From RAND Policy Currents <[email protected]>
Subject The Pentagon's Processes on Civilian Casualties Need Reform
Date January 27, 2022 7:40 PM
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** RAND research and commentary on the issues that matter most
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Jan 27, 2022

The Pentagon's Processes on Civilian Casualties Need Reform

The Department of Defense has committed to an array of policies and processes that aim to mitigate and respond to civilian casualties resulting from U.S. military operations. But a RAND report released today finds that weaknesses and inconsistencies remain. Additionally, lessons from military strikes that caused civilian casualties are not shared across the department in a way that meaningfully reduces future casualties.

The authors recommend several ideas for reform, including

* making civilian casualty assessments more robust by expanding the kinds of data and information used and improving DoD's management of civilian casualty-related data
* adapting investigations of civilian harm incidents to support operational and institutional learning within the military
* providing guidance and training on all options available to commanders when responding to civilian harm and assisting those affected
* creating dedicated, permanent positions for protection of civilians in each geographic combatant command and across DoD
* creating a center of excellence for civilian protection.

Such improvements "will enable DoD to address civilian-harm issues with institutional, not just operational changes," said lead author Michael McNerney.

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