On
this date, December 8 2012, Dr. Dilip Joseph was rescued by the Seal Team Six
in Taliban. Let us also not forget one of the comrades, Nicolas Checque who was
killed in the rescue. I will post information from Wikipedia and other news
source.
Petty
Officer 1st Class
Nicolas David Checque
(PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.csrevitalization.com/Soldiers.asp)
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On
8 December 2012, DEVGRU rescued Dilip Joseph, an American doctor held captive by
the Taliban in Eastern Afghanistan. Dr. Joseph, who was working for an aid
organization, was kidnapped along with two Afghan colleagues at a road block by
armed men and were moved to a compound in Laghma Province. The two Afghans were
later released after negotiations. When intelligence indicated Dr. Joseph was
in imminent danger a rescue operation was mounted. During the operation at
least six of his Taliban captors were killed and two Taliban captured. A DEVGRU
member involved in the rescue, Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Nicolas Checque,
was also killed. Checque was a highly decorated combat veteran awarded with the
Bronze Star Medal with Valor and the Purple Heart, among many others.
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U.S. Navy SEAL killed in operation to rescue American doctor in
Afghanistan
From Qadir Sediqi, CNN
December 10, 2012 -- Updated 1550 GMT (2350 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: The freed doctor's family thanks U.S. and allied partners, grieves lost U.S. service member
- Dr. Dilip Joseph was among 3 abducted while returning from a rural clinic, officials say
- 2 local Afghan leaders say smugglers are responsible; ISAF blames the Taliban
- A U.S. official says the man killed in the rescue was a member of Navy SEAL Team Six
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) -- An elite U.S. special forces team rescued an American doctor who had been abducted in
Afghanistan, but lost one of their own members in the mission, officials said.
Dr.
Dilip Joseph was freed 11 hours after his captors released two other kidnapped
staffers of his nonprofit agency, Morning Star Development, the organization
said Sunday.
Hours
later, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced that "a U.S. service
member was killed in the operation."
A
U.S. official said the man who was shot dead belonged to the Navy's Special
Warfare Development Group, more commonly known as SEAL Team Six. The elite unit
is the same one that took part in the raid that killed al Qaeda leader Osama
bin Laden, but the official didn't know if the fallen service member was
involved in that operation.
While
he did not delve into detail, Panetta said, "the special operators who
conducted this raid knew they were putting their lives on the line to free a
fellow American from the enemy's grip."
The NATO-led International Security
Assistance Force said Joseph was believed to be in imminent danger of injury or
death when the rescue mission was launched.
"He
gave his life for his fellow Americans, and he and his teammates remind us once
more of the selfless service that allows our nation to stay strong, safe and
free," President Barack Obama said of the slain U.S. service member, who
was not immediately identified.
There
were conflicting reports about who was behind the kidnappings. ISAF said it was
Taliban insurgents, while two local Afghan officials told CNN it was smugglers.
The
kidnapping of Joseph and the two other Morning Star staff members occurred
around 3:30 p.m. Wednesday (6 a.m. ET), as the three men were returning from a
rural medical clinic in eastern Kabul province.
"They
were stopped and captured while driving, by a group of armed men,"
according to the agency, which sponsors community and economic
initiatives in Afghanistan.
"They
were eventually taken to a mountainous area about 50 miles from the Pakistan
border."
Tribal
leader Malik Samad and district chief Muhammad Haqbeen told CNN that Joseph and
an Afghan doctor were abducted near the village of Jegdalek in the Sarobi
district, just outside Kabul.
Morning
Star said negotiations began "almost immediately" between the
captors, the hostages and the agency's crisis management team in Kabul and
Colorado Springs, Colorado. In addition to U.S. and Afghan authorities, the
agency thanked "Afghan residents (including) elders and local leaders who
made visits and appeals to the captors advocating for the release of the
hostages."
The
"on-again, off-again" negotiations lasted three days into Saturday
night, when two of the three were released.
Morning
Star did not release the identities of the two men, citing safety concerns
"because they live and work in the general region." The group said
one of them belonged to its medical staff and the other was part of the
organization's support staff.
The
two men got out of the area and eventually were taken to a police station, at
which time Morning Star and their families learned they'd been released.
The
Afghan doctor's family paid $12,000 to the smugglers, who later released him,
Haqbeen and Samad said. For its part, Morning Star stated "categorically
that we paid no ransom, money or other consideration" to anyone in
securing any of its staffers' release.
Sometime
Saturday night, military forces rescued Joseph in a mission ordered by Gen.
John Allen, commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan. Samad and Haqbeen, the two
Afghan officials, said the operation took place in Laghman province.
"Today's
mission exemplifies our unwavering commitment to defeating the Taliban,"
Allen said in a statement. "I'm proud of the American and Afghan forces
that planned, rehearsed and successfully conducted this operation. Thanks to them,
Dr. Joseph will soon be rejoining his family and loved ones."
Joseph
has worked with Morning Star for three years. He serves as its medical adviser,
and travels frequently to Afghanistan, the agency said.
The
doctor appeared to be in "good condition and uninjured" at Bagram
Airfield after his abduction. Morning Star said "he will receive
precautionary examinations and debriefing before returning to his Colorado
Springs home, probably within a few days."
His
family issued a statement Sunday acknowledging "harrowing"
uncertainty in recent days and extending its "deepest condolences to the
family of the American sailor who died during Dilip's rescue."
"We
are incredibly grateful for the multiple agencies of the U.S. government that
have supported us in this difficult time, and especially the quick response by
our military and partner allies to rescue Dilip," the family said.
"They showed great heroism and professionalism."
Despite
the kidnappings of Joseph and its two other staffers, Morning Star reiterated
its "commitment to continue its work" in Afghanistan.
CNN's
Barbara Starr, Maria Ebrahimji, Deborah Doft and Greg Botelho contributed to
this report.
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Taliban
fighters (Saeed Ali Achakzai)
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The
Seal Team Six (SOURCE: http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/165104-seal-team-six-the-raid-on-osama-bin-laden-on-national-geographic-cha/)
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