20 January 2022

A Feature, Not a Bug

We now know that a secret US special operations unit known as Task Force 9 called in an air strike on a Syrian dam which has been listed as a protected site that was not to be bombed.

It appears that Task Force 9 called in an emergency airstrike which avoided the chain of command, something which the unit has done repeatedly, and took power out for a large area and risked a dam failure which would have killed thousands of civilians and displaced hundreds of thousands.

Once and I would call it an error, but Task Force 9 does this routinely, so I have to conclude that this is a deliberate policy of the military command, and that the secretive unit is deliberately used as a cutout to obscure war crimes.

The fact the the senior command uses this to lie about such actions reinforces my suspicions:

Near the height of the war against the Islamic State in Syria, a sudden riot of explosions rocked the country’s largest dam, a towering, 18-story structure on the Euphrates River that held back a 25-mile-long reservoir above a valley where hundreds of thousands of people lived.

The Tabqa Dam was a strategic linchpin and the Islamic State controlled it. The explosions on March 26, 2017, knocked dam workers to the ground and everything went dark. Witnesses say one bomb punched down five floors. A fire spread, and crucial equipment failed. The mighty flow of the Euphrates River suddenly had no way through, the reservoir began to rise, and local authorities used loudspeakers to warn people downstream to flee.

The Islamic State, the Syrian government and Russia blamed the United States, but the dam was on the U.S. military’s “no-strike list” of protected civilian sites and the commander of the U.S. offensive at the time, then-Lt. Gen. Stephen J. Townsend, said allegations of U.S. involvement were based on “crazy reporting.”

“The Tabqa Dam is not a coalition target,” he declared emphatically two days after the blasts.

Townsend, of course, was lying through his teeth, but he had the whole, "Secretive special operations unit," get out of jail free card, so, by the standards of the military, no harm, no foul.

In fact, members of a top secret U.S. Special Operations unit called Task Force 9 had struck the dam using some of the largest conventional bombs in the U.S. arsenal, including at least one BLU-109 bunker-buster bomb designed to destroy thick concrete structures, according to two former senior officials. And they had done it despite a military report warning not to bomb the dam, because the damage could cause a flood that might kill tens of thousands of civilians.

Given the dam’s protected status, the decision to strike it would normally have been made high up the chain of command. But the former officials said the task force used a procedural shortcut reserved for emergencies, allowing it to launch the attack without clearance.

Later, three workers who had rushed to the dam to prevent a disaster were killed in a different coalition airstrike, according to dam workers.

Yeah, they bombed the dam, and then they bombed the people trying to keep the dam from flooding a highly populated valley.  Seems deliberate to me.

The two former officials, who spoke on the condition that they not be named because they were not authorized to discuss the strikes, said some officers overseeing the air war viewed the task force’s actions as reckless.
Gee, "Reckless," you think?

The two former officials, who spoke on the condition that they not be named because they were not authorized to discuss the strikes, said some officers overseeing the air war viewed the task force’s actions as reckless.

This is not recklessness.  This is deliberate policy.  It's all about PR and plausible deniability for war crimes.

It all comes down to this:

The United States went into the war against the Islamic State in 2014 with targeting rules intended to protect civilians and spare critical infrastructure. Striking a dam, or other key civilian sites on the coalition’s “no-strike list,” required elaborate vetting and the approval of senior leaders.

So they adopt nice sounding rules, and then, structure the chain of command is set up such that you can ignore these rules.  That is what TF9 is all about:  Providing a way to ignore the rules of war when it is inconvenient.

………

The task force’s solution to this problem too often was to set aside the rules intended to protect civilians, current and former military personnel said.

Soon, the task force was justifying the vast majority of its airstrikes using emergency self-defense procedures intended to save troops in life-threatening situations, even when no troops were in danger. That allowed it to quickly hit targets — including no-strike sites — that would have otherwise been off limits.

Rushed strikes on sites like schools, mosques and markets killed crowds of women and children, according to former service members, military documents obtained by The Times and reporting at sites of coalition airstrikes in Syria.

………

The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces dismissed reports of serious damage as propaganda. A spokeswoman said the coalition had struck the dam with only “light weapons, so as not to cause damage.”

A short time later, General Townsend denied the dam was a target and said, “When strikes occur on military targets, at or near the dam, we use noncratering munitions to avoid unnecessary damage to the facility.”

By non-cratering munitions, they mean 2000 lb armor piercing bombs. Again, a flat out lie. 

But the US military investigated, didn't it?  Well ……… no.

No disciplinary action was taken against the task force, the officials said. The secret unit continued to strike targets using the same types of self-defense justifications it had used on the dam.
Like I said, the recklessness of TF9 is a feature, not a bug.  

If this were not the case, someone would have experienced negative consequences.  (I kid)

1 comments :

The Red Alias said...

Norman Solomon would term this series of bombings a,

"multiple wargasm."

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