Saturday 12 May 2018

8-page summary adds to calls for full 180-page report Jason Ditz Posted on May 11, 2018Categories NewsTags Niger, Pentagon The Pentagon’s newly released 8-page report on the Niger incident had a very clear narrative. From the moment local commanders endorsed the mission to the recovery of the four bodies of slain US soldiers, the report goes out of its way to lionize everyone’s actions, and downplay errors. This makes sense, because underlying these conclusions is the fact that the Pentagon has no intention of holding anyone to account for the mistakes made. Yet the summary report’s decision to tread very lightly on a lot of potentially embarrassing specifics means that it ultimately raises a lot more questions than it answered. Fortunately, a lot of those answers exist, as this 8-page version was just a summary of a 180-page full report on the incident. The administration is keeping that carefully secret, however. They say that the report needs to be heavily reviewed, and redacted, before ever being made public. The need for such redaction doesn’t make much sense if the summary is accurate in portraying this as a straightforward case of 100 militants managing to infiltrate across the Malian border and ambush a group of US and Nigerien troops and then disappear back across the border. Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz Germany Seeks Russian Support for Preserving Iran Nuclear Deal - May 11th, 2018 US Promises Investigation After Civilians Killed in Somali Raid - May 11th, 2018 Putin Backs Off Giving Syria S-300 Systems After Netanyahu Meeting - May 11th, 2018 Disaster Looms in North Yemen as Pro-Saudi Forces near Hodeidah - May 11th, 2018 Appeals Court Judges Ask If Legal Challenge to ISIS War Still Matters - May 10th, 2018 FacebookTwitterGoogle+WhatsAppRedditLinkedInTumblrEmailPrint Share Author: Jason Ditz Jason Ditz is news editor of Antiwar.com. View all posts by Jason Ditz Post navigation PREVIOUS Previous post:Germany Seeks Russian Support for Preserving Iran Nuclear Deal


8-page summary adds to calls for full 180-page report

Jason Ditz 



The Pentagon’s newly released 8-page report on the Niger incident had a very clear narrative. From the moment local commanders endorsed the mission to the recovery of the four bodies of slain US soldiers, the report goes out of its way to lionize everyone’s actions, and downplay errors.

This makes sense, because underlying these conclusions is the fact that the Pentagon has no intention of holding anyone to account for the mistakes made. Yet the summary report’s decision to tread very lightly on a lot of potentially embarrassing specifics means that it ultimately raises a lot more questions than it answered.

Fortunately, a lot of those answers exist, as this 8-page version was just a summary of a 180-page full report on the incident. The administration is keeping that carefully secret, however. They say that the report needs to be heavily reviewed, and redacted, before ever being made public.

The need for such redaction doesn’t make much sense if the summary is accurate in portraying this as a straightforward case of 100 militants managing to infiltrate across the Malian border and ambush a group of US and Nigerien troops and then disappear back across the border.

https://news.antiwar.com/2018/05/11/pentagons-niger-report-raises-more-questions-than-it-answers/

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