{"id":77297,"date":"2021-08-18T14:43:48","date_gmt":"2021-08-18T14:43:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/?post_type=news_and_analysis&p=77297"},"modified":"2021-08-18T17:10:19","modified_gmt":"2021-08-18T17:10:19","slug":"pentagon-revelations-increase-pressure-on-european-militaries-to-acknowledge-killing-civilians","status":"publish","type":"news_and_analysis","link":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/news\/pentagon-revelations-increase-pressure-on-european-militaries-to-acknowledge-killing-civilians\/","title":{"rendered":"Pentagon revelations increase pressure on European militaries to acknowledge killing civilians"},"content":{"rendered":"
When the Department of Defense withdrew a key part of its annual report<\/a> on civilian harm earlier this month, it all but confirmed something long suspected – that France, Britain and Belgium know they likely killed civilians in Iraq and Syria in specific events, but refuse publicly to\u00a0accept it.<\/p>\n The original Pentagon report to Congress, released on May 28th<\/a>, initially claimed responsibility for the deaths of 50 civilians in eleven airstrikes against the so-called Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria in 2017 and 2018.<\/p>\n After Airwars pointed out significant errors, the DoD withdrew and reissued the report along with an addendum,<\/a> removing nine of the eleven incidents in which civilians died. This amounted to the Pentagon’s effective confirmation that those strikes were carried out by its allies, including the UK, France and Belgium.<\/p>\n Of these nine incidents, two were in fact the same event – seemingly a clerical error. Two more have been publicly claimed already by Australia, which has accepted responsibility for the deaths.<\/p>\n That leaves six events in which the Coalition’s own investigators concluded that 18 civilians had died.<\/p>\n What are the six strikes?<\/strong><\/p>\n Three of them were British airstrikes. We knew this before due to in-depth reporting by Airwars and the BBC<\/a> but the Pentagon’s withdrawal of the data all but confirms it.<\/p>\n In the most deadly individual case, on August 13th 2017, 12 civilians were killed<\/a>, including a young girl, in an airstrike targeting an ISIS mortar system. A further six were injured. In February 2019 the US-led Coalition accepted that civilians were killed and the UK later confirmed it was a British strike – yet without accepting anyone died.<\/p>\n In a second case<\/a>, the Coalition publicly confirmed the deaths of two civilians in a strike near the Iraqi city of Mosul on January 9th 2017. Again the UK confirmed it was a British strike but without accepting that civilians were killed. This contradicted a Coalition whistleblower, who earlier told the BBC<\/a> that civilians had likely died in the British attack.<\/p>\n The third British incident<\/a> occurred in Bahrah in eastern Syria on January 20th 2018. The Coalition’s military assessors admitted the death of one civilian. The BBC and Airwars published an investigation showing it was a British strike and the UK accepted this, but again refused to accept responsibility for any civilian harm.<\/p>\n The reason for the gap between the Coalition and British statements is that London applies a different – and critics would say unrealistic – standard for assessing civilian harm. Whereas the Coalition and the US assess whether they caused civilian harm on the ‘balance of probabilities’, the UK demands overwhelming evidence – described as ‘hard facts<\/a>.’ In the context of an airstrike from thousands of feet and with no Coalition civilian casualty investigation forces on the ground, such overwhelming proof is near impossible to come by.<\/p>\n To date, the UK has accepted just one civilian death in Iraq and Syria, despite 8,000 declared flight sorties<\/a> over seven years.<\/p>\n Gavin Crowden, Executive Director of Every Casualty Counts, said that when it came to civilian harm, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) was pretending the “absence of evidence is evidence of absence.”<\/p>\n “The Pentagon has shattered the MoD\u2019s already implausible claim that British forces have caused only one civilian death across Iraq and Syria. This is statistically almost impossible.”<\/p>\n “The [Chilcot] Report of the Iraq Inquiry<\/a> made clear that the MoD had failed to account for civilian casualties following the invasion in 2003. Almost twenty years on, the MoD is still failing to take even basic steps to identify and record harm caused to civilians.”<\/p>\n French and Belgian strikes<\/strong><\/p>\n The other three incidents the Pentagon insists were not US actions are believed to be either Belgian or French strikes.<\/p>\n On February 27th 2017<\/a> a Coalition strike on an ISIS vehicle near the Iraqi-Syrian border killed at least one civilian and injured another. Local sources said the death toll could have been as high as three. The Coalition accepted causing the harm, and a senior Belgian government official unofficially informed Airwars that the strike was Belgian, though the government has never publicly confirmed this.<\/p>\n