Punishments but no criminal charges in US attack on Afghanistan hospital
WASHINGTON: A US gunship attack on a hospital in Afghanistan that killed 42 people occurred because of human errors, process errors and equipment failures and none of the crew knew they were striking a trauma centre, a top US general said on Friday.
No criminal charges have been levelled against military personnel for mistakes that resulted in last year’s attack on the civilian hospital in Afghanistan operated by the medical charity Doctors Without Borders. The group has called the attack a war crime.
Gen Joseph Votel, the new head of US Central Command, said that the trauma centre was on a no-strike list, but that the gunship crew didn’t have access to the list.
The Pentagon released the full report on the investigation on Friday, including details about what exactly led an Air Force special operations AC-130 gunship to bomb the hospital and how those mistakes were made.
According to one senior US official, a two-star general was among 16 American military personnel disciplined because of the attack. A number of those punished are special operations personnel.
No one was sent to court-martial, officials said.
However, in many cases a non-judicial punishment, such as a letter of reprimand or suspension, can effectively end a military career.
The air strike in the northern city of Kunduz last October was carried out by one of the most lethal aircraft in US arsenal. Doctors Without Borders called the attack “relentless and brutal”.
The Associated Press reported in March that more than a dozen US military personnel had been disciplined in connection with the bombing, and that the punishments were all largely administrative.
The crew of the AC-130, which is armed with side-firing cannons and guns, had been dispatched to hit a Taliban command centre in a building about 400 metres from the hospital, the US military said in November.
Hampered by problems with their targeting sensors, the crew relied on a physical description that led them to begin firing at the hospital even though they saw no hostile activity there.
Officials have said the attack was caused by human error, and that many chances to prevent the attack on the wrong target were missed.
A separate US report on the incident said the AC-130 aircraft fired 211 shells at the hospital compound over 29 minutes before commanders realised the mistake and ordered a halt. Doctors Without Borders officials contacted military personnel during the attack to say the hospital was “being ‘bombed’ from the air”, and the word finally was relayed to the AC-130 crew, the report said.
The strike came as US military advisers were helping Afghan forces retake Kunduz, which had fallen to the Taliban on Sept 28. It was the first major city to fall since the Taliban were expelled from Kabul in 2001.
Afghan officials claimed the hospital had been overrun by the Taliban, but no evidence of that has surfaced. The hospital was destroyed and Doctors Without Borders, also known by its French acronym, MSF, ceased operations in Kunduz.
Published in Dawn, April 30th, 2016