tv Prime Interest RT September 21, 2013 9:29am-10:01am EDT
9:29 am
on the call sheet that morning the two f. fifteen pilots were briefed that they would be the first aircraft to enter the no fly zone by regulation no helicopters were allowed to fly into the zone without fighter coverage however unbeknown to the f. fifteen pilots a last minute early morning trip was scheduled to get peacekeepers to appeal a town deep in northern iraq when the pilots entered the no fly zone that morning they were alarmed to see two helicopters appear on their radar nobody's supposed to be in front of them that day so you're already your expectations these are probably enemy helicopters that speeded that out that this sends all you're trying to figure out isn't hit as in a plane which soviet designation helicopters were the army's rules of engagement the f. fifteen approach the blackhawks to visually confirm that they were enemy aircraft before firing they were trained on this they take a lot of pride in this but of course a black hawk u.s. army black hawk. was configured these two blackhawks were configured slightly
9:30 am
different that a normally a black hawk they have little wing lights on the side and sponsons and on this particular day the blackhawks were going about one hundred miles to the town of erbil inside deep inside northern iraq and so they attached external fuel tank still blackhawks and these little wings and that changed the shape. what shapes what we see every day it's largely shaped by our expectations. by what we want to see what we expect to see and also then the ultimate you know sort of the physical stimulus that actually enters or i so it was a very ambiguous stimulus the speed the distance and everything camouflage in a very strong set of expectations the visual identification has happened the intersection of a strong set of expectations possibly a little desire to maybe see an enemy aircraft and a very ambiguous stimulus that actually came in the eyes of what we do as humans we
9:31 am
fill in the blanks. and then finally both shooter and target aircraft were quipped with. a specially designed electronic equipment something we call i. identify friend or foe and this is equipment designed specifically to prevent this type of x. and remember her so how in the world could this happen. the helicopters were inside the no fly zone and squawking a code that coalition aircraft when they're in turkey they didn't realize that three years before the air force had changed to two different codes we get one cog in the code they always squad fifteen's are checking for that correct code and of course it's coming back sour because the f. fifteen because helicopters are critical for turkey and the f. fifteen zero for the code in the no fly zone because they're. what keeps me awake at night is in complex organizations like this good people highly trained highly
9:32 am
equipped doing what they do every day normal behavior normal organizations can actually result in terrible tragedy i would not want to subscribe to the proposition therefore that every episode of friendly fire can simply sort of be. dismissed it as an unfortunate reflection of the fog and friction of war there would be some episodes i imagine where one might say in this case the friendly fire episode was preventable. and therefore the people who failed to prevent it the people who perpetrated it ought to be held responsible ready reading. we're doing a lot of stupid over here pop never forget those words. he said we're going on a mission for a couple of days after that. but he said we're doing
9:33 am
a lot of stupid. and i didn't know what that meant because i had no idea what they were doing and when you look at what happened and how it happened it was stupid the army creed has x. amount of lives lost in the last three or four lines one of them is i will never leave a fallen soldier or fallen comrade sensually i will never leave a man behind and what happened here what happened that day of on the battlefield was he got left behind not by another one of his peers but by his superiors by the commanding officer on the battlefield he got left behind. around four am on january sixteenth two thousand and eight during operation hood harvest six individuals were spotted fleeing across an open field in an attempt to evade u.s. forces. are on right now. private first class dave sherrod and seven members of the aerial
9:34 am
9:35 am
when dave was a little kid. he wanted to be exactly like it stan and his dad was a football player macho and dave was not a macho kid but he wanted to be like is stan and so i think he he almost forced his own personality to be more like dad which was tough and so on the exterior at times he was very top but inside he just had a really sweet heart we just had this bond that was it was father and son but it was something way beyond father and son i know i was so heavily invested in making sure that he grew up knowing he was loved beyond knowing he was loved knowing that he was just important and. secure safe.
9:36 am
they were so close that the points that made me jealous is as a son because i felt like i was almost living in the shadows of bubbles like dave could be he was just a guy that then once you knew you wanted to be on his side you wanted him to to like you because. he was still great guy. i feel. the aerial reaction force surrounded the thicket demanding that the insurgents surrender instead the insurgents opened fire in the chaos private first class danny kimmie was killed moments later specialist john sixty was killed.
9:37 am
in the midst of exploding grenades and machine gun fire specialist raphael collins private first class brendan clan staff sergeant christopher mcgraw and private first class sharon tried to maintain their positions. collins in quin later received sober stars for their heroic actions. for thirty minutes the enemy engaged the soldiers many men down as black ops above attempted to provide cover. for the other to really. get a good. reinforcements
9:38 am
finally arrived from second platoon charlie company. they quickly destroyed the last of the insurgents and moved to secure the area and locate the wounded unable to determine how many soldiers were still on the ground officers called for help from the pilots above. all of the wounded were located except private first class share it over the radio second platoon notified air cover they clearly not able to locate want to carefully . sixty six minutes after the fighting began share a badly wanted was located with a faint pulse he died on the helicopter headed for the combat support hospital
9:39 am
within a few days of private first class share its death the family began receiving information about the circumstances surrounding his death well yeah i believe they told us it was a it was a a fight and he was killed by a grenade fire it just seems like that's what the casualty officer told us because that's what was in the paper the casualty officer came to the house and said well we think it may have been friendly fire and that was like whoa. and then i asked i said well would you have whoever is in charge over there in iraq call me up and tell me what's going on and he said i will and we got a phone call from his lieutenant colonel the next day who vehemently denied to me that it was friendly fire then i said to him would you please. tell me what happened and he told me what happened then i said would you please send me an
9:40 am
e-mail recounting exactly what you just told me which he did which i have. in the e-mail the lieutenant colonel wrote as dave's elements surrounded the position the enemy opened fire at very close range touching off a fierce grenade and small arms fight that resulted in the deaths of dave corporal john sigsbee and private first class danny kaye me in the next week dave was laid to rest at arlington national cemetery. technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia we the future covered. unexplored antarctica what is it in this icy expanse that attracts the people who come here. now i only go to the duchess.
9:41 am
and enter into. a new generation of polar explorers is coming. we have a new group of specialists here now all of them are young how are they going to get along with each other and i don't know. do. i used to be a bureaucrat. seriously. what adventures await in this mysterious land where do they live what do they eat and what are they actually doing in antarctica . the island is so small but for me it's the center see the center of the universe. on a tiny island the size of a football field in the middle of a lake stanza ruined monastery forty years ago two lovers decided to spend their
9:42 am
honeymoon here. they have no idea but the island would change their lives forever and that they would change the fate of the island. lesions in the never seen anything like this before. going to come in the house. in the fortress of ice is grown in just one hour and it's only the beginning. dramas that trying to be ignored. stories others to refuse to notice. the faces changing the world right now. on full picture of today's events my own designs from around the globe. dropped to. fifty. the army did it right
9:43 am
that are only. four months after the incident dave and vicki received the final incident report in direct contradiction to the lieutenant colonels initial email the report stated that his son had been killed by friendly fire when his commanding officer lieutenant hanson shot him believing that he was the enemy. confused by the conflicting accounts of his son's death dave reached out to private first class jimmy's father dog a police officer in illinois became somebody who i spent literally hours on the telephone with and i shared this e-mail with him that had been sent to me being a cop he looked at this and instantly instantly had heartburn with and had serious issues with it after months of asking for additional information about the conflicting reports of their son's deaths and getting no answers from the army they've met with doug to me in person for the first time at a ceremony at fort campbell when we were at fort campbell and we were visiting for
9:44 am
this memorial service we had kind of gotten to a point where we both felt like we could release it and let it go after the ceremony the two fathers were talking in one of their rooms when there was a knock at the door to when listed men who had by the information about the night that their boys were killed handed them video of the incident they did that because they were sick and tired of the way that fort campbell had treated this that their superior officer treated this and they said there was a cover up going on. i was furious i was absolutely furious here is you know here's this organization that's supposed to protect me my son gave his life to protect me and they can't even tell me the truth. there covering up you know it was it was awful for the first time the family was able to truly begin to understand what happened that night. well it's four o'clock in the morning there's very low
9:45 am
visibility it's eight degrees. and our guys have we know exactly where they are but we haven't got a clue what they're in there doing as it turns out they're all sitting back to back just waiting for our guys to come. they were told that the enemy was unarmed that we surrounded the thicket you never surround the enemy because once the firing begins you've got a circular firing squad tactically it was a nightmare. in the initial minutes of the firefight they've avoided enemy gunfire and return fire into the thick of. i can see dave he's hugging the earth his feet are moving he's squirming trying not to be seen the rounds are going over his head it's chaotic out the field. after five minutes of fierce fighting dave attempted to reestablish his position further back. i want to be able to watch. and as
9:46 am
he sprints backwards he is shot by his lieutenant. and the way we have figured this elf ballistically and through the autopsy reports it had to have been. extreme close range he is shot in the back the lower left buttock but he fell just feet away from the man who shot him and the man who shot him his lieutenant had to have gone. like this to do it he would have had to swallow at this kind of angles now maybe he thought it was one of the terrorists trying to run out whatever day full speed from him just feet from him four seconds later hanson gets up and retreats even more knew early on the. dave was mistakenly shot by lieutenant handsome but it wasn't until receiving the videos nearly a year later that they fully understood how the commanding officers actions following the shooting further impacted their son's death as two dead there's one
9:47 am
one on the bed two on the battlefield left who are alive and fighting and one who is dying who is still alive. then that's my side. and this guy gets on the chopper an injured in the battle lieutenant hanson boarded the first helicopter out of the zone with two badly injured soldiers he's the one guy who knows where his men would be but he left his men on the battlefield he walked. the time five of his men were unaccounted for and lieutenant hansen took the only active radio. the one guy who has any means of communication has got on a chopper left. this son of a bitch shoots my brother in the leg not intentionally because it because it was night time it was four in the morning there was a bit of very little store cover very little moonlight stayed there to point out his position because when they got to him there was
9:48 am
a faint heart beat. so the whole idea of brotherhood an author and then and camaraderie in this sense it was in this context that has absolutely no place. so he goes silent of these guys and they're trying to assess where people are assess what the situation is and he's silent dave is out there for. how many minutes vick eighty. yeah dying. there's precious minutes spent trying to find him they don't know where he is.
9:49 am
when they found him he had a pulse and they worked c.p.r. on him till they put him on the bird so he lost precious minutes because his lieutenant left him on the battlefield and didn't the prize anybody who landed where his men were. with the new information in hand dave contacted army officials and demanded that they reexamined the actions of lieutenant hanson in hopes of appeasing the sheriff family colonel mcbride wrote a scathing reprimand of lieutenant hanson. colonel mcbride writes you are hereby reprimanded for failing to exercise adequate command and control over your platoon your conduct contributed directly to the death of one of your soldiers from friendly fire your mission was ill planned and poorly executed resulting in grievous consequences to the unit based on your actions i have grave doubts concerning your potential for future military service as it turns out the letter was filed locally in iraq what is the final letter it was shredded now they
9:50 am
happened with it doesn't go past like asian nobody ever sees it and so when lieutenant hanson comes up for a promotion nobody sees this and he skates up to being captain which is what happened he gets promoted to captain that really was the final poke in the eye for us frustrated by lieutenant hansen's promotion dave contacted a former student james me a military affairs correspondent with the new york daily news as meek gathered documents and video for a lead story army officials began to question the motives of the family. in an internal e-mail to higher ranking officers uncovered by me a public affairs officer notes that we may rapidly be reaching the point where respecting slash understanding mr sharon's grieving process becomes secondary to defending the actions of the leadership involved in this incident i've been
9:51 am
described as a grieving father who will say anything to bring published city who will say anything i think the subtle implication they're not so implication if you will is that i'll make up things in order to try to publicize what happened to my son because i'm so overwrought with grief just people don't take accountability for their actions. and. this i forgive them i would but i have a lot of anger it in my heart in my mind towards this man for what he did and the more i find out about the situation the more it it just it's unbelievable. you know there's a sort of old since the. soldier who gives his life for his country is a hero. and these people have given their life for their country. so there is a feeling i think i'm actually feeling the why should i burden the family
9:52 am
complicate. things further for them i would love to believe that they're trying to protect us from the pain knowing our sons were killed by friendly fire. but it's just not knowing the truth causes more pain. people might think that you can take it but what you want to know is you want to know exactly what happened you want to invision exactly what happened you want a picture of the. individuals. may sometimes act in a way to cover their own. but the army is an institution i think. generally avoid such cover ups in. we make mistakes and i think in the honest person they are we understand that we make mistakes willing to admit that.
9:53 am
oh my to sit back and judge a man in the heat of combat. and i don't know what that's like you don't know what that's like and then nobody who's never been in it doesn't really have any idea if you watch it on the movie or whatever it happens. unfortunately it happened us. fire in his shoes i would do the same thing. illegal for justice justice for your son. looking for the truth. you know the the the simple things which don't seem like big things to ask for a start to deal with the world's largest army bureaucracy. hope that justice is done and where if we get justice maybe everybody who has
9:54 am
9:55 am
9:57 am
on their way to antarctica the crew of the i can to make sure that of face many challenges. here you have to look out for yourself crashing onto rocks trapped in pack ice in extreme conditions anything can happen in antarctica always comes up with surprises you have to keep your eyes open because if there's always something going wrong the ship carries huge reserves of water food fuel as well as helicopters and people able to survive extreme conditions they're ready for anything even an apocalypse she's really an incredible ship calling all antarctica stations this is academic a field of radio check please respond. in all i want to. pick up something that is quite simply
9:58 am
a mess. was no way oh. clearly they were just at the wrong place at the wrong time. and sold to the us and turned over to the us for. the sole that could be buried alive. was saved with great effort. and they wanted to turn me into a terrorist so it is they wanted me to admit that i was a member of al qaeda and the taliban and that i fought with them. was not a bad time i didn't even know what al-qaeda is nevertheless there are people. rave enough to start a fight. or something is going to be done that's going to be done by me and it's now a short amount of time to do it but it's going to impact me and be prosecuted but it's not going to impact. the wife my daughter. the one time or travel.
10:00 am
the syrian government come to believe they hound of chemical weapons dated to a hague based welsh dog while also says its approach to that some government may change if it finds out he is not playing by the. european diplomats on the right stocks of a slash on today's road play made soldiers along the mop and the west bank not getting it so what about international norm and. also there's now one yet until scotland decides whether to ditch the united kingdom but the days doing the job their rhetoric is rushing out with oil the centerpiece of disagreement that. new york of deming's demanded the release of students in the basement up and detained by the police during a street protest against of what sites.
41 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
