The US commander in Afghanistan said Thursday that
his forces would never intentionally target a hospital
and that all requests from Afghan troops for air
support are thoroughly vetted.
General John Campbell was testifying to US
lawmakers five days after a US air strike on a Doctors
Without Borders hospital in the disputed Afghan city
of Kunduz that killed at least 22 staff and patients.
President Barack Obama has apologized to the
medical aid agency but three investigations — by the
US military, by NATO and by Afghan officials — are
underway and the general would not be drawn on
their progress.
But, asked about unconfirmed allegations that Afghan
troops had called in the US strike because wounded
Taliban fighters were being treated in the hospital,
Campbell said that would not be a justification.
“A hospital is a protected facility. We would not target
a hospital,” he told the US House of Representatives
Armed Services Committee in Washington.
“When the Afghans call for fire, that’s not an
automatic response. Every day the Afghans ask me for
close air support and we just don’t go fire some
place,” he said.
“We go through a rigorous procedure to put aerial
fires on the ground — A US process, under the US
authorities.
“So we’ve got to figure out what happened in that
case but I don’t want people to think that just because
the Afghans call fire that there’s automatic fire
anywhere they want it, that’s just not the case.”
Asked whether the presence of Taliban fighters in a
hospital could justify a strike, Campbell said simply:
“No.”
On Thursday, Doctors Without Borders said nine
patients and 24 staff are still missing after the bombing
of the hospital, bringing the potential total toll to more
than 50 people.
The aid agency has demanded an independent enquiry


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