Johnny Micheal Spann

Officer

Birthday March 1, 1969

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Winfield, Alabama, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2001-11-25, Qala-i-Jangi, Balkh Province, Afghanistan (32 years old)

Nationality United States

#46845 Most Popular

1969

Johnny Micheal "Mike" Spann (March 1, 1969 – November 25, 2001) was an American paramilitary officer in the Central Intelligence Agency's Special Activities Division.

1987

Spann graduated in 1987 from Winfield City High School, where he played football.

At 17, he earned his private pilot license and later became a certified rescue diver and parachutist.

1991

In December 1991, while attending Auburn University, he joined the Marine Corps Reserve.

1992

After graduating from Auburn with a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice/Law Enforcement in 1992, Spann attended the Marines' Officer Candidates School at Quantico, Virginia.

He had originally wanted to go into aviation, but became a field artillery officer and eventually served with the 2nd Air Naval Gunfire Liaison Company.

He specialized in close air support.

1997

In 1997, he was second-in-command for UNITAS, a joint exercise expedition in Latin America and Africa.

He served six years with the United States Marine Corps and was stationed in Okinawa, Japan and at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, eventually achieving the rank of Captain.

1999

Spann joined the CIA in June 1999 and trained at The Farm, where he met his future wife Shannon Verleur (née Joy) and was known as "Silent Mike".

On completion of training, he was assigned to Ground Branch of the CIA's Special Activities Division.

2001

Spann was the first American killed in combat during the United States invasion of Afghanistan in 2001.

He died at the Qala-i-Jangi fortress during an al-Qaeda prisoner uprising.

Johnny Micheal Spann was from the small town of Winfield, Alabama, the son of real estate agent Johnny Spann and his wife Gail.

His name was spelled Micheal because of his mother's Irish ancestry.

In early 2001, he was on a training course with a fellow former Marine called Brian (who in 2021 was head of the CIA's Special Activities center) and discussed the Al Qaeda threat and the USS Cole, which had been bombed in October 2000.

"What would we be doing right now as a country if the Cole had snapped in half and gone to the bottom of the Gulf of Aden?"

Spann asked Brian.

"Would we be on a training course?"

Later in 2001, Spann undertook temporary duty in Uzbekistan, where he helped train Uzbek commandos, and the Balkans.

Spann returned from the Balkans on September 8, 2001 was inside CIA headquarters on 9/11 and was angered by the order to evacuate, asking colleagues: "Why are we leaving when we can stay and do something?"

On October 17, 2001, Spann was one of the eight members of the CIA's Team Alpha who were inserted into the Darya Suf Valley, south of Mazar-i-Sharif.

Team Alpha was flown into Afghanistan in two Black Hawk helicopters from the Karshi-Khanabad air base in Uzbekistan.

The eight were the first Americans behind enemy lines after 9/11; the CIA's Jawbreaker team had arrived on September 26, but were located in terrain controlled by the Northern Alliance in the Panjshir Valley.

Three days later, they were joined by 12 Green Berets from ODA 595.

On October 27, Spann led a three-man team to Yakawlang, sixty miles west of Bamiyan, to prepare the way for the CIA’s Team Delta and ODA 553.

CIA medic Mark Rausenberger and Captain Justin Sapp, a Green Beret, were under his command.

Spann insisted that the Landing Zone at Yakawlang be named after his baby son, despite opposition from CIA headquarters.

"There are no rules here,” he said. "We’re making the decisions and it’s going to be called LZ Jake." Spann's three-man team rejoined Team Alpha just before the fall of Mazar-i-Sharif on November 9.

Spann was killed during an uprising at the Qala-i-Jangi compound near Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan.

Earlier that day, he and David Tyson, a CIA case officer and Uzbek-language specialist based in Tashkent, questioned John Walker Lindh, an American citizen, and other prisoners.

Around 400 Al Qaeda prisoners had surrendered on November 24 and been kept overnight in the cellar of the Pink House, in the southern half of the fort.

Spann focused intently on Lindh after another prisoner identified him as an Irishman.

Spann asked Lindh: "Do you know the people here you’re working with are terrorists and killed other Muslims? There were several hundred Muslims killed in the bombing in New York City. Is that what the Koran teaches? I don’t think so. Are you going to talk to us?” Lindh remained silent. Two Afghan doctors, interviewed by author Toby Harnden, witnessed Spann's final moments. They saw the CIA officer, who was about five yards away from them, swing around and raise his AKMS rifle to his shoulder as the prisoners revolted amid sounds of gunfire and grenade explosions. Prisoners were rushing out, straight at Spann. The doctors saw Spann shoot two or three of them with his Kalashnikov before the Qatari prisoner and others who had been sitting close to the Pink House stood up and jumped on Spann from behind, pushing him to the ground. Spann pulled out his Glock 19 pistol and fired one or two shots before he was overwhelmed, disappearing beneath a pile of prisoners desperately trying to seize his weapons.

Tyson ran toward Spann after hearing his comrade shout: "Dave, Dave, Dave."

Tyson then used his Browning Hi-Power pistol to shoot dead four Al Qaeda prisoners on top of Spann.

Kicking Spann and seeing blood on the ground, Tyson concluded Spann was dead.

Tyson grabbed Spann's AKMS rifle and used it, and other weapons, to fight his way into the northern half of the fort, killing at least a dozen and possibly up to 40 Al Qaeda prisoners.

Afghans recovered his body on November 28 as CIA officers looked on.

After Afghan Northern Alliance troops, backed by U.S. airstrikes, US Army Special Forces and British Special Boat Service members, eventually quelled the uprising.