The US Central Command investigation's conclusions led the top Marine, General James Amos, to announce on Monday that he had forced two senior Marine generals to retire early. Amos held Major General Charles Gurganus and Major General Gregg Sturdevant responsible for failures to protect their forces.
The Central Command's report which was released yesterday indicated that the Marines at Camp Bastion, one of the largest coalition airfields in Afghanistan, could have foreseen the possibility of a Taliban effort to penetrate the base's perimeter on the night of September 14, 2012.
A group of 15 Taliban fighters used wire cutters to cut through a chain link fence on Bastion's perimeter and walked onto the base undetected.
They destroyed six Marine fighter jets and wounded 17 people in addition to killing two Marines.
The investigation report said that in the weeks prior to the attack there had been numerous breaches of Bastion's supposedly secure perimeter, some of which had been captured on surveillance videos.
It said many people, including Gurganus, who was the commander of all coalition forces in southwestern Afghanistan, had expressed concern about the breaches but "accepted them" as related to theft or other incursions that did not necessarily pose a security danger to the Marines.
The report faulted Gurganus for failing to take sufficient actions to ensure security prior to the attack.
"He underestimated the threat posed by the enemy's capabilities, overestimated US and coalition capabilities to counter that threat and failed to take prudent steps to counter or mitigate an enemy attack," it concluded.
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