US Kills 12
Civilians and Destroys a Community.
Anatomy of an
Air Attack Gone Wrong
December 29, 2012 "FP" -- SANAA, Yemen — The villagers who rushed to the road, cutting through rocky fields in central Yemen, found the dead strewn around a burning sport utility vehicle. The bodies were dusted with white powder -- flour and sugar, the witnesses said -- that the victims were bringing home from market when the aircraft attacked. A torched woman clutched her daughter in a lifeless embrace. Four severed heads littered the pavement. "The bodies were charred like coal. I could not recognize the faces," said Ahmed al-Sabooli, 22, a farmer whose parents and 10-year-old sister were among the dead. "Then I recognized my mother because she was still holding my sister in her lap. That is when I cried."
December 29, 2012 "FP" -- SANAA, Yemen — The villagers who rushed to the road, cutting through rocky fields in central Yemen, found the dead strewn around a burning sport utility vehicle. The bodies were dusted with white powder -- flour and sugar, the witnesses said -- that the victims were bringing home from market when the aircraft attacked. A torched woman clutched her daughter in a lifeless embrace. Four severed heads littered the pavement. "The bodies were charred like coal. I could not recognize the faces," said Ahmed al-Sabooli, 22, a farmer whose parents and 10-year-old sister were among the dead. "Then I recognized my mother because she was still holding my sister in her lap. That is when I cried."
Quoting
unnamed Yemeni officials, local and
international media initially described the
victims of the Sept. 2 airstrike in al-Bayda
governorate as al Qaeda militants. After relatives
of the victims threatened to bring the charred
bodies to the president, Yemen's official news
agency issued a brief statement admitting the awful
truth: The strike was an "accident"
that killed 12 civilians. Three were children.
Nearly four
months later, that terse admission remains the only
official word on the botched attack. A Washington
Post article, published on Dec. 24, reports
that "U.S. officials in Washington, who spoke on
the condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the matter, said it was a Defense
Department aircraft, either a drone or a fixed-wing
airplane, that fired" on the vehicle. But the people
of al-Bayda still have received no official word as
to who was responsible for the deaths -- the United
States, which in the past year has accelerated its
covert targeted-killing program against Yemeni-based
al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula; or the Yemeni
government, whose new president, Abd al-Rab Mansur
al-Hadi, was installed with Washington's help.
The
information blackout on terrorism-related killings
is not limited to al-Bayda. The United States has
revealed only the barest details of its
400 estimated strikes on alleged militant
targets in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia over the
past decade. The attacks, carried out by the CIA and
the Pentagon with unmanned aerial vehicles (drones),
manned warplanes, and cruise missiles, have
reportedly killed at least 2,800 people, according
to sources such as the Bureau of Investigative
Journalism (TBIJ) in London. Yet in most cases,
Washington refuses to even confirm or deny any role
in the strikes, much less acknowledge whether any
civilians were killed. With the United States
leading the way on obfuscation, allies such as Yemen
have no qualms about following suit, leaving no one
accountable when attacks kill the wrong people.
U.S. President
Barack Obama's administration is
reportedly drafting new rules on targeted
killings, the majority of which have been conducted
on his watch. But though these new rules might
include more oversight, it's likely that the program
will remain shrouded in secrecy. For the people of
al-Bayda, just a pinprick on the map of innocents
lost to the "war on terror," policy changes without
more transparency mean nothing.
During a trip
to Yemen for Human Rights Watch in October, I spoke
with four people, including Sabooli, who witnessed
the al-Bayda attack. The witnesses drove 10 hours
round-trip to see me in Sanaa, the Yemeni capital,
after Human Rights Watch decided it was too
dangerous for me to travel to al-Bayda, an area
outside the government's control with a known al
Qaeda presence and a reputation for kidnappings.
Without
visiting the scene of the attack, we were unable to
determine what kind of aircraft carried out the
strike and whether it dropped a bomb or fired
missiles. But the witnesses provided some important
clues, including the presence of what they said were
drones, during the attack. Only the United States is
known to operate drones in Yemen, home to what
Washington calls al Qaeda's most active affiliate.
The attack
took place near Radda, a hilltop city roughly 100
miles southeast of Sanaa. For more than a year,
drones had been circling day and night over Radda
and surrounding areas, and one or two had been
flying overhead on the morning of Sept. 2, the
witnesses said. Shortly before 4 p.m., three of the
witnesses said, two warplanes also swooped into the
area. (The Washington Post article notes that
some witnesses saw three planes.)
"I heard a
very loud noise, like thunder," said Sami al-Ezzi, a
farmer who was working in his fields in Sabool, a
farming village six miles from Radda. "I looked up
and saw two warplanes. One was firing missiles."
Arriving at
the scene, about 1.5 miles from Sabool, local
residents found a horrific sight: The battered
Toyota Land Cruiser that had served as the daily
shuttle between Sabool and Radda lay on its side in
flames. All the dead and injured were Sabool
residents returning from Radda.
"About four
people were without heads. Many lost their hands and
legs," said Nawaf Massoud Awadh, a sheikh from
Sabool who saw the attack. "These were our relatives
and friends."
Sabooli's
mother was in the vehicle because her husband had
taken her to Radda to see a doctor. Other passengers
were farmers who had gone to Radda to sell their
crop of khat, a legal and widely used stimulant in
Yemen. Only two passengers, both men, survived. Both
lost their ability to walk, the witnesses said.
The witnesses
who met me in Sanaa brought along videos showing the
Land Cruiser overturned and in flames, near two
craters created by the strike -- one immediately
behind the vehicle and the other nearby. Bodies lay
on the ground in contorted heaps.
"Push! Push!"
"Open the door!" local residents are heard crying.
Seeking to extinguish the flames, they urged, "Bring
sand!"
One video
shows a man pulling a Kalashnikov assault rifle from
the wreckage and throwing it aside. (This may seem
like a smoking gun, but it's common for men to be
armed with assault rifles in tribal areas of Yemen
such as al-Bayda that are outside government
control.)
The Sept. 2
strike was the seventh in al-Bayda that local or
international media had
attributed to U.S. or Yemeni forces since
January 2012. That month, a band of militants from
al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula took control of
Radda for 10 days --
some accounts say with help from loyalists of
the former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who were
trying to spoil Yemen's political transition. After
being forced out by local tribal leaders, many
militants reportedly disappeared into the
surrounding villages.
The attack's
reported target was Abdulraouf al-Dahab, an
alleged al Qaeda militant whose brother led the
January takeover of Radda. Dahab is from Manasseh, a
village about 14 kilometers from Radda. The attack
took place as the shuttle approached an intersection
where one road led to Sabool and the other to
Manasseh. But witnesses, as well as unnamed
government officials quoted by
media, said Dahab was not inside the Land
Cruiser. Nor was the SUV even traveling to Manasseh;
it was completing its daily round trip between
Sabool and Radda. A
Yemeni newspaper reported that Dahab was killed
in a U.S. drone strike in Radda six days later, but
some residents of the Radda area say he is still
alive.
Media reports,
quoting unnamed Yemeni officials, attributed the
Sept. 2 attack to U.S. drones; others to manned
warplanes. Two witnesses told me they saw warplanes
fire munitions that they thought were bombs and
missiles. Two witnesses also told me they saw a
black tail fin near the burning SUV. (A black tail
fin is typical of a Hellfire, a U.S. missile that
can be fired by either drones or jet fighters.) The
shrapnel that witnesses brought us from the site,
however, is more consistent with the type of damage
caused by a bomb -- which would point to an attack
by manned jets. But even these scraps of information
are inconclusive: Yemen's air force has fighter
jets, while the United States
reportedly flies F-15E Strike Eagles (as well as
armed and surveillance drones) over Yemen from a
military base in Djibouti.
On one of the
videos I reviewed, two men are heard saying that a
warplane with "two exhausts in the back" --
presumably twin engines -- fired munitions at the
vehicle while other aircraft were circling. The
men's agitated exchanges underscore the confusion in
Yemen over who is conducting such attacks.
"It's our
government; it's our government," one man says.
"It's America;
it's America," the other responds.
Media reports
quoting Yemeni officials as saying Yemeni warplanes
carried out the attack also provide no clear
answers. A
classified U.S. cable from January 2010,
released by WikiLeaks, revealed that Yemen has
previously covered up for U.S. targeted killings
gone awry. As the cable relates, Saleh, president at
the time, was talking to Gen. David Petraeus, who
was then the head of U.S. Central Command. The two
officials were discussing a
botched airstrike in late 2009 that killed 41
civilians in southern Abyan governorate. "We'll
continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours," said
Saleh.
* * *
Yemen has a
long, painful history in the U.S. war on terror that
includes being the site of the first known U.S.
drone strike against a terrorist target. The
attack, 10 years ago, killed reputed al Qaeda leader
Qaed Salim Sinan al-Harethi, along with five other
alleged militants. The United States carried out its
next targeted killing in Yemen in 2009 and to date
has carried out at
least 52 drone strikes and other air attacks
there, killing hundreds, according to TBIJ. But lack
of access to the attack areas, nearly all of which
are too dangerous for international media and
investigators to visit, makes it impossible to
verify the figures. The same difficulty exists for
verifying casualties from U.S. targeted killings in
Pakistan and Somalia.
The office of
Obama's counterterrorism advisor, John Brennan,
declined to comment for this article, saying it does
not speak about specific operations. The Yemeni
government referred Human Rights Watch to a recent
speech in which President Hadi
lauded U.S. drone strikes but did not respond to
specific questions about the al-Bayda attack.
U.S.
officials, including Brennan, argue that the United
States has authority under both domestic and
international law to conduct targeted killings
because the country is
at war with al Qaeda and its affiliates.
International law permits targeted killings of
enemy fighters in battle zones and of people posing
an imminent risk to life in law enforcement
situations. However, U.S. officials have failed to
explain how they make this determination in areas
that are far from a traditional battlefield.
Washington
also says that the vast majority of those killed are
militants and that civilian casualties are "exceedingly
rare." But, citing national security, it refuses
to disclose how many militant suspects and civilians
it has killed, or the legal basis for placing
suspected militants on a kill list. Nor will it
detail what steps it takes to minimize civilian
casualties or investigate attacks in which civilians
are killed.
Governments
have an obligation under international law to
investigate and provide redress for unlawful
attacks. In Afghanistan, NATO members -- including
the United States -- have recognized the value of
compensating civilians for loss of life or other
damage, even when the attacks are lawful.
There is no
such formal system in Yemen, leaving the people of
Sabool with little more than anger. And with neither
Yemeni nor U.S. authorities taking responsibility
for the attack, the villagers blame both countries.
* * *
The deaths
from the September attack have devastated Sabool, a
cluster of 120 brick-and-mud homes that residents
say has no electricity, no paved roads, no schools,
no hospitals, and no jobs apart from khat farming.
"Seven of the
victims were breadwinners. Now we have 50 people in
our village with no one to care for them," said
Awadh, the local sheikh. "Who will raise them? Who
will educate them? Who will take care of their
needs?"
Sabooli, the
farmer whose parents and only sister were killed,
said six of his 10 remaining siblings are still too
young to fend for themselves. "When I enter our
house, my younger brothers still ask, 'Where are my
mother, my father, and my sister?'" he said.
Sabool's
residents accuse authorities of refusing to take
responsibility for the deaths from the start. When
distraught villagers tried to bring the dead to the
city morgue in Radda, Republican Guard troops
blocked their entry for two hours. Then the morgue
refused the bodies. The Sabool villagers spent the
night on the streets of Radda, fending off stray
dogs from the corpses spread out on the beds of
pickup trucks. The next day, Radda shopkeepers
joined the Sabool residents in blocking the main
street in Radda and threatening to bring the bodies
to President Hadi's doorstep in Sanaa.
Within hours,
Sheikh Sinan Garoon, the deputy governor of al-Bayda,
arrived to appease the Sabool residents the tribal
way, with 95 Kalashnikovs and 15 million Yemeni
rials -- about $70,000 -- in burial money. He also
promised further compensation, villagers said.
"We denounce
what happened," a video obtained by Human Rights
Watch showed Garoon telling the angry demonstrators.
"We will give you the guns.… If you demand blood
money, it will be given to you."
From Sanaa,
Hadi announced he would
form a special committee to investigate the
attack. But as of late December the panel was not in
place, and talks on compensation beyond the initial
$70,000 had stalled. "They were toying with us,"
said Awadh.
"We've had
four meetings with Sheikh Garoon, but he said that
the government is busy nowadays with more important
issues," Sabooli said. "It's as if we live in a
jungle and the attack was on wild animals -- no one
cares. Both the Yemeni government and the American
government killed my family and my villagers. Both
of them should be brought to justice."
Letta Tayler,
a former foreign correspondent, is a
terrorism/counterterrorism researcher at Human
Rights Watch. She recently returned from a
fact-finding trip to Yemen.
No comments:
Post a Comment