What truly brings the story of Fallen Angel… home is the testimony of not only those who have strong military expertise, but of the soldiers who were there that night and were forced to watch on by restrictive rules of war that have become bogged down by bureaucratic politicians who care more for saving face as opposed to protecting soldiers. Written by Stephen Spivey, who co-directs with Karl Horstmann, Fallen Angel: Call Sign – Extortion 17 uses Don Brown’s book “Call Sign Extortion 17: The Shoot Down of SEAL Team Six” as its guide to the events of that night, which Spivey and Horstmann replicate with rather impressive dramatic recreations that, on their own, could be used in a war movie. Fallen Angel: Call Sign – Extortion 17 attempts to get to the bottom of these questions, and the results are equally perplexing and disturbing. The ramifications of what happened with Extortion 17 run especially deep, with many questions still asked about what happened, how it could happen, and what events transpired afterwards. military life in a single incident in the Afghanistan campaign. Thirty Navy SEALs lost their lives in the attack, the worst loss of U.S. Among the debris of metal and concrete and flesh and blood that was the Two Towers lies with it a mountain of stories chewed up and spit out by an insatiable news cycle.Īmong those is the story of Extortion 17, the call sign of a military helicopter shot down in Afghanistan by an enemy RPG in 2011. That tragic day 20 years ago set forth a series of events that still shapes America today. With a mournful yet defiant spirit and unquenchable desire for the truth, Fallen Angel – Call Sign: Extortion 17 delves into the facts, the lies, the cover-up, and the legacy of one of the worst tragedies in US military history.
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