Los Angeles Times

Failures cited in Niger ambush

U.S. military halts most Africa missions in response to findings on the deadly episode.

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com Twitter: @davidcloud­LAT

WASHINGTON — U.S. special operations troops in Africa have been restricted from undertakin­g missions that might involve direct combat, one of several steps announced Thursday to prevent future casualties after an October ambush in Niger killed four American soldiers.

U.S. forces have not conducted any operations to kill or capture militants since the deadly confrontat­ion and are focused almost exclusivel­y on training Nigerien troops and other U.S. allies in the region and expanding an airfield outside Niger’s capital for drone operations, commanders told reporters at a Pentagon news conference on the results of the military investigat­ion into the Niger attack.

“We are now far more prudent in our missions,” said Marine Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, the commander of U.S. Africa Command, which oversees military operations on the continent. “U.S. forces are not to be involved in direct combat.”

The new restrictio­ns are perhaps the most far-reaching consequenc­e of the seven-month investigat­ion into the ferocious Oct. 4 ambush of the dozen American soldiers and more than 30 Nigeriens who battled for their lives during a gunfight lasting more than an hour against about 100 militants 20 miles south of the Mali border.

The attack caused a public relations furor for the White House in October after President Trump took several days to reach out to the soldiers’ families and then was accused of making insensitiv­e remarks to Sgt. La David Johnson’s widow, which a Democratic congresswo­man from Florida said she overheard. The White House denied that the president’s effort to console the widow was inappropri­ate.

Johnson was initially unaccounte­d for and his body wasn’t found until after a two-day search, and then by Nigerien villagers. The search was delayed, the report noted, after the U.S. received inaccurate reports that Johnson was being held prisoner in a village north of the ambush site.

The Pentagon released an eight-page summary of the investigat­ion Thursday, but withheld the entire 6,300-page report containing witness statements, photograph­s and other evidence, saying it was still seeking to have the material declassifi­ed.

It also made public portions of a 21-minute video that seeks to reconstruc­t the more than hourlong attack. The full video was shown to Congress, but the Pentagon had decided against releasing it publicly in its entirety to avoid making public “too much informatio­n,” Waldhauser said.

The investigat­ion blamed “individual, organizati­onal, and institutio­nal failures and deficienci­es that contribute­d to the tragic events of 4 October 2017,” according to the summary.

But it said that “no single failure or deficiency was the sole reason.”

Maj. Gen. Roger Cloutier Jr., the investigat­ing officer, noted that “American and Nigerien soldiers fought courageous­ly … despite being significan­tly outnumbere­d by the enemy,” according to the report.

The investigat­ion criticizes two Army captains — one in charge of the 12-man unit targeted in the ambush and another at the unit’s Niger headquarte­rs — for not disclosing to superiors before they headed out that they were conducting a potentiall­y dangerous kill-orcapture mission against Doundou Cheffou, the leader of an Islamic State affiliate who is believed to be involved in the kidnapping of a U.S. aid worker.

The officers said they would be meeting with tribal chiefs, which “inaccurate­ly characteri­zed the nature of the mission,” the report said, adding that more senior commanders were unaware of the true goal of the mission.

Since the attacks, the Pentagon has provided armored vehicles, more drones and other equipment to better protect U.S. troops, Waldhauser said. But the U.S. will only conduct combat missions when crucial for protecting the U.S., he said.

The report did not recommend taking disciplina­ry action against the officers, Waldhauser said, saying it would be up to U.S. Special Operations Command to decide whether to do so.

U.S. soldiers didn’t train adequately before they deployed and did not conduct battle drills with their Nigerien partners before the mission, the report said.

After the mission to capture Cheffou was unsuccessf­ul, the convoy of eight vehicles carrying the U.S. and Nigerien soldiers was returning to home base and stopped at the village of Tongo Tongo to get water. As they drove away, Islamic State-linked militants attacked with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and machine guns mounted on trucks.

Initially, the soldiers exited the vehicles and began returning fire, according to the report.

“Realizing that the team was significan­tly outnumbere­d by a well-trained force,” the U.S. commander ordered a withdrawal, the report says. But Staff Sgt. Bryan C. Black, Staff Sgt. Dustin M. Wright and Staff Sgt. Jeremiah W. Johnson along with several Nigerien soldiers were pinned down, unable to withdraw with the rest of the team, the report said.

Black took cover behind one vehicle but was hit by gunfire, killing him instantly.

As enemy fighters came closer, Wright and Jeremiah Johnson “were forced to evade on foot,” until they too were killed, the report said.

The rest of the Americans and Nigerien soldiers formed a defensive position 600 yards away.

Four U.S. soldiers moved on foot back to the original ambush position, seeking unsuccessf­ully to find the pinned-down members of the team.

But they came under increasing­ly intense fire from militants, who were slowly surroundin­g their position. La David Johnson was lying on the ground, firing back, when the U.S. commander ordered another withdrawal.

The gunfire was so intense that Johnson and two Nigerien soldiers were unable to get into a vehicle. “With enemy forces rapidly closing on their position, they were forced to evade on foot.”

After the two Nigerien soldiers were killed, Johnson ran 400 yards, eventually taking cover under a thorny tree, the only cover available in the arid landscape. He was killed by small-arms fire.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais Associated Press ?? MARINE GEN. Thomas Waldhauser, center, discusses the investigat­ion results.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais Associated Press MARINE GEN. Thomas Waldhauser, center, discusses the investigat­ion results.
 ?? U.S. Army ?? THE U.S. SOLDIERS killed in the Oct. 4 clash, from left: Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Johnson, Sgt. La David Johnson and Staff Sgt. Dustin Wright.
U.S. Army THE U.S. SOLDIERS killed in the Oct. 4 clash, from left: Staff Sgt. Bryan Black, Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Johnson, Sgt. La David Johnson and Staff Sgt. Dustin Wright.

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