Obama speaks during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House yesterday. The White House admitted yesterday that a January US operation against an Al Qaeda compound near the Afghan-Pakistan border killed one American and one Italian hostage, along with an American member of the jihadist group.

Reuters/Washington

An American and an Italian who had been held hostage for several years by Al Qaeda were inadvertently killed in a US counter-terrorism operation in the border region of Pakistan and Afghanistan in January, President Barack Obama said yesterday.
The operation in which American doctor Warren Weinstein and Italian aid worker Giovanni Lo Porto were killed also resulted in the death of an American Al Qaeda leader, Ahmed Farouq, the White House said.
Another American Al Qaeda member, Adam Gadahn, was also killed, likely in a separate operation, the White House added.
US government sources said the operations involved drone strikes.
Such strikes have long been used by the administration of Obama and his predecessor, George W Bush, in counter-terrorism operations in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border area and elsewhere.
The use of drones has been controversial because of the deaths of civilians who were not targeted and because on occasion they have involved killing Americans abroad without judicial process.
The United States is conducting a review to understand how the operation killed the unintended targets, Obama said in an appearance at the White House.
He added: “I profoundly regret what happened. On behalf of the United States government, I offer our deepest apologies to the families.”
Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni called the incident a “tragic and fatal error ... that our American partners made” but said Lo Porto’s death was “entirely the responsibility of the terrorists”.
Although the operation took place in January, a US official said that the authorities concluded only a few days ago that the two hostages were killed.
Obama said that the US intelligence had hundreds of hours of surveillance on the compound targeted in the attack and there had been no signs that Weinstein and Lo Porto were held there.
US officials did not give the location of the incident.
If it was on the Pakistan side of the border, it was likely to have been in North Waziristan, a mountainous region where the Pakistani military launched a long-awaited operation last June to clear out the Taliban, and where it now holds the major urban centres.
Pockets of insurgents remain, particularly in the deep forests of the Shawal Valley.
The White House said that while both Farouq and Gadahn were Al Qaeda members, “neither was specifically targeted, and we did not have information indicating their presence at the sites of these operations”.
Weinstein’s wife, Elaine, said her family was devastated by his death.
She criticised the US government for “inconsistent and disappointing” assistance during her husband’s years in captivity.
Like other American families whose relatives have been killed over the past year after being held hostage by militants in the Middle East, she called for a better US government policy for relaying information to hostages’ families.
“We hope that my husband’s death and the others who have faced similar tragedies in recent months will finally prompt the US Government to take its responsibilities seriously and establish a co-ordinated and consistent approach to supporting hostages and their families,” she said in a statement.
US Representative John Delaney, who has helped the Weinstein family, said that the United States needs to do a better job handling American hostages.
Obama said he had spoken with Weinstein’s family.
Weinstein, 73, was abducted in Lahore, Pakistan, in 2011 while working for a US consulting firm.
Al Qaeda had asked to trade him for members of the Islamist militant group being held by the United States.
Weinstein was seen in videos released in May 2012 and December 2013, asking for Obama to intervene on his behalf and saying that he was suffering from heart problems and asthma.
Lo Porto had been missing in Pakistan since January 2012.
Italian media said Lo Porto, who was from Palermo, Sicily, was kidnapped three days after arriving in Pakistan on January 19, 2012, to work for a German organisation building houses for victims of a 2010 flood.
Another man was kidnapped with him but later freed in October 2014 by German special forces.
Obama said that Weinstein, who lived in Rockville, Maryland, had devoted his life to service as a member of the Peace Corps and more recently as a contractor for the US Agency for International Development in a poverty-fighting programme.
Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the committee had been reviewing the operation that killed the hostages and now intended to do so in greater detail.
CIA drone strikes in Pakistan have steeply declined from a peak of around 128 in 2010, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which tracks each strike reported by the media.
There have been seven drone strikes in Pakistan so far this year, the group said.
The Pakistani government routinely protests the strikes as an infringement of national sovereignty, but many in Pakistan believe the country’s powerful military at least tacitly supports the strikes.