Death from the Sky: Searching for Ground Truth in the Kunduz Hospital Bombing
(The Intercept) When the Taliban overran Kunduz last September after a monthlong siege, the northern Afghan city became the first to fall to the insurgency since the war began in 2001. A week earlier, many Kunduz residents had left town to observe Eid al-Adha, the sacrificial feast honoring Abrahams act of submission to God. The heavy fighting sent the remaining Kunduzis fleeing as dead bodies littered the streets.
On Friday, October 2, the city lay quiet, with just one building lit up against the dark sky. Most other international organizations had evacuated when the fighting began, but the Kunduz Trauma Center run by Médecins Sans Frontières remained open throughout the battle for the city. It was one of the few buildings with a generator. Throughout the week, violence seemed to lap against the walls of the hospital without ever engulfing it. All around the 35,620-square-meter compound, the site of an old cotton factory, fighting ebbed and flowed. Doctors and nurses marked the intensity of battle by the freshly wounded who arrived at the gate. According to MSF, the hospital treated 376 emergency patients between September 28, when the city fell, and October 2.
The last week had seen much bloodshed, but Friday was uncharacteristically calm: no fighting nearby, no gunshots, no explosions. I remember seeing a child flying a kite, recalled Dr. Kathleen Thomas, and thought to myself, today is a calm day. That evening, while more than 100 MSF employees and caretakers slept in a basement below the hospital, several staff members remained awake, preparing for what the night might bring. There were 105 patients in the hospital, including three or four Afghan government soldiers and about 20 Taliban fighters, two of whom appeared to be of high rank. Hospital staff stepped outside to take in the bracing autumn air, something theyd lately refrained from doing for fear of stray bullets. The night sky was open and clear.
Some 7,000 feet above, an AC-130 gunship was preparing to fire. At 2:08 a.m., on October 3, a missile began its descent, gliding through a cloudless sky.
.....(snip).....
From the beginning, the U.S. military struggled to keep its story straight. Officials initially denied that U.S. forces had attacked the MSF hospital at all, saying that the building might have sustained collateral damage from an adjacent airstrike. Gen. John F. Campbell, the top American commander in Afghanistan, stated that U.S. forces were taking fire when the airstrike was called in. On October 4, Ash Carter, the secretary of defense, admitted that there was American air action in that area and that there was definitely destruction in those structures and the hospital. The narrative shifted the next day when Gen. Campbell said Afghan forces had come under fire and called in the airstrike. ....................(more)
https://theintercept.com/2016/04/28/searching-for-ground-truth-in-the-kunduz-hospital-bombing/
Jerry442
(1,265 posts)During the flight, he said, the electronic systems onboard the aircraft malfunctioned, preventing the operation of an essential command and control capability and eliminating the ability of aircraft to transmit video, send and receive email, or send and receive electronic messages.
...and the dog ate the report.
enlightenment
(8,830 posts)It reveals, completely, why humans have no business engaging in war. Thank you for posting the link.
polly7
(20,582 posts)"OCTOBER 3, 2015 Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) condemns in the strongest possible terms the horrific bombing of its hospital in Kunduz, which was full of staff and patients. MSF wishes to clarify that all parties to the conflict, including in Kabul and Washington, were clearly informed of the precise location (GPS Coordinates) of the MSF facilities in Kunduz, including the hospital, guesthouse, office and an outreach stabilization unit in Chardara northwest of Kunduz.
As it does in all conflict contexts, MSF communicated the precise locations of its facilities to all parties on multiple occasions over the past months, including most recently on September 29.
The bombing in Kunduz continued for more than 30 minutes after American and Afghan military officials in Kabul and Washington were first informed by MSF that its hospital was struck."
BBM
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/article/afghanistan-msf-staff-killed-hospital-partially-destroyed-kunduz
Kunduz Killers Go Free
by Media Lens / March 31st, 2016
MSF154301The remains of a bed frame in a room on eastern wing of the main Outpatient Department building.
The US military has disciplined more than a dozen service members after an air strike on a Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) hospital in Afghanistan killed 42 people last year.
The Pentagon has acknowledged that the clinic was targeted by mistake, but no personnel will face criminal charges.
Note that the BBC wording the Pentagon has acknowledged that the clinic was targeted by mistake is deceptive bias. The BBC made no mention that MSF had presented strong evidence that the clinic was deliberately targeted, that the attack was a war crime, and that there was an urgent need for an independent inquiry.
The BBC continued:
Full article: http://dissidentvoice.org/2016/03/kunduz-killers-go-free/
http://medialens.org/index.php/alerts/alert-archive/2016/815-kunduz-killers-go-free.html