THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Pat Tillman killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan – 2004

Via History.com

Pat Tillman, who gave up his pro football career to enlist in the U.S. Army after the terrorist attacks of September 11, is killed by friendly fire while serving in Afghanistan on April 22, 2004. The news that Tillman, age 27, was mistakenly gunned down by his fellow Rangers, rather than enemy forces, was initially covered up by the U.S. military.

Patrick Daniel Tillman was born the oldest of three brothers on November 6, 1976, in San Jose, California. He played linebacker for Arizona State University, where during his senior year he was named Pac-10 Defensive Player of the Year. In 1998, Tillman was drafted by the Arizona Cardinals. He became the team’s starting safety as well as one of its most popular players. In 2000, he broke the team record for tackles with 224.

In May 2002, Tillman turned down a three-year, multi-million-dollar deal with the Cardinals and instead, prompted by the events of 9/11, joined the Army along with his brother Kevin, a minor-league baseball player. The Tillman brothers were assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment in Fort Lewis, Washington, and did tours in Iraq in 2003, followed by Afghanistan the next year.

On April 22, 2004, Pat Tillman was killed by gunfire while on patrol in a rugged area of eastern Afghanistan. The Army initially maintained that Tillman and his unit were ambushed by enemy forces. Tillman was praised as a national hero, awarded the Silver Star and Purple Heart medals and posthumously promoted to corporal. Weeks later, Tillman’s family learned his death had been accidental.

His parents publicly criticized the Army, saying they had been intentionally deceived by military officials who wanted to use their son as a patriotic poster boy. They believed their son’s death was initially covered up by military officials because it could’ve undermined support for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

A criminal investigation was eventually launched into the case and in 2007 the Army censured retired three-star general Philip Kensinger, who was in charge of special operations at the time of Tillman’s death, for lying to investigators and making other mistakes. “Memorandums of concern” were also sent to several brigadier generals and lower-ranking officers who the Army believed acted improperly in the case.

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12 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
April 22, 2021 8:23 am

Was it worth it, Pat? R.I.P.

Llpoh
Llpoh
April 22, 2021 8:48 am

I doubt the righteousness of the foreign wars. I never doubted Tillman’s convictions. He did what he thought was right. I disagree that it was, but I generally admire men who are prepared to back up their beliefs with action. As Stuck say, RIP.

Steve
Steve
April 22, 2021 9:32 am

Mr. Tillman; duped into believing in American exceptionalism and a noble fight for righteousness that doesn’t exist.
RIP

Stucky
Stucky
  Steve
April 22, 2021 9:37 am

It wasn’t just Mr. Tillman. A LOT of us were duped way back in 2004. I was. Weren’t you?

DS
DS
  Stucky
April 22, 2021 10:59 am

Stuck,

I admit that I was duped — suckered by emotion and the “logic” of nation-building and the “evidence” of yellow cake. Remember all those lies? I clearly remember debating with a good (anit-war liberal) friend of mine in 2003 about the war and arguing for the US intervention to “bring democracy to Iraq”. A few years ago I apologized to him; I told him he was totally right and I had been totally wrong.

Now I (try to) question everything to reduce the chances I’ll be duped again by the gubbmint or anyone else. I doubt it will ever be zero, but hope to get close to it…

Thersites
Thersites
  Stucky
April 22, 2021 1:12 pm

I appreciate your honesty. I fell prey to the R vs D binary. I now realize the Dems don’t have to be right for me to understand the Stupid Party is wrong yet again.

The last 20 years, and the last 4 in particular have demonstrated that the R’s are the opposition party described in Orwell’s “1984”, they are just another front of “The Party”. McCain in ’08 made me suspicious, Romney in ’12 confirmed it for this slow learner. If now forced to choose, I’ll still go with “The Party” lite – the R’s, but am no longer duped by pretenses.

DS
DS
  Thersites
April 22, 2021 1:23 pm

Yeah, I thought I was smart and informed — didn’t realize the Rs suck and lie almost as bad as the Ds. Painful lesson learned, hope not to repeat it…

Lucy
Lucy
  Stucky
April 22, 2021 1:29 pm

No. I’ve been awake for a long long time.

piearesquared
piearesquared
  Stucky
April 22, 2021 2:51 pm

I wasn’t duped in 2004. I hadn’t yet figured out that 9/11 was a false flag event ( I didn’t figure that out until 2005), but I did know that the Afghan and Iraq wars had nothing to do with 9/11 or WMDs. Those wars had been desired by the Neocons and others for a long time, and they were simply using 9/11 and WMDs as a plausible excuse to invade those countries. This post doesn’t mention it (obviously), and neither do any of the comments so far, but there is a lot of evidence that Tillman was intentionally killed to shut him up, because he had figured out that the wars were a scam, and was planning to expose that fact when he got out of the Army.

Yahsure
Yahsure
April 22, 2021 1:11 pm

Basically, Tillman wasn’t that bright is what I get from articles about him. He was most likely shot on purpose by others who were not as gung-ho as him. I’ve heard this from two different people who were there or who were full of crap. I really wonder about people volunteering to possibly die for oil companies.
Saudis attacked us and we went to Afghanistan, its all BS.

Lucy
Lucy
  Yahsure
April 22, 2021 1:30 pm

No. It was an inside job. Surely you know this by now.

TheAssegai
TheAssegai
  Yahsure
April 22, 2021 3:30 pm

Ah yes, I remember those Dancing Saudis. Those Saudis who worked for the Saudi moving company. Those Saudis who went on Saudi TV and explained how they were in the US to film the event. Those Saudis who the FBI cleared of any wrong doing. Yes, and then we went to Afghanistan, and who would have guessed the poppy production would have been so profitable for the CIA.