Santa Fe New Mexican

Army captains not to blame for son’s death, says father

- By Dan Lamothe

The father of a U.S. soldier killed in a devastatin­g ambush in Niger last year said his family does not blame two Army captains that the U.S. military cited for lapses in planning in an investigat­ion summary released Thursday, saying any mistakes did not contribute directly to the death of their loved one.

Army Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, 35, was killed Oct. 4 while maneuverin­g alongside a vehicle as he and his fellow soldiers faced a hail of enemy fire outside the village of Tongo Tongo in an attack that eventually sparked a political firestorm in Washington and a monthslong military investigat­ion. Black’s father, Henry, said investigat­ors told him his son repeatedly fired on the enemy with both his service rifle and a grenade launcher before he eventually fell, mortally wounded.

Moments later, two fellow soldiers who had been fighting alongside him, Staff Sgt. Dustin M. Wright, 29, and Staff Sgt. Jeremiah W. Johnson, 39, also were killed, the Pentagon said in the eight-page summary released Thursday. A fourth U.S. soldier, Sgt. La David T. Johnson, 25, was killed less than 30 minutes later and not found for another two days. All four soldiers were stripped of their equipment.

“At some point as they were moving and the vehicle was moving, Bryan was apparently ahead of the vehicle, and he was killed,” Black’s father said. “Dustin and Jeremiah pulled his body behind the vehicle, and they continued to engage the enemy until they were apparently [nearly] overrun. And then … Jeremiah was hit. Dustin returned to stay with him and fight with him, and they fought together until they died from the wounds they had.”

Senior U.S. military officials said Thursday that all of the U.S. soldiers in the battle fought courageous­ly, and several could receive awards for valor. The Pentagon’s findings found multiple individual and institutio­nal failures created the circumstan­ces in which an American unit could be overrun, but the only individual­s specifical­ly cited were the team leader, Capt. Michael Perozeni, and a second Army captain who served as the acting commander of a base nearby.

Perozeni was shot in the battle and tossed from a vehicle, and later identified in congressio­nal testimony by a senior defense official in December. He and the other captain were cited in the investigat­ion for filing an initial concept of operation that said the unit, part of 3rd Special Forces Group, was to undertake a routine reconnaiss­ance patrol.

In reality, the soldiers went on a counterter­rorism mission to Tiloa, Niger, near the Mali border, to search for an Islamic State leader, Doundoun Cheffou. He wasn’t there, so the soldiers then met with a Nigerien military leader nearby, the Pentagon said.

Black’s father said that as his son’s unit nearly returned to their base in the Nigerien capital of Niamey, a more senior commander sent them on a third mission. The Pentagon said that decision was made by a more senior commander in Chad. He directed them to undertake a multi-team Special Operations raid to a campsite to which the U.S. government had tracked Cheffou, and eventually to do it on their own when another U.S. team was forced to abort a helicopter raid due to bad weather.

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