by Chris Woods
When news flashed of an airstrike on two cars in the city of Radaa on Sunday afternoon, early claims that ‘al Qaeda militants’ had died soon gave way to a more grisly reality. At least 11 civilians had been killed, among them women and three children. It was the worst loss of civilian life in Yemen’s brutal internal war since May 2012. Somebody had messed up badly. But who was responsible – the United States or Yemen?
Local officials and eyewitnesses were clear enough. The Radaa attack was the work of a US drone, a common enough event since the start of the Arab Spring. From May 2011, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has recorded up to 116 US drone strikes in Yemen, part of a broader covert war aimed at crushing Islamist militants. But of those attacks, only 39 have been confirmed by officials as the work of the United States.
The attribution of dozens of further possible drone attacks – and others reportedly involving US ships and conventional aircraft – remain unclear. Both the CIA and Pentagon are fighting dirty wars in Yemen, each with a separate arsenal and kill list. Little wonder that hundreds of deaths – among them up to 57 civilians – remain in a limbo of accountability.
‘Decrepit’ air force
With anger rising at the death of civilians in Radaa, Yemen’s government stepped forward to take the blame. It claimed that its own air force had carried out the strike on moving vehicles after ‘faulty intelligence.’ Yet the Yemen Air Force is barely fit for purpose, its decrepit fleet of mainly Soviet-era aircraft incapable of precision bombing.
And why believe the Defence Ministry anyway? Just 48 hours earlier it had made similar claims. But when it emerged that alleged al Qaeda bomber Khaled Musalem Batis had died in a strike, anonymous officials soon admitted that a US drone had carried out that killing.
There is a long history of senior Yemeni officials lying to protect Barack Obama’s secret war on terror. When US cruise missiles decimated a tented village in December 2009, at least 41 civilians were butchered alongside a dozen alleged militants, as a parliamentary report later concluded.
As we now know thanks to Wikileaks, the US and Yemen sought to cover up the US role in the attack. ‘We’ll say the bombs are ours, not yours,’ President Saleh informed Centcom’s General Petraeus.
There is a long history of senior Yemeni officials lying to protect Barack Obama’s secret war on terror.
Civilians at risk in the areas being targeted are being given no information at all about how best to protect themselves’Haykal Bafana, Sanaa-based lawyer |
Pakistan’s own former strongman Pervez Musharraf had performed a similar deed for the CIA, with the army claiming early US drones strikes as its own work. A senior Musharraf aide told the Sunday Times, ‘We thought it would be less damaging if we said we did it rather than the US.’ Only when civilian deaths became too unbearable in 2006 did Islamabad end that charade (paywall).
Still, dictators may have been better able to rein in US covert attacks than their democratic successors. When US Special Forces accidentally killed Jaber al-Shabwani, the deputy governor of Yemen’s Marib province in May 2010, Saleh was able to secure a year-long pause in the US bombing campaign.
With new president Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi owing his position to the United States he is unlikely to enjoy similar leverage, if Pakistan’s present impotence against CIA strikes is any guide.
Poor compensation
The odds of finding out who was really responsible for Sunday’s deaths are not good. At the height of this year’s US-backed offensive against al Qaeda in May, at least a dozen civilians died in a double air strike in Jaar. As onlookers and rescuers came forward after an initial attack, they were killed in a follow-up strike.
The event was reminiscent of CIA tactics in Pakistan, and there is circumstantial evidence that US drones carried out the attack. London Times reporter Iona Craig recalls the testimony of one survivor she met in Jaar:
He didn’t know who carried out the strike but said they didn’t hear any planes or fighter jets before either strike and they dived to the ground when they saw a ‘missile’ with a jet stream of ‘white smoke behind it’, flying through the sky towards them before the second strike happened.’
Four months on and neither Yemen nor the US has taken responsibility for that attack. According to Haykal Bafana, a lawyer based in Sanaa, ‘the greatest worry for people here is not only a lack of accountability but a lack of transparency. Civilians at risk in the areas being targeted are being given no information at all about how best to protect themselves.’
Legal advocacy group HOOD issued a statement [Arabic] after Sunday’s Radaa incident calling for ‘an apology and punishment for the mistakes and crimes of the perpetrators, and fair compensation for the victims.’ In a country as poor as Yemen, compensation is a serious matter.
Yemen’s government has now ordered an inquiry into the Radaa bombing. Yet following the 2009 killing of 41 civilians relatives were compensated with just a few hundred dollars, after details of Centcom’s role were deliberately hidden from that inquiry. In contrast, US forces in Afghanistan not only admitted responsibility in a recent incident, but paid out $46,000 (£29,000) for each person killed and $10,000 for those injured.
‘Revenge’
There is a growing gulf between what Yemen’s people are experiencing and what their government claims. Bafana says that Yemen’s official news agency Saba hasn’t even used the word ‘drone’ since February 2011. A confirmed US strike on August 29 killed not only three alleged militants but a policeman and a local anti-al Qaeda imam, according to local reports. Those civilian deaths remain absent from Saba’s coverage.
The US in turn greets queries with obfuscation. The CIA declined to comment when asked whether it had carried out the lethal attack on Radaa, or had ever paid out compensation for collateral damage. And a senior Pentagon spokesman, declining to comment ‘on reports of specific counterterrorism operations in Yemen,’ referred any queries back to Yemen’s government.
In the aftermath of Sunday’s disastrous airstrike, relatives of the dead threatened to lay the corpses of the victims in front of the country’s new president. As local activist Nasr Abdullah told CNN, ‘I would not be surprised if a hundred tribesmen joined the lines of al Qaeda as a result of the latest drone mistake. This part of Yemen takes revenge very seriously.’ Civilian deaths risk undoing all that the United States is trying to achieve in Yemen – and an absence of true accountability is making matters worse.
This article was originally published by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism on September 7, 2012.