TEHRAN, May 29, YJC - Civilian death in the fight against Daesh (ISIL) in Iraq and Syria is merely a “fact of life,” US Defense Secretary James Mattis says, noting that Washington’s has shifted its tactic against the terror group from “attrition” to “annihilation.”
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Speaking
to CBS on Sunday, Mattis said the change of policy was primarily aimed
at preventing Daesh’s foreign members from returning to their own
countries.
"We have already shifted from attrition tactics, where
we shove them from one position to another in Iraq and Syria, to
annihilation tactics, where we surround them. Our intention is that the
foreign fighters do not survive the fight to return home,” Mattis
claimed.
"Civilian casualties are a fact of life in this sort of
situation,” the Pentagon chief added, claiming that "We’ve had success
on the battlefield."
The comments came days after reports emerged
that US-led airstrikes against purported Daesh positions in Iraq and
Syria had led to heavy civilian casualties on several occasions over the
past weeks.
On
Thursday, the Pentagon admitted that at least 105 Iraqi civilians,
including 42 children, lost their lives after a US Air Force fighter jet
targeted a building in the embattled Iraqi city of Mosul back in March.
Fresh
airstrikes by the US-led campaign killed at least 20 more Iraqi
civilians in the northern parts of Mosul's Old City on Sunday, according
to Arabic-language al-Forat news agency.
Also on Sunday, the
so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported that
around 20 civilians had been killed in a US airstrike against southern
outskirts of the Syrian city of Raqqah.
The US and a number of its
allies have been pounding parts of Iraq and Syria since 2014. The
campaign has yet to yield any meaningful achievements besides destroying
hospitals and other critical infrastructure.
Mattis said Sunday
that the US military was still trying to "avoid civilian casualties at
all costs,” doing "everything humanly possible consistent with military
necessity.”