Redhots
Member
- Apr 9, 2006
- 507
- 36
- 16
Pat Tillman investigations spur questions
Probes highlight chaos surrounding former football player's combat death
In a remote and dangerous corner of Afghanistan, under the protective roar of Apache attack helicopters and B-52 bombers, special agents and investigators did their work.
They walked the landscape with surviving witnesses. They found a rock stained with the blood of the victim. They re-enacted the killings here the U.S. Army Rangers swept through the canyon in their Humvee, blasting away; here the doomed man waved his arms, pleading for recognition as a friend, not an enemy.
Cease fire, friendlies, I am Pat (expletive) Tillman, damn it! he shouted, again and again.
The latest inquiry into Tillmans death by friendly fire should end next month; authorities have said they intend to release to the public only a synopsis of their report. But The Associated Press has combed through the results of 2¼ years of investigations and uncovered some startling findings.
One of the four shooters, Staff Sgt. Trevor Alders, had recently had PRK laser eye surgery. Although he could see two sets of hands straight up, his vision was hazy, he said. In the absence of friendly identifying signals, he assumed Tillman and an allied Afghan who also was killed were enemy.
Another, Spc. Steve Elliott, said he was excited by the sight of rifles, muzzle flashes and shapes. A third, Spc. Stephen Ashpole, said he saw two figures, and just aimed where everyone else was shooting.
Squad leader Sgt. Greg Baker had 20-20 eyesight, but claimed he had tunnel vision. Amid the chaos and pumping adrenaline, Baker said he hammered what he thought was the enemy but was actually the allied Afghan fighter next to Tillman who was trying to give the Americans cover: I zoned in on him because I could see the AK-47. I focused only on him.
All four failed to identify their targets before firing, a direct violation of the fire discipline techniques drilled into every soldier.
Shortage of supplies
Theres more:
+Tillmans platoon had nearly run out of vital supplies, according to one of the shooters. They were down to the water in their Camelbak drinking pouches, and were forced to buy a goat from a local vendor. Delayed supply flights contributed to the hunger, fatigue and possibly misjudgments by platoon members.
+A key commander in the events that led to Tillmans death both was reprimanded for his role and meted out punishments to those who fired, raising questions of conflict of interest.
+A field hospital report says someone tried to jump-start Tillmans heart with CPR hours after his head had been partly blown off and his corpse wrapped in a poncho; key evidence including Tillmans body armor and uniform was burned.
+Investigators have been stymied because some of those involved now have lawyers and refused to cooperate, and other soldiers who were at the scene couldnt be located.
+Three of the four shooters are now out of the Army, and essentially beyond the reach of military justice.
Taken together, these findings raise more questions than they answer, in a case that already had veered from suggestions that it all was a result of the fog of war to insinuations that criminal acts were to blame.
The Pentagons failure to reveal for more than a month that Tillman was killed by friendly fire have raised suspicions of a coverup. To Tillmans family, there is little doubt that his death was more than an innocent mistake.
One investigator told the Tillmans that it hadnt been ruled out that Tillman was shot by an American sniper or deliberately murdered by his own men though he also gave no indication the evidence pointed that way.
I will not assume his death was accidental or fog of war, said his father, Pat Tillman Sr. I want to know what happened, and theyve clouded that so badly we may never know.
Almost two years after three bullets through the forehead killed the star defensive back a man who President Bush would call an inspiration on and off the football field the fourth investigation began.
This time, the investigators are supposed to think like prosecutors:
Who fired the shots that killed Pat Tillman, and why?
Who insisted Tillmans platoon split and travel through dangerous territory in daylight, against its own policy? Who let the command slip away and chaos engulf the unit?
And perhaps most of all: Was a crime committed?
From football to Rangers
The long and complicated story of Pat Tillmans death and the investigations it spawned began five years ago, in the smoking ruins of the World Trade Center.
It is a proud and patriotic thing you are doing, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld wrote to Tillman in 2002, after Tillman shocked and outraged by the Sept. 11 attacks turned down a multimillion-dollar contract with the Arizona Cardinals to join the elite Army Rangers.
The San Jose, Calif. native enlisted with his brother Kevin, who gave up his own chance to play professional baseball. The Tillmans were deployed to Iraq in 2003, then sent to Afghanistan.
The mission of their Black Sheep platoon in April 2004 sounded straightforward: Divide a region along the Pakistan border into zones, then check each grid for insurgents and weapons. They were to clear two zones and then move deeper into Afghanistan.
A broken-down Humvee known as a Ground Mobility Vehicle, or GMV, stalled the unit on an isolated road. A mechanic couldnt fix it, and a fuel pump flown in on a helicopter didnt help.
Hours passed. Enemy fighters watched invisibly, plotting their ambush.
Tillmans platoon must have presented an inviting target. There were 39 men and about a dozen vehicles.
Impatience was rising at the tactical operations center at Forward Operating Base Salerno, near Khowst, Afghanistan, where officers coordinated the movements of several platoons. Led by then-Maj. David Hodne, the so-called Cross-Functional Team worked at a U-shaped table inside a 20-by-30-foot tent with a projection screen and a satellite radio.
(Hodne, now a lieutenant colonel and executive officer for the 75th Ranger Regiment, declined to be interviewed on the record by the AP as did nearly every person involved in the incident.)
When the Humvee broke down, the Black Sheep were nearing the end of their assignment; all that was left was to turn one last stone and then get out, Hodne would testify. The unit was then to head for Manah, a small village where it would spend the night.
The commanders had already given the Black Sheep an extra day to get into its grid zones. High-ranking commanders were pushing us pretty hard to keep moving, said Hodne.
We had better not have any more delays due to this vehicle, he told his subordinates.
'I felt like the village idiot'
At the operations center, the Black Sheeps company commander, then-Capt. William C. Satch Saunders, was feeling the heat to get the platoon moving.
We wanted to make sure we had a force staged to confirm or deny any enemy presence in Manah the next day, so we would not get ourselves too far behind setting ourselves up for our next series of operations, he recalled later to an investigator.
The order came down to split the platoon in two to speed its progress.
Saunders initially told investigators that Hodne had issued the order, but later, after he was given immunity from prosecution, he acknowledged it was his decision alone.
Hodne later said he was in the dark I felt like the village idiot because I had no idea what they were doing, he recalled. The decision was foolhardy, he said. Divided in two, they didnt have enough combat power to do that mission of clearing Manah, he testified. (Other commanders have insisted that splitting the platoon was perfectly safe and a common practice.)
One thing is clear: The order sparked a flurry of activity by the Black Sheep.
One of the gunners who shot Tillman said his unit didnt even have time to look at a map before getting back on the road.
We were rushed to conduct an operation that had such flaws, said Alders. Which in the end would prove to be fatal.
If anything, this sense of urgency was as deadly to Tillman as the bullet that cut his life short, Alders wrote in a lengthy statement protesting his expulsion from the Rangers. We could have conducted the search at night like we did on the follow-up operations or the next morning like we ended up doing anyway. Why, I ask, why?
An investigator, Brig. Gen. Gary M. Jones, would later agree that an artificial sense of urgency to keep Tillmans platoon moving was a crucial factor in his death: There was no specific intelligence that made the movement to Manah before nightfall imperative.
An officer involved in the incident told AP there was, however, general intelligence of insurgent activity in this region, historically a Taliban hotbed.
That suspicion would be confirmed when the Black Sheep drove through a narrow canyon, its walls towering about 500 feet, and came under fire from enemy Afghans. Chaos broke out and communications broke down.
After the platoon split, the second section of the convoy roared out of the canyon, into an open valley and straight at their comrades a few minutes ahead. A Humvee packed with pumped-up Rangers opened fire, killing the friendly Afghan and Tillman, though he desperately sought to be recognized.
Later, at least one of the same Rangers turned his guns on a village where witnesses say civilian women and children had gathered. The shooters raked it with fire, the American witnesses said; they wounded two additional fellow Rangers, including their own platoon leader.
'Holding the military accountable'
Had it happened in the United States, police would have quickly cordoned off the area with crime scene tape and determined whether a law had been broken.
Instead, the investigations into Tillmans death have cascaded, one after another, for the past 30 months.
For Mary Tillman, getting to the bottom of her sons death is more than a personal quest.
This isnt just about our son, she said. Its about holding the military accountable. Finding out what happened to Pat is ultimately going to be important in finding out what happened to other soldiers.
In the days after the shootings, the first officer appointed to investigate, then-Capt. Richard Scott, interviewed all four shooters, their driver, and many others who were there. He concluded within a week that the gunmen demonstrated gross negligence and recommended further investigation.
It could involve some Rangers that could be charged with a crime, Scott told a superior later.
Then-Lt. Col. Jeffrey Bailey later assured Tillmans family that those responsible would be punished as harshly as possible.
But no one was ever court martialed; staff lawyers advised senior Army commanders reviewing the incident that there was no legal basis for it.
Instead, the Army punished seven people; four soldiers received relatively minor punishments known as Article 15s under military law, with no court proceedings. These four ranged from written reprimands to expulsion from the Rangers. One, Baker, had his pay reduced and was effectively forced out of the Army. The other three soldiers received administrative reprimands.
Scotts report circulated briefly among a small corps of high-ranking officers.
Then, it disappeared.
Some of Tillmans relatives think the Army buried the report because its findings were too explosive. Army officials refused to provide a copy to the AP, saying no materials related to the investigation could be released.
Lingering questions
The commander of Tillmans 75th Ranger Regiment, then-Col. James C. Nixon, wasnt satisfied with Scotts investigation, which he said focused too heavily on pre-combat inspections and procedures rather than on what had happened.
Scott made some conclusions in the document that werent validated by facts as described by the participants, Nixon would tell later investigators.
Nixon assigned his top aide, Lt. Col. Ralph Kauzlarich, to lead what became the second investigation. Kauzlarich harshly criticized Baker and the men on his truck.
Among other things, Baker should have known that at least two of his subordinates had never been in a firefight, and should have closely supervised where they shot.
His failure to do so resulted in deaths of Cpl. Tillman and the AMF soldier, and the serious wounding of two other (Rangers), Kauzlarich concluded. While a great deal of discretion should be granted to a leader who is making difficult judgments in the heat of combat, the command also has a responsibility to hold its leaders accountable when that judgment is so wanton or poor that it places the lives of other men at risk.
The Tillman family complained that questions remained: Who killed Tillman? Why did they fire? Were the punishments stiff enough?
I dont think that punishment fit their actions out there in the field, said Kevin Tillman, who was with his brother the day Pat was killed but was several minutes behind him in the trailing element of a convoy and saw nothing.
They were not inquiring, identifying, engaging (targets). They werent doing their job as a soldier, he told an investigator. You have an obligation as a soldier to, you know, do certain things, and just shooting isnt one of your responsibilities. You know, it has to be a known, likely suspect.
And so, in November 2004, acting Army Secretary Les Brownlee ordered up yet another investigation, by Jones.
The result was 2,100 pages of transcripts and detailed descriptions of the incident, but no new charges or punishments. The report, completed Jan. 10, 2005, was provided to the Tillman family. It has not been released to the public; the family found it wanting.
Pressed anew by the Tillmans, the Pentagon inspector general announced a review of the investigations in August 2005. And in March 2006, they launched a new criminal probe into the actions of the men who shot at Tillman.
[continued]
Probes highlight chaos surrounding former football player's combat death
In a remote and dangerous corner of Afghanistan, under the protective roar of Apache attack helicopters and B-52 bombers, special agents and investigators did their work.
They walked the landscape with surviving witnesses. They found a rock stained with the blood of the victim. They re-enacted the killings here the U.S. Army Rangers swept through the canyon in their Humvee, blasting away; here the doomed man waved his arms, pleading for recognition as a friend, not an enemy.
Cease fire, friendlies, I am Pat (expletive) Tillman, damn it! he shouted, again and again.
The latest inquiry into Tillmans death by friendly fire should end next month; authorities have said they intend to release to the public only a synopsis of their report. But The Associated Press has combed through the results of 2¼ years of investigations and uncovered some startling findings.
One of the four shooters, Staff Sgt. Trevor Alders, had recently had PRK laser eye surgery. Although he could see two sets of hands straight up, his vision was hazy, he said. In the absence of friendly identifying signals, he assumed Tillman and an allied Afghan who also was killed were enemy.
Another, Spc. Steve Elliott, said he was excited by the sight of rifles, muzzle flashes and shapes. A third, Spc. Stephen Ashpole, said he saw two figures, and just aimed where everyone else was shooting.
Squad leader Sgt. Greg Baker had 20-20 eyesight, but claimed he had tunnel vision. Amid the chaos and pumping adrenaline, Baker said he hammered what he thought was the enemy but was actually the allied Afghan fighter next to Tillman who was trying to give the Americans cover: I zoned in on him because I could see the AK-47. I focused only on him.
All four failed to identify their targets before firing, a direct violation of the fire discipline techniques drilled into every soldier.
Shortage of supplies
Theres more:
+Tillmans platoon had nearly run out of vital supplies, according to one of the shooters. They were down to the water in their Camelbak drinking pouches, and were forced to buy a goat from a local vendor. Delayed supply flights contributed to the hunger, fatigue and possibly misjudgments by platoon members.
+A key commander in the events that led to Tillmans death both was reprimanded for his role and meted out punishments to those who fired, raising questions of conflict of interest.
+A field hospital report says someone tried to jump-start Tillmans heart with CPR hours after his head had been partly blown off and his corpse wrapped in a poncho; key evidence including Tillmans body armor and uniform was burned.
+Investigators have been stymied because some of those involved now have lawyers and refused to cooperate, and other soldiers who were at the scene couldnt be located.
+Three of the four shooters are now out of the Army, and essentially beyond the reach of military justice.
Taken together, these findings raise more questions than they answer, in a case that already had veered from suggestions that it all was a result of the fog of war to insinuations that criminal acts were to blame.
The Pentagons failure to reveal for more than a month that Tillman was killed by friendly fire have raised suspicions of a coverup. To Tillmans family, there is little doubt that his death was more than an innocent mistake.
One investigator told the Tillmans that it hadnt been ruled out that Tillman was shot by an American sniper or deliberately murdered by his own men though he also gave no indication the evidence pointed that way.
I will not assume his death was accidental or fog of war, said his father, Pat Tillman Sr. I want to know what happened, and theyve clouded that so badly we may never know.
Almost two years after three bullets through the forehead killed the star defensive back a man who President Bush would call an inspiration on and off the football field the fourth investigation began.
This time, the investigators are supposed to think like prosecutors:
Who fired the shots that killed Pat Tillman, and why?
Who insisted Tillmans platoon split and travel through dangerous territory in daylight, against its own policy? Who let the command slip away and chaos engulf the unit?
And perhaps most of all: Was a crime committed?
From football to Rangers
The long and complicated story of Pat Tillmans death and the investigations it spawned began five years ago, in the smoking ruins of the World Trade Center.
It is a proud and patriotic thing you are doing, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld wrote to Tillman in 2002, after Tillman shocked and outraged by the Sept. 11 attacks turned down a multimillion-dollar contract with the Arizona Cardinals to join the elite Army Rangers.
The San Jose, Calif. native enlisted with his brother Kevin, who gave up his own chance to play professional baseball. The Tillmans were deployed to Iraq in 2003, then sent to Afghanistan.
The mission of their Black Sheep platoon in April 2004 sounded straightforward: Divide a region along the Pakistan border into zones, then check each grid for insurgents and weapons. They were to clear two zones and then move deeper into Afghanistan.
A broken-down Humvee known as a Ground Mobility Vehicle, or GMV, stalled the unit on an isolated road. A mechanic couldnt fix it, and a fuel pump flown in on a helicopter didnt help.
Hours passed. Enemy fighters watched invisibly, plotting their ambush.
Tillmans platoon must have presented an inviting target. There were 39 men and about a dozen vehicles.
Impatience was rising at the tactical operations center at Forward Operating Base Salerno, near Khowst, Afghanistan, where officers coordinated the movements of several platoons. Led by then-Maj. David Hodne, the so-called Cross-Functional Team worked at a U-shaped table inside a 20-by-30-foot tent with a projection screen and a satellite radio.
(Hodne, now a lieutenant colonel and executive officer for the 75th Ranger Regiment, declined to be interviewed on the record by the AP as did nearly every person involved in the incident.)
When the Humvee broke down, the Black Sheep were nearing the end of their assignment; all that was left was to turn one last stone and then get out, Hodne would testify. The unit was then to head for Manah, a small village where it would spend the night.
The commanders had already given the Black Sheep an extra day to get into its grid zones. High-ranking commanders were pushing us pretty hard to keep moving, said Hodne.
We had better not have any more delays due to this vehicle, he told his subordinates.
'I felt like the village idiot'
At the operations center, the Black Sheeps company commander, then-Capt. William C. Satch Saunders, was feeling the heat to get the platoon moving.
We wanted to make sure we had a force staged to confirm or deny any enemy presence in Manah the next day, so we would not get ourselves too far behind setting ourselves up for our next series of operations, he recalled later to an investigator.
The order came down to split the platoon in two to speed its progress.
Saunders initially told investigators that Hodne had issued the order, but later, after he was given immunity from prosecution, he acknowledged it was his decision alone.
Hodne later said he was in the dark I felt like the village idiot because I had no idea what they were doing, he recalled. The decision was foolhardy, he said. Divided in two, they didnt have enough combat power to do that mission of clearing Manah, he testified. (Other commanders have insisted that splitting the platoon was perfectly safe and a common practice.)
One thing is clear: The order sparked a flurry of activity by the Black Sheep.
One of the gunners who shot Tillman said his unit didnt even have time to look at a map before getting back on the road.
We were rushed to conduct an operation that had such flaws, said Alders. Which in the end would prove to be fatal.
If anything, this sense of urgency was as deadly to Tillman as the bullet that cut his life short, Alders wrote in a lengthy statement protesting his expulsion from the Rangers. We could have conducted the search at night like we did on the follow-up operations or the next morning like we ended up doing anyway. Why, I ask, why?
An investigator, Brig. Gen. Gary M. Jones, would later agree that an artificial sense of urgency to keep Tillmans platoon moving was a crucial factor in his death: There was no specific intelligence that made the movement to Manah before nightfall imperative.
An officer involved in the incident told AP there was, however, general intelligence of insurgent activity in this region, historically a Taliban hotbed.
That suspicion would be confirmed when the Black Sheep drove through a narrow canyon, its walls towering about 500 feet, and came under fire from enemy Afghans. Chaos broke out and communications broke down.
After the platoon split, the second section of the convoy roared out of the canyon, into an open valley and straight at their comrades a few minutes ahead. A Humvee packed with pumped-up Rangers opened fire, killing the friendly Afghan and Tillman, though he desperately sought to be recognized.
Later, at least one of the same Rangers turned his guns on a village where witnesses say civilian women and children had gathered. The shooters raked it with fire, the American witnesses said; they wounded two additional fellow Rangers, including their own platoon leader.
'Holding the military accountable'
Had it happened in the United States, police would have quickly cordoned off the area with crime scene tape and determined whether a law had been broken.
Instead, the investigations into Tillmans death have cascaded, one after another, for the past 30 months.
For Mary Tillman, getting to the bottom of her sons death is more than a personal quest.
This isnt just about our son, she said. Its about holding the military accountable. Finding out what happened to Pat is ultimately going to be important in finding out what happened to other soldiers.
In the days after the shootings, the first officer appointed to investigate, then-Capt. Richard Scott, interviewed all four shooters, their driver, and many others who were there. He concluded within a week that the gunmen demonstrated gross negligence and recommended further investigation.
It could involve some Rangers that could be charged with a crime, Scott told a superior later.
Then-Lt. Col. Jeffrey Bailey later assured Tillmans family that those responsible would be punished as harshly as possible.
But no one was ever court martialed; staff lawyers advised senior Army commanders reviewing the incident that there was no legal basis for it.
Instead, the Army punished seven people; four soldiers received relatively minor punishments known as Article 15s under military law, with no court proceedings. These four ranged from written reprimands to expulsion from the Rangers. One, Baker, had his pay reduced and was effectively forced out of the Army. The other three soldiers received administrative reprimands.
Scotts report circulated briefly among a small corps of high-ranking officers.
Then, it disappeared.
Some of Tillmans relatives think the Army buried the report because its findings were too explosive. Army officials refused to provide a copy to the AP, saying no materials related to the investigation could be released.
Lingering questions
The commander of Tillmans 75th Ranger Regiment, then-Col. James C. Nixon, wasnt satisfied with Scotts investigation, which he said focused too heavily on pre-combat inspections and procedures rather than on what had happened.
Scott made some conclusions in the document that werent validated by facts as described by the participants, Nixon would tell later investigators.
Nixon assigned his top aide, Lt. Col. Ralph Kauzlarich, to lead what became the second investigation. Kauzlarich harshly criticized Baker and the men on his truck.
Among other things, Baker should have known that at least two of his subordinates had never been in a firefight, and should have closely supervised where they shot.
His failure to do so resulted in deaths of Cpl. Tillman and the AMF soldier, and the serious wounding of two other (Rangers), Kauzlarich concluded. While a great deal of discretion should be granted to a leader who is making difficult judgments in the heat of combat, the command also has a responsibility to hold its leaders accountable when that judgment is so wanton or poor that it places the lives of other men at risk.
The Tillman family complained that questions remained: Who killed Tillman? Why did they fire? Were the punishments stiff enough?
I dont think that punishment fit their actions out there in the field, said Kevin Tillman, who was with his brother the day Pat was killed but was several minutes behind him in the trailing element of a convoy and saw nothing.
They were not inquiring, identifying, engaging (targets). They werent doing their job as a soldier, he told an investigator. You have an obligation as a soldier to, you know, do certain things, and just shooting isnt one of your responsibilities. You know, it has to be a known, likely suspect.
And so, in November 2004, acting Army Secretary Les Brownlee ordered up yet another investigation, by Jones.
The result was 2,100 pages of transcripts and detailed descriptions of the incident, but no new charges or punishments. The report, completed Jan. 10, 2005, was provided to the Tillman family. It has not been released to the public; the family found it wanting.
Pressed anew by the Tillmans, the Pentagon inspector general announced a review of the investigations in August 2005. And in March 2006, they launched a new criminal probe into the actions of the men who shot at Tillman.
[continued]