Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump meets remains of SEAL killed in Yemen

He and Ivanka join family of fallen Team 6 member

- By Michael A. Memoli and W.J. Hennigan Washington Bureau michael.memoli@latimes.com

DOVER, Del. — President Donald Trump made an unannounce­d trip Wednesday to witness the return of the remains of a Navy SEAL killed in a botched raid in Yemen, the first known casualty of an operation Trump ordered, as he confronted the most fraught duty of the office while partaking in one of its most solemn rituals.

At Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, Trump joined the family of Chief Special Warfare Operator William “Ryan” Owens, 36, who died during a raid on a compound used by al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the terrorist group’s Yemenbased offshoot.

Owens, a member of the Virginia-based unit known as SEAL Team 6, was a native of Peoria, Ill.

The operation began as a mission to gather computers and electronic devices believed to contain informatio­n about the organizati­on, and possibly about plots in the works.

But it devolved unexpected­ly into a firefight that also killed more than a dozen women and children.

Among those reportedly killed was the 8-year old daughter of Anwar Awlaki, the American-born al-Qaida leader who was based in Yemen and killed in a 2011 drone strike. Awlaki has been cited as the inspiratio­n for several major attacks in the West, including the San Bernardino, Calif., shootings.

The ritual in Dover, called a dignified transfer, was kept private at the request of Owens’ family. Trump, accompanie­d by his daughter Ivanka and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., were on the grounds for more than two hours.

The remains of service members killed in action are brought to the Delaware base in flag-draped cases, then carried by a six-person team to a vehicle to be taken to a mortuary on the base. According to the Air Force, the dignified transfer is conducted for every service member who dies in a theater of operation.

Media coverage of the transfers were banned in 1991 during the Gulf War, in response to an episode two years earlier in which a television network showed split-screen images of a jovial President George H.W. Bush and the coffins of U.S. personnel killed in Panama.

The policy was lifted by the Pentagon during the Obama administra­tion after a review, and families were given the option to allow media coverage.

President Barack Obama traveled to Dover twice to witness such transfers, the first time in October 2009. He returned in 2011 to witness the remains of 30 service members killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanista­n being brought back to the U.S.

In a speech in December, Obama said the visits to Dover made real the potential costs of decisions he made to send troops into conflict.

The Pentagon typically relies on drone strikes against al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, but U.S. commanders believed they had identified militant headquarte­rs in the village of Yaklaa in Yemen’s Bayda province and wanted to send in troops to gather valuable informatio­n about the terrorist group’s operations.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies consider the group one of al-Qaida’s most dangerous offshoots because of its repeated attempts to attack Western targets.

The group attempted to destroy a U.S.-bound airliner over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009, tried to take down two cargo planes headed to Chicago in 2010 and claimed responsibi­lity for the mass shooting that killed 12 people at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris in 2015.

The U.S. military’s Joint Special Operations Command plan for the raid had been ready in the final weeks of Obama’s presidency and was awaiting approval, said U.S. officials, who weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the clandestin­e operation. Obama had opted not to sign off because the proposal called for the raid to take place on Jan. 28, a week after he left office.

With Trump’s blessing, U.S. officials said, helicopter­s carrying members of the elite Navy SEAL Team 6 slipped into eastern Yemen under the cover of darkness.

The raid ran into problems almost immediatel­y after the assault began. Commandos encountere­d gunfire and a nearly hourlong firefight ensued, wounding Owens and three other commandos.

The others are expected to survive, officials said.

At least 14 militants, including women, lost their lives, the U.S. military said.

“There were a lot of female combatants who were part of this,” Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters. “We saw during this operation as it was taking place that they ran to pre-establishe­d positions as if they’d trained to be ready and trained to be combatants and engage with us.”

He said local reports of female civilian casualties should be taken with “a grain of salt” but would not comment on the reports of civilian deaths, including Awlaki’s young daughter, other than to say that the allegation­s were being investigat­ed.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP ?? President Donald Trump and his daughter, Ivanka, flew to Dover Air Force Base to witness the return of the remains of a Navy SEAL killed in a raid in Yemen against al-Qaida.
NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP President Donald Trump and his daughter, Ivanka, flew to Dover Air Force Base to witness the return of the remains of a Navy SEAL killed in a raid in Yemen against al-Qaida.

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