FRIENDLY FIRE ???? WHY IS IT THAT OUR MEN AND WOMEN GET
KILLED BY FRIENDLY FIRE ????? Is Obama attached to this friendly fire since he
had to slip into Afghanistan for some reason????? I can't buy into this one..
Afghanistan
Family members reportedly identify 2 of 5 US Special
Operations Forces troops killed in Afghanistan

Family
members of two of the five U.S. Special Operations Forces troops killed in a
possible friendly-fire incident in southern Afghanistan Monday reportedly
identified their relatives as victims Tuesday.
Relatives
of Aaron Toppen, 19, of Mokena, Illinois and Justin Helton, 25, of Beaver, Ohio
told The Associated Press that military members came to their relatives' doors
in the middle of the night to deliver the news of the deaths. The identities of
the other three victims have not been released.
Toppen,
the youngest of three children, had been in Afghanistan since March and
deployed there one month after the death of his father. Helton had been in the
military since 2010 and was on his first deployement to Afghanistan.
A
senior U.S. defense official told Fox News early Tuesday that the troops were
killed when they requested air support from a B-1 bomber after coming in
contact with enemy forces.
"Five
American troops were killed yesterday during a security operation in southern
Afghanistan. Investigators are looking into the likelihood that friendly fire
was the cause. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of these
fallen," Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said.
Earlier
Tuesday, a statement from NATO confirmed the service members' deaths, but did
not give further details on their nationalities. Coalition policy is for home
countries to identify their military dead.
"The
casualties occurred during a security operation when their unit came into
contact with enemy forces," the statement from NATO's International
Security Assistance Force read. "Tragically, there is the possibility that
fratricide may have been involved. The incident is under investigation. Our
thoughts are with the families of those killed during this difficult
time."
If
confirmed, it would be one of the most serious cases involving coalition on
coalition friendly fire during the nearly 14-year Afghan war. One of the worst
came in April 2002 when four Canadian soldiers were killed when an American
F-16 dropped a bomb on them near a night firing exercise in the southern
Kandahar province.
A
senior police official in southern Zabul province said the coalition troops may
have been killed when they called in for close air support.
Provincial
police chief Gen. Ghulam Sakhi Rooghlawanay said Afghan and NATO troops
conducting a joint operation in the area's Arghandab district early Monday came
under fire by the Taliban.
"After
the operation was over, on the way back the joint forces came under the attack
of insurgents, then foreign forces called for an air support. Unfortunately,
five NATO soldiers and one Afghan Army officer were killed mistakenly by NATO
airstrike," Rooghlawanay said.
There
was no way to independently confirm Rooghlawanay's comments. The coalition
would not comment and NATO headquarters in Brussels also declined to comment.
The
only U.S. troops now involved in combat operations are usually Special
Operations Forces that mentor their Afghan counterparts. They often come under
fire and are responsible for calling in air support when needed. Because of
constraints placed by outgoing Afghan President Hamid Karzai, such airstrikes
are usually called "in extremis," or when troops fear they are about
to be killed.
Karzai
blamed a similar airstrike called in by special forces mentoring an Afghan
operation for killing a dozen civilians during an operation in northern Parwan
province. The U.S. military vehemently denied the charge, saying that two
civilians were killed in crossfire with Taliban militants and that airstrike
was called in when forces thought they were about to be killed by insurgents.
The
Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack against the joint force in Zabul.
A
Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said a battle took place on Monday night
between foreign troops and Taliban fighters in the Arghandab district. Ahmadi
claimed a "huge number" of NATO soldiers were killed or wounded in
the fighting. The Taliban often exaggerate their claims.
Separately,
a NATO statement said a service member died Monday as a result of a non-battle
injury in eastern Afghanistan.
The
deaths bring to 36 the number of NATO soldiers killed so far this year in
Afghanistan, with eight service members killed in June.
The
insurgents have intensified attacks on Afghan and foreign forces ahead of the
country's presidential election runoff Saturday. Officials are concerned there
could be more violence around the time of the vote, although the first round in
April passed relatively peacefully.
Casualties
have been falling in the U.S.-led military coalition as its forces pull back to
allow the Afghan Army and police to fight the Taliban insurgency. All combat
troops are scheduled to be withdrawn from the country by the end of this year.
Fox
News' Jennifer Griffin and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/06/11/nato-says-5-service-members-killed-in-afghanistan-attack/?intcmp=latestnews
1 comment:
Look into the mossad snipers active in the theatre of war. Wars are managed.
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