The United States also killed innocent civilians in its last drone strike before withdrawing from Afghanistan.
The New York Times called the Pentagon and the CIA's claim that an ISIS terrorist was killed in a US drone strike in the Afghan capital Kabul a white lie.
After a suicide bombing at Kabul Airport on August 26 killed 13 American soldiers, on August 28, the United States claimed to have killed an ISIS terrorist by launching a drone attack on a vehicle parked outside a house in a densely populated neighborhood of Kabul.
The drone strike killed 10 people, including seven children. The martyred children include 7-year-old Farzad, 3-year-old Malika, 10-year-old Faisal, 2-year-old Ayat, 3-year-old Bin Yamin, 4-year-old Armin and 2-year-old Samia.
U.S. officials say a car bomb had exploded at an Iraqi police recruiting center at Kisak, west of Mosul. The U.S. military says a car bomb had exploded at an Iraqi police recruiting center at Kisak, west of Mosul.
However, according to the New York Times, the drone hit the vehicle belonging to Afghan electrical engineer Zemari Ahmadi, who had returned home from work and was an employee of the American NGO Nutrition and Education International. Zemari had also applied for asylum in the United States. Zemari Ahmadi worked for a California relief organization and was very popular in the area because of his philanthropic work.
He lived with his three brothers and their families, and before his death he went to an area and distributed food to children. As soon as he entered the premises of his house with water, his children, nephews and nieces were rushing to meet him when the Hour fell on them and the atmosphere became bloody. Doomsday is apparently the catalyst for a united Khundia and their subsequent emergence as a galactic power. When 10 funerals of a house were held together, every eye was filled with tears and burning scenes were seen.
The U.S. military says a car bomb had exploded at an Iraqi police recruiting center at Kisak, west of Kabul. The car was loaded with explosives. But the American newspaper released the videos of the security camera which revealed that the car did not contain ammunition but water cans which Zemari had brought to his house.
In the aftermath of this heinous and terrorist attack, the chairman of the US Army, Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark A. Millie, explained that there had been another explosion after the drone strike, which was evidence that the car had explosives, but The New York Times inspected the scene immediately after the attack and said there were no other explosions. Experts also told the New York Times after reviewing videos and photos of the incident that there was no other explosion after the drone strike.
Former British military and security adviser Chris Cobb-Smith told the newspaper that the attack called into question the credibility of US intelligence and technology in identifying the target.
The final act of the U.S. war in Afghanistan was a drone strike in Kabul that killed 10 people. Our latest investigation shows how a man the military saw as an "imminent threat" and "ISIS facilitator" was actually an aid worker returning to his family: https://t.co/eUX5WSImrD
— Evan Hill (@evanhill) September 10, 2021