U.S.
military punishes 16 over 2015 Afghan hospital bombing
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[April 29, 2016]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. military
will announce on Friday that has it taken disciplinary action against 16
service members over a deadly Oct. 3 air strike in Afghanistan that
destroyed a hospital run by the international medical charity Medecins
Sans Frontieres, U.S. officials told Reuters.
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The disclosure of the nonjudicial punishments will come during the
release of the findings of a U.S. military investigation into the
incident, which will broadly conclude that the strike was a tragic
mistake, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
That finding is consistent with the results of a preliminary
investigation released by the U.S. military in November, when
commanders stressed that American forces did not intentionally
target the hospital.
Instead, General John Campbell, who was then head of U.S. and NATO
forces in Afghanistan, described a series of blunders that allowed
the American forces to target the hospital, even though it was on a
no-strike list.
MSF, known as Doctors Without Borders in English, has in the past
publicly cast doubt on the idea that the strike could have been a
mistake.
Forty-two people were killed in the incident and 37 were wounded as
American forces helped Afghans repel Taliban insurgents from the
city of Kunduz last year.
One general was among those singled out for disciplinary action, the
officials said. The nonjudicial punishments include letters of
reprimand, which could have a career-ending effect on the service
members involved.
"These people are not promotable," said one U.S. official.
According to the initial U.S. investigation, U.S. forces had meant
to target a different building in the city and were led off-track by
a technical error in their aircraft's mapping system that initially
directed them to an empty field.
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The U.S. forces then looked for a target that was visually similar
to the one they had originally sought, the former National
Directorate of Security headquarters in Kunduz, which they believed
was occupied by insurgents.
The Taliban's brief capture of the Kunduz provincial capital was
arguably the biggest victory for the militants in the 15-year war
since they were toppled by U.S.-led forces in late 2001.
Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since the departure of most
foreign combat troops in 2014.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Bernard Orr
and James Dalgleish)
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