WASHINGTON (2004) — Pat Tillman died
while leading a team of Army Rangers up a remote southeastern
Afghan hill to knock out enemy fire that had pinned down other
American soldiers, the Army said Friday.
The Army released details of the former Arizona
Cardinals football player's death as it announced that he was
posthumously awarded the Silver Star, its third-highest award
for combat valor.
Tillman, 27, and his team were initially not
in danger from the hostile small-arms and mortar fire when the
April 22 ambush began. But when the rear section of their convoy
became pinned down in rough terrain, Tillman ordered his team
out of its vehicles "to take the fight to the enemy forces" on
the higher ground.
As Tillman and other soldiers neared the hill's
crest, he directed his team into firing positions, the Army said.
As he sprayed the enemy positions with fire from his automatic
rifle, he was shot and killed. The Army said his actions helped
the trapped soldiers maneuver to safety "without taking a single
casualty."
Walter Sokalski, a spokesman for Army Special
Forces Command, said the Silver Star will be presented to Tillman's
family Monday during a public memorial service in San Jose, Calif.
"It will be presented by members of the 75th
Ranger Regiment, by soldiers that knew him," Sokalski said. Tillman
was in the 2nd battalion of the regiment, based out of Fort Lewis,
Wash.
Tillman, who walked away from a $3.6 million
contract extension offered by the Cardinals to join the Army
in 2002, this week also was posthumously promoted to corporal
from specialist.
Pentagon officials had previously given only
sketchy details of the fighting 26 miles southwest of Khost,
saying the ambush occurred about 7:30 p.m. local time near the
village of Sperah, and that two other soldiers were wounded and
an Afghan Militia Force soldier was killed.
Tillman's platoon was in the region as part
of a spring offensive called Operation Mountain Storm, aimed
at rooting out hard-line Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters.
But according to the details provided Friday,
Tillman led his Ranger team that day "without regard for his
own safety," and was shot and killed heroically trying to protect
his comrades.
Tillman's platoon had been split into two sections
during a patrol.
Tillman, a team leader, was in the platoon's
front when the rear section was hit with enemy fire. Because
of the rough terrain, "the trail element was unable to maneuver
out of the kill zone and it was difficult for the embattled trail
section to target the enemy positions," according the Army's
description of the events.
Although his group was safely out of that danger
area, the Army said Tillman ordered his team members to get out
of their vehicles and maneuver up a hill near the enemy's location.
As they got to the crest of the hill, "Tillman's voice was heard
issuing commands to take the fight to the enemy forces ... on
the dominating high ground." It was during this effort, as he
provided suppressive fire, that Tillman was shot and killed,
the Army said.
Sokalski said he had no information Friday on
whether any of the enemy attackers have been identified or captured.
During a briefing Friday with Pentagon reporters,
Gen. John Abizaid, commander of U.S. Central Command, which includes
operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, said he was able to talk
Thursday with 1st Lt. Dave Hutman, Tillman's platoon leader.
"I asked him about Pat Tillman," Abizaid told
the reporters. "He said, 'Pat Tillman was a great Ranger and
a great soldier, and what more can I say about him?'"
"When he was talking to me, he was still nursing
a large number of wounds that he sustained in that firefight
where Pat Tillman lost his life," Abizaid said.