http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/18/world/middleeast/18military.html?_r=1
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/18/world/middleeast/18military.html?_r=1&ore
f=slogin> &oref=slogin
Army Punished 2 Officers in '06 After Failures in Iraq Ambush 
By
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/z/paul_von_zielb
auer/index.html?inline=nyt-per> PAUL von ZIELBAUER

An Army general relieved a company commander and a platoon leader of their
commands last year after enlisted men were ambushed and killed by insurgents
at an isolated observation post south of Baghdad in June 2006, Army
officials said yesterday. 

An Army investigation into the circumstances of the attack, which killed one
soldier immediately and resulted in two others being kidnapped and later
killed, concluded that they had been left for up to 36 hours without
supervision or enough firepower or support to repel even a small group of
enemy fighters. 

The investigative report, by Lt. Col. Timothy Daugherty, a deputy brigade
commander with the Fourth Infantry Division, which the soldiers were
attached to at the time, recommended that the platoon leader and company
commander be given written reprimands. 

But Lt. Gen. James D. Thurman, the commander of American forces in Baghdad
last year, went a step further, Army officials said, and relieved the
company commander, Capt. John Goodwin, and the platoon leader, First Lt.
Timothy Norton, of their duties. 

"This was an event caused by numerous acts of complacency and a lack of
standards at the platoon level," Colonel Daugherty wrote in a nine-page
summary of his report. "The shortcomings of standards at the platoon level
was compounded by company leadership that was not engaged in enforcing
standards." 

The insurgent attack, on June 16 near Mahmudiya, killed three soldiers from
Company B of the First Battalion, 502nd Infantry. Specialist David J.
Babineau of Springfield, Mass., was killed in the attack, and Pfc. Kristian
Menchaca of Houston and Pfc. Thomas Tucker of Madras, Ore., were abducted.
Their bodies were found three days later, badly mutilated and booby-trapped
with bombs.

The Associated Press first reported the investigation's findings yesterday
morning. The Army's V Corps, in Heidelberg, Germany, where General Thurman
is currently the commander, released a statement yesterday confirming the
report's conclusions and the reassignment of the platoon and company
commanders. 

In the summary of his findings dated June 28, 2006, Colonel Daugherty
described the soldiers' platoon as demoralized and decimated. Seven
soldiers, the report said, were killed during the platoon's rotation in
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/ir
aq/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> Iraq - including a team leader, a squad leader
and a platoon leader. And at the time of the ambush, five other soldiers
from the platoon had been implicated in the rape of a 14-year-old girl in
Mahmudiya and the killing of her and her family.

"Although the leaders of this platoon care and are staying in the fight, the
platoon is frayed," Colonel Daugherty wrote. He recommended that the platoon
be given immediate down time to recuperate. 

The three soldiers who were killed were at a remote outpost near a mobile
bridge, more than two-thirds of a mile from the closest Army checkpoint, and
were ordered to not allow insurgents to mine or destroy the structure. The
platoon's senior enlisted man, in a statement to an Army lawyer two months
later, called the outpost - with three men and one Humvee stationed behind a
two-foot-high wall just 30 feet from a road with no traffic control
checkpoint - "a death trap."

"The soldiers called it the Alamo, because it was essentially your last
stand," the soldier, Sgt. First Class Robert Gallagher, said in the
statement to the Army lawyer. The statement was taken as part of the
investigation of the Mahmudiya rape and killings, and it was given to The
New York Times by David Sheldon, a civilian lawyer in that case.

In his interview, Sergeant Gallagher called Captain Goodwin "a good man" who
did not have enough soldiers or equipment to fulfill missions ordered by
superiors. "I felt it was the command above him," he said. "A captain is not
going to tell a battalion commander that he cannot complete a mission based
on personnel and based on assets." 

Colonel Daugherty's report found that a "quick reaction force" in the area
took 25 minutes to arrive at the scene of the ambush, where it found
Specialist Babineau dead and the two other soldiers missing. 

The report criticized numerous aspects of the way the outpost was situated,
supported and supervised. "This platoon needs to take a hard look at its
standards and discipline," the report said.

The report found no major fault with the battalion, led by Lt. Col. Thomas
G. Kunk, who supervised the company. But he recommended that the overseeing
brigade commander, Col. Todd J. Ebel, issue Colonel Kunk a "letter of
concern" on the need for "an absolutely clear and concise flow of
information down to the platoon level."

 



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