The New York Times revealed in December that the deaths of thousands of civilians killed in US drone strikes in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria from 2014鈥21, were covered up by the Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Joe Biden administrations.
The , are based on internal Pentagon documents, as well as on-the-ground reporting from dozens of air-strike sites and interviews with scores of survivors.
Kahn writes: 鈥淭丑别 trove of documents 鈥 the military鈥檚 own confidential assessments of more than 1,300 reports of civilian casualties, obtained by The New York Times 鈥 lays bare how the air war has been marked by deeply flawed intelligence, rushed and often imprecise targeting, and the deaths of thousands of civilians many of them children, a sharp contrast to the American government鈥檚 image of war waged by all-seeing drones and precision bombs 鈥
鈥淭丑别 air campaign represents a fundamental transformation of warfare that took shape in the final years of the Obama administration, amid the deepening unpopularity of the forever wars that had claimed more than 6,000 American service members.
鈥淭丑别 United States traded many boots on the ground for an arsenal of aircraft directed by controllers sitting at computers, often thousands of miles away.
鈥淧resident Obama called it 鈥榯he most precise air campaign in history鈥.
鈥淭his was the promise: American 鈥榚xtraordinary technology鈥 would allow the military to kill the right people while taking the greatest possible care not to harm the wrong people.鈥
Afghanistan
鈥淭丑别 August [2021] drone strike in Kabul that killed an Afghan aid worker and nine of his relatives grabbed the world鈥檚 attention,鈥 Kahn writes.
鈥淏ut most American air strikes took place far from the cities, in remote areas where cameras were not filming, mobile lines were often cut and the internet was non-existent.鈥
Seventy percent of Afghans live in rural areas.
鈥淎merica鈥檚 longest war was, in many ways, its least transparent,鈥 writes Kahn.
鈥淔or years, these rural battlefields were largely off-limits to American reporters. But after the Taliban returned to power in August, Afghanistan hinterlands opened up.
鈥淭丑别 Times arrived in Barang [in the Band-e-Timor Area of Afghanistan] a little over a month later, visiting 15 households in this hamlet of mud homes and farmland, and also interviewing tribal elders and others across Band-e-Timor. Most said they had never spoken to a journalist before.
鈥淭丑别 accounts they gave 鈥 consistently and reliably 鈥 help explain how America lost the country, how its war of airstrikes and support of corrupt security forces [of the puppet government] paved the way for the Taliban鈥檚 return.
鈥淥n average, each household lost five civilian family members. An overwhelming majority of these deaths were caused by airstrikes, most during [security forces] raids. Many people admitted they had relatives who were Taliban fighters, but civilians accounted for most of those lost:
鈥淎 father killed in an airstrike while running for the forest. A nephew killed while he slept with his flock of sheep. An uncle shot by American soldiers while he went to a bazar to buy okra for dinner.
鈥淎t the sound of helicopters, Hajji Muhammad Ismail Agha鈥檚 sons had bounded for the desert. The 鈥榝oreign helicopters鈥 fired on them. One son, Nour Muhammad, was killed; the other, Hajji Muhammad, survived. 鈥楬ow could the planes tell the difference between a civilian and a Taliban?鈥 The father asked. 鈥楬e was killed just a little far from here. I watched it happen.鈥
鈥淣one of these incidents were mentioned in Pentagon news releases. Few were tallied in United Nations counts. So isolated from the Afghan government were residents that when asked for their loved one鈥檚 death certificates, they asked where they might obtain them. Instead, to verify deaths, The Times visited tombstones in graveyards littered across the desert.鈥
This account reaffirms what other reporters who visited rural Afghanistan wrote in a November article in the New Yorker, 鈥淭丑别 Other Afghan Women鈥. The Taliban were supported because they were fighting the Americans and their bombing, as well as the 鈥渟ecurity forces鈥.
Impunity
This explains how the Taliban built up steady support in the rural areas, eventually surrounding cities. When they then attacked cities, the corrupt government forces 鈥 without the US bombing 鈥 melted away.
The series predominantly covers the more than 50,000 air strikes conducted by the US, mostly in its campaign against ISIS in Syria and Iraq, from 2015鈥17.
鈥淩epeatedly, the [military鈥檚] documents point to the psychological phenomenon of 鈥榗onfirmation bias鈥 鈥 the tendency to search for and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing belief,鈥 writes Kahn.
鈥淧eople streaming toward a fresh bombing site were assumed to be ISIS fighters, not civilian rescuers. Men on motorcycles moving 鈥榠n formation鈥 displaying the 鈥榮ignature鈥 of an imminent attack, were just men on motorcycles.
鈥淥ften, the danger to civilians is lost in the cultural gulf separating American soldiers and the local populous. 鈥楴o civilian presence鈥 was detected when in fact families were sleeping through the days of Ramadan fast, sheltering inside against the midsummer swelter or gathering in a single house for protection when the fighting intensified.
鈥淚n many cases, civilians were visible in surveillance footage, but their presence was either not observed by analysts or was not noted in the communications before a strike.
鈥淚n chat logs accompanying some assessments, soldiers can sound as if they are playing video games, in one case expressing glee over getting to fire in an area ostensibly 鈥榩oppin鈥 with ISIS fighters 鈥 without spotting the children in their midst.鈥
There are many other examples. Two of note were the battles to retake Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq, the former bombed into a 鈥渘ecropolis鈥 and the latter reduced to a pile of rubble, with many civilian deaths.
The second article in the series, 鈥淭丑别 Human Toll of America鈥檚 Air Wars鈥, details typical case studies.
Azmat Kahn told on December 22: 鈥淲hat I often found in examining the records, looking at these strikes on the ground, interviewing people, and really going in-depth, was that there were patterns of failure that they really couldn鈥檛 investigate or understand without being on the ground, that they had limited view from where they were looking鈥
鈥淎nd after a while, once you see that over and over and over, you do have to ask whether this is really a system of accountability or whether it is designed to function as a system of impunity鈥︹
War on terror continues
Reading through the series, there is one inescapable conclusion: the US killing of thousands of civilians, including children, was deliberately built into the lackadaisically poor intelligence, slap-dash targeting, lack of accountability, and cover-up.
Sanctions 鈥 used against Cuba, Iran, Venezuela and other countries that reject US domination 鈥 are also acts of war, even if US military might and financial control prevents retaliation.
These sanctions target the populations, who bear the brunt of suffering caused by them.
The imperialists hope that by severely hurting these populations, they will turn against their governments, and install pro-US regimes. This is wishful thinking.
The US is now targeting the people of Afghanistan for defeating it and its puppet government in the war.
Under US occupation, Afghanistan鈥檚 economy became dependent on funding from the US 鈥 and other rich countries to a lesser extent 鈥 to stay afloat. With the 鈥渓oss鈥 of the country, the US has frozen all that aid.
The result is a severe economic crisis, including mass starvation. Children are not spared. Malnourished mothers鈥 milk runs dry. International human rights agencies say that about 5 million children five-years-old and under face starvation in the coming weeks.
Kahn鈥檚 reports of the civilian toll of Afghans by the US air war was in the same mold as sanctions; an attempt to bomb the people into submission that backfired.
Back in August, after the last US troops were airlifted from Kabul, : 鈥淲e will maintain the fight against terrorism in Afghanistan and other countries. We just don鈥檛 need to fight a ground war to do it. We have what鈥檚 called over-the-horizon capabilities, which means we can strike terrorists and targets without American boots on the ground 鈥 or very few, if needed.鈥
According to a January 1 NYT report, the US military may be about to launch 鈥渙ver the horizon鈥 strikes against an ISIS cell that they believe was involved in the suicide bombing attack outside Kabul airport in August, which killed 13 US soldiers. According to the report, 鈥淭丑别 cell members could be among the first insurgents struck by armed MQ-9 Reaper drones flying missions over Afghanistan from a base in the Persian Gulf,鈥
Is the US air war against Afghanistan about to be restarted?