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Spokesman: Probe will determine Chinook crash facts

Posted 8/8/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service


8/8/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- 
An investigation will determine the facts surrounding the deaths of 30 U.S. service members and eight Afghan commandos when their CH-47 Chinook helicopter went down in Afghanistan's Wardak province Aug. 6, a Pentagon spokesman said.

Marine Corps Col. Dave Lapan warned against jumping to conclusions about the incident.

"Any conclusions are premature until we conduct an investigation to determine the facts," he said Aug. 8 during an informal meeting with Pentagon reporters. Leaks of information resulted in reporting that was "all over the place in terms of facts that were not accurate," Lapan said.

"It's never helpful when people get out in the immediate aftermath of an incident like this and start providing information that one, can be inaccurate and lead to inaccurate reporting, and two, can be speculative about what may or may not have happened," he added.

A rocket-propelled grenade shot down the Army helicopter, Pentagon officials said Aug. 8.  Five of the U.S. casualties were aircrew members, and 25 were members of U.S. Special Operations Command. It was the largest loss of life in a single combat incident in Afghanistan, officials said.

Lapan caution reporters against reading too much into a single combat incident. As tragic as the loss of life is, he said, it is not a trend, but an anomaly.

"This one single incident does not represent any watershed or trend," Lapan said. "As we have said continuously, the Taliban were going to come back hard. They weren't going to take the losses that they have suffered lightly. They were going to try to inflict casualties not only on us, but the Afghans, and those are the things we are seeing."

The Taliban are still on the run, and the coalition and its Afghan partners have reversed the momentum of the insurgent group, the colonel said, adding that special operations forces will continue to drive on.

"In the immediate aftermath, they press on with the mission," the colonel said. "It is an unfortunate fact of the business we're in that we take casualties, and our folks are well-trained to recognize that they can't let the loss of their comrades deter them from the mission, especially since this is a very dangerous undertaking, and you can't afford to lose focus."



tabComments
8/10/2011 8:16:54 PM ET
I think a scene from the movie Blackhawk Down summed it up best. You can't control who gets hit and who doesn't, who falls out of a chopper or why. It ain't up to you. It's just war.
J.T., Crestview FL
 
8/9/2011 12:15:19 PM ET
I have an idea. We gather the GPS coord of where the Chinook actually got shot down and send a tactical nuke to the closest known insurgent village. This will send a message. It's time. Let's WIN a war and stop worrying about public opinion. We no longer have the political brawn.
Sean, been there
 
8/8/2011 8:01:28 PM ET
I agree with Col Lapan that conclusions are premature until an investigation to determine the actual facts is concluded. He mentions that leaks resulted in erroneous reporting. I would like that statement clarified as to the following: 1. Is it a permitted practice to send that many SEALS out on a mission in a single helicopter? 2. Were the SEALS in fact in a standard National Guard Chinook transport helicopter rather than one of the special ops Chinooks used for special ops and is this an approved practice during missions? 3. Is it standard practice to identify units involved in special ops of the type that is claimed to have taken out Osama bin Laden? 4. Was Osama bin Laden in fact on dialysis for a genetic condition which caused renal failure since before 911 and if he was, what were his chances of survival getting treatment in the caves of of Afghanistan and homes in Pakistan? 5. If in fact Osama bin Laden had this condition mentioned in 4. above, why were...
John Williams, Surprise AZ
 
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