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Facebook posts
Facebook posts
stated on June 6, 2020 in a post on Facebook:

“United States Navy Seal Team … helicopter was shot down yesterday in Afghanistan and they lost 30 members of the team.”

Mostly False
By Madison Czopek
June 15, 2020

No, a helicopter transporting U.S. soldiers was not recently shot down

If your time is short

• There is no evidence that a helicopter transporting U.S. service members was recently shot down in Afghanistan.

• Similar claims have been circulating on the internet as far back as 2017. 

• In 2011, insurgents in Afghanistan shot down a helicopter and killed 30 U.S. service members, including several Navy SEALs.

See the sources for this fact-check

When a national tragedy happens, it’s not uncommon for social media users to post requests for thoughts and prayers. It’s puzzling, however, when there is no record of the recent tragedy.

This seems to be the case with social media claims about a downed U.S. military helicopter.

A Facebook post on June 6 asks users to acknowledge the deaths of 30 U.S. service members killed in Afghanistan.  

“I am asking everyone to please take a moment of silence for the United States Navy Seal Team and their families,” the post says. “Their helicopter was shot down yesterday in Afghanistan and they lost 30 members of the team.”

This attack was not lost in the news of 2020. It happened in 2011.

On Aug. 6, 2011, in what History.com referred to as the “the costliest day in SEAL Team Six history,” insurgents in Afghanistan shot down a Chinook transport helicopter, killing 30 U.S. service members and eight Afghans.

Twenty-two of the service members who died were Navy SEALs (not 30, as the post says). Most were members of SEAL Team 6, the unit that carried out the mission to kill Osama bin Laden. (Officials said none involved in the raid died in the helicopter attack.)

So it really happened, but not “yesterday.”

This request for prayers has been circulating for years. Back in September 2017, the fact-checking organization Snopes.com explained that a nearly identical social media post was based on an outdated event.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. American officials would say only that insurgents shot down the helicopter

Our ruling

A social media post about a helicopter crash in Afghanistan says it happened “yesterday.” But the attack was in 2011, not 2020.

We rate this claim Mostly False.

 

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