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Missing U.S. commando found dead in Niger desert

- By W.J. Hennigan Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — After an intense two-day search, local military forces recovered the body Friday of a U.S. Army commando who was inadverten­tly left behind after a daylight ambush by militants killed three other Green Berets in a rugged border region in Niger.

Pentagon officials had not previously announced that a Green Beret was missing in action after the surprise attack on a joint patrol of U.S. commandos and Nigerian troops Wednesday. Six of the 12 Americans on the patrol were killed or wounded.

U.S. officials hoped the missing Special Forces operative might still be hiding in the brush, rather than having been taken captive, and launched a massive search and rescue mission with aerial drones and other aircraft, as well Nigerian ground forces.

The death of four Green Berets in West Africa marks the worst single loss of U.S. forces under fire since President Donald Trump took office. The president was briefed on the search and the discovery of the body, officials said.

The casualties came as a heavy blow to the insular Special Operations community that increasing­ly shoulders the burden of America’s counter-terrorism operations overseas. The four fatalities, as well as two wounded Green Berets, were in the 3rd Special Forces Group in Fort Bragg, N.C.

The Pentagon identified the first three commandos as Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, 35, of Puyallup, Wash.; Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Johnson, 39, of Springboro, Ohio, and Staff Sgt. Dustin Wright, 29, of Lyons, Ga.

Officials did not as release the name of the Green Beret whose body was found. It wasn’t clear if he was killed in the firefight or died later.

According to the Pentagon, the Special Forces Operationa­l Detachment Alpha, known as an A-Team, went on a routine patrol Wednesday with 20 troops with the Forces Armées Nigerienne­s when they came under heavy fire.

Officials said a barrage of machine gun fire and rocket-propelled grenades forced the U.S. and Nigerien troops into defensive positions near the border with Mali. The fire peppered the troops’ trucks and shattered windows before they could regroup and fire back.

The soldiers called in support from French attack helicopter­s and fighter jets. It’s not clear whether the aircraft fired.

Amid the chaos, the officials said, one of the 12 Green Berets was left behind in a border region notorious for drug smuggling, human traffickin­g and myriad extremist militias, including allies of alQaida and Islamic State.

The other Green Berets only noticed his absence after they had pulled back.

Col. Mark Cheadle, spokesman for U.S. Africa Command, which oversees U.S. military operations on the continent, said commanders are reassessin­g whether U.S. forces on patrol are properly supplied to defend themselves.

“We are re-evaluating,” he said. “This was not expected. This was clearly something that had we anticipate­d this sort of attack, we absolutely would have devoted more resources to it to reduce the risk.”

He said the patrol had planned to talk to local leaders about security. He said the military has no indication that someone tipped off the militants to set up an ambush in the brush.

“It would’ve been easy to have good concealmen­t in this terrain,” he said. He said an unarmed surveillan­ce aircraft was overhead, but no armed air cover because the threat was considered “unlikely.”

Four Nigerien soldiers also were reported killed with eight wounded. The two wounded Green Berets were flown to the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, the largest U.S. military hospital overseas.

The deadly attack drew attention to the littleknow­n U.S. military presence in Niger, an impoverish­ed desert country in Francophon­e West Africa. About 800 U.S. personnel are deployed there.

Niger is considered strategic for U.S. counter-terrorism operations. It lies between Nigeria to the south, where an Islamic State affiliate, Boko Haram, has been fighting to establish Islamic rule, and Mali to the west, where multiple extremist militias are active.

In all, U.S. special operations teams are deployed in 124 countries to train, advise, and assist friendly forces, although most are focused in Africa and the Middle East.

The special operators’ clandestin­e operations and extensive training in guerrilla warfare became critical in tracking terrorist networks rooted in the Middle East and Horn of Africa.

Brig. Gen. Donald C. Bolduc, former commander of Special Operations Command-Africa told Special Warfare magazine, an internal military publicatio­n, in January that the future for special operations “isn’t in Iraq or Afghanista­n but in areas where we’re seeing violent extremist organizati­ons spreading, like Africa.”

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