“I am committed to ensuring counterterrorism operations comply with the laws of war and U.S. policy for protecting civilians,” Mr. Gallego, the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee’s Intelligence and Special Operations Subcommittee, said in a statement. “I look forward to hearing D.O.D.’s response and future briefings on this critically important issue.”
The lawmakers asked the Defense Department to specifically address the lack of a leader within the department dedicated solely to addressing civilian harm, and they called on the department to bring on additional personnel dedicated to reviewing policies, procedures and investigations.
They also asked the department to create a standardized process that would track all future incidents in which civilians were harmed, to ensure that previous reports of civilian harm that may have been wrongly dismissed would be investigated in a “full, independent, transparent” way, and to look into why “ex gratia,” or condolence, payments have not been offered to victims.
The 90-day review established by Mr. Austin began in January and is set to wrap up in late April. It was announced after a previous letter in which 11 senators and dozens of House members expressed grave concern over the government’s targeting criteria for drone strikes and other policies intended to prevent civilian casualties during military operations.