In the five months since they arrived in southern Afghanistan, members of a Minnesota-based National Guard unit have gone outside the wire to clear roads of mines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) without a major incident in one of the most dangerous regions remaining in the country.
But on Monday, a suicide attack on their base carried out by suspected Taliban combatants left five members of Litchfield, Minn.-based unit wounded, including one serious enough to be airlifted to Germany for treatment.
One American soldier, Chief Warrant Officer Edward Balli, 42, of Monterey, Calif., was killed in the attack, Pentagon officials said Wednesday. The assault occurred Monday about 10:30 a.m. on a base in Kandahar Province, said Lt. Col. Kevin Olson of the Minnesota National Guard. As the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan winds to a close after more than 13 years, the Minnesota National Guard continues to play a role in a country that has still proven dangerous for U.S. troops. About 250 Minnesota Guard members are currently deployed in Afghanistan.
The injuries from the attack on Monday are some of the most serious against Minnesota Guard members in Afghanistan since Specialist George Cauley was killed in October 2009 when his truck struck an explosive device. He is one of 28 service members with Minnesota ties to be killed in Afghanistan.
Officials were not disclosing identifying information about the Guard members from the 849th Mobility Augmentation Company or their conditions.
But the mother of one of the wounded Minnesota soldiers said she got a brief telephone call from her son, Staff Sgt. Robbie Sheets, saying he had been hit in the leg and back by shrapnel.
"He said, 'We got ambushed.' Robbie kept saying, 'We're all alive, we're all alive,' " said Kim Schwich, of Green Isle, Minn. "That mother instinct is very strong. I told him, 'I'm glad to hear your voice, but really, are you OK?' "
One airlifted out
One Minnesota Guard member was flown to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany for treatment and "is recovering," Olson said. The others are recovering in Afghanistan, he said.