Sgt. Maj. Christopher Nelms |
A highly decorated soldier
from the Army’s elite Delta Force died last month after a free-fall parachute
training accident the military did not make public.
Sgt. Maj. Christopher Nelms, 46, died July 1 from injuries
sustained when his parachute failed to fully open during a June 27 jump at
Laurinburg-Maxton Airport, N.C., about 40 miles southwest of Delta’s home post
of Fort Bragg, N.C. “He was fighting it the whole way down,” said a former
Delta Force officer familiar with the accident.
Nelms was buried in Arlington Cemetery on July 31, Bockholt
said.
Special mission units like Delta and the Navy’s SEAL Team 6
have found themselves at the forefront of the military’s post-9/11 campaigns in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Africa and Yemen, an uncomfortable starring role for troops
who prefer to work in the shadows. That sometimes leads to a tension between
the special operators’ preference for utmost secrecy and the public’s right to
know what its military is doing.
“We don’t make it a habit to just announce every time somebody
dies [in training] ,” Bockholt replied, when asked why his command
had made no public mention of Nelms’s death.
The military also typically does not identify soldiers as
belonging to Delta, a secret unit whose full name is 1st Special Forces
Operational Detachment – Delta. Bockholt would say only that Nelms was assigned
to U.S. Army Special Operations Command. Two former Delta operators confirmed
to Yahoo News that Nelms was a member of the unit.
“He had a great reputation,” said a former Delta operator who
knew Nelms. “Everyone who serves at the unit is handpicked, so whether it’s [in
training] or in combat, the reality is losing someone at that level is
devastating,” he said.
The exact structure and size of Delta Force is kept secret, but
a biography provided by Bockholt said Nelms had served as a troop sergeant
major, a senior leadership position, even in a unit filled with experienced
noncommissioned officers.
Nelms was “irreplaceable,” the former operator said. “It’ll be
a decade before someone can fill those kinds of slots, with that experience,
with that training.”
Nelms was twice awarded the Silver Star, the military’s
third-highest award for valor, during a 28-year Army career that he began as an
infantryman before moving to the Army National Guard’s 19th Special Forces
Group. He returned to active duty in 2008 and was selected for Delta, with whom
he deployed six times to Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia.
“Any free-fall jump has
a great deal of risk,” said a former Delta operator. “I don’t think people
realize how risky jumps like that are, whether training or for real.”
No comments:
Post a Comment