U.S. Army punishes 6 over Niger ambush

05 November, 2018
U.S. Army punishes 6 over Niger ambush
The U.S. Army has punished six members of the armed forces for their roles in a 2017 mission in Niger that resulted in the ambush deaths of four Americans and four allied Nigerien troops, The New York Times reported on Saturday.

The ambush occurred on Oct. 4, 2017, as a unit of 11 American special forces soldiers and 30 Nigerien troops, returning from a village near the Malian border, were overrun by scores of extremist fighters.

An investigative report released by the Pentagon in May said that while U.S. soldiers had fought bravely and four “died with honor,” they had not been properly prepared for the mission. Investigators cited “individual, organizational and institutional failures.”

Those being disciplined, the Times said Saturday, include Captain Mike Perozeni, the leader of the Green Beret team, as well as his second in command, a master sergeant whose name has been withheld.

The paper said a letter of reprimand to Perozeni cited the insufficient training and a lack of mission rehearsals. The two senior officers who approved the mission and oversaw the ill-fated operation were not reprimanded, according to the newspaper.

“As a result of the Niger 15-6 investigation report, Secretary Mattis directed U.S. Africa Command, U.S. Special Operations Command, Department of the Army and the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to conduct a comprehensive review of procedures, policies and training programs and report back to him with a plan of action and corrective measures,” said Cmdr. Candice Tresch, a Pentagon spokeswoman.

“Secretary Mattis received those reports by the 120-day deadline and is conducting a thorough review of the findings.”

The Defense Department has been tight-lipped about the nature of the mission in Niger.

The Times account said Perozeni’s Green Beret unit, Team 3212, had headed toward the Niger-Mali border in pursuit of an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant militant group leader named Doundoun Cheffou.

After intelligence located him, an operation was planned against the leader’s camp by a helicopter-borne team of American commandos and Nigerien troops, along with Team 3212. But bad weather led to the helicopter mission being canceled. Team 3212 proceeded to the now-empty campsite. It was ambushed by some 50 heavily armed ISIL fighters while returning to its outpost.

The ambush claimed the largest loss of American lives in combat in Africa since the 1993 “Black Hawk Down” incident in Somalia. 
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