Pentagon Blows Deadline To Explain US Role in Nigerian Airstrike That Killed 160 Civilians

One human rights campaigner said the military's failure to provide a timely response to Democratic lawmakers' questions "does not bode well for the U.S. government's expressed commitment to transparency and accountability."

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The Pentagon’s stated commitment to transparency on civilian casualties was questioned Tuesday in an Intercept report noting that the Department of Defense has failed to respond to a group of House Democrats who set a three-month deadline to explain the US military’s role in a 2017 Nigerian airstrike that killed more than 160 noncombatants.

On September 8, Reps. Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.), Jason Crow (D-Colo.), Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.), and Andy Kim (D-N.J.) – the Protection of Civilians in Combat Caucus – sent a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin citing reporting that the US military provided Nigerian forces with intelligence support ahead of a January 17, 2017 airstrike on a refugee camp in Rann, Borno state, in the country’s northeastern corner.

Nigeria bombed the camp believing it was a base for Boko Haram fighters. More than 160 civilians died in the attack, including six Red Cross aid workers. A formerly classified US military document obtained by The Intercept referred to the strike as a “U.S.-Nigerian” operation. Days after the attack, US Africa Command (AFRICOM) secretly ordered a probe of the airstrike.

The lawmakers asked what was the nature of US involvement in the strike, whether the military provided intelligence or other support to its Nigerian partner, and other questions, asking Pentagon officials to reply “no later than 90 days” after they received the letter. That deadline was nearly two weeks ago.

“The Pentagon’s failure to provide information and documents… to determine possible US involvement in an airstrike that took many civilian lives in northeast Nigeria does not bode well for the US government’s expressed commitment to transparency and accountability,” Human Rights Watch Nigeria researcher Anietie Ewang told The Intercept.

“It sends a worrisome message that, at minimum, the Defense Department is unwilling to engage on an issue affecting countless lives and may even reflect an attempt to evade responsibility,” she added.

The Intercept‘s Nick Turse writes:

In August, the Pentagon unveiled a Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response Action Plan, which provides a blueprint for improving how the US military addresses civilian harm. The plan calls for a new emphasis on the “proactive release of information” and “transparency regarding [Defense Department] policies and processes for mitigating and responding to civilian harm” – but not until next year.

The formerly secret AFRICOM document obtained by The Intercept, along with reporting by Nigerian journalists and interviews with experts, suggests that the US may have launched this rare internal investigation because it secretly provided intelligence or other support to the Nigerian armed forces who carried out the deadly strike.

Asked to comment on the missed deadline, Pentagon spokesperson Col. Phillip Ventura told The Intercept that “I don’t think we’re going to get a lot of joy on this one.”

“The Department of Defense is aware of the matter and addressing the concerns of Congress directly with them,” Ventura told the outlet after the article’s publication.

“As a department, we have long recognized the strategic and moral importance of mitigating harm to civilians – whether resulting from a US military operation or an operation conducted by our allies and partners,” he added, “and we will continue to improve by implementing the steps outlined in the Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response Action Plan (CHMR-AP), which Secretary Austin approved in August of this year.”

Earlier this week, Jacobs and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) sent a letter to Austin expressing alarm over the “vast difference” in the number of civilians the Pentagon claims responsibility for killing during US attacks and casualty figures compiled by independent investigators.

Brett Wilkins is is staff writer for Common Dreams. Based in San Francisco, his work covers issues of social justice, human rights and war and peace. This originally appeared at CommonDreams and is reprinted with the author’s permission.

4 thoughts on “Pentagon Blows Deadline To Explain US Role in Nigerian Airstrike That Killed 160 Civilians”

  1. You will not get this in the Mockingbird media.

    December 23, 2021 Unveiled Documents Expose Countless Civilian Deaths and War Crimes Committed by US

    Since the early 2000’s, drone use in warfare became more prominent in US military planning and engagement. Successive US presidents, particularly Barack Obama, promised that the use of all-seeing drones and precision bombs would reduce civilian casualties. However, documents unveiled by the New York Times show flawed intelligence, faulty targeting, years of civilian deaths, and perhaps most disturbingly, scant accountability.

    http://infobrics.org/post/34826/

    May 16, 2014 90% of All Deaths In War Are Civilians

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/90-of-all-deaths-in-war-are-civilians/5382520

    1. The US is the leader of war crimes and drone strikes and calls Putin and Xi Jinping warmongers. The Western Media calls what the US and its allies do to civilians “collateral damage” and what Russia does “war crimes”.
      Bush called Iran, Iraq and North Korea the “Axis of Evil”. The US and its allies can call themselves “War Crimes Are Us”.

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