White House insists Israel airstrike on Rafah did NOT cross a 'red line'... and defends their response to killing civilians because US 'did the same' in Iraq and Afghanistan
By Geoff Earle and Associated Press
Daily Mail
May 28, 2024
National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby said there is there is still 'no major ground operation', following repeated U.S. contact with Israel urging it to protect civilian life
The White House on Tuesday defended U.S. ally Israel's response to the airstrike that killed dozens of civilians in Gaza, even comparing the tragic error to U.S. strikes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
'We have conducted airstrikes in places like Iraq and Afghanistan where, tragically, we caused civilian casualties,' White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters at the White House.
'We did the same thing. We owned up to it, we investigated it, and we tried to learn from it to make changes,' he said, even as he spoke to the 'heartbreaking' images following an Israeli strike in Gaza Sunday.
'We tried to learn from it – to make changes so that that those set of mistakes wouldn't happen again, including, as we pulled out of Afghanistan, where we did ... an airstrike which tragically killed a father and some of his kids. We atone for it. We learn from it. And we put in place procedures to try to prevent that from happening again. And that's what our expectations will be in this case,' Kirby said.
Kirby was referencing a 2021 U.S. drone strike in Kabul in the last days of the decades long U.S. engagement there.
'This exactly does speak to the challenge of military operations in a densely populated area, a challenge I would add ... that we have been sharing our perspective with the Israelis, from our own lessons learned in places like Iraq and Afghanistan. This incident speaks exactly to that challenge,' he said.
Kirby said the U.S. ally had not crossed a red line and said the U.S. is not planning any policy changes as a result.
White House national security spokesman John Kirby referenced 'devastating images coming out of Rafah' over the weekend after an Israeli Defense Forces strike that killed 'dozens of innocent Palestinians – including children.' He called the images ' heartbreaking that horrible.'
But Kirby told reporters that Israel had not violated President Joe Biden's 'red line' for withholding future offensive arms transfers because it has not, and it appears to the U.S. that it will not, launch a full-scale ground invasion into the city in southern Gaza.
That was in keeping with repeated U.S. warnings not to do so without presenting a plan that would protect civilians.
'Everything that we can see tells us that they are not moving into a major ground operation in population centers in the center of Rafah,' Kirby said. Most of those killed in the Sunday strike were sheltering in tents.
Kirby pushed back when asked how many 'charred corpses' the president had to see before he considered a change – a reference to the raging tent fired that ensued after the Israeli strike.
'We don't want to see a single more innocent life taken, and I kind of take a little offensive the question. No civilian casualties is the right number of civilian casualties. And this is not something that we've turned a blind eye to, nor has it been something we've ignored or neglected to raise with our Israeli counterparts,' said Kirby.
'As a result of this strike on Sunday, I have no policy changes to speak to,' he said. 'It just happened. The Israelis are going to investigate it. We're going to be taking great interest in what they find in that investigation. And we'll see where it goes from there.'
He also pointed to the size of the munitions Israel said the IDF used, at a time when the administration has put a hold on sending 2,000 pound bombs to Israel.
A '37 pound bomb is not a big bomb, and it is exactly the kind of munitions if in fact, that's what they used ... If it is in fact that they used it is certainly indicative of an effort to be discreet and targeted and precise,' he said.
'We understand that this strike did kill two senior Hamas heads who are directly responsible for attacks,' Kirby said
His comments came on a day when the Pentagon said a $320 million pier the U.S. had constructed to help deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza would have to be towed away for repairs.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a 'tragic mishap' was made in carrying out the airstrike, adding to the surging international criticism Israel has faced over its war with Hamas, with even its closest allies expressing outrage at civilian deaths.
Biden and his top advisers have repeatedly warned the Israelis against carrying out widescale operations in Rafah without a plan to secure the safety of innocent civilians. But the administration made clear that it would not move - at least not immediately - to curtail any support for Israel as a result of the strike.
But other global leaders were sharper in their condemnation.
President Emmanuel Macron used social media to say that 'these operations must stop.' The Foreign Ministry of Germany called the images of the strike 'unbearable' and said the 'civilian population must finally be better protected.' And Qatar, a key mediator in attempts to secure a cease-fire and the release of hostages held by Hamas, said the Rafah strike could 'complicate' talks.
The incident came two days after the International Court of Justice ordered Israel to end its military offensive in Rafah, where more than half of Gaza´s 2.3 million people had sought shelter before Israel´s incursion earlier this month. Tens of thousands of people remain in the area, while many others have fled.
Kirby said Biden's 'not making decisions based on popularity or public opinion polls here or around the world,' but acknowledged it wasn´t in the U.S. interest or 'our Israeli partner's interest for them to become further isolated' on the world stage.
He called the loss of life 'heartbreaking' and 'horrific,' and said 'we certainly condemn the loss of life here.' He added that the U.S. was monitoring the results of an Israeli investigation into the strike, which suggested the civilian deaths were the result of a secondary explosion after a successful strike on two Hamas operatives.
'We understand that this strike did kill two senior Hamas heads who are directly responsible for attacks,' Kirby said. 'We've also said many times Israel must take every precaution possible to do more to protect innocent life.'
State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters that Israel´s weeks-old offensive in Rafah was still on a 'far different' scale than the assaults Israeli forces waged on other cities in Gaza earlier in the seven-month war against Hamas. The U.S. had urged Israel not to replicate those earlier attacks in Rafah, given the vulnerable civilians crowded there.
Miller said he had no direct knowledge of reported accounts from witnesses on the ground Tuesday that Israeli tanks had entered the center of Gaza, and noted Israel had denied responsibility for a new Israeli strike outside of Rafah on Tuesday that Gaza health officials said killed more than 20 people.
Asked whether the strike would result in any U.S. policy changes, Kirby said, 'I have no policy changes to speak to.'
Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh said she did not know whether it was a U.S.-provided weapon that was used in the deadly Sunday strike that killed the dozens of civilians at a displacement camp. 'I do not know what type of ammunition was used in that airstrike,' Singh said. 'I have to refer you to the Israelis to speak to that.'
The Israelis have said they used small-diameter precision munitions in the attack and have suggested that a secondary explosion caused the number of civilian deaths. Singh said the U.S. has not paused shipments to Israel in the wake of the strike. 'Security assistance continues to flow,' Singh said.
Still, Kirby said the incident reflected the challenge of conducting military operations in densely populated areas like Rafah, a concern that Biden and his top advisers have repeatedly raised with the Israelis.
'There´s going to be an investigation. They´ve already said it was a tragic mistake,' he added. 'They´re looking into it. They have been able to investigate themselves and hold people accountable in the past. We´ll see what they do here.'
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