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Friday, January 23, 2026

Special forces chief tried to cover up concerns about SAS conduct in Afghanistan, inquiry told - The Guardian

Whistleblower says chain of command failed to stop extrajudicial shootings, including of children, after alarm was raised

The former director of UK special forces and other senior military officers tried to cover up concerns that SAS units were carrying out unlawful killings in Afghanistan, an inquiry has heard.

A senior special forces whistleblower said the chain of command failed to stop extrajudicial shootings, including of two small children, after the alarm was first raised in early 2011. That failure allegedly allowed them to continue until 2013.

The cover-up allegations are among the most severe to be raised at an ongoing inquiry into claims that 80 people were summarily killed by members of three different British SAS units operating in Afghanistan. The inquiry, led by Lord Justice Haddon-Cave, was launched in 2023.

The whistleblower, referred to only by the cipher N1466, said he first flagged concerns about possible “war crimes” to the director of special forces and others in February 2011.

According to newly released redacted transcripts of evidence given in secret last year, the officer said: “We could have stopped it in February 2011. Those people who died unnecessarily from that point onwards, there were two toddlers shot in their bed next to their parents … all that would not necessarily have come to pass if that had been stopped.”

The officer’s allegation appears to refer to the serious injuries sustained by the children of Hussain Uzbakzai and his wife,...



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