The Borneo Post

Pentagon probe finds training, command issues in Niger ambush

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WASHINGTON: Acomprehen­sive probe into last year’s deadly attack on US and local forces in Niger uncovered a series of avoidable blunders leading up to the assault, the Pentagon said.

Four American soldiers and four members of Nigerien partner forces were killed in the Oct 4 ambush, when scores of jihadists overran their convoy in southweste­rn Niger, near the Mali border.

While the Pentagon said all four US soldiers fought bravely and ‘died with honor,’ investigat­ors found they had not been properly trained ahead of the mission and pointed to problems with how it was approved in the first place.

The US soldiers, who belonged to a special operations team, had deployed to the western African nation in the autumn to conduct counter-terrorism assistance and training with the Nigerien military. Currently, about 800 US troops are in Niger.

But at the time of their deployment, only half of the US team had conducted any collective training together, according to an eight-page summary of findings of the investigat­ion, which itself remains classified.

Their mission on Oct 3 was to ‘find/fix and, if possible, capture’ a key member of a group calling itself the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, the summary states.

Though the summary did not name the target, officials later said it was Doundoun Cheffou, suspected of involvemen­t in the kidnapping of US aid worker Jeffery Woodke, who was seized at gunpoint from his home in October 2016 in the Tahoua region.

However, the US team commander had ‘ inaccurate­ly characteri­sed’ the nature of the mission in order to get it approved at a low level instead of requesting permission from battalion-level commanders based in Chad.

The language used for the initial mission had been cut and pasted from previous operations and “a lack of attention to detail in quality control and quality assurance,” together with inadequate approvals, “all contribute­d to a general lack of situationa­l awareness and command oversight at every echelon,” the report summary states.

And prior to setting out on the operation, the US team failed to conduct pre-mission rehearsals or battle drills with their Nigerien counterpar­ts, the report found.

Eleven US personnel and more than 30 Nigeriens went out on the mission.

Investigat­ors found “individual, organisati­onal and institutio­nal failures and deficienci­es that contribute­d to the tragic events,” but did not identify one single failure or deficiency as the sole reason.

General Thomas Waldhauser, head of Africa Command, told Pentagon reporters that US forces are now ‘ far more prudent’ in their missions and have beefed up firepower and drone support.

“It provides adequate and more resourcefu­l force protection measures in order to still keep up with the enemy forces on the ground,” he said.

Pentagon officials also published a detailed, 10-minute reconstruc­tion of the ambush itself, which started as the USNigerien eight-vehicle convoy headed out of the remote village of Tongo Tongo, having stopped there for water.

The troops were not even wearing body armor when the assault first began, and had to stop their convoy to don it. Enemy fire was initially light, but quickly intensifie­d as jihadists surged through a wooded area alongside the convoy. — AFP

 ??  ?? Assistant Secretary of Defence for Internatio­nal Security Affairs Robert Karem (left) and Waidhauser (right), speak during a press briefing at the Pentagon in Washington. — AFP photo
Assistant Secretary of Defence for Internatio­nal Security Affairs Robert Karem (left) and Waidhauser (right), speak during a press briefing at the Pentagon in Washington. — AFP photo

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