“The infliction of ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’… would have caused serious physical and psychological injury,” the report reads.
This statement marks what some consider a new phase in the probe, and could make waves in the US, which is not a member of the ICC and has opposed it openly in the past.
The report also notes that all inquiries conducted by the US on reported crimes by its soldiers in Afghanistan have borne no fruit: no perpetrators have been convicted and no high-profile commanders have faced trial.
Investigators have yet to determine the gravity and scale of all violations committed in Afghanistan, according to the ICC.
More than 13,000 foreign troops – mostly American – are still deployed in Afghanistan despite US President Barack Obama’s announcement at the end of 2014 that the US-led combat mission was over. They remain there within the framework of what Washington calls a support mission.