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Army Staff Sgt. Richard J. Tieman

Died May 18, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom


28, of Waynesboro, Pa.; assigned to Special Troops Battalion, V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany; died May 18 in Kabul, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered in a suicide car bombing. Also killed were Col. John M. McHugh, Lt. Col. Paul R. Bartz, Lt. Col. Thomas P. Belkofer, and Spc. Joshua A. Tomlinson.

O-6, two O-5s among 5 killed in convoy blast

By David Larter

Staff writer

A suicide bomb attack in Kabul on May 18 killed five American soldiers, the highest number killed in a single attack in seven months.

A colonel and two lieutenant colonels were among those killed in the attack, marking the first time during the Afghanistan war that three officers of those ranks were killed in a single incident.

A suicide bomber detonated a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device after targeting a convey traveling down Kabul’s Darulaman Road.

The Defense Department on May 19 identified the soldiers.

* Col. John M. McHugh, 46, of Newark, N.J., assigned to the Army Battle Command Training Program, Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

* Lt. Col. Paul R. Bartz, 43, of Waterloo, Wis., assigned to Headquarters, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, N.Y.

* Lt. Col. Thomas P. Belkofer, 44, of Perrysburg, Ohio, assigned to Headquarters, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, N.Y.

* Staff Sgt. Richard J. Tieman, 28, of Waynesboro, Pa., assigned to Special Troops Battalion, V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany.

* Spc. Joshua A. Tomlinson, 24, of Dubberly, La., assigned to Special Troops Battalion, V Corps, Heidelberg, Germany.

The attack also killed Canadian Col. Geoff Parker and more than a dozen Afghan civilians.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, told The Associated Press the bomber was a man from Kabul and that the vehicle was packed with 1,650 pounds of explosives.

A spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force said commanders thought the attack was indiscriminate and not part of a larger Taliban strategy targeting senior leaders.

“We don’t have any information that they were targeting the specific group,” Air Force Master Sgt. Jeff Loftin said.

McHugh had been in Kabul for a few days, traveling with Bartz and Belkofer. They were conducting a site survey in advance of the division headquarters deployment. The headquarters is scheduled to go to Afghanistan in the fall.

Tieman and Tomlinson were traveling with the convoy.

The incident was quickly condemned by ISAF and NATO leaders.

“This sort of desperate brutality and aggression reminds us of the pessimism of an enemy who seeks to kill the innocent and to stop the progress necessary for a better Afghanistan,” said ISAF spokesman Brig. Gen. Josef Blotz in a statement.

In addition to the loss of life, the blast damaged five ISAF vehicles and more than a dozen civilian vehicles.

The last attack of this magnitude was an IED attack on a Stryker in the Arghandab Valley on Oct. 27 which killed seven soldiers with 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division.

October was the deadliest month of the U.S.-led occupation of Afghanistan, claiming 56 service-members’ lives; 48 of them were soldiers. So far in May, 18 service members have been killed in Afghanistan.


Eyed roll as drill sergeant after deployment

The Associated Press

The military always was an integral part of Richard Tieman’s life.

He was born and raised on Army bases around the country during his father’s long military career. He enlisted in the Army just after graduation from Waynesboro Area Senior High School in 2000.

He married a fellow staff sergeant, Paulina Tieman, earlier this the year while on leave from his base in Heidelberg, Germany. And he planned to continue his military career by becoming a drill sergeant this summer at Fort Jackson, S.C.

Tieman, of Waynesboro, Pa., died May 18 in Kabul when a NATO convoy was bombed. It was his third tour of duty after serving twice in Iraq.

“He was an all-around great guy,” said Toby Ditch, Tieman’s best friend. “Anytime I’d call, he’d be there for me. No matter what we did, we had fun. He lived his life. There was never a dull moment.”

Tieman loved playing football, lifting weights, fishing with his dad and brother, socializing with friends, playing the Guitar Hero video game and rooting for the Philadelphia Eagles.

Survivors also include his parents, Richard and Diane Tieman, and his younger brother, Tyler.

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