Friday, November 8, 2013
Army
Friday, November 8, 2013 by DXTR corporation
Army opens criminal investigation into killings of Afghan civilians
By Barbara Starr, CNN Pentagon Correspondent
November 7, 2013 -- Updated 1857 GMT (0257 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The investigation is based on new information provided by the ICRC, ISAF spokeswoman says
- The investigation was opened July 17, she says
- There was no announcement of the investigation at the time, sources tell CNN
The investigation was
sparked by evidence gathered in Afghanistan and provided to U.S.
officials and the NATO alliance by the International Committee of the
Red Cross, said Col. Jane Crichton, a spokeswoman for the NATO-led
International Security Assistance Force.
The Red Cross'
information was provided to criminal investigators on July 17 and an
investigation was opened the same day, she said.
In a written statement, the Red Cross said it heard about the allegations and submitted its concerns to "relevant authorities."
"The ICRC's objectives
are purely humanitarian," the statement said. "In accordance with its
mandate, the ICRC works to ensure that the safety, physical integrity,
dignity and rights of individuals are protected and respected. Our
protection policy and activities also aim to prevent disappearances and
to ascertain the fate of people whose families are without news of
them."
It said it would not
comment publicly about the allegations "since these are only discussed
bilaterally and confidentially with the relevant authorities."
A spokesman for the
investigation unit, known as CID, confirmed its involvement. "CID was
notified of the allegations on July 17, 2013, by the Office of the Legal
Adviser, HQ, ISAF, Kabul, and then CID opened its investigation that
same day," Christopher Grey told CNN.
There was no announcement
of the investigation at the time, sources told CNN, and Crichton said
she did not know when the Afghan government -- which has complained
bitterly about the allegations of U.S. misconduct -- may have been
alerted.
Army Green Berets in
Afghanistan's Wardak province are alleged to have abused Afghan
villagers, and may have been involved with Afghan forces in killing
them, a U.S. official told CNN.
In response to CNN
queries, U.S. military officials had previously said the matter had been
investigated and none of the allegations from local civilians had been
substantiated.
"U.S. forces conducted
several investigations in response to specific allegations from November
2012 to February 2013," Crichton told CNN on Thursday. "At the time,
inquiries found no reliable evidence to substantiate misconduct.
However, after those investigations, the ICRC provided new information
that was not included in the previous investigations. Therefore, the
most prudent course in consideration of that new information was to turn
the matter over to professional military investigators."
A senior military
official tells CNN that the move will take the investigation out of the
hands of those serving in Afghanistan and put it in the independent
investigatory jurisdiction of CID.
Much of the new detail is being reported in an article in Rolling Stone.
A U.S. official told CNN
the allegations involve an Army Operational Detachment Alpha team, or
so-called A-team. These are units that have openly operated in
Afghanistan for years -- conducting raids and working with local Afghan
forces.
Citing the new, ongoing
investigation, officials would not detail the new information. Rolling
Stone published photographs, interviews and details of alleged U.S.
misconduct, including allegations that U.S. troops were involved with
Afghan forces in the killing of civilians in the areas.
The Army's Special
Operations Command said it was aware of the allegations, but said any
further comment could jeopardize the investigation.
Source:CNN News International
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