No US troops or officials will face disciplinary action for a drone strike in Kabul in August that killed 10 Afghan civilians, including seven children, the Pentagon said on Monday.
Spokesman John Kirby said Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin had received a high-level review of the strike which made no recommendation of accountability.
“He approved their recom-mendations,” Kirby said. “The secretary is not … calling for additional accountability measures.”
The 29 August drone strike took place in the final days of the US-led evacuation of Ka-bul after the Taliban seized control of the country.
US officials said they had in-telligence of a possible Islamic State attack on the evacuation operations at Kabul airport, and launched a missile from a drone at a target that, in real-ity, was a family that included an Afghan man who worked for a US aid group.
In early November an initial report carried out by the US air force inspector general, Lt Gen Sami Said, called the strike tragic but “an honest mistake”.
The review by Central Com-mand head Gen Kenneth McKenzie Jr and Special Op-erations Command chief Gen Richard Clarke made use of Said’s report and detailed rec-ommendations on procedures for future drone strikes.
But it made no call for anyone to be punished for the mis-take.“What we saw here was a breakdown in process, in exe-cution and procedural events, not the result of negligence, not the result of misconduct, not the result of poor leader-ship,” said Kirby.
If Austin “believed … that ac-countability was warranted, he would certainly support those kinds of efforts”, Kirby added.—Agencies