Unintended Consequences
"At 11:42 a.m. local time on May 3rd, U.S. Central Command forces conducted a unilateral strike in Northwest Syria targeting a senior Al Qaeda leader."CENTCOM
'Senior leader' of Al-Qaeda-linked group killed in US strike Middle East Monitor |
"Centcom takes all such allegations seriously and is investigating to determine whether or not the action may have unintentionally resulted in harm to civilians."Michael Lawhorn, spokesman, Central Command
Military
officials in the United States are now investigating a recent strike in
Syria that senior officials initially claimed killed a high-ranking
al-Qaeda fighter. The man who was killed by the Central Command strike
was a 56-yar-old farmer, struck by a killer drone on May 3. A man whom
family and other villagers identify as a father of ten who had been
tending his sheep when an American missile hit and killed him. Lotfi
Hasa Misso, a former bricklayer, lived in Qorqanya, Syria, described as
hard-working whose "whole life was spent poor".
Hours
after the strike the operation, overseen by US. Central Command,
claimed a Predator drone strike targeted a "senior al-Qaeda leader". The
brother of the dead man immediately contacted the famed White Helmets
who arrived on scene to find a dead man and animals that had also been
struck. Doubts were raised and communicated to the Pentagon. "We are no longer confident we killed a senior AQ official", said one official. Another clarified on the condition of anonymity that "though we believe the strike did not kill the original target, we believe the person to be al-Qaeda."
Mohammed Hassan Masto sits next to the grave of his brother Lutfi, who was killed on Wednesday, May 3, in a U.S. military strike, in the village of Qorqanya, a rural area in northern Idlib province, Syria, Sunday, May 7, 2023 |
Following
the attack American military authorities refused to identify who their
target was, much less how the targeting error occurred or even whether a
legitimate terrorist leader had escaped. Some of the U.S. military
authorities continue to insist that a 'senior leader' of an
Al-Qaeda-linked group was killed in the and that the dead farmer,
despite the family's and villagers' denials was indeed a member of
al-Qaeda.
When
such unintended consequences take place, as they have in the past, the
Pentagon tends to expand investigations in light of sufficient credible
evidence of harm to civilians emerging. In this case questions have been
raised whether the information that had been used in the authorization
of the attack can even be justified.
The
Biden administration last year insisted it would take steps to reduce
such risks to civilians, promising greater transparency when unintended
deaths occur. The U.S. military had covered up past instances of errant
airstrikes inadvertently killing innocent people. Media outlet
investigations revealed flawed intelligence and "confirmation bias" led
to disaster. A 2021 strike during the U.S. evacuation of Afghans under
emerging Taliban rule had officially been described as targeting a
suicide bomber, but had killed ten Afghan civilians, seven children
among them.
The Washington Post
broke the story after having given four terrorism experts details about
Lotfi Hassan Misto, and where he lived, asking them to survey online
discussions among jihadists following the strike for comments on the
Qorqanya attack. The result was no references indicating Misto to be
affiliated with a terrorist group; each of the consultants remarking it
would be unusual for a senior leader in al-Qaeda to operate near the
area, controlled by a rival group.
The
Post shared coordinates of where the drone strike occurred -- near
Misto's home and chicken farm. One U.S. defence official said the
location is close to a "known area of interest" to al-Qaeda
contradicting Misto's neighbours who say that no terrorists live or
operate near Misto's home. Obtaining images of Misto's face before and
after death, the Post provided them to Central Command where officials have not responded whether they believe he is the man killed in the strike.
Father-of-ten Lotfi Hassan Misto, 56, who has been identified by his family as the man killed in the strike on May 3. They say was a former bricklayer who lived in the quiet northern town of Qorqanya, according to the Washington Post |
Labels: Accidental Death, Al- Qaeda, Syria, U.S. Central Command
<< Home