Weeks of silence over Iran school strike highly unusual, former US officials say
Weeks of silence over Iran school strike highly unusual, former US officials say Five former US officials, including a former top military lawyer, have criticised the Pentagon for not acknowledging potential American involvement in a deadly strike on an Iranian school earlier this year.
In the two months since then the Pentagon has said only that the incident is under investigation.
The current US position "strikingly departs from the standard response," said Lt Col Rachel E VanLandingham, a retired Judge Advocate General in the US Air Force and former senior legal adviser at US Central Command during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
We of course never target civilian targets". The US Department of Defense has declined to answer multiple questions about the strike.
Last month, the BBC independently confirmed video showing a US Tomahawk missile striking the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base next to the school. US media reports quoted unnamed military officials saying a preliminary inquiry had determined a US missile struck the school.
The reports said this was due to outdated target coordinates supplied by a US intelligence agency.
The Pentagon has not commented on the reports.
"From a process standpoint… that just points even more to the fact that they know already that the US caused this or else they wouldn't doing this investigation and they just don't want to acknowledge it or speak to it. " "To not even be able to have any comment on it whatsoever is just unacceptable," said Bryant, who left the Pentagon last year when staffing at the civilian harm unit was significantly reduced under Hegseth.
"Normally the Pentagon would take immediate [or] relatively fast responsibility and then probably require a longer period of time to provide all the details, so to me it's problematic," the former official added. Democrats demand answers Congressional Democrats have written several times to Hegseth asking a series of questions about the Minab strike, starting with whether the US carried it out. The BBC has seen two of the Pentagon's response letters, sent on behalf of Hegseth, which give no answers to any of the questions.
The BBC approached 15 Republican members of Congress asking about the administration's handling of the strike, but all declined to comment. They included top Republicans on committees covering national security in the Senate and House of Representatives.
It was a terrible, terrible mistake. "
Adam Smith, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told the BBC the officials said they could not comment due to their ongoing investigation, a response he called "pathetic and completely inadequate". He said there had been no admission of US responsibility in the briefings. The BBC has reviewed three historical cases involving civilian fatalities to form a comparison with the Trump administration's response to the Minab strike.
In fact it had killed a family of 10 including seven children, which became clear within days from media reporting. Less than three weeks after the bombing the Pentagon admitted its responsibility and apologised The bombing of a hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, in October 2015: The attack by a US AC-130 helicopter gunship killed at least 42 people including 24 patients and 14 medics from the medical charity MSF.
The same day the White House admitted the mistake and apologised An attack on the al-Amiriyah shelter in Baghdad, Iraq, in February 1991: The US Air Force bombing killed 408 civilians.
The administration said the bunker was a military command centre and therefore a legitimate target.
The BBC, among other reporters who visited the site shortly after the bombing, found no evidence for this. The US administration acknowledged from the start there were civilian deaths and that it was a US strike Each of the historical cases, under both Democratic and Republican administrations, involved senior US military officials making significantly more detailed public comments than has been the case so far in the Minab strike.
He attributed the relative silence in the Minab case to what he saw as a rejection by the administration of "any negative news about the war they branded as unpatriotic". Additional reporting by Catherine Alaimo
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