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Snapshot 6:Fri, May 29, 2026 12:07:03 PM GMT last edited by Kani

UK Inquiry: SAS Leaders Hid Afghan War Crime Concerns

UK Inquiry: SAS Leaders Hid Afghan War Crime Concerns

Above: Soldiers from the Alfa (Grenadier) company, The 3rd Battalion Royal Regiment for Scotland, on a patrol in Nad e Ali, the area is expected to be among the next places to be handed over to Afghan National security forces. Image credit: Owen Humphreys/PA Images/Getty Images

The Spin


Endless retroactive legal proceedings are driving experienced SAS soldiers to resign rather than face what critics call politically motivated witch hunts. Veteran warrant officers — the backbone of special forces — are leaving, hollowing out key squadrons at a time of growing security threats. Subjecting combat veterans to years of legal jeopardy over battlefield decisions risks eroding the trust between government and military that underpins effective operations.

Senior SAS commanders allegedly buried credible war crimes evidence for years, allowing unlawful killings of Afghan civilians to continue unchecked. A whistleblower said explosive findings reached special forces leaders as early as 2011, yet were met with internal reviews rather than referrals to military police. Complaints from Afghan partner forces and former President Hamid Karzai further suggest the allegations could not easily be dismissed as mere oversight.


Metaculus Prediction

There is a 32% chance that Taliban-controlled Afghanistan will be used as a base for anti-NATO terrorism before 2027, according to the Metaculus prediction community.

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1