irakienne.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation.

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, cinq missions de tirs, trois d’éclairement et deux d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 4 au 10 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1648 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations.

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 4 au 10 avril). Aucune frappe n’a été réalisée.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7965 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Report Date

April 13, 2018

Notes

For April 4th to 10th, France reports that the Wagram Task Force continued its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, five shooting missions – three lighting and two interdiction missions – were carried out. Air activity focussed on supporting the SDF engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, the aircraft engaged in the Chammal operation made 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. No strikes were carried out.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE



Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, sur la rive orientale de l’Euphrate, la Coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre les dernières poches de Daech.

Cette semaine, ces dernières ont repris à Daech une vingtaine de km2 de champs pétroliers, les privant ainsi de sources de revenus.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Elles assurent actuellement la sécurisation du pèlerinage d’Al Khadim, qui se déroule jusqu’au 13 avril et devrait attirer de l’ordre de 8 millions de pèlerins à Bagdad. Jusqu’à aujourd’hui, aucun incident n’est à déplorer, démontrant l’amélioration de la situation sécuritaire en Irak et l’autonomie croissante des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

En parallèle, les opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes se poursuivent à un rythme élevé. Cette semaine, en Ninive, plus de 600 engins explosifs improvisés et 3000 détonateurs ont été détruits, et plusieurs terroristes arrêtés.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE



Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie.

Les instructeurs du pilier formation sont actuellement impliqués dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes.

La formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes : un effort collectif

Les instructeurs des Task Force Monsabert et Narvik travaillent régulièrement aux côtés des détachements d’instructeurs fournis par les autres membres de la coalition.

Ces dernières semaines la TF Narvik s’est ainsi engagée aux côtés de soldats polonais dans l’instruction d’une quarantaine de tireurs d’élite de l’Iraki Counter Terrorism Service (ICTS).

Dans le même temps, la TF Monsabert, accompagnée de spécialistes de la TF Wagram, a renforcé les instructeurs norvégiens chargés de la formation de la 7e division d’infanterie irakienne pour apporter leur expertise à une campagne de tir de canon 155 mm.

La TF Monsabert réalise également de façon régulière des actions de formations conjointes avec les instructeurs espagnols du Mobile Training Team (MTT), dont la mission est de renforcer ponctuellement les autres équipes d’instructeurs chargés de la formation de la 7e division d’infanterie irakienne.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation.

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, cinq missions de tirs, trois d’éclairement et deux d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 4 au 10 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1648 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations.

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 4 au 10 avril). Aucune frappe n’a été réalisée.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7965 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Netherlands MoD for April 11, 2018 – April 12, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 12, 2018

Notes

For April 4th-11th the Netherlands reports that its F-16s flew 6 missions in support of troops on the ground, including in Deir Ezzor in Eastern Syria and the Iraqi province Kirkuk. No weapons were deployed.

Weekoverzicht Defensieoperaties

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 6 missies. Dat gebeurde onder meer in de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. In Irak vlogen de jachtvliegtuigen missies boven de provincie Kirkuk. Tijdens deze missies zijn geen wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 4 tot en met 11 april 2018.

Nederlandse instructeurs geven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Report Date

April 12, 2018

Notes

For April 4th-11th the Netherlands reports that its F-16s flew 6 missions in support of troops on the ground, including in Deir Ezzor in Eastern Syria and the Iraqi province Kirkuk. No weapons were deployed.

Weekoverzicht Defensieoperaties

Nieuwsbericht | 11-04-2018 | 12:00

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 6 missies. Dat gebeurde onder meer in de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. In Irak vlogen de jachtvliegtuigen missies boven de provincie Kirkuk. Tijdens deze missies zijn geen wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 4 tot en met 11 april 2018.

Nederlandse instructeurs geven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Incident date

April 6, 2018

Incident Code

TI015

LOCATION

سدكان , Sedkan, Erbil, Iraq

Two civilians were injured in an alleged Turkish artillery strike on Sedkan, according to local sources. Basnews reported that “on Friday [April 6th], Turkish artillery continued to bombard the area of ​​Bradust and its villages in Siddakan (northeast of Erbil), injuring two civilians and displacing about 120 others from their villages. According to information received

Summary

First published
April 6, 2018
Last updated
January 18, 2022
Civilian harm reported
Yes
Civilians reported killed
0
Civilians reported injured
2
Airwars civilian harm grading
Fair
Reported by two or more credible sources, with likely or confirmed near actions by a belligerent.
Suspected belligerent
Turkish Military
View Incident

CJTF–OIR for April 5, 2018 – April 6, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 6, 2018

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. Coalition strikes continue to target Daesh in SDF-held areas of Syria, and throughout Iraq under the leadership of Iraqi authorities. “All Coalition air strikes are carried out with the consent of the Iraqi government,” said Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in a press conference April 1, 2018.

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between March 30 and April 5, Coalition military forces conducted nine strikes consisting of 11 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 5, 2018.

On April 5 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed a Daesh supply route.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 4, 2018.

On April 4 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Baghdad, one strike destroyed a Daesh cave.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on April 3, 2018.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 2, 2018.

On April 2 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Bayji, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

• One strike was conducted near Qayyarah.

On April 1 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

On April 1 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Bayji, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On March 31 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 31 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Rutbah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

On March 30 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Shadaddi, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 30, 2018.

Report Date

April 6, 2018

Report Summary

  • 9 total strikes
  • 6 in Iraq
  • 3 in Syria

Report Summary

  • 8 total strikes
  • 5 in Iraq (14197 – 14201)
  • 3 in Syria (15010 – 15012)

Confirmed Actions

US, UK

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

April 1, 2018

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. Coalition strikes continue to target Daesh in SDF-held areas of Syria, and throughout Iraq under the leadership of Iraqi authorities. “All Coalition air strikes are carried out with the consent of the Iraqi government,” said Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in a press conference April 1, 2018.

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

March 30, 2018

Between March 30 and April 5, Coalition military forces conducted nine strikes consisting of 11 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

April 5, 2018
Iraq: 1 strikes

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 5, 2018.

On April 5 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed a Daesh supply route.
April 4, 2018
Iraq: 1 strikes

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 4, 2018.

On April 4 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Baghdad, one strike destroyed a Daesh cave.
April 3, 2018

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on April 3, 2018.

April 2, 2018
Iraq: 3 strikes
Syria: 1 strikes

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on April 2, 2018.

On April 2 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Bayji, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.
One strike was conducted near Qayyarah.

On April 1 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

On April 1 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Bayji, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh-held building.
March 31, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 31 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 31 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Rutbah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

On March 30 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Shadaddi, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 30, 2018.

UK MoD for April 5, 2018 – April 6, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

April 6, 2018

Thursday 5 April – Typhoons attacked two groups of terrorists and their vehicle in the western deserts of Iraq…On the night of Wednesday 5 April, two Royal Air Force Typhoon FGR4s, based at Akrotiri and supported by a Voyager air refuelling tanker, were dispatched to the western deserts of Iraq, some 40 miles south-east of Ar Rutbah, where a surveillance aircraft was tracking a group of terrorists. An initial strike by the Tornados, armed with Paveway IV guided bombs, saw one aircraft attack several of the extremists, whilst the second aircraft destroyed their truck, parked some distance away. Within the hour, further members of the group had been successfully identified nearby, and were struck by a third Paveway IV.

Report Date

April 6, 2018

Thursday 5 April – Typhoons attacked two groups of terrorists and their vehicle in the western deserts of Iraq…On the night of Wednesday 5 April, two Royal Air Force Typhoon FGR4s, based at Akrotiri and supported by a Voyager air refuelling tanker, were dispatched to the western deserts of Iraq, some 40 miles south-east of Ar Rutbah, where a surveillance aircraft was tracking a group of terrorists. An initial strike by the Tornados, armed with Paveway IV guided bombs, saw one aircraft attack several of the extremists, whilst the second aircraft destroyed their truck, parked some distance away. Within the hour, further members of the group had been successfully identified nearby, and were struck by a third Paveway IV.

Published

April 5, 2018

Written by

Samuel Oakford
Photographs are published with the kind permission of Maranie R. Staab. All rights fully reserved.

Eighteen months ago, Iraqi forces backed by heavy coalition firepower descended on Mosul, Iraq’s second city and the largest ever controlled by the Islamic State. It took them nine months—well beyond initial estimates—to dislodge the terror group. During that time, strategies changed. Under the Obama administration, more commanders with the U.S.-led coalition were given latitude to call in strikes. When Donald Trump took office, he grew that trend, and embraced so-called “annihilation” tactics. In parallel, Iraqi security forces suffered heavy casualties early in the fight among their elite units, and later operated with fewer restraints. By the time the city was captured in July of last year, it was littered with some eight million tons of rubble—three times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza, the UN noted.

The urban fighting in Mosul that began on October 16, 2016 was described by U.S. officials as the most intense since World War II. Backing Iraqi forces on the ground, the U.S.-led coalition, which included a dozen partner countries, carried out more than 1,250 strikes in the city, hitting thousands of targets with over 29,000 munitions, according to official figures provided to us. But in the nine months since the reclamation of Mosul, those involved in the operation have conspicuously neglected to assess how many civilians were killed. There remains no official count of the dead in Mosul.

In December 2017, the Associated Press estimated that 9,000 to 11,000 civilians had died in the battle—an estimate nearly 10 times higher than what had been officially reported. At least a third of those deaths, the AP found, came as a result of coalition or Iraqi bombardments. In a separate investigation, NPR reported that the city morgue had recorded the names of 4,865 individuals on death certificates, dating between October 2016 and July 2017, and estimated that more than 5,000 civilians had been killed.

While these reports filled what had, in effect, been a vacuum, they were met with little concern from Western authorities. Neither Washington nor its local and international allies have shown any indication that they will undertake a comprehensive survey of the loss of life in Mosul. Nor have they taken significant steps to compensate the families of those their forces killed inadvertently. While the Pentagon does make such payments and did so during the Iraq war, it has only done so twice in the war against ISIS.

Medics work to stabilize Ammar, age 8. The young Moslawi boy was brought to “Trauma Stabilization Point #2” following an airstrike on the night of June 12, 2017 in West Mosul, Iraq. (Maranie R. Staab)

“It is simply irresponsible to focus criticism on inadvertent casualties caused by the coalition’s war to defeat ISIS,” spokesperson Colonel Thomas Veale told the AP in response to its report. “Without the coalition’s air and ground campaign against ISIS, there would have inevitably been additional years, if not decades of suffering and needless death and mutilation in Syria and Iraq at the hands of terrorists who lack any ethical or moral standards.” This argument—that acting decisively and with overwhelming force in an urban battlefield saved lives in the long term—is belied by an official lack of interest in finding how many died overall, no matter the culprit.

The question of who, if anyone, is accurately tracking civilian deaths is difficult to answer. Both the Pentagon and U.S. embassy in Baghdad directed questions about civilian deaths to the counter-ISIS coalition, the body that represents the countries supporting government forces in Iraq’s fight against ISIS. However, the coalition has only investigated strikes it has identified as its own and found reason to review. This means that only U.S. and French artillery strikes in Mosul, and U.S., British, French, and Australian airstrikes on the city are subject to review—a process which thus far has yielded civilian death estimates far lower than our own, which are based on local reports and the coalition’s own strike data. But the coalition’s tally represents only a small fraction of the overall death toll in Mosul.

To date, the coalition has acknowledged its involvement in the deaths of 352 civilians during the battle for the city. A coalition spokesperson told us that “any assessment on the effects to Iraqi citizens of the ISIS occupation of the city and subsequent liberation by Iraqi Security Forces’ support by the coalition would be conducted by the government of Iraq.” But Iraqi officials have not been forthcoming, and did not respond to requests for comment. In an interview with the AP, Haider al-Abadi, the prime minister of Iraq, even said that, at most, 1,260 civilians were killed in fighting for the city.

With our team of researchers at Airwars, we monitored thousands of local reports and claims from within Mosul during the battle for the city. We also spoke with multiple reporters and researchers carrying out their own field investigations at the time. Based on local reporting and confirmed coalition strikes in the near vicinity, we conservatively estimated that between 1,066 and 1,579 civilians likely died from coalition air and artillery strikes during the nine-month battle, out of a total of somewhere between over 6,000 to nearly 9,000 deaths alleged by local sources against Coalition forces. But in many cases reports from the city were confused: There was simply so much incoming and outgoing fire that it remains unclear whether several thousand civilians were killed by coalition, Iraqi, or ISIS munitions.

Ali’s mother, Noor, grieves over the body of her son. On the night of June 12, 2017 an airstrike hit Ali’s neighborhood in West Mosul, Iraq. The young Moslawi died from blunt force trauma and arrived at the Trauma Stabilization Point (TSP) “dead on arrival.” (Maranie R. Staab)

Interviews with more than 20 journalists and aid workers who were on the ground in Mosul, both during and immediately after the assault, strongly support the view that many thousands of civilians died. Their reporting also showed that simply speaking with locals—something the coalition and American authorities confirmed to us they almost never do as a matter of policy, and Iraqi federal authorities have also not done—can uncover the details of fatal incidents.

On January 24, Iraqi officials announced the liberation of East Mosul.  In late February, Iraqi troops began the far tougher job of penetrating the dense Western part of the city, only capturing it five months later. In the climactic weeks of fighting in Mosul’s Old City, ISIS’s last stronghold in West Mosul, press footage showed civilians attempting harrowing escapes from blocks controlled by the group to those held by Iraqi forces. Many families didn’t make it out. Journalists and aid workers spoke of how Iraqi counter-terror forces—who they described as more careful to avoid endangering civilians—had been depleted in the early stages of the fight. As a result, the less-well-trained security forces took their place in the fight for Western Mosul.

Among them were the Iraqi Federal Police, notorious among locals for their negligence. According to several journalists and aid workers, by the end of the battle, Iraqi forces were launching crude explosive weapons into narrow areas packed with civilians. Some units launched improvised rockets from the back of vehicles. At the time, the Red Cross said civilians were fleeing, “bleeding even from their eyes.”

John Beck, a freelance journalist from Scotland, covered the assault. “When the West came, the Federal Police and Iraqi army took a more prominent role and were less discriminate in their use of heavy unguided artillery,” Beck said. “I began to hear more and more people who said they had relatives buried under the rubble. Many said entire families had been wiped out.”

Human-rights investigators took note. “The U.S.-led coalition was in joint enterprise with Iraqi forces. Its toleration for use of [rockets] enabled the killing of many, many civilians in Mosul,” Benjamin Walsby, a field researcher at Amnesty International, said. In July, Walsby and his colleagues released a significant report outlining the destruction in Mosul. Based on research that included interviews with more than 150 West Mosul residents, as well as medical workers, Amnesty accused ISIS of war crimes, but also said the coalition and Iraqi forces may have committed violations themselves. “I reject any notion that coalition fires were in any way imprecise, unlawful or excessively targeted civilians,” then-coalition commander Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend said in a press conference in July. “I would challenge the people from Amnesty International or anyone else out there who makes these charges to first research their facts.”

An elderly Iraqi man sits outside of a medical Trauma Stabilization Point (TSP) in West Mosul, Iraq. The man is the grandfather of Zainab, a young Moslawi that was injured and who ultimately died following an airstrike on the afternoon of May 31, 2017. (Maranie R. Staab)

Months later, an extensive investigation for The New York Times by journalists Azmat Khan and Anand Gopal determined that in certain areas of northern Iraq, total civilian deaths from coalition strikes during 2016 were more than 31 times higher than official estimates based on video taken by coalition planes and other sources of intelligence. The coalition, they reported, had often misidentified targets. Even with the benefit of drone surveillance and video feeds, its forces had killed civilians where ISIS was not present.

In December 2016, as Khan and Gopal were in the midst of their field research, the Obama administration extended the authority to call in airstrikes to personnel lower in the command chain, moving decision making further from headquarters and to the field level. (This practice continued and grew under the Trump administration, by Trump’s own account.) Khan and Gopal immediately noted an uptick in civilian deaths in areas they’d been surveying. “The number of cases we documented in East Mosul, just within 15 days, it was like night and day, so it was a real change on the ground,” Gopal said.

Journalists who embedded with Iraqi forces have offered specific examples of exactly how civilians were likely killed all over Mosul, and especially in the West, by both the coalition and Iraqi forces. Civilians faced excruciating choices, and often operated with limited knowledge of what was happening around them as they cowered in basements, unsure of how close Iraqi forces were. Who was in homes or other buildings targeted by airstrikes wasn’t always clear. “I can’t see into houses,” as one helicopter pilot told Stars and Stripes.

Injured civilians arrive at “Trauma Stabilization Point #2” in West Mosul, Iraq following an airstrike on the night of June 12, 2017. (Maranie R. Staab)

“We would hear stories of neighbors sheltering together, 40 people, 50 people in a basement,” one Western journalist who was based in Iraq during the assault, and asked that we not share their name due to ongoing work in the region told us. “You can imagine easily a whole family wiped out—a lot of families lived together so it would be parents, their kids and grandkids.”

ISIS certainly put civilians in extreme danger, fighting in their midst, using them as human shields, keeping them in booby-trapped buildings, or executing them outright. In a November report, the UN estimated that at least 741 civilians died in execution-style killings by ISIS during the battle for the city—and hundreds more in shelling and car bombings. Iraqi forces encountered a staggering 700 car bombs in Mosul, according to the coalition. Moslawis told Amnesty International how ISIS would bury bombs under the soil, so civilians were never sure where they could move. One witness recounted how ISIS fighters welded shut the front doors of houses. “They did this to our door, and even worse, they did it to another house in our neighborhood where hundreds of people were staying,” the witness said.

When civilians did flee, weapons fire could come from all sides. Naviseh Kohnavard, a Middle East correspondent for the BBC World Service, recalled the confusion in Zanjili, one of the neighborhoods in Western Mosul hit hardest by fighting. “I saw people coming out; they were bloody and most of the people were carrying out children, and many died in front of us,” she said. Investigations by Mike Giglio of BuzzFeed led the coalition to acknowledge responsibility for the deaths of 36 civilians—but only after he tracked down survivors and witnesses during reporting trips in May. “It’s such a chaotic situation and they don’t have people on the ground,” Giglio said. “All we did to get that information was we drove past checkpoints—my photographer and I—and then I went without an armed escort into civilian neighborhoods and I just asked people where there had been casualties.”

Giglio witnessed incidents first hand as well. In February, he embedded with Iraqi forces in Western Mosul when ISIS fighters—at least one using a tunnel to pop in and out of—began shooting anti-tank missiles in their direction. “I looked down the street and saw the ISIS guy who fired it—they called in an airstrike on this guy’s position,” Giglio said. “An airstrike hit the tunnel, the tunnel was in the street, and I saw it knock down one maybe two houses in the process,” Giglio said. “I think that’s how a lot of this stuff happens.”

Nadia Aziz Mohammed looks on as Mosul civil defence officials search for the bodies of 11 family members, killed in a June 2017 airstrike (Photo by Sam Kimball. All rights reserved.)

Another incident occurred on June 20, in Western Mosul, uncovered later by American journalist Sam Kimball, who was reporting in the area. Once again, an ISIS fighter was seen on the roof of a family home. In the ensuing airstrike, Nadia Aziz Mohammed said she lost 11 relatives. A week later and filmed by Kimball, Mohammed stood a short distance from the home, watching as a bulldozer dug out the remains of her family. By this point in the conflict, the Coalition had informed Airwars that the Iraqi Air Force was no longer carrying out air raids on the city, meaning there was little doubt that any airstrike had been conducted by the U.S.-led alliance. (With the exception of its drones, ISIS had no air force.)

On another occasion—in East Mosul—Kimball told a young man he was looking to speak to victims of airstrikes. The man put out a call and locals began to come forward. “I spoke to so many people who either said I had relatives killed in an airstrike, or my neighbors were killed, or at least one of their family members were killed in an airstrike,” said the young American war reporter.

Among the 352 civilian deaths the coalition has admitted occurred during the Mosul assault, the United States has officially taken responsibility for only one incident that killed civilians to date. On March 17, 2017, an airstrike in the western neighborhood of al Jadida left over 100 civilians dead by the coalition’s own count—likely the deadliest strike during operations in the city. U.S. officials claimed that the two 500-pound bombs that targeted the roof of the building where civilians were sheltering then set off explosives held inside, though locals disagreed with this account.

Activists also moved into the information gap. Perhaps the best known of these is a social media account called “Mosul Eye” run by a Moslawi man named Omar Mohammed. Under ISIS rule and then during the battle for Mosul, “Mosul Eye” meticulously documented reports received from the city. The account relayed reports from sources inside Mosul, or family members of those trapped. These often would have been difficult to fully investigate during the assault. Mohammed maintained that many tens of thousands were killed during the fight for Mosul—an estimate that well exceeds the tallies arrived at by the AP and NPR. “Every day I was receiving reports of families killed by airstrikes or missiles—at least 20 or 25, sometimes 40 people were killed in one house and this was every day,” he told us.

An ambulance leaves Trauma Stabilization Point #2 carrying injured civilians following an airstrike on the night of June 12, 2017. (Maranie R. Staab)

Though the coalition has made strides in reporting civilian harm, the gap between the deaths it has acknowledged and public estimates is substantial.

Across the entire coalition war against ISIS since 2014, the United States and its allies have so far conceded 841 civilian deaths—while Airwars places the likely minimum tally at 6,200 or more killed. As Khan and Gopal’s work has shown, that disparity may stem at least in part from serious procedural issues that implicate the military’s ability to track not just civilian deaths but the location of its bombs—and a failure to investigate events on the ground.

Moslawis recently marked a year since the al Jadida strike that killed over 100 people. For a brief period in 2017, global attention was paid to those civilians killed or injured in the assault on Mosul, and to the limits of “precision” warfare in cities. A year later, the U.S. government appears unwilling to study the civilian toll of massive urban battlefields such as those in Mosul. Americans continue to wage wars without a true understanding of the costs, while Iraqi civilians understand them all too well.

 

 

▲ An Iraqi man rushes his son for medical treatment during the Battle of Mosul. (Maranie R. Staab)

Incident date

April 2, 2018

Incident Code

CI876

LOCATION

Al Qanus Island, Qayarrah, Nineveh, Iraq

In an event not tracked by Airwars at the time, in July 2018 the Coalition self-reported that it had accidentally killed one civilian and injured a second in an action near Qayarrah. According to the report, “April 2, 2018, near al-Qanus Island, Qayyarah, Iraq, via self-report. During a strike one civilian was unintentionally injured and

Summary

First published
April 2, 2018
Last updated
January 18, 2022
Civilian harm reported
Yes
Civilians reported killed
1
Civilians reported injured
1
Airwars civilian harm grading
Confirmed
A specific belligerent has accepted responsibility for civilian harm.
Known belligerent
US-led Coalition
View Incident

Netherlands MoD for March 29, 2018 – March 30, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 28th-April 3rd the Dutch reported that its F16s supported ground troops in 8 missions. This happened, among others, in the Syrian provinces Abu Kamal and Deir Al Zour. In Iraq the jets flew above the provinces of Sala ad-Din and Diyala. No weapons were deployed. On Wednesday, the 9th detachment took over the command from ATFME 8.

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 8 missies. Dat gebeurde onder meer in de Syrische provincies Abu Kamal en Deir Al Zour. In Irak vlogen de jachtvliegtuigen missies boven de provincies Sala ad-Din en Diyala. Bij geen van de missies zijn wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 28 maart tot en met 3 april 2018.

Vorige week is het commando over de Air Task Force overgedragen. Sinds woensdag is het negende detachement actief in de strijd van de internationale coalitie tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS boven Irak en Oost-Syrië . Militairen van de achtste lichting zijn inmiddels teruggekeerd in Nederland en herenigd met hun thuisfront.

Nederlandse instructeurs geven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 28th-April 3rd the Dutch reported that its F16s supported ground troops in 8 missions. This happened, among others, in the Syrian provinces Abu Kamal and Deir Al Zour. In Iraq the jets flew above the provinces of Sala ad-Din and Diyala. No weapons were deployed. On Wednesday, the 9th detachment took over the command from ATFME 8.

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen tijdens 8 missies. Dat gebeurde onder meer in de Syrische provincies Abu Kamal en Deir Al Zour. In Irak vlogen de jachtvliegtuigen missies boven de provincies Sala ad-Din en Diyala. Bij geen van de missies zijn wapens ingezet. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 28 maart tot en met 3 april 2018.



Vorige week is het commando over de Air Task Force overgedragen. Sinds woensdag is het negende detachement actief in de strijd van de internationale coalitie tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS boven Irak en Oost-Syrië . Militairen van de achtste lichting zijn inmiddels teruggekeerd in Nederland en herenigd met hun thuisfront.

Nederlandse instructeurs geven cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Zij leren onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en krijgen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De instructeurs verzorgen de opleidingen met collega’s van partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

French MoD for March 29, 2018 – March 30, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 28th to April 3rd: The Wagram Task Force continues its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, four shooting missions – two illumination and two interdiction – were carried out (balance of March 28 to April 3). Since the beginning of its mission, TF Wagram has carried out 1643 firing missions. The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the Syrian Democratic Forces engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, aircraft carried out 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. No strikes were conducted.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, dans la vallée de l’Euphrate, la coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre Daech. Celles-ci s’attachent à réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate, autour de Dashisha et Al Qaim.

La situation à l’est de l’Euphrate est restée globalement stable cette semaine.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Conduisant des opérations de sécurisation régulières, elles obtiennent des résultats conséquents saisissant régulièrement des quantités importantes d’armes et de munitions à Daech.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement.

Elles sont actuellement impliquées dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes, notamment dans le domaine de la lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés.

Les Task Force Wagram et Monsabert appuient la remontée en puissance de l’artillerie irakienne

Cette semaine a été marquée par l’organisation d’une conférence sur l’avenir de l’artillerie irakienne à laquelle ont activement participé des instructeurs issus des Task Force Wagram et Monsabert.

La journée était présidée par le Général Hushem, commandant l’école de l’artillerie irakienne.

Cette rencontre devrait déboucher prochainement, sur une formation « pilote » menée par les deux Task Force françaises. Cette formation inclura une partie théorique ainsi qu’une séquence de tir et de mise en application sur les canons irakiens.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, quatre missions de tirs, deux d’éclairement et deux d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 28 mars au 3 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1643 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol, sans qu’aucune frappe n’ait été réalisée (bilan du 28 mars au 3 avril).

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7942 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 28th to April 3rd: The Wagram Task Force continues its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, four shooting missions – two illumination and two interdiction – were carried out (balance of March 28 to April 3). Since the beginning of its mission, TF Wagram has carried out 1643 firing missions. The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the Syrian Democratic Forces engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, aircraft carried out 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. No strikes were conducted.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, dans la vallée de l’Euphrate, la coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre Daech. Celles-ci s’attachent à réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate, autour de Dashisha et Al Qaim.

La situation à l’est de l’Euphrate est restée globalement stable cette semaine.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Conduisant des opérations de sécurisation régulières, elles obtiennent des résultats conséquents saisissant régulièrement des quantités importantes d’armes et de munitions à Daech.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement.

Elles sont actuellement impliquées dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes, notamment dans le domaine de la lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés.

Les Task Force Wagram et Monsabert appuient la remontée en puissance de l’artillerie irakienne

Cette semaine a été marquée par l’organisation d’une conférence sur l’avenir de l’artillerie irakienne à laquelle ont activement participé des instructeurs issus des Task Force Wagram et Monsabert.

La journée était présidée par le Général Hushem, commandant l’école de l’artillerie irakienne.

Cette rencontre devrait déboucher prochainement, sur une formation « pilote » menée par les deux Task Force françaises. Cette formation inclura une partie théorique ainsi qu’une séquence de tir et de mise en application sur les canons irakiens.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, quatre missions de tirs, deux d’éclairement et deux d’interdiction, ont été réalisées (bilan du 28 mars au 3 avril).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1643 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol, sans qu’aucune frappe n’ait été réalisée (bilan du 28 mars au 3 avril).

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7942 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

French MoD for March 29, 2018 – March 30, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 21st-27th, France reports that the Wagram Task Force continued its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, four shooting missions – all lighting missions – were carried out

Since the beginning of its mission, TF Wagram has carried out 1639 firing missions.

The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the Syrian democratic forces engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, the aircraft engaged in Operation Chammal made 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. A strike was made in the Tal Afar region of Iraq.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, dans la vallée de l’Euphrate, la coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre Daech. Celles-ci s’attachent à réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate, autour de Dashisha et Al Qaim, objectif qui prend du temps du fait de la complexité de la situation en Syrie. Les mauvaises conditions météorologiques régulières dans la zone limitent également les capacités de l’appui aérien apportées par la coalition, ralentissant de fait la progression des forces locales présentes au sol.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Elles conduisent également des opérations de sécurisation ponctuelles d’ampleur variable, opérations auxquelles la coalition apporte son soutien à leur demande. Leur effort se concentre actuellement sur les régions de Mossoul, d’Hawijah et de Ramadi, où elles obtiennent des résultats conséquents avec des découvertes quotidiennes d’engins explosifs improvisés, d’armements et la capture régulière de terroristes.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement.

Elles sont actuellement impliquées dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes. Ces formations couvrent un large spectre de domaines, allant du secourisme au tir, en passant par la lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés, le déplacement tactique en véhicule et le combat en localité.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, quatre missions de tirs, toutes d’éclairement, ont été réalisées (bilan du 21 au 27 mars).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1639 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 21 au 27 mars). Une frappe a été réalisée dans la région de Tal Afar en Irak.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7919 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Report Date

March 30, 2018

Notes

For March 21st-27th, France reports that the Wagram Task Force continued its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, four shooting missions – all lighting missions – were carried out

Since the beginning of its mission, TF Wagram has carried out 1639 firing missions.

The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the Syrian democratic forces engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last two pockets of ISIS in Syria. In this context, the aircraft engaged in Operation Chammal made 23 air sorties in support of local forces engaged on the ground. A strike was made in the Tal Afar region of Iraq.

CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs restent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, dans la vallée de l’Euphrate, la coalition continue d’appuyer les forces démocratiques syriennes luttant contre Daech. Celles-ci s’attachent à réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate, autour de Dashisha et Al Qaim, objectif qui prend du temps du fait de la complexité de la situation en Syrie. Les mauvaises conditions météorologiques régulières dans la zone limitent également les capacités de l’appui aérien apportées par la coalition, ralentissant de fait la progression des forces locales présentes au sol.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les forces de sécurité irakiennes maintiennent un maillage territorial important et efficace.

Elles conduisent également des opérations de sécurisation ponctuelles d’ampleur variable, opérations auxquelles la coalition apporte son soutien à leur demande. Leur effort se concentre actuellement sur les régions de Mossoul, d’Hawijah et de Ramadi, où elles obtiennent des résultats conséquents avec des découvertes quotidiennes d’engins explosifs improvisés, d’armements et la capture régulière de terroristes.

ACTIVITE DE LA FORCE

Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik poursuivent la formation des forces de sécurité irakiennes

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement.

Elles sont actuellement impliquées dans de nombreux stages au profit de près de 300 soldats des forces de sécurité irakiennes. Ces formations couvrent un large spectre de domaines, allant du secourisme au tir, en passant par la lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés, le déplacement tactique en véhicule et le combat en localité.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La Task Force Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, quatre missions de tirs, toutes d’éclairement, ont été réalisées (bilan du 21 au 27 mars).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1639 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les deux dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

Dans ce cadre, les aéronefs engagés dans l’opération Chammal ont réalisé cette semaine 23 sorties aériennes en appui des forces locales engagées au sol (bilan du 21 au 27 mars). Une frappe a été réalisée dans la région de Tal Afar en Irak.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7919 sorties / 1448 frappes / 2238 objectifs neutralisés.

Published

March 29, 2018

Written by

Samuel Oakford

Australia has admitted to killing two civilians and injuring two children during the battle for Mosul – the third such admission of harm by Canberra’s military, and one that further sets the Royal Australian Air Force apart from most other Coalition partners which continue to deny civilian casualties from their own airstrikes.

The case originally came to light during a field investigation by Amnesty International – which was slammed for its findings at the time by the US-led alliance. Airwars then published details of the event – which in turn were investigated by the Australian Defence Force (ADF).

The admitted incident occurred in the Mosul neighborhood of Islah al Zirae on the night of May 3rd 2017, during an intense push by Iraqi forces with Coalition air support. Civilians who reported being trapped by ISIS fighters or pinned down by heavy fire attempted to flee once ISIS fighters had withdrawn. In the midst of this, several family members were attempting to evacuate a home they had been sheltering in when it was hit by an airstrike.

The ADF said it carried out two investigations into the attack, and found that the civilians were killed and injured by munitions dropped by an RAAF Super Hornet.

“On the balance of probabilities, our strike resulted in the death of two people and the injury of two others,” deputy chief of joint operations, Major General Greg Bilton, said in remarks reported by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

‘Chaos of airstrikes’

The newly conceded case was one of 45 civilian harm events that Amnesty researchers documented in West Mosul. Amnesty however only published details of nine of the incidents, leaving out the Ishlah al Zirae event because it was based on a single source — a family member of the deceased. The precise date of the incident also could not be narrowed down at the time, with Amnesty flagging it as having likely taken place some time between May 1st and 3rd.

The testimony taken by Amnesty was however shared with Airwars, which in turn alerted the Coalition to the event as part of its own routine advocacy engagement. In its most recent monthly civilian casualty report, released on March 28th, the Coalition said it had been determined that while conducting a strike to destroy an ISIS fighting position in the neighborhood of Islah al Zirai, “two civilians were unintentionally killed and two civilians injured.”

“We were getting dressed to leave and my brother’s family were still getting dressed and putting jackets on the children,” said the relative who survived and spoke with Amnesty researchers. “I set off with my wife and children and we turned the corner and heard an air strikes. I ran back and the house had caved in. My brother died. My sister in law [wife of another brother] also died.”

“People were panicking and running out of their house – four family members were trapped in the house or trying to leave,” said Ben Walsby, part of the Amnesty team that deployed to Mosul. “They hadn’t been able to get out before because ISIS was preventing them, but in the chaos of airstrikes, they felt they had to get out.”

“This was just a quick interview with a family member who had run out of the house because the airstrikes were coming — people were scrambling,” said Walsby.

In their report, Amnesty accused ISIS of war crimes in Mosul, but also said the Coalition and Iraqi forces may have committed violations themselves. The Coalition responded by sharply questioning the veracity of Amnesty’s work.

“I would challenge the people from Amnesty International or anyone else out there who makes these charges to first research their facts and make sure they are speaking from a position of authority,” said Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, then the Coalition’s top commander.

As it turned out, it was the Coalition which needed to further investigate, and in the case of the May 3rd strike, both the alliance and the Australian Defence Force have now accepted responsibility.

Amnesty International investigated civilian harm events in multiple neighbourhoods of West Mosul for its report – including Islah al Zirae

‘Regrettable incident’

There are several reasons why the latest ADF admission is notable. The Australian military remains the only Coalition partner besides the US to admit to any civilian harm in Iraq or Syria since 2014, despite an estimated 10,000 strikes by non-US allies. Countries like France and the United Kingdom have yet to concede a single civilian death — a statistically implausible assertion.

These countries have been aided by a Coalition practice enforced since 2017 that does not identify which partner is responsible for any single event in the alliance’s monthly casualty reports. With rare exceptions, the US itself no longer acknowledges its own Coalition strikes that caused civilian casualties.

The Amnesty account which triggered the Australian investigation – recorded in an informal camp for displaced persons – also illustrates how effective simply speaking with survivors from battles like Mosul’s can be. Australian officials in the May 3rd case were able to conclude involvement without carrying out their own interviews, though only after Amnesty had recorded the initial testimony. As a policy, the Coalition does not conduct interviews with survivors in the aftermath of strikes – a practice that extends into Syria, as recently reported by Airwars at Raqaa.

Australia was identified in December 2016 by Airwars as one of the Coalition’s least transparent members. Since then it has taken steps to improve the reporting of its actions. In September 2017, the ADF reported its involvement in two previous civilian harm events – one an Australian airstrike, the other an action by another ally for which the ADF had supplied flawed intelligence.

“I think it’s very important for us to recognize what a very complex urban environment environment this was, and the face we are operating in a war zone,” said Defence Minister Marise Payne of the latest ADF admission. “Our operators work to the highest standards but regrettably incidents like this happen.”

“The strike was called in because the Iraqi security forces were under direct sniper attack from the building, and the sniper was causing injuries,” said Payne. The witness who spoke to Amnesty, however, said “there were no Daesh around, otherwise how could I have just walked out of my house?”

Airwars director Chris Woods welcomed the latest Australian admission. “With only a single survivor claim and a fairly vague date attached to this incident originally, the ADF would have had to put quite a bit of detective work into identifying its own role in the event,” said Woods. “The event also shows why we must continue to take seriously the voices of affected Iraqis and Syrians.”

▲ Library image: Royal Australian Air Force personnel start post flight maintenance on an F/A-18A Hornet aircraft following an Operation OKRA mission (Via ADF)

UK MoD for March 26, 2018 – March 27, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 27, 2018

Monday 26 March – a Reaper destroyed a terrorist vehicle in eastern Syria…A Reaper tracked a group of terrorists in a vehicle in the Syrian Euphrates valley on Monday 26 March, and successfully destroyed it and its occupants with a precision Hellfire missile attack. Following an detailed investigation, it is assessed that one civilian was unintentionally killed in the strike. For further information please see the Government’s statement here.

Report Date

March 27, 2018

Monday 26 March – a Reaper destroyed a terrorist vehicle in eastern Syria…A Reaper tracked a group of terrorists in a vehicle in the Syrian Euphrates valley on Monday 26 March, and successfully destroyed it and its occupants with a precision Hellfire missile attack. Following an detailed investigation, it is assessed that one civilian was unintentionally killed in the strike. For further information please see the Government’s statement here.

Incident date

March 25, 2018

Incident Code

TI014

LOCATION

شيلاديزي, Shiladeza, Duhok, Iraq

According to local sources, one civilian was killed and one or two more were injured in an alleged Turkish airstrike on the Shiladeza area, north of Duhok province in Iraqi Kurdistan. One local source told Roj News Agency that the raids began in the afternoon, striking the village of Hillah, “in the area between Rikani

Summary

First published
March 25, 2018
Last updated
January 18, 2022
Civilian harm reported
Yes
Civilians reported killed
1
Civilians reported injured
1–2
Airwars civilian harm grading
Fair
Reported by two or more credible sources, with likely or confirmed near actions by a belligerent.
Suspected belligerent
Turkish Military
Named victims
1 named
View Incident

CJTF–OIR for March 24, 2018 – March 25, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 25, 2018

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between March 23 and March 29, Coalition military forces conducted 11 strikes consisting of 12 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

On March 29 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 29, 2018.

On March 28 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 28, 2018.

On March 27 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 27 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Ramadi, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel system.

On March 26 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 26 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed three Daesh tunnels.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on March 25, 2018.

On March 25 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Qayyarah, one strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh watercraft.

On March 24 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 24, 2018.

On March 23 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a fighting position.

On March 23 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Rutbah, one strike destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

Report Date

March 25, 2018

Report Summary

  • 11 total strikes
  • 7 in Syria
  • 4 in Iraq

Report Summary

  • 11 total strikes
  • 7 in Syria (14996 – 15002)
  • 4 in Iraq (14188 – 14191)

Confirmed Actions

US

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between March 23 and March 29, Coalition military forces conducted 11 strikes consisting of 12 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

March 29, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes

On March 29 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 29, 2018.

March 28, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes

On March 28 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 28, 2018.

March 27, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 27 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 27 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Ramadi, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel system.
March 26, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 26 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On March 26 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed three Daesh tunnels.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on March 25, 2018.

March 25, 2018
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 25 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Qayyarah, one strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh watercraft.
March 24, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes

On March 24 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 24, 2018.

March 23, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 23 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a fighting position.

On March 23 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Rutbah, one strike destroyed a Daesh vehicle.

CJTF–OIR for March 22, 2018 – March 23, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 23, 2018

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between March 16 and March 22, Coalition military forces conducted 14 strikes consisting of 19 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

On March 22 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units.

• Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On March 22 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Tal Afar, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel.

On March 21 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 21, 2018.

On March 20 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh staging area and a weapons cache.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 20, 2018.

On March 19 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a VBIED factory.

On March 19 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh cave.

• Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on March 18, 2018.

On March 17 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh-held building and a weapons cache.

On March 17 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

• Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh facility.

• Near Ramadi, one strike destroyed a Daesh underground storage facility.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on March 16, 2018.

Additionally, we received late reporting of two strikes consisting of three engagements conducted in the vicinity of Makhmour, Iraq on March 11, 2018 engaging an ISIS tactical unit and destroying a tunnel network.

Report Date

March 23, 2018

Report Summary

  • 14 total strikes
  • 9 in Syria
  • 5 in Iraq

Report Summary

  • 14 total strikes
  • 9 in Syria (14990 – 14998)
  • 5 in Iraq (14187 – 14191)

Confirmed Actions

US

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates in order to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to resurge and resume its capacity to threaten and destabilize the international community.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between March 16 and March 22, Coalition military forces conducted 14 strikes consisting of 19 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

March 22, 2018
Syria: 3 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On March 22 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units.
Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On March 22 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Tal Afar, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel.
March 21, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes

On March 21 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 21, 2018.

March 20, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes

On March 20 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh staging area and a weapons cache.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on March 20, 2018.

March 19, 2018
Syria: 3 strikes
Iraq: 2 strikes

On March 19 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a VBIED factory.

On March 19 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh cave.
Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on March 18, 2018.

March 17, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 2 strikes

On March 17 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh-held building and a weapons cache.

On March 17 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh facility.
Near Ramadi, one strike destroyed a Daesh underground storage facility.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria or Iraq on March 16, 2018.

Additionally, we received late reporting of two strikes consisting of three engagements conducted in the vicinity of Makhmour, Iraq on March 11, 2018 engaging an ISIS tactical unit and destroying a tunnel network.

French MoD for March 22, 2018 – March 23, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 23, 2018

Notes

TF Wagram continues its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, three shooting missions were carried out (two illuminance missions and interdiction mission – balance sheet from February 14 to March 20) The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the SDF engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last pockets of Daesh in Syria. 26 aerial sorties were made in the past week (March 14th to 20th). A strike was made in the region of Abu Kamal in Syria.

OPÉRATION CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs demeurent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, appuyées par la coalition, les forces démocratiques syriennes poursuivent leur effort pour réduire les dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les opérations de sécurisation se poursuivent. Dans le désert de l’Anbar, l’armée irakienne vient de terminer une opération interarmées d’envergure au cours de laquelle des caches d’armes ont été découvertes et plusieurs terroristes de Daech mis hors de combat.

ACTIVITÉ DE LA FORCE

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie.

La TF Monsabert accompagne la 6e division irakienne

La semaine dernière, la TF Monsabert conduit actuellement plusieurs formations au profit des forces de sécurité irakiennes. Ces formations balayent un large spectre de savoir-faire : combat, lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés, secourisme au combat et topographie.

La TF Narvik engagée dans plusieurs stages au profit de l’Iraki Counter Terrorism Service

Le 21 mars, la TF Narvik a été endeuillée par la mort accidentelle du légionnaire Bogusz Pochylski.

La Task Force est actuellement engagée dans cinq stages distincts au profit d’une quarantaine de stagiaires chacun, soit environ 200 soldats de l’ICTS. Ces stages concernent la lutte contre les IED, le tir de combat, le déplacement tactique en véhicule, le secourisme de combat et le tir de précision.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La TF Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, trois missions de tirs ont été réalisées (2 missions d’éclairement et une d’interdiction – bilan du 14 février au 20 mars).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1635 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

26 sorties aériennes ont été réalisées dans la semaine écoulée (bilan du 14 au 20 mars). Une frappe a été réalisée dans la région d’Abou Kamal en Syrie.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7896 sorties / 1447 frappes / 2237 objectifs neutralisés.

Report Date

March 23, 2018

Notes

TF Wagram continues its support for security operations carried out by Iraqi security forces in the Euphrates Valley. This week, three shooting missions were carried out (two illuminance missions and interdiction mission – balance sheet from February 14 to March 20) The activity of the French Air Forces engaged in Operation Chammal focused on supporting the SDF engaged in the Euphrates Valley to reduce the last pockets of Daesh in Syria. 26 aerial sorties were made in the past week (March 14th to 20th). A strike was made in the region of Abu Kamal in Syria.

OPÉRATION CHAMMAL

SITUATION MILITAIRE DU THEATRE

Sur le théâtre irako-syrien, les opérations se poursuivent. Les objectifs demeurent inchangés : défaire les dernières poches terroristes en Syrie et renforcer la sécurisation du territoire irakien.

Poursuite des combats en Syrie

En Syrie, appuyées par la coalition, les forces démocratiques syriennes poursuivent leur effort pour réduire les dernières poches de Daech présentes sur les rives orientales de l’Euphrate.

Poursuite des actions de sécurisation en Irak

En Irak, les opérations de sécurisation se poursuivent. Dans le désert de l’Anbar, l’armée irakienne vient de terminer une opération interarmées d’envergure au cours de laquelle des caches d’armes ont été découvertes et plusieurs terroristes de Daech mis hors de combat.

ACTIVITÉ DE LA FORCE

En Irak, le rythme des actions de formation se maintient à un niveau élevé. Les Task Force Monsabert et Narvik y participent activement et directement afin d’amener l’armée irakienne vers toujours plus d’autonomie.

La TF Monsabert accompagne la 6e division irakienne

La semaine dernière, la TF Monsabert conduit actuellement plusieurs formations au profit des forces de sécurité irakiennes. Ces formations balayent un large spectre de savoir-faire : combat, lutte contre les engins explosifs improvisés, secourisme au combat et topographie.

La TF Narvik engagée dans plusieurs stages au profit de l’Iraki Counter Terrorism Service

Le 21 mars, la TF Narvik a été endeuillée par la mort accidentelle du légionnaire Bogusz Pochylski.

La Task Force est actuellement engagée dans cinq stages distincts au profit d’une quarantaine de stagiaires chacun, soit environ 200 soldats de l’ICTS. Ces stages concernent la lutte contre les IED, le tir de combat, le déplacement tactique en véhicule, le secourisme de combat et le tir de précision.

La Task Force Wagram en appui des opérations de sécurisation

La TF Wagram poursuit son appui aux opérations de sécurisation menées par les forces de sécurité irakiennes dans la vallée de l’Euphrate. Cette semaine, trois missions de tirs ont été réalisées (2 missions d’éclairement et une d’interdiction – bilan du 14 février au 20 mars).

Depuis le début de sa mission, la TF Wagram a réalisé 1635 missions de tirs.

Les bases aériennes en Jordanie et aux EAU en appui des opérations

L’activité des forces aériennes françaises engagées dans l’opération Chammal se concentre sur l’appui aux forces démocratiques syriennes engagées dans la vallée de l’Euphrate pour réduire les dernières poches de Daech en Syrie.

26 sorties aériennes ont été réalisées dans la semaine écoulée (bilan du 14 au 20 mars). Une frappe a été réalisée dans la région d’Abou Kamal en Syrie.

Bilan total depuis le 19/09/14 :

7896 sorties / 1447 frappes / 2237 objectifs neutralisés.

Incident date

March 22, 2018

Incident Code

TI012

LOCATION

Villages in Choman district, Erbil, Iraq

Four civilians died and 10 more were injured in alleged Turkish airstrikes on villages in the Choman area of Iraqi Kurdistan, local sources reported. According to IC Afrin Resistance, the “Turkish army’s attacks and #TurkishWarCrimes are spreading: Yesterday night at 1:05 am Turkish air-forces bombarded villages in the district Qesre of Erbil (South #Kurdistan /

Summary

First published
March 22, 2018
Last updated
January 18, 2022
Strike type
Airstrike
Civilian harm reported
Yes
Civilians reported killed
2
Civilians reported injured
10
Airwars civilian harm grading
Fair
Reported by two or more credible sources, with likely or confirmed near actions by a belligerent.
Suspected belligerent
Turkish Military
Named victims
4 named
Belligerents reported killed
2
View Incident

UK MoD for March 18, 2018 – March 19, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 19, 2018

Sunday 18 March – a Reaper killed two terrorists on a motorcycle in eastern Syria…On Sunday 18 March, a Reaper tracked a pair of terrorists on a motorcycle south-east of As Shadadi in eastern Syria. It became clear that they were operating as a mobile checkpoint in an attempt to exert control over the local area. The Reaper’s crew waited until the motorcycle was in open country, and despite its high speed, achieved a direct hit with a Hellfire which killed both of the Daesh extremists.

Report Date

March 19, 2018

Sunday 18 March – a Reaper killed two terrorists on a motorcycle in eastern Syria…On Sunday 18 March, a Reaper tracked a pair of terrorists on a motorcycle south-east of As Shadadi in eastern Syria. It became clear that they were operating as a mobile checkpoint in an attempt to exert control over the local area. The Reaper’s crew waited until the motorcycle was in open country, and despite its high speed, achieved a direct hit with a Hellfire which killed both of the Daesh extremists.

CJTF–OIR for March 15, 2018 – March 16, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 16, 2018

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.
Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates and to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the extremist terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to regroup and resume its capacity to threaten citizens of all nations.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between Mar. 9 and Mar. 15, Coalition military forces conducted 23 strikes consisting of 37 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

On Mar. 15 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh observation post.

On Mar. 15 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed a Daesh supply route.
• Near Qayyarah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On Mar. 14 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On Mar. 14 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of seven engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Rutbah, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed two Daesh-held buildings, two Daesh vehicles and three fighting positions.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on Mar. 13, 2018.

On Mar. 13 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Baghdad, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.
• Near Rutbah, one strike damaged a Daesh tunnel.
• Near Qayyarah, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed two Daesh watercrafts and a fighting position.

On Mar. 12 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On Mar. 12 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Rutbah, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh tunnel and a Daesh vehicle.

On Mar. 11 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.
• Near Dayr Az Zawr, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh drone.

On Mar. 11 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Hawijah, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh camp and a tunnel.

On Mar. 10 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.
• Near Dayr Az Zawr, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On Mar. 10 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.
• Near Baghdad, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On Mar. 9 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.
• Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh-held building and a weapons cache.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 9, 2018.

Additionally, we received late reporting of one strike consisting of three engagements conducted in Iraq against Daesh targets on Mar. 8 near Tal Afar, destroying a Daesh tunnel.

Report Date

March 16, 2018

Report Summary

  • 24 total strikes
  • 9 in Syria
  • 15 in Iraq

Report Summary

  • 23 total strikes
  • 9 in Syria (14982 – 14990)
  • 14 in Iraq (14181 – 14194)

Confirmed Actions

US

Military Strikes Continue Against Daesh Terrorists in Syria and Iraq

SOUTHWEST ASIA – Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates and to degrade, disrupt and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the extremist terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to regroup and resume its capacity to threaten citizens of all nations.

Weekly Strike Summary

March 9, 2018

Between Mar. 9 and Mar. 15, Coalition military forces conducted 23 strikes consisting of 37 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

March 15, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 2 strikes

On Mar. 15 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh observation post.

On Mar. 15 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Al Qaim, one strike destroyed a Daesh supply route.
Near Qayyarah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.
March 14, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 2 strikes

On Mar. 14 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On Mar. 14 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of seven engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Rutbah, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed two Daesh-held buildings, two Daesh vehicles and three fighting positions.
March 13, 2018
Iraq: 4 strikes

There were no reported strikes conducted in Syria on Mar. 13, 2018.

On Mar. 13 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Baghdad, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.
Near Rutbah, one strike damaged a Daesh tunnel.
Near Qayyarah, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed two Daesh watercrafts and a fighting position.
March 12, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 2 strikes

On Mar. 12 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.

On Mar. 12 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Rutbah, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh tunnel and a Daesh vehicle.
March 11, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 3 strikes

On Mar. 11 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Dayr Az Zawr, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh drone.

On Mar. 11 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of four engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Hawijah, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh camp and a tunnel.
March 10, 2018
Syria: 5 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On Mar. 10 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed a Daesh-held building.
Near Dayr Az Zawr, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On Mar. 10 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Baghdad, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit.

On Mar. 9 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh-held building and a weapons cache.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 9, 2018.

March 8, 2018
Iraq: 1 strikes
Additionally, we received late reporting of one strike consisting of three engagements conducted in Iraq against Daesh targets on Mar. 8 near Tal Afar, destroying a Daesh tunnel.

Netherlands MoD for March 15, 2018 – March 16, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 16, 2018

Notes

For March 14th-20th the Dutch reported that its F16s supported ground troops in 10 missions above the Iraqi provinces Nineveh, Al Anbar, Kirkuk, Erbil and Diyala and the Syrian governorate Deir Ezzor. No weapons were deployed.

Midden-Oosten

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen boven de Iraakse provincies Ninawa, Al-Anbar, Kirkuk, Erbil en Diyala en de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. Dat gebeurde tijdens 10 missies. Er werden geen wapens ingezet.

Nederland neemt boven Irak en Oost-Syrië in coalitieverband deel aan de strijd tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS.

Nederlandse instructeurs startten in Irak nieuwe cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Ze leerden hen onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en kregen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De militairen verzorgden de opleidingen met partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2 hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Report Date

March 16, 2018

Notes

For March 14th-20th the Dutch reported that its F16s supported ground troops in 10 missions above the Iraqi provinces Nineveh, Al Anbar, Kirkuk, Erbil and Diyala and the Syrian governorate Deir Ezzor. No weapons were deployed.

Midden-Oosten

Nederlandse F-16’s ondersteunden grondtroepen boven de Iraakse provincies Ninawa, Al-Anbar, Kirkuk, Erbil en Diyala en de Syrische provincie Deir Al Zour. Dat gebeurde tijdens 10 missies. Er werden geen wapens ingezet.

Nederland neemt boven Irak en Oost-Syrië in coalitieverband deel aan de strijd tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS.

Nederlandse instructeurs startten in Irak nieuwe cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Ze leerden hen onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en kregen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De militairen verzorgden de opleidingen met partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2 hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Published

March 15, 2018

Written by

Airwars Staff

A renewal of airstrikes by the Netherlands against so-called Islamic State in 2018 has been accompanied by some improvement in public transparency, an Airwars assessment of the first two months of the campaign has concluded.

While the Netherlands remains less transparent than the UK, changes to the way it publicly reports on military actions now place it on a par with France, one of the more transparent nations in the US-led alliance. Airwars Dutch advocacy officer Koen Kluessien welcomed “this positive move”, while encouraging the defence ministry to go further.

Since the renewal of its mission on January 5th, the Netherlands has included the location of the nearest large settlement to a Dutch strike in its weekly updates. Previously no locational data was provided – leading Airwars repeatedly to identify the Netherlands as the least transparent member of the 13-nation Coalition.

However, despite recent improvements the Dutch defence ministry still does not state on which precise date it conducted its actions, something the UK has been doing since the beginning of the war in 2014. That in turn means Dutch actions cannot be cross-referenced against specific public claims of civilian harm – a key demand from Airwars and others advocating for better public transparency.

“The improved reporting is a step in the right direction, but the Dutch Defense Ministry could do better. An advanced democracy like the Netherlands should be leading the way when it comes to public transparency and accountability,” said Kluessien, who has been closely monitoring the renewed mission.

Six F-16s

The Dutch rejoined the US-led Coalition with six F-16s on January 3rd, from an airbase in Jordan. This is the second time the Netherlands has taken part in the fight against ISIS. Military operations first began in October 2014, with the campaign paused in July 2016 when Dutch F-16s swapped out for Belgian aircraft.

The move towards greater public transparency has brought the Netherlands more into line with all other active Coalition partners. Among the four known active members, the UK remains the most transparent – publicly reporting on the date, location and target of each strike. France and the Netherlands now publish the same level of data – saying roughly where they bomb in any given week – though not precisely when.

The United States now finds itself the least transparent member of the remaining Coalition members it leads – refusing to publish specific data on where, when or what it bombs. However the US is also the only one of the four nations to have conceded any civilian casualties in almost four years of airstrikes, and has committed significant resources towards broader Coalition transparency (for example staffing Operation Inherent Resolve’s civilian casualty monitoring cell.)

An Airwars graphic showing improved Dutch transparency and public accountability – now on a par with the weekly reporting of the French defense ministry.

Parliamentary engagement

In the run-up to the renewed mission, Dutch MPs returned to the issue of transparency and public accountability in late 2017. Parliament’s earlier demands for improved reporting during the 2014-2016 campaign had been ignored by the defense ministry. As social-liberal D66 MP Sjoerd Sjoerdsma stated in a Foreign Affairs committee meeting: “I would like to challenge the Minister of Defense to see if we can do more with regards to the transparency side of things. I had tabled a motion about this. This was passed with a large majority. I’m not quite sure what happened with this, from an operational point of view.”

Airwars director Chris Woods had already warned Dutch MPs at a November 29th parliamentary hearing in The Hague, that the Netherlands risked being remembered as the least transparent partner in the entire Coalition against so-called Islamic State. This concern was later echoed by several Members of Parliament in a plenary debate on the renewed missions against ISIS.

As a result, another cross-party motion was passed calling for “more detailed reporting on military weapon deployments”. The motion was supported by then Minister of Foreign Affairs Halbe Zijlstra, who stated: “[…] we cannot and will not put aside this call for transparency.”

Perhaps as a result of that motion – and of the long running campaign for more transparency from Airwars and others – the weekly reports accompanying the renewed Dutch campaign marked a relative improvement in transparency.

The first update was issued on January 10th by the defense ministry and reported that for the period of January 3rd-9th its F-16s deployed weapons during one mission near Abu Kamal in Deir Ezzor, Syria. Since then, a total of almost 20 Dutch airstrikes have been reported.

‘No civilian casualties’ claim

While the more detailed weekly reports mark a welcome step towards greater accountability, the Dutch defense ministry still insists that hundreds of Dutch airstrikes in Iraq and Syria have never led to any civilian casualties since 2014.

Even with improved airstrike reporting by the Netherlands, it remains difficult for affected victims to understand responsibility.

Between January 3rd and February 27th, our Syria researchers tracked and assessed 19 civilian casualty incidents allegedly tied to Coalition strikes in the vicinity of Abu Kamal and Abu Hammam. Of these 19 events, Airwars presently evaluates 15 as fairly reported and estimates that between 104 and 249 civilians likely died in these incidents.

However, with multiple belligerents bombing the region from the air – and the Netherlands not providing specific dates of strikes – attribution for recent events has proven to be challenging.

Asked if the defense ministry has cross-referenced its own airstrike data with any of these 19 specific claimed events, a spokesperson told Airwars: “When it comes to examining a weapon deployment after the fact, it is assessed whether or not the strike conformed with the mandate; and checked for possible civilian casualties and collateral damage. We use any information available to do so.“

An Airwars map showing the general location of Dutch airstrikes from January 3rd until February 27th. Nearly all of the 19 missions in which weapons were deployed occurred near Abu Kamal and Abu Hammam in Deir Ezzor, Syria.

No release of previous strike locations

Despite recent improvements, for airstrikes conducted during the first leg of its anti-ISIS campaign the Netherlands is sticking to its former levels of poor transparency and accountability.

When asked if the defense ministry would also release the near locations of earlier airstrikes, a senior public affairs officer told Airwars that “The weekly updates for the period 2014-2016 will not be adjusted. These are previous publications that we will not revise.”

At present, almost nothing is known about Dutch strikes between October 2014 and July 2016, even though Dutch F-16s fired more than 1,800 munitions. Official data suggests that the Netherlands may at times have been the fourth most active member of the Coalition – after the US, UK and France. However, all freedom of information requests for information on the Dutch campaign have so far been refused.

▲ Library image: A Dutch F-16 pilot checking missiles before take-off from an airbase in Jordan (Netherlands defence ministry)

Netherlands MoD for March 13, 2018 – March 14, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 14, 2018

Notes

For March 7th-14th 2018, the Dutch MoD reports that Dutch F-16s attacked ISIS-fighters in support of ground troops above Deir Al Zour in Eastern Syria. The planes supported ground troops during 10 missions, also above the Iraqi provinces Salah ad Din and Kirkuk. Weapons were deployed during 2 missions.

Nederlandse F-16’s vielen ter ondersteuning van grondtroepen ISIS-strijders aan. Dat gebeurde in de buurt van Abu Kamal in de provincie Deir Al Zour in Oost-Syrië. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 7 tot en met 13 maart 2018.

De jachtvliegtuigen hielpen de grondtroepen tijdens 10 missies, ook boven de Iraakse provincies Salah ad Din en Kirkuk. Bij 2 missies werden wapens ingezet.

Nederland neemt boven Irak en Oost-Syrië in coalitieverband deel aan de strijd tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS.

Nederlandse instructeurs startten in Irak nieuwe cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Ze leerden onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en kregen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De militairen verzorgden de opleidingen samen met partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Report Date

March 14, 2018

Confirmed Actions

Netherlands

Notes

For March 7th-14th 2018, the Dutch MoD reports that Dutch F-16s attacked ISIS-fighters in support of ground troops above Deir Al Zour in Eastern Syria. The planes supported ground troops during 10 missions, also above the Iraqi provinces Salah ad Din and Kirkuk. Weapons were deployed during 2 missions.

Nederlandse F-16’s vielen ter ondersteuning van grondtroepen ISIS-strijders aan. Dat gebeurde in de buurt van Abu Kamal in de provincie Deir Al Zour in Oost-Syrië. Een overzicht van Defensieoperaties in de week van 7 tot en met 13 maart 2018.

De jachtvliegtuigen hielpen de grondtroepen tijdens 10 missies, ook boven de Iraakse provincies Salah ad Din en Kirkuk. Bij 2 missies werden wapens ingezet.

Nederland neemt boven Irak en Oost-Syrië in coalitieverband deel aan de strijd tegen terreurorganisatie ISIS.

Nederlandse instructeurs startten in Irak nieuwe cursussen aan militairen in Irak. Ze leerden onder meer grote gebieden te beveiligen en kregen bataljonsstaf- en infanterietrainingen. De militairen verzorgden de opleidingen samen met partnerlanden.

Een Nederlands chirurgisch team opereert in een Amerikaans role 2-hospitaal in westelijk Irak. Het team werkt nauw samen met Britse medici.

Published

March 12, 2018

Written by

Samuel Oakford

An investigation by Airwars for the Daily Beast shows that Coalition-inflicted casualties were vastly higher than are being publicly acknowledged – and the Trump administration has shown little interest in discovering the truth

In the weeks after the defeat of the so-called Islamic State at Raqqa, a woman named Ayat Mohamed—her black clothing covering burns on her body—led a French TV crew to the ruins of a building in the Al Badou neighborhood. Here in late September Ayat’s husband Khaled al Salama, their four children, along with her mother, sister and niece, had all been killed by an alleged strike by the US-led coalition. Their bodies remained trapped below.

“The planes were bombing and rockets were falling 24 hours a day,” said a tearful Ayat. “There were ISIS snipers everywhere, you couldn’t breath.” In all directions, buildings had been destroyed, and it was hard to tell where one structure began and another ended. “My children are still there, buried under the rubble,” she told the camera. “No one has dug them out yet.” Ayat said she could not afford to have their bodies retrieved. “How can I get them out of these ruins, how can I see them?”

Ayat Mohamed, interviewed by France 24 in her ruined neighbourhood

Nearly three more months would pass before some of the bodies were recovered. A picture taken at the scene shows five white body bags labelled with the names of Ayat’s husband, Khaled, and their children Farah, Mohammad, Najah and Hussein. Their remains were dug out on February 12th, according to the local monitor Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBSS).

“Al Salama’s wife survived the shelling and spent nearly four months communicating with the Raqqa Civilian Council until they pulled out the bodies of her family,” an RBSS representative told Airwars. The location of the remains of Ayat’s mother, sister and niece is unclear, though it is possible they were among the nearly 30 bodies that have been pulled from the building, most of them badly decomposed and many charred after they were burned in the attack. All of the bodies were buried in Tal al Bai’aa cemetery, said RBSS.

More remains of victims are being retrieved in Raqqa every day, some dug out by laborers hired by relatives and loved ones. According to Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, in the month leading to mid-February alone, upwards of 190 additional unidentified corpses had been pulled from the rubble.

Overall, an estimated 2,000 civilians were killed during bitter fighting for control of Raqqa, according to local casualty monitors – in an assault dominated by US firepower. Even now the dying hasn’t stopped. Cut down by explosives left rigged by ISIS, hundreds of returning civilians have been wounded or killed since October. Like those seeking to retrieve their family members, Raqawis, the people of Raqqa, left to fend for themselves have paid desperate locals to try and disarm their homes, or have attempted to make their homes safe themselves—sometimes with disastrous consequences.

All this is occurring as international media coverage of Raqqa dwindles away. Once the center of countless stories about the so-called Islamic caliphate, ISIS’s self-declared capital is now 80 per cent uninhabitable due to destruction from recent fighting, according to the United Nations.

The remains of Ayat’s husband and four children. Image provided by RBSS.

No Accountability By the time US-backed ground forces began moving into Raqqa in early June 2017, a parallel offensive across the Iraqi border in Mosul was nearly finished. After eight months of bitter fighting, parts of Iraq’s second largest city were devastated and thousands of civilians had been killed or injured. In Raqqa, early accounts indicated that just as in Mosul, civilians were being obstructed from leaving – at risk from booby traps laid by ISIS, or targeted by the terror group’s snipers. At the same time, civilians inside Raqqa received conflicting evacuation instructions from the Coalition and Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

Unlike operations in Mosul, which took place across two US administrations, the fight in Raqqa was carried out entirely under the watch of Donald Trump’s White House. Trump’s promise to delegate everything to commanders in the field—and Defense Secretary James Mattis’ shift to “annihilation tactics”—helped contribute to a drastic increase in civilian casualties from Coalition strikes that took off early in 2017. As The Daily Beast and Airwars reported last year, the number of civilian deaths caused by the Coalition during the entire war against ISIS had already doubled under Trump by the summer of 2017—right in the midst of operations in Raqqa.

According to official data, the Coalition—in Syria almost entirely consisting of American military aircraft and ground artillery units, with limited support from British and French planes—leaned heavily on airpower and artillery during the five months it took to expel ISIS from an area much smaller than Mosul.

Today, the actual number of weapons fired in Raqqa remains clouded by inconsistent statements from US officials. However, according to an Airwars analysis, at least 95 per cent of strikes in Raqqa and all artillery strikes were American. At least 21,000 munitions—and possibly thousands more—struck the city.

What isn’t uncertain is that the intense bombardment resulted in significant civilian casualties. Local monitors estimate that upwards of 2,000 were killed by all parties to the fighting—and many victims, like those in the Salama family, are only now being found.

At the same time, the Coalition’s record on investigating alleged deaths from air and artillery strikes appears to have significantly weakened in Raqqa. Nine months into operations in Mosul – at the end of June – the Coalition had acknowledged responsibility for 43 strikes that it said killed at least 240 civilians and wounded a further 42. (As of its most recent update, the Coalition has admitted to killing 321 or more civilians in Mosul, and injuring a further 46 people in 60 events.) It concluded that 58 additional alleged civilian casualty incidents at Mosul were considered “non-credible”. That meant that after seven months, 43 percent of the 101 total completed assessments had resulted in acknowledgements of responsibility.

In Raqqa, a greater reliance on air and artillery strikes ahead of more cautious ground advances—as well as the limited firepower of local partner forces (the largest weapons wielded by the SDF were 120mm mortars)—all indicated that civilian harm would be more often tied to Coalition actions.

Yet nine months later, only 11 percent of Coalition civilian harm assessments have resulted in an admission of responsibility. Out of 121 reports so far assessed for the Raqqa assault, the Coalition has confirmed involvement in just 13 strikes, which it says left 21 civilians dead and six injured—far short of the 1,400 likely Coalition-inflicted deaths Airwars tracked between June and October.

The enemy forces arrayed against the Coalition in Raqqa also significantly differed. According to Coalition figures, international and Iraqi forces encountered 700 vehicle borne IEDs during the battle for Mosul. In Raqqa, the Coalition and SDF encountered only “around a dozen VBIEDs” between June and Oct. 20, 2017.

Most damage to the city—described in January 2018 by USAID chief Mark Green as devastation “almost beyond description”—was the result of US air and artillery strikes. Satellite images from before the battle show one neighborhood mostly intact. Soon it was mostly gone.

Meanwhile, decisions about what and what not to strike were moved significantly down the command chain, a dynamic that began in late 2016 under President Barack Obama and which was in full effect during the battle in Raqqa. “TEA [Target Engagement Authority] was decentralized from the Headquarters GO level (far removed from the battlefield) and delegated to the appropriate level commander, who was close to the fight,” AFCENT spokesperson AnnMarie Annicelli told Airwars in an email. The “ground force unit,” she said, “controlled all dynamic engagements” of air and artillery.

View of Raqqa’s Old City, taken on June 2nd 2016.

View of the Old City, taken on July 19th 2017. Images from Amnesty International.

 

A storm of weapons

Fired from afar and usually targeted based on intelligence from local proxy ground forces,the SDF, US bombs, missiles and artillery shells rained almost continuously into Raqqa. According to official figures provided to Airwars, the Coalition launched more than 20,000 munitions into the city during the five-month campaign. In August, that barrage had officially increased to more than one bomb, missile, rocket or artillery round fired every eight minutes—a total of 5,775 munitions during the month.

This was more than all munitions released by the US in Afghanistan during all of 2017. In Mosul – a far larger city with many times as many residents, and where fighting lasted nearly twice as long – the Coalition actually fired on average fewer air-dropped and artillery munitions during nine months of fighting (3,250 per month).

According to Air Force Central Command (AFCENT), Coalition aircraft carried out “nearly 4,500” airstrikes in and around Raqqa between May and October of 2017. During the four month battle for Raqqa, the UK said that its aircraft had hit 213 targets in the city, while France reported fewer than 50 airstrikes on Raqqa over the same period. All other air attacks (approximately 95 percent) and every artillery round to hit the city most likely came from US forces.

During the first half of the battle for Raqqa, fire from A-10 “Warthog” ground assault aircraft accounted for roughly 44 percent of weapon use in Raqqa. The extensive use of A-10s in such an urban setting – which fire 30mm cannons and can also deploy bombs and missiles – was described by US officials at the time as unprecedented.

“The fight itself was within the urban complex of Raqqa and the pilots had to get creative to figure out ways to strike targets at the bottom of these five-story buildings,” said Lt. Col. Craig Morash, commander of the 74th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron. “Urban conflict, at least in this form, was kind of the first time anybody had ever seen it before,” he later told a reporter.

Those A-10s were joined by Reaper drones, B-2 and B-52 bombers, F-15s and F-16s, and long range artillery. Raqqa experienced the full weight of the US warfighting machine.

Quentin Sommerville, the BBC’s veteran Middle East Correspondent, reported extensively from both Raqqa and Mosul. His battlefield dispatches from deserted areas of Raqqa that had been captured from ISIS showed a city in ruins, even as fighting still raged in other neighborhoods. “24 hours of coverage wouldn’t do justice to the total devastation across Raqqa,” he tweeted from the city on September 17th. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

“I would say in Mosul artillery and airstrikes were in most cases a last resort,” Sommerville said in an interview with Airwars. “In Raqqa, they seemed like they were used first.”

Recent disclosures suggest the true number of weapons fired in Raqqa may in fact be even higher. Speaking to reporters on January 23rd, Command Sergeant John Wayne Troxell—a senior non-enlisted adviser to the Joint Chiefs of Staff—said that US Marines stationed near Raqqa had “in five months… fired 30,000 artillery rounds on ISIS targets, killing ISIS fighters by the dozens.”

A spokesperson for the Marine Corps later told Airwars that they were not authorized to verify those figures, while the Coalition said that many of the rounds fired by the unit were aimed “at other Daesh targets in Syria outside of Raqqah.” Artillery, however, has a limited range, and Marines based in Syria during Raqqa fighting likely would have unleashed the majority of rounds inside the city itself, which by June was completely surrounded.

The remains of the building in which Ayat’s entire family was killed. Image via RBSS.

In August, Amnesty International reported that hundreds of civilians were already dead from Coalition air and artillery strikes. “Artillery shells are hitting everywhere, entire streets,” Raqqa resident Ahmad Mahmoud, wounded by artillery himself, told Amnesty in June 2017. “It is indiscriminate shelling and killing a lot of civilians.” A Western reporter in touch with Airwars said survivors from Raqqa later told them artillery was scarier, as it came in deluges and without any warning.

The so-called Islamic State bears significant responsibility for the destruction and death toll at Raqqa, according to investigators. “By deliberately placing civilians in areas where they were exposed to combat operations, for the purpose of rendering those areas immune from attack, ISIL militants committed the war crime of using human shields in Raqqah governorate,” the UN’s Commission of Inquiry for Syria noted in a recent report.

“Despite the fact that civilians were being used as human shields, international coalition airstrikes continued apace on a daily basis, resulting in the destruction of much of Raqqah city and the death of countless civilians, many of whom were buried in improvised cemeteries, including parks,” the Commission also wrote.

Facing down thousands of bombs and shells, residents said ISIS sometimes made civilians wear the same clothes as ISIS fighters so as to appear indistinguishable. ISIS would also position vehicles “next to a house and fire at the planes and helicopters in the sky,” one witness who lost his brother in a subsequent strike told Amnesty. “Then it would move and park next to another house. The helicopters and planes kept trying to hit it. They hit so many houses but they didn’t even hit the vehicle.”

But at times Coalition targeting was less explicable. In one incident, on the night of July 1st, neighbors told Amnesty, a family of five—including three children—died when an airstrike hit their building in Raqqa’s Old City. The house was 100 meters, the witness said, from the closest group of ISIS fighters. The Coalition has identified a number of possible incidents around this date in Raqqa—including one referred to it by a “human rights organization,” and another which the Coalition has already determined was a “non-credible” allegation.

The Salama family appears to have fallen victim to such a scenario. Ayat and her husband Khaled had recently returned to Raqqa in order to bring other family members to safety. Instead they all became trapped as the fighting intensified. According to RBSS, the family was moved by ISIS, reportedly along with many residents of al Amassi neighborhood, to another part of the city called al Badou. There, they were killed in a reported Coalition strike.

Silent media

Despite the horrors experienced by civilians during recent fighting, press reports from Raqqa have been filed far less regularly than its status as the former “ISIS capital” might have suggested. In Mosul, many more journalists covered the battle—often revealing important details about the civilian toll. In December for example, a major field investigation by the Associated Press put the overall civilian death in Mosul above 9,000.

Reporters on the ground in Mosul were able to uncover incidents of civilian deaths from airstrikes, and in several cases help convince the Coalition to concede involvement. The work of BuzzFeed News’ Mike Giglio led to an admission of culpability in four cases, which had left a total of 40 civilians dead. That accountability was only possible after Giglio made unauthorized reporting trips to Mosul, interviewing family members and other witnesses—investigatory steps that the Coalition itself does not undertake. In Raqqa, few media investigations have so far taken place.

When details of civilian deaths do emerge, they gain less traction. In the last month of fighting at Raqqa, a report released by the UN’s humanitarian agency OCHA included details of an October 2nd presumed Coalition strike that hit “a water well located in the outskirts of the Al-Tawaassoiya area in the north of Ar-Raqqa city, reportedly killing 45 civilians.” The next day, another strike hit wells where civilians had again congregated, leaving at least 21 dead according to OCHA. The attacks left the city with no functional wells, said the humanitarian brief.

Those attacks, which followed an alleged pattern of civilians being bombed near water sources, and the targeting of civilians trying to escape the city by boat earlier in the offensive, do not appear to have been widely picked up by English-language media.

“In Mosul, media were falling over each other; almost no stone was left unturned,” said Sommerville. “But Raqqa was more difficult to reach during the offensive, and is still difficult to get to. There we have barely scratched the surface. It seemed to me that wherever we went there were stories of civilian casualties. And no one was investigating.”

Yet access to civilians who had escaped the fighting at Raqqa was possible. The SDF had set up civilian reception centers on the outskirts of the city, where survivors were able to speak freely about their harrowing experiences.

A body part seen in February amid the rubble in the Hadiqa Bayda area of Raqqa. Image provided by RBSS.

“The bombardment had been so heavy that people weren’t even afraid of talking about it in front of the SDF,” said a Western journalist who visited one of the centers. “Almost every single person we spoke to had a relative, friend or neighbor that was killed in some kind of bombardment—whether they were going to get water or something else.”

Though all these civilians passed through central locations, there appears to be little or no official record kept of their testimonies about the toll of fighting and bombing inside the city. “The Coalition has not conducted interviews on the ground in or around Raqqa as part of any civilian casualty investigation,” a Coalition spokesperson told Airwars.

“It is striking to see the Coalition continue to deny civilian casualties even after independent on the ground investigations found the contrary,” said Nadim Houry, of Human Rights Watch. “If they want to talk to survivors, they only need to visit these areas.”

Though Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International were both able to reach Raqqa without permission from the Syrian government, UN investigators have been blocked by Damascus since 2012. The UN’s Commission of Inquiry, established by the Human Rights Council and the only internationally sanctioned body tasked with investigating crimes committed by all sides in the Syrian war, is severely hamstrung. It can only carry out investigations remotely, often via cell phones and the internet.

Ironically, the Syrian government’s attempts to shield its own crimes has also offered a better chance at impunity for its adversaries. “It is beyond comprehension that, despite this extensive range of violations, Syrian victims and survivors continue to be denied any meaningful justice,” said Commission Chair Paulo Pinheiro on March 6th.

Houry of Human Rights Watch visited Raqqa governorate in the lead up to the battle, documenting evidence of at least 84 civilian deaths in two strikes. In each case, HRW provided detailed information to the Coalition, but not a single one of those civilian deaths has been admitted. “The delays at this point suggest either lack of seriousness in the effort or a desire to hide something,” he claims.

The legacy of the fight for Raqqa may now be the thousands upon thousands of unexploded pieces of ordnance that litter the streets, many of them IEDs rigged by ISIS to explode. Coalition countries say they are funding efforts to train and equip cleanup teams, but those efforts appear to be inadequate. On a subsequent trip, Houry documented the toll—at least 491 dead and injured since October—from IEDS, and how desperate many civilians remained.

The going rate for young men to look through properties and remove rubble was around $50 per house, according to one resident. A false step could cost searchers their lives. A successful job could lead to the discovery of more war dead, like the family of Ayat Mohamed. “It’s like playing Russian roulette, but these young men are desperate for money,” said the resident.

Raqqa is only one part of a complex Syrian battlefield that has claimed countless civilian lives. But the defeat of the so-called Islamic State in its self-proclaimed caliphate was a fight orchestrated and carried out in the main by the United States. To date, the Trump administration has shown little interest in properly understanding the civilian harm resulting from its defeat of ISIS.

▲ Photos of bodies pulled from al Tawassouiya neighbourhood (via Reporters Without Borders)

UK MoD for March 11, 2018 – March 12, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 12, 2018

Sunday 11 March – Tornados eliminated a small group of terrorists in northern Iraq…A further attack was conducted in Iraq on Sunday 11 March; coalition surveillance had identified a small group of Daesh extremists in a hilly region some 25 miles south east of Qayyarah and the Iraqi security forces requested assistance in dealing with them. Two Tornado GR4s eliminated the Daesh group with a single Paveway IV, thus preventing any effort to re-establish terrorist activities in the area.

Report Date

March 12, 2018

Sunday 11 March – Tornados eliminated a small group of terrorists in northern Iraq…A further attack was conducted in Iraq on Sunday 11 March; coalition surveillance had identified a small group of Daesh extremists in a hilly region some 25 miles south east of Qayyarah and the Iraqi security forces requested assistance in dealing with them. Two Tornado GR4s eliminated the Daesh group with a single Paveway IV, thus preventing any effort to re-establish terrorist activities in the area.

UK MoD for March 10, 2018 – March 11, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 11, 2018

Saturday 10 March – Typhoons bombed a Daesh drone team in eastern Syria…In similar fashion, a Typhoon flight armed with Paveway IV guided bombs s was able to strike successfully a Daesh team flying a quadcopter drone from a building in the Euphrates valley on Saturday 10 March.

Report Date

March 11, 2018

Saturday 10 March – Typhoons bombed a Daesh drone team in eastern Syria...In similar fashion, a Typhoon flight armed with Paveway IV guided bombs s was able to strike successfully a Daesh team flying a quadcopter drone from a building in the Euphrates valley on Saturday 10 March.

CJTF–OIR for March 8, 2018 – March 9, 2018
Original
Annotated

Report Date

March 9, 2018

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates across multiple networks in order to degrade, disrupt, and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the extremist terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to regroup and resume its capacity to threaten citizens of all nations.

Weekly Strike Summary

Between Mar. 2 and Mar. 8, Coalition military forces conducted 20 strikes consisting of 30 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

On Mar. 8 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, two strikes [1 British?] destroyed a Daesh supply route and a UAV.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 8, 2018.

On Mar. 7 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed four Daesh motorcycles.

On Mar. 7 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets. • Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel.

On Mar. 6 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh supply route, a front end loader and a staging facility.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 6, 2018.

On Mar. 5 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh supply route and a Daesh transportation vehicle.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 5, 2018.

On Mar. 4 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed two Daesh supply routes.

On Mar. 4 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets. • Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh tunnel and a weapons cache.

On Mar. 3 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units. • Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed five Daesh-held buildings.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 3, 2018.

On Mar. 2 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of nine engagements against Daesh targets. • Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed two Daesh supply routes, three Daesh construction vehicles, a weapons cache and a command and control center.

On Mar. 2 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets. • Near the Atashanah Mountains, one strike destroyed two Daesh supply routes.

Additionally, we received late reporting of one strike consisting of six engagements conducted in Syria against Daesh targets on Mar. 1 near Abu Kamal, engaging a Daesh tactical unit and destroying a weapons cache, 11 VBIEDs and a VBIED storage facility.

These strikes were conducted as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, the operation to destroy Daesh in Iraq and Syria. The destruction of Daesh targets in Iraq and Syria also further limits the group’s ability to project terror and conduct external operations throughout the region and the rest of the world.

This Coalition strike release contains all strikes conducted by fighter, attack, bomber, rotary-wing, or remotely piloted aircraft, rocket propelled artillery and ground-based tactical artillery.

A strike, as defined in the Coalition release, refers to one or more kinetic engagements that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative effect in that location. For example, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone Daesh vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against a group of Daesh-held buildings and weapon systems in a compound, having the cumulative effect of making that facility harder or impossible to use. Strike assessments are based on initial reports and may be refined.

CJTF-OIR does not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target. The information used to compile the daily strike releases is based on “Z” or Greenwich Mean Time.

Report Date

March 9, 2018

Report Summary

  • 20 total strikes
  • 17 in Syria
  • 3 in Iraq

Report Summary

  • 18 total strikes
  • 15 in Syria (14972 – 14986)
  • 3 in Iraq (14166 – 14168)

Confirmed Actions

US, UK

Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve and its partners continue to strike Daesh targets in designated parts of Syria and Iraq.

Ongoing operations by Iraqi Security Forces and Syrian Democratic Forces, supported by CJTF-OIR efforts, demonstrate that much work remains to defeat Daesh here. The Coalition and our partners continue to exert pressure on Daesh senior leaders and associates across multiple networks in order to degrade, disrupt, and dismantle Daesh structures and remove the extremist terrorists throughout Iraq and Syria. This will prevent the terrorist group’s ability to regroup and resume its capacity to threaten citizens of all nations.

Weekly Strike Summary

March 2, 2018

Between Mar. 2 and Mar. 8, Coalition military forces conducted 20 strikes consisting of 30 engagements in Syria and Iraq.

March 8, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes

On Mar. 8 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes [1 British?] destroyed a Daesh supply route and a UAV.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 8, 2018.

March 7, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On Mar. 7 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed four Daesh motorcycles.

On Mar. 7 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Qayyarah, one strike destroyed a Daesh tunnel.
March 6, 2018
Syria: 4 strikes

On Mar. 6 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted four strikes consisting of six engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, four strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed a Daesh supply route, a front end loader and a staging facility.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 6, 2018.

March 5, 2018
Syria: 2 strikes

On Mar. 5 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted two strikes consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh supply route and a Daesh transportation vehicle.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 5, 2018.

March 4, 2018
Syria: 1 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On Mar. 4 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, one strike destroyed two Daesh supply routes.

On Mar. 4 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of one engagement against Daesh targets.

Near Hawijah, one strike engaged a Daesh tactical unit and destroyed a Daesh tunnel and a weapons cache.
March 3, 2018
Syria: 6 strikes
Iraq: 1 strikes

On Mar. 3 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of three engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, two strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units.
Near Al Shadaddi, one strike destroyed five Daesh-held buildings.

There were no reported strikes conducted in Iraq on Mar. 3, 2018.

On Mar. 2 in Syria, Coalition military forces conducted three strikes consisting of nine engagements against Daesh targets.

Near Abu Kamal, three strikes engaged two Daesh tactical units and destroyed two Daesh supply routes, three Daesh construction vehicles, a weapons cache and a command and control center.

On Mar. 2 in Iraq, Coalition military forces conducted one strike consisting of two engagements against Daesh targets.

Near the Atashanah Mountains, one strike destroyed two Daesh supply routes.
March 1, 2018
Additionally, we received late reporting of one strike consisting of six engagements conducted in Syria against Daesh targets on Mar. 1 near Abu Kamal, engaging a Daesh tactical unit and destroying a weapons cache, 11 VBIEDs and a VBIED storage facility.

These strikes were conducted as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, the operation to destroy Daesh in Iraq and Syria. The destruction of Daesh targets in Iraq and Syria also further limits the group’s ability to project terror and conduct external operations throughout the region and the rest of the world.

This Coalition strike release contains all strikes conducted by fighter, attack, bomber, rotary-wing, or remotely piloted aircraft, rocket propelled artillery and ground-based tactical artillery.

A strike, as defined in the Coalition release, refers to one or more kinetic engagements that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative effect in that location. For example, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone Daesh vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against a group of Daesh-held buildings and weapon systems in a compound, having the cumulative effect of making that facility harder or impossible to use. Strike assessments are based on initial reports and may be refined.

CJTF-OIR does not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target. The information used to compile the daily strike releases is based on “Z” or Greenwich Mean Time.