Afghanistan GC-IV · Art.19 CIHL · Rule 35 Rome Statute · Art.8 Closed — No Prosecution

Kunduz Trauma Center Strike

On 3 October 2015, a US AC-130 gunship conducted repeated strikes over 68 minutes on a functioning hospital operated by Médecins Sans Frontières in Kunduz, Afghanistan. Forty-two people were killed, including 24 patients and 14 MSF staff. The facility's coordinates had been provided to US and Afghan military in advance.

Date 03 Oct 2015
Location Kunduz, Afghanistan
Killed 42 confirmed
Perpetrating Force US AC-130 Gunship
Accountability Disciplinary only
Record ID GRV-2015-AF-001
Incident Narrative

What happened

In the early hours of 3 October 2015, US Special Operations Forces, operating in support of Afghan National Army units conducting operations against Taliban forces in Kunduz city, called in an air strike on a compound that turned out to be the MSF Kunduz Trauma Center — the only facility of its kind in the region.

The AC-130 gunship began its attack at approximately 02:08 local time and continued to fire for 68 minutes despite repeated radio calls from MSF staff to US and NATO military contacts in Kabul and Washington. MSF's emergency coordinator called the US military's Kabul office at 02:19 and was told the bombing would stop. It did not. Further calls were made at 02:32 and 02:52. The strikes continued until 03:15.

The main hospital building — the trauma ward — was directly and repeatedly struck. Patients burned in their beds. Staff were killed while attempting to flee. The ICU, operating theatres, and emergency room were destroyed. In the aftermath, MSF staff reported that some patients who had tried to escape were shot from the aircraft as they fled.

MSF had provided the GPS coordinates of the facility to US forces in Kabul on 29 September 2015 — four days before the strike — as part of standard deconfliction protocol. The facility had been continuously operational and visibly marked.

29 Sep 2015
MSF provides GPS coordinates of Kunduz Trauma Center to US military in Kabul via standard deconfliction protocol.
03 Oct · 02:08
AC-130 begins attack on MSF compound. Main trauma ward building struck.
03 Oct · 02:19
MSF emergency coordinator calls US military Kabul office. Told strike will stop. Strikes continue.
03 Oct · 02:32 — 02:52
Further calls made to US and NATO contacts. Attack ongoing. 14 MSF staff and 24 patients killed during this window.
03 Oct · 03:15
Attack ceases after 68 minutes. MSF later reports patients who fled were shot from the aircraft.
Nov 2015
US DOD investigation concludes incident was result of "human error and equipment failure." Recommends administrative action, not criminal charges.
Apr 2016
16 US military personnel receive administrative punishments. No criminal charges filed against any individual.
2015–present
MSF calls repeatedly for independent investigation under International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission. US declines to consent to jurisdiction.
Legal Analysis

IHL element assessment

The following analysis assesses the Kunduz strike against applicable international legal frameworks. This record does not constitute a legal determination. It applies the relevant elements to documented facts and records where thresholds are met, partially met, contested, or unresolved.

GC-IV Art. 19
Protection of Hospitals
The Kunduz Trauma Center was a functioning civilian medical facility in continuous operation. Hospital protection under Article 19 of Geneva Convention IV is absolute unless the facility is used to commit acts harmful to the enemy — a condition for which no evidence has been established. Deconfliction coordinates were provided four days prior.
Element
Met
CIHL Rule 35
Protected Zones
Customary IHL Rule 35 prohibits attack on medical units. The rule applies regardless of prior notification and is not contingent on advance deconfliction, though deconfliction had occurred. Continued strikes after MSF notification reinforce applicability.
Element
Met
CIHL Rule 15
Precautions in Attack
Attacking forces are required to take all feasible precautions to avoid or minimize incidental civilian casualties. The failure to verify target identity against known deconfliction data, and the continuation of strikes following MSF notification, represents a failure of precautionary obligation.
Element
Met
Rome Statute Art. 8(2)(b)(ix)
Attacks on Protected Sites
Article 8(2)(b)(ix) criminalises intentional attacks on buildings dedicated to medical purposes which are not military objectives. The element of intent is contested — US investigation concludes the attack resulted from misidentification rather than deliberate targeting. However, continuation after notification raises mens rea questions that have not been independently adjudicated.
Contested
— Intent
Rome Statute Art. 8(2)(b)(iv)
Disproportionate Attack
Even accepting the misidentification claim, the proportionality standard requires weighing anticipated military advantage against expected civilian harm. A 68-minute sustained attack with continued strikes after receipt of hospital notification fails the proportionality assessment on any reasonable calculus.
Substantially
Met
Accountability
Obligation
States are obligated to investigate alleged IHL violations and, where warranted, prosecute. The US investigation was conducted internally by the investigating party — an arrangement inconsistent with independence requirements. MSF's request for IHFFC investigation was denied. No criminal accountability has followed.
Obligation
Unmet
Sources & Documentation

Evidentiary basis

All entries in this record are sourced to primary or independently verifiable material. Confidence level: High. Core facts — date, location, death toll, duration, deconfliction timeline — are corroborated across multiple independent primary sources.

01
MSF Incident Report: Attack on Kunduz Trauma Centre
Médecins Sans Frontières · October 2015 · Primary
MSF's official account including timestamped log of communications with US military, staff testimony, and photographic documentation of the destroyed facility.
Primary Source
02
US CENTCOM Investigation Report (AR 15-6)
US Department of Defense · November 2015 · Official
DOD's internal investigation. Concludes "human error and equipment failure." Recommends administrative action. Does not address IHL compliance obligations independently. Partially declassified.
Official Record
03
MSF Demands for Independent Accountability
MSF International · 2015–2016 · Advocacy
MSF's formal requests for IHFFC investigation and documentation of US refusal to consent to jurisdiction. Relevant to accountability obligation analysis.
Secondary
04
"Why Did the US Bomb a Hospital?" — The Atlantic
The Atlantic · November 2015 · Investigative Journalism
Detailed reconstruction of the chain of command failures and decision points. Corroborates MSF timeline and raises systemic targeting procedure questions.
Journalism
05
Physician-Facilitated Detention & the Hospital Attack — PHR
Physicians for Human Rights · 2016 · Legal Analysis
Legal analysis by PHR applying IHL frameworks to the Kunduz incident and prior US military strikes on medical facilities. Used as reference for element analysis in this record.
Legal Analysis
06
ICRC Commentary on Geneva Convention IV, Article 19
International Committee of the Red Cross · Reference
Authoritative commentary on hospital protection provisions applied in the legal element assessment above.
Reference