2019 Ménaka mid-air collision
On 25 November 2019, two French military helicopters, part of Operation Barkhane, crashed in northern Mali, killing 13 soldiers. It was the deadliest incident involving the French military since the 1983 Beirut barracks bombings. BackgroundIn November 2019, the city of Indelimane and its surroundings, located between Ansongo and Ménaka, were the scene of numerous clashes. The region was then one of the Islamic State's areas of action in the Sahara.[1] On November 1, at least 49 Malian soldiers were killed in a jihadistic attack on the military base in the city. On November 2, an LAV escorting a convoy between Gao and Ménaka ran into an improvised explosive device 20 kilometers from Indelimane: a French soldier was killed.[2][3] On November 16, about 20 kilometers south of Indelimane, GCP commandos carried out an attack on a camp: five Islamic State jihadists were killed and a French commando was seriously injured during the fighting.[4][5] IncidentOn November 22, 2019, the French army launched a large-scale operation in the Eranga Valley, located about twenty kilometers south of Indelimane. On November 25, late in the day, French forces launched an attack in the Liptako Gourma region against jihadists traveling in pick-ups and motorcycles. Around 5 p.m., GCP soldiers clashed with the jihadists. As night fell, they requested air support to cross the Wadi. Two Tiger helicopters and a Cougar, as well as a patrol of two Mirage 2000s, were mobilized. At around 7:40 p.m., while the helicopters were carrying out a maneuver intended to prepare for the enemy engagement, one of the two Tigers and the Cougar accidentally collided. The crash left no survivors. Thirteen French soldiers, including seven from the 5th Combat Helicopter Regiment (5° RHC), and six operators from the Groupement de commandos de Montagne, were killed.[6][7][8][9] On November 28, the Islamic State in West Africa claimed to have provoked the crash that had occurred three days earlier: "the soldiers of the caliphate fired in the direction of the helicopter, forcing it to retreat and eventually colliding with another helicopter, resulting in the death of thirteen soldiers."[10][11][12] The next day, General François Lecointre, the Armed Forces' chief of staff, denied that jihadist fire had caused the collision: "This is absolutely incorrect. [...] There was no attack by the jihadists, [who were] being chased and marked in a certain way on the ground. And so there was no withdrawal of a plane in the face of jihadist fire."[12][13][14] CasualtiesSix officers and a master corporal were among the 13 fatalities. One of those killed, Pierre-Emmanuel Bockel, was the son of French Senator Jean-Marie Bockel.[15] Bockel was the pilot of the 'Cougar' helicopter.[16] On December 2, France gave them a national tribune in the courtyard of the Hôtel des Invalides. President Emmanuel Macron presented them with the posthumous Legion of Honor.[17] References
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