U.S. Southern Command Can't Handle Civilian Casualty Reports, Pentagon Steps In
The U.S. military's southernmost command is overwhelmed by the number of civilian casualty reports stemming from its operation to abduct Venezuelan President NicolΓ‘s Maduro. Instead of handling these cases themselves, SOUTHCOM has referred all reports directly to the Pentagon's own Civilian Protection Center of Excellence.
Airwars, a UK-based watchdog group, had attempted to submit documentation on civilian casualties to SOUTHCOM but found that the command did not have a mechanism in place for such reports. When Airwars reached out to the Pentagon, it was told to submit its cases directly to the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence.
The need for this has arisen as a result of Secretary of War Pete Hegseth's efforts to gut programs aimed at reducing civilian casualties. Experts and insiders have said that even small numbers of civilian casualty reports are now too much for SOUTHCOM to handle, with personnel devoted to tracking and mitigation dwindling from four staff to just one contractor.
The Pentagon has acknowledged the failure of SOUTHCOM to track and mitigate civilian harm effectively but has not offered any further explanation. The Intercept reported on cuts to SOUTHCOM's civilian harm staff last year and that the command had been dodging questions about this issue for months.
Col. Emanuel Ortiz, SOUTHCOM's chief of public affairs, said that his command complies with statutory and regulatory requirements but did not provide any further details. The Civilian Protection Center of Excellence has been established to address these issues but has faced criticism from experts who say it is not enough to prevent similar harm in the future.
The Pentagon has also come under fire for its handling of civilian casualties, including a recent operation that killed dozens of civilians in Yemen. Experts and lawmakers have called this an extrajudicial killing and have criticized the Pentagon's lack of transparency on these issues.
In total, the U.S. military has carried out 35 known attacks on boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since September, killing at least 123 civilians who it claims are narco-terrorists.
The U.S. military's southernmost command is overwhelmed by the number of civilian casualty reports stemming from its operation to abduct Venezuelan President NicolΓ‘s Maduro. Instead of handling these cases themselves, SOUTHCOM has referred all reports directly to the Pentagon's own Civilian Protection Center of Excellence.
Airwars, a UK-based watchdog group, had attempted to submit documentation on civilian casualties to SOUTHCOM but found that the command did not have a mechanism in place for such reports. When Airwars reached out to the Pentagon, it was told to submit its cases directly to the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence.
The need for this has arisen as a result of Secretary of War Pete Hegseth's efforts to gut programs aimed at reducing civilian casualties. Experts and insiders have said that even small numbers of civilian casualty reports are now too much for SOUTHCOM to handle, with personnel devoted to tracking and mitigation dwindling from four staff to just one contractor.
The Pentagon has acknowledged the failure of SOUTHCOM to track and mitigate civilian harm effectively but has not offered any further explanation. The Intercept reported on cuts to SOUTHCOM's civilian harm staff last year and that the command had been dodging questions about this issue for months.
Col. Emanuel Ortiz, SOUTHCOM's chief of public affairs, said that his command complies with statutory and regulatory requirements but did not provide any further details. The Civilian Protection Center of Excellence has been established to address these issues but has faced criticism from experts who say it is not enough to prevent similar harm in the future.
The Pentagon has also come under fire for its handling of civilian casualties, including a recent operation that killed dozens of civilians in Yemen. Experts and lawmakers have called this an extrajudicial killing and have criticized the Pentagon's lack of transparency on these issues.
In total, the U.S. military has carried out 35 known attacks on boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since September, killing at least 123 civilians who it claims are narco-terrorists.