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Remembering Johnny “Mike” Spann, 22 Years After He Became The First American Casualty Inside Afghanistan after 9/11

Remembering Johnny “Mike” Spann, 22 Years After He Became The First American Casualty Inside Afghanistan after 9/11

CIA Operations Officer was killed during a Taliban prisoner uprising during the Battle of Qala-I-Jangi Fortress

Twenty-two years ago today, Johnny Micheal (“Mike”) Spann, a CIA operations officer with Alpha Team, became the first American killed inside Afghanistan after 9/11.

Spann was killed during the Battle of Qala-i-Jangi Fortress, a prisoner uprising at the ancient fortress where John Walker Lindh (the “American Taliban”) was held and interrogated by Spann.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/worlds-collide-07-12-2001/

[Mike Spann interviewing John Walker Lindh, Afghanistan, 2001]

This was my first post about Spann, on May 3, 2011, which launched the annual remembrance, Remembering Johnny “Mike” Spann:

Hearing the news of Osama bin Laden’s death brought forward many emotions and memories.

One of those memories for me was the story of Johnny “Mike” Spann, from Winfield, Alabama, the first American killed in the Afghanistan war, on November 25, 2001.

Spann was a CIA operative, one of a small number of Americans who landed in Afghanistan, helped coordinate local forces hostile to the Taliban, and directed bombing and other military action.

The story of this small band of men has been told, but not told enough.

Spann was killed during the Battle of Qala-i-Jangi when Taliban prisoners gained access to weapons and attacked.

Spann was killed during that uprising (see video).  One of the prisoners was the so-called American Taliban, John Walker Lyndh, who Spann interrogated shortly before Spann’s death.

Spann’s wife Shannon also worked for the CIA.  In addition to his wife, Spann left behind two daughters and an infant son.

Each year since then we remember him, and try to bring to light any new information and videos that arose or became available in the prior year. Scroll through our Johnny “Mike” Spann Tag from the earliest post forward for an enormous amount of detail.

http://teamuzunovmedia.blogspot.com/2009/07/afghan-general-dostum.html

This year continued to bring new information and a lot new videos.

In May, Spann’s widow Shannon wrote an article on Memorial Day for AARP magazine. Here is an excerpt from My Husband’s Heroic Legacy and the True Meaning of Sacrifice:

For my family, the turmoil and tragedy were more direct than for most — Mike was one of the first eight Americans sent behind enemy lines in Afghanistan and on Nov. 25, 2001, he became America’s first casualty on the battlefield in a new war that would last for 20 years.

He died fighting, shooting back at his al-Qaeda attackers at close quarters during a prisoner uprising at Qala-i-Jangi before he was overwhelmed. We were both 32.

Less than a month after Mike was killed, I found myself back at Arlington for Mike’s funeral, numbed by grief and holding a 5-month-old Jake. I hardly remember delivering a eulogy, which was filmed live on national television. “Mike is a hero not for the way that he died,” I said, “but rather because of the way he lived.”

He was buried in Section 34 of the cemetery, which is flanked by Grant Drive.

Mike was given a white marble headstone. In the years since, I’ve tried to think of what Martin Luther King Jr. said about the “arc of the moral universe” as a way to make some sense of Mike’s death.

When the loss is recent and up close and personal, it’s harder to believe in that arc. But in the years since 2001, when I’ve stood in Arlington among all the headstones stretching out as far as one can see, I’ve felt that as precious as Mike’s one headstone is to me, it’s even more precious because it’s part of the whole.

This year, Memorial Day is more difficult than before because of the moral injury suffered by the veteran community due to the harm that’s coming to our allies and partners in Afghanistan. On previous Memorial Days, I would mourn but I had a greater ability than I do now to say the sacrifice was worth the cost.

That phrase in his eulogy about the way Mike lived his life was central to the reason I, along with several of Mike’s comrades, set up a nonprofit charity to assist the approximately 30 families of the men who fought alongside the CIA and Green Berets in northern Afghanistan immediately after 9/11.

We called it Badger Six, a call sign used by members of Mike’s team in 2001. Mike wasn’t able to continue living his life, so we who are left are living our lives in his way through Badger Six.

I found two new YouTube “shorts” – unfortunately they don’t size properly in WordPress (unlike regular YouTube Videos) so here are hyperlinked images (click to go to the video). This video is an interview with Shannon:

This ‘short’ explains the efforts to rescue Spann during the battle;

Toby Harnden, whose book about Spann – First Casualty – is a must read, posted on Instagram last Memorial Day:

On Memorial Day 2001, Mike Spann, a CIA paramilitary who’d been a @USMC officer, took his pregnant wife Shannon, also CIA, and two daughters to Arlington National Cemetery. On December 10 that year, he was buried there in Section 34. This is his grave this week.

#MemorialDay2022 #MemorialDay #RememberMikeSpann

First Casualty page 68:

Mike loved American military history, particularly the Civil War, and had told Alison that Ulysses S. Grant, the Union general and later US president, was one of his heroes. On Memorial Day of that year, with Shannon nearly nine months pregnant, they had taken the girls by Metro to visit Arlington National Cemetery. It was a sacred place to Mike, and a day to teach his children the importance of respect for America’s fallen.

Page 296:

A horse-drawn caisson, accompanied by a Marine honor guard in dress blues and the sound of clopping hooves and a snare drum, carried Mike Spann’s casket through Arlington National Cemetery. It was 1:15 p.m. on December 10, the eve of the three-month anniversary of 9/11. Amid the leafless trees and white marble headstones stretching into the distance, the caisson halted before grave number 2359 in Section 34. Mike had visited the cemetery with Shannon and his daughters less than seven months earlier. It was the fitting place, Shannon had decided, for her husband to be laid to rest.

There were videos. Lots of videos posted in the past year. Some of them contain information previously available. This video from NBC News summarizes the story through an interview with Spann’s teammate, David Tyson.

This video is a fairly long detailed accont of the Battle of Qala-I-Jangi Fortress, well worth the watch if you are not already familiar.

Finally, the Mike Spann Invitational was run this year again.

Nothing that happened in Afghanistan in the past two decades diminishes his sacrifice.

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Comments

Right now I am thinking of the cost this country has exacted from us, and from the people of other countries. Thoughtless people placed in position to make serious decisions have made wreaked havoc on our nation’s foreign policy, economy, and health. At the moment, I can only pray that we will in the future become more worthy of the blessings Almighty God has bestowed on us.

May our country become more worthy of this gentleman’s sacrifice.

    texansamurai in reply to Valerie. | November 26, 2023 at 8:52 am

    May our country become more worthy of this gentleman’s sacrifice.
    ______________________________________________________

    reminds me of a line delivered at the end of a film from over twenty years ago:

    ” is rome worth one good man’s life ? “–a question for the ages and from time to time it requires an answer in blood–legions of men and women have given all their tomorrows in an effort to keep us safe, to preserve our way of life–in truth, a debt that can never be repaid but regardless, one that each of us may one day be required to honor–may we have the courage to do so if necessary

    and to mike spann: rest in peace, warrior

An amazing website is “Wall of Faces” of all the young men killed in Vietnam. Click on a face and see posts from family and friends and strangers about these young heroes. Some touching and amazing stories about their childhoods, etc.

President Trump is the only President to keep us out of war….

We must reelect him again in 2024

For the third time

So men like Mike are not murdered in vain

And I disagree, 20 years later

What the hell was all the sacrifice worth(

The Gentle Grizzly | November 26, 2023 at 7:44 am

“ What the hell was all the sacrifice worth”

What indeed?

Thank you Professor, for keeping Mike Spann’s sacrifice and memory alive for us. I also remember Obama slobbering over John Walker Lindh’s parents at the White House as if their swine of a son were some sort of national hero.
It’s sad just how little things have changed.