Call Sign Extortion 17

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Call Sign Extortion 17

The Shoot-­Down of SEAL Team Six

Don Brown

An imprint of Rowman & Littlefield

 

Distributed by NATIONAL BOOK NETWORK

 

Copyright © 2015 by Don Brown

 

All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote passages in a review.

 

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-­in-­Publication Data

Brown, Don, 1960-

Call Sign Extortion 17 : the shoot-down of SEAL Team Six / Don Brown.

pages cm

ISBN 978-1-4930-0746-2

1. Afghan War, 2001—Aerial operations, American. 2. United States. Navy. SEALs—History—21st century. 3. United States. Naval Special Warfare Development Group—History. 4. Chinook (Military transport helicopter) 5. Special operations (Military science)—United States. 6. Afghan War, 2001—Campaigns. I. Title. II. Title: Shoot-down of SEAL Team Six.

DS371.412.B74 2015

958.104'745—dc23

2015002084

 

ISBN 978-1-4930-1732-4 (e-­book)

 

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992.

Contents

Copyright

Prologue

 

Chapter 1:
Forward Operating Base “Shank”

Chapter 2:
Aboard Extortion 17

Chapter 3:
Base Shank

Chapter 4:
SEALs Called to Action

Chapter 5:
Ninety-­Seven Days from Quintessential Glory to Unexplained Disaster

Chapter 6:
Background on the Colt Report

Chapter 7:
The Colt Report: A General Overview

Chapter 8:
The Colt Report 101: Points to Keep in Mind in Examining Evidence

Chapter 9:
The Pink Elephant Escapes

Chapter 10:
CENTCOM Handcuffs Colt's Investigation

Chapter 11:
The Seven Missing Afghans Discovered by Happenchance

Chapter 12:
“Green-­on-­Blue” Violence: “Friendly” Afghans Killing Americans

Chapter 13:
An Ambassador's Blunt Warnings

Chapter 14:
A Forced Suicide Mission

Chapter 15:
Extortion 17 Pilots: Underequipped and Untrained for Special Ops

Chapter 16:
The Deadly Record of CH-47D in Afghanistan

Chapter 17:
Task Force Commander Concerns: Conventinal Aviation with Special Forces

Chapter 18:
Pre-­Flight Intelligence: Taliban Targeting US Helicopters

Chapter 19:
Chaos in the Air: The Lost Minutes

Chapter 20:
The Chopper's Last Call

Chapter 21:
The Odd Request for a “Sparkle”

Chapter 22:
The Final Seconds: Who Is “Them”?

Chapter 23:
Extortion 17's Bizarre Behavior

Chapter 24:
The “Two-­Minute Burn” and the “One-­Minute Call” That Wasn't

Chapter 25:
Was Bryan Nichols Trying to Tell Us Something?

Chapter 26:
A Three-Minute Burn? The Copper in the Spotlight?

Chapter 27:
Fallen Angel: The Final Seconds of Extortion 17

Chapter 28:
Taliban Access to NVGs and Other Weapons

Chapter 29:
A Point-­Blank Shot: Clues from Exhibit 60

Chapter 30:
Testimony of Apache Pilots and Pitch-­Black Conditions

Chapter 31:
Extortion 17 and the Earlier Ranger Mission

Chapter 32:
The Rules of Engagement: Groundwork for the Death of Thirty Americans

Chapter 33:
Enemy “Squirters” on the Ground Prior to Shoot-Down

Chapter 34:
Hypocrisies and Inconsistencies in the Rules of Engagement

Chapter 35:
Indefensible Inconsistency: Pathfinders Get Pre-­Assault Fire but SEALs Don't

Chapter 36:
The Disappearing Black Box: Further Evidence of Inconsistencies and Cover-­Up

Chapter 37:
Disconnect: The Pathfinders vs. the Task Force

Chapter 38:
The Black Box Absent from the Executive Summary

Chapter 39:
The Crash Site: Before the Pathfinders' Arrival

Chapter 40:
The Mystery Unit First on the Ground

Chapter 41:
The Executive Summary: Whitewashing the Real Chronology

Chapter 42:
The Little Creek Briefing and Other Reports: More Questions on the Box

Chapter 43:
February 27, 2014: The Congressional Hearing

Chapter 44:
The Military's Changed Tune: “There Was No Black Box”

Chapter 45:
Black Box Black Magic: The “Analog” Ruse

Chapter 46:
Chaffetz on Fox: The Pink Elephant Lives

Chapter 47:
Cremation and Destruction of DNA Evidence

Chapter 48:
British Press Reports: The Taliban Knew

Chapter 49:
Afghan President Karzai: First to Announce the Shoot-Down

Chapter 50:
NATO Special Operations Forces Kill President Karzai's Cousin

Chapter 51:
Karzai and the Taliban Playing Footsie for Years

Chapter 52:
Another Dirty Secret: Afghans on Every American Mission

Chapter 53:
Shocking Discovery: Bullets in the Bodies

Chapter 54:
Autopsies Versus “No Identifiable Remains”

Chapter 55:
All Signs Point to a Cover-Up

Chapter 56:
Final Thoughts

 

Index

About the Author

Prologue

base shank

logar province, afghanistan

august 6, 2011

Under the moonless sky in Logar Province, at just before two o'clock in the morning local time, thirty Americans, including seventeen members of the elite SEAL team that had killed Osama Bin Laden fourteen weeks earlier, were scrambled aboard a Vietnam-­era US Army National Guard Chinook helicopter, code name Extortion 17. Sixty-­six years earlier to the day, the United States had dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima.

The old Chinook was not the type of helicopter typically used by the SEALs. Special Forces units typically attack with specially equipped, highly armed Special Operations helicopters with highly sophisticated electronic and jamming systems, flown by Special Operations pilots trained to insert the SEALs with swiftness, speed, and surprise.

But the Chinook was not an assault helicopter. It did not have significant offensive capabilities, and it was not designed for high-­speed assaults carried out by US Special Forces. The Chinook was a transport chopper and was not designed to fly into a hot combat zone. Its crew was a National Guard crew, trained to transport troops and equipment, but not trained or equipped for Special Operations in hot battle zones.

The Americans boarding the chopper ranged in age from the youngest, twenty-­one-­year-­old Specialist Spencer C. Duncan of Olathe, Kansas, to the oldest of the group, forty-­seven-­year-­old Chief Warrant Officer David Carter of Aurora, Colorado.

Two of the men, Lieutenant Commander Jonas Kelsall, the SEAL commander, and Chief Petty Officer Robert Reeves, had been best friends
since their high school days in Shreveport, Louisiana, and even played on the same high school football team.

Sixteen of the men had wives back home in the United States, and thirty-­two American children called these men “Daddy.”

Three of the men, Navy Senior Chief Craig Vickers of Hawaii, Navy Chief (SEAL) Matt Mason of Kansas City, and Senior Chief Tommy Ratzlaff of Arkansas, had wives who were expecting their third child.

Vickers was on his last tour with the Navy and planned to retire and return home to his family in May 2012. Like Craig Vickers, forty-­four-­year-­old Senior Chief Lou Langlais, one of the most highly decorated and experienced SEALs in the Navy, was also on his last combat deployment and planned to return to a stateside job as a trainer where he would reunite with his wife, Anya, and their two boys in Santa Monica.

Seven mysterious Afghan commandos, along with one Afghan interpreter, joined these remarkable Americans on the helicopter that night. The presence of the unknown Afghans, whose names were not on the flight manifest, breached all semblances of military and aviation protocol.

Within minutes of takeoff, every American on board Extortion 17 died a horrific, fiery death in a crash that would mark the deadliest single loss in the eleven-­year-­old Afghan war, and the single-­largest loss in the history of US Special Forces.

Why did these men die?

Their children and wives deserve to know. Their parents and their country deserve an answer.

Powerful evidence now suggests there was a cover-­up to prevent the truth from ever getting out.

What is being covered up?

Several signs suggest that the Taliban were tipped off as to the Chinook's flight path and were lying in wait with rocket-­propelled grenades as it approached the landing zone. Invaluable forensic evidence has been inexcusably lost, negligently or intentionally destroyed by the military, or conveniently glossed over to obfuscate the truth as to why these men died.

Even if the Taliban had no inside information, which appears unlikely, the decision to order a platoon of US Navy SEALs and supporting troops onto a highly vulnerable and largely defenseless Vietnam-­era National
Guard helicopter, a CH-47 Chinook piloted by a noble crew of National Guard aviators who were ill equipped and untrained in the Special Forces aviation techniques necessary to prosecute this mission, effectively sealed the death warrants for each and every American on board that night.

For the sake of the thirty-­two children who lost their fathers, for the sixteen wives who lost their husbands, for the sake of sixty parents who lost their sons, and for the sake of a nation that deserves better from its leadership in protecting its treasured sons in times of war, hard questions need to be asked.

This is the story of the last flight of Extortion 17 and the cover-­up that followed.

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