Obama Acknowledges Civilian Deaths by US Drone Strikes
TEHRAN (Tasnim) – US President Barack Obama acknowledged that "civilians were killed that shouldn't have been" in past US drone strikes, but claimed the administration is now "very cautious" about striking where women or children are present.
Obama was asked at a news conference about an increase in the number of people targeted in drone strikes allegedly against extremists in Libya, Syria, Somalia and elsewhere.
"In the past, there was legitimate criticism that the legal architecture around the use of drone strikes wasn't as precise as it should have been," Obama said. "There's no doubt that civilians were killed that shouldn't have been."
He claimed that over the last several years, the administration has worked to prevent civilian deaths.
"In situations of war, you know, we have to take responsibility when we're not acting appropriately," Obama said, AP reported.
Recent drone and other airstrikes have killed large numbers of people. A strike on a Daesh (ISIL) training camp in western Libya in February killed more than 40 people; a drone strike in Somalia against al-Shabab on March 5 killed 150 people. A drone strike in Yemen in February killed dozens.
The US came under heavy criticism for a drone strike several years ago against extremists in Yemen, which critics said actually hit a wedding party and killed women and children.
In October, an AC-130 gunship mistakenly hit a hospital in Afghanistan that was run by the charity organization Doctors Without Borders. The group has demanded that the strike be investigated as a war crime. The Pentagon disciplined several officers and enlisted personnel for their part in the attack.
Obama said Friday the US uses "vigorous criteria" for getting intelligence on targeting, and that intelligence is "checked, double-checked, triple-checked before kinetic actions are taken."
He said the US is targeting camps that are clearly "involved in and directing plots that could do the United States harm or are supporting ISIL activities or al-Qaeda activities."
Then, he said, "a strike will be taken."