Soldier from Wasilla dies of wounds suffered in Afghanistan

Pfc. Hansen B. Kirkpatrick was killed while conducting operations against the Taliban in Afghanistan's Helmand province. (Photo courtesy U.S. Army)
Pfc. Hansen B. Kirkpatrick was killed while conducting operations against the Taliban in Afghanistan’s Helmand province. (Photo courtesy U.S. Army)

Update | 11:39 a.m. Wednesday

A 19-year-old U.S. soldier has been killed Monday in an attack in southern Afghanistan as he was taking part in counter-terror operations.

Pfc. Hansen B. Kirkpatrick, of Wasilla, Alaska, had been stationed in Fort Bliss, Texas.

The U.S. military’s independent news source Stars and Stripes reported that Kirkpatrick was the seventh U.S. servicemember killed in action in Afghanistan in 2017.

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker today ordered that U.S. and Alaska flags be lowered to half-staff in honor of Private First Class Hansen B. Kirkpatrick, 19, of Wasilla.

Flags should return to full staff at sunset on Thursday (July 6).

Two other service members were wounded in Monday’s attack in Helmand province, according to a statement from the United States Armed Forces-Afghanistan.

The group came under “indirect fire,” according to the military, meaning an attack using rockets or mortars. A U.S. military spokesman in Kabul tells NPR’s Tom Bowman that munitions hit a building while the group was inside it.

The injured service members’ wounds are “not considered life threatening,” the military’s statement said, and they are currently being hospitalized.

“At a time when we remember the patriots who founded our nation in freedom, we are saddened by the loss of one of our comrades who was here protecting our freedom at home,” Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, said in a statement. “We will keep his family in our thoughts and prayers as we reflect on the sacrifice he and others have made to secure our freedoms and help make Afghanistan a better place.”

He is the first fatality since an “insider attack” by an Afghan soldier killed three U.S. service members in May. The Taliban claimed responsibility for that assault, as The Two-Way reported. An Afghan source tells NPR that the Afghan soldier involved in the killings was investigated several times for suspected ties to the Taliban.

Kirkpatrick was killed in the Nawa district, Tom reports. He is the first U.S. fatality there since 2012, according to icasualties.org.

According to The Associated Press, “there has been a recent increase in U.S. military deaths and injuries in Afghanistan as the fighting season with the Taliban becomes more intense and American forces work more closely with their Afghan partners in the battle.”

The United States is considering sending thousands of additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan, after Gen. Nicholson requested the force increase to break what he called a “stalemate” in the war. The conflict is now in its 16th year.

Most if not all of those new troops would be involved in training, and not the counter-terror mission. The training includes increasing the number of Afghan commandos, and building up the Afghan Air Force.

Last month, President Donald Trump gave Defense Secretary Jim Mattis the authority to set U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan. “We are not winning in Afghanistan right now, and we will correct this as soon as possible,” Mattis told lawmakers last month.

In testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee earlier this year, Nicholson requested thousands more troops and billions more dollars. “Offensive capability is what will break the stalemate in Afghanistan,” he said.

Mattis traveled to Afghanistan in April, and said at the time that the Trump administration was reviewing its policy in the country. That strategy is expected to be presented later this month.

(KTOO’s Carter Barrett contributed to this story.)

Merrit Kennedy, NPR

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Original story | 10:39 a.m. Wednesday

ANCHORAGE — The Army says an Alaska soldier serving in Afghanistan has died.

Pfc. Hansen Kirkpatrick, 19, of Wasilla died Monday in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, the Department of Defense said. He was wounded in what the Defense Department says was an indirect fire attack.

The incident is under investigation.

Kirkpatrick was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 36th Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division at Fort Bliss, Texas.

The Associated Press

NPR News

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