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Losing the War on Error: US Journalists Justify Attack on Kunduz Hospital

© Photo : media.msf.org/Victor J. BlueAn interior view of the MSF Trauma Centre, 14 October 2015, shows a missile hole in the wall and the burnt-out remians of the the building aftera sustained attack on the facility in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan
An interior view of the MSF Trauma Centre, 14 October 2015, shows a missile hole in the wall and the burnt-out remians of the the building aftera sustained attack on the facility in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan - Sputnik International
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On October 3, US forces bombed a MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières, or Doctors Without Borders) hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, killing at least 30 medical staff and patients, including three children, in what is thought to have been the deadliest incident to occur in the country in terms of loss of civilian life since the conflict began in 2001.

The tragedy caused an international outcry. But despite almost universal condemnation, not one Western nation has dared censure the United States for its actions.

After the bombing, MSF appealed to 76 nations, requesting support for an impartial international investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident. However none of the 76 countries stepped forward to show their support for an independent investigation by the Humanitarian Commission.

Although US President Barack Obama publically apologized to the head of the MSF, the United States is still refusing to consent to an independent investigation.

Immediately following the first reports of the tragedy, dozens of American journalists insisted that the US couldn't be found guilty even if it bombed the hospital, despite not having investigated the nature of the tragedy or what errors in judgment could have led to it. The US military insisted it was ‘collateral damage’ and that these things just happen, The Intercept pointed out on Friday.

The Doctors Without Borders trauma center is seen in flames after explosions near their hospital, in the northern Afghan city of Kunduz - Sputnik International
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“They cling to this self-flattering belief so vehemently that they not only refused to entertain the possibility that the US government might have done something bad on purpose, but they scornfully mock anyone who questions the official claim of 'mistake',” writes The Intercept.

This approach smacks of American Exceptionalism: the idea that the usual rules don't apply to the US.  Accordingly, Americans are always doing what's best and everyone makes mistakes sometimes, so any notion that there should be an investigation into the motives or mistakes that led to the bombing of a civilian hospital should be dismissed, according to The Intercept.

Here are some examples of government apologists who believe anyone who would blame America is unpatriotic and harboring animosity.

Christian Science Monitor

Almost a month later, Murphy switched from negation to what might be construed as a justification:

Vox

New Yorker

Boston Globe

“When you’re lucky enough as a government and military to have hordes of journalists so subservient and nationalistic that they do and say this — to exonerate you fully — before knowing any facts, why would you ever feel the need to submit to someone else’s investigation?” The Intercept concludes.

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