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Friendly Fire Kills Three U.S. Soldiers


AP
B-52 bomber
Wednesday, December 05, 2001


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WASHINGTON — Three U.S. special forces soldiers were killed and 19 others
hurt in Afghanistan Wednesday when a B-52 bomber accidentally dropped a bomb
near them, the Pentagon confirmed. Two of the Americans were killed on the
scene; the third died on the way to the hospital.


The Pentagon identified those killed as Master Sgt. Jefferson Donald Davis,
39, of Watauga, Tenn.; Sgt. 1st Class Daniel Petithory, 32, of Cheshire,
Mass.; and Staff Sgt. Brian Cody Prosser, 28, of California.

All were members of the Army's 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group,
stationed at Fort Campbell, Ky.

Five anti-Taliban fighters accompanying the Americans also died in the
incident, Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said. The "friendly fire"
bombing took place north of Kandahar, the Taliban's birthplace and last
redoubt.

The weapon was believed to be a 2,000-pound satellite-guided bomb called a
JDAM, or Joint Direct Attack Munition, said Clarke. She said she didn't know
the intended target.

"I, along with all the rest of America, grieve for the loss of life in
Afghanistan. Three of our soldiers were killed by an inadvertent bomb, and
our prayers and sympathies go to the families," President Bush said before
meeting in the Oval Office with Norway's prime minister, Kjell Magne Bondevik.

"I want the families to know that they died for a noble and just cause, that
the fight against terror is noble and it's just, and they defend freedom,"
Bush said. "And for that, we're grateful."

"These men died as heroes and were wounded as heroes," said Rear Adm. John
Stufflebeem, deputy director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at
the Pentagon.

The bombing happened at about 10 a.m. Afghan time — 12:30 a.m. EST — as the
B-52 targeting Taliban positions missed a target and dropped a bomb "in close
proximity to friendly forces," said Lapan.

Stufflebeem said Marines based south of Kandahar rushed to the scene and
evacuated the casualties. A combat search-and-rescue team based in Pakistan
also responded, he said.

Some casualties were evacuated to the Marine base in southern Afghanistan for
transfer to another, undisclosed, medical facility, while others went
directly to the facility, said Capt. Stewart Upton, a public affairs officer
at the base. About 20 Afghan troops were treated at the Marines' base, he
said.

The Pentagon provided few details about the circumstances of the accident. It
was not clear whether the bomb's guidance system malfunctioned or human error
was responsible.

"We're still trying to get information about what happened," Clarke said.

Stufflebeem said the U.S. soldiers killed and wounded had called in the B-52
strike as Afghan opposition forces were fighting Taliban troops. He said the
bomb landed about 100 yards from the U.S. troops, but he was not certain the
exact location of the intended target. To be safe, a person should be at
least 1,300 yards away from the explosion of a bomb that size, he said.

"A 2,000-pound weapon is a devastating weapon," he said.

Some of the American casualties included special operations soldiers from
Fort Campbell, Ky., home of the 5th Special Forces Group, said a spokesman at
Fort Bragg, N.C., headquarters for all Army special forces.

The names of the killed and wounded were being withheld pending notification
of their families.

American deaths in Afghanistan now number four. CIA operative Johnny "Mike"
Spann was killed Nov. 25 at the beginning of the Qalai Janghi fortress
prisoner revolt. Five U.S. soldiers were hurt by another U.S. JDAM bomb
during that uprising.

Another U.S. soldier was shot under the collarbone in fighting near Kandahar
Tuesday, but his injuries were not life-threatening, anonymous defense
officials said.

The soldier, who had been working with anti-Taliban groups, was evacuated
from Afghanistan and was in stable condition at a military hospital, a U.S.
Central Command statement said.

Four other servicemen have died in accidents outside Afghanistan during
operations related to the war on terrorism — two in Pakistan in a helicopter
crash, one accidentally shot in Uzbekistan and another run over by a truck
while loading equipment.

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has pointed out in recent days that the
United States has entered a more dangerous phase in the war to root out the
Taliban, Usama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda terrorist network.

"It is a very complicated, untidy circumstance, and it makes it a dangerous
and difficult task," Rumsfeld said Tuesday at a Pentagon press conference.

"The situation in Kandahar is complicated," he added. "It's not easy, but one
thing is clear: The Taliban and Al Qaeda will be driven from Kandahar."

Rumsfeld said Marines would probably not be involved in the assault on
Kandahar, but patrols operating out of the base 70 miles southwest of the
city were preventing Taliban forces from moving.

The base, a former private airfield for rich Arabs to use on hunting trips,
is temporary home for some 1,300 U.S. Marines and an unknown number of
British and Australian troops.

American troops have been on the ground in Afghanistan for weeks to help
forces fighting the Taliban militia, giving them weapons, food and other
supplies. They also have been helping call in airstrikes, pinpointing targets
for U.S. warplanes.

American planes have been bombing Kandahar to help anti-Taliban attackers,
while Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar has instructed his followers not to
surrender.

Two main groups of anti-Taliban forces are pressing toward Kandahar as the
Marine base's contingent of about 1,300 operates within striking distance.
The opposition forces included those of Hamid Karzai, who was named head of
the provisional government in Afghanistan Wednesday morning. Karzai told
Britain's Channel 4 News that he was safe.

The United States is focusing its bombing on Kandahar and the mountainous
area near the Khyber Pass south of Jalalabad, where it is believed bin Laden
and his top lieutenants are hiding in a complex of caves and tunnels.




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