Body of U.S. Army lieutenant recovered off Moroccan coast as search continues for second missing soldier

By Ethan Cole on
 May 11, 2026

A Moroccan military search team pulled the remains of 1st Lt. Kendrick Lamont Key Jr. from the Atlantic Ocean on May 9, one week after the 27-year-old Army officer and a fellow soldier fell from a cliff during an off-duty hike near Morocco's Cap Draa Training Area. The second soldier has not been found.

Key, of Richmond, Virginia, was an Air Defense Artillery officer assigned to Charlie Battery, 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command. He had participated in the African Lion multinational military exercise hours before the fall on May 2. Both soldiers went over the cliff's edge during what the Army described as a recreational hike, the New York Post reported.

U.S. Army Europe and Africa confirmed the recovery in a statement: "A Moroccan military search team found the Soldier in the water along the shoreline at approximately 8:55 a.m. local time May 9, within roughly one mile of where both Soldiers reportedly entered the ocean."

The identity of the second missing soldier has not been publicly released. As of Sunday, the eighth day of the search, rescue teams had covered more than 12,000 square kilometers of sea and shore without locating the second service member.

A massive search effort and a devastating loss

Six hundred personnel from the United States, Morocco, and partner militaries launched the search-and-rescue operation. They deployed frigates, vessels, helicopters, and drones across the coastline and open water. The effort brought the broader African Lion exercise to what the reporting described as "a screeching halt."

African Lion is U.S. Africa Command's largest joint multinational exercise, drawing more than 7,000 military personnel from over 30 nations. The exercise has run since 2004 and regularly features high-ranking officials from the U.S. and its top allies on the continent.

The Washington Times reported that media accounts indicated Key entered the water while attempting to rescue the second soldier after the other fell from a coastal cliff. That detail, if confirmed, would cast Key's final moments in a different light, not a shared accident, but an act of selflessness.

Brig. Gen. Curtis King addressed the loss directly. Fox News reported his statement:

"Today, we mourn the loss of 1st Lt. Kendrick Key, whose remains were recovered in Morocco."

Lt. Col. Chris Counch, who also spoke publicly about Key, offered a fuller tribute. He described Key as someone who set the standard for others in uniform:

"Kendrick embodies the highest standards of service as a selfless, inspirational leader whose unwavering dedication to his soldiers and their development leaves an enduring legacy within our ranks."

A young officer's rising career

Key began his military career in 2023 as an officer candidate and rose to Air Defense Artillery officer by 2024. He earned a Bachelor of Science in marketing from Methodist University in North Carolina, with minors in international business, entrepreneurship, and business administration. He was 27 years old.

That profile, a young college graduate who chose military service, earned his commission, and deployed overseas for a demanding multinational exercise, is the kind of story that rarely makes national headlines until something goes wrong. Key's death is a reminder that the risks American service members face extend well beyond combat zones. Training exercises, including new readiness programs the Army has rolled out to sharpen frontline performance, carry real danger.

This is not the first time African Lion has turned fatal. In 2012, two Marines were killed when their helicopter went down during the exercises, and two others were injured. The rugged terrain and austere conditions that make the training valuable also make it unforgiving.

Unanswered questions remain

The Army has not disclosed the exact circumstances of the hike or the fall. The specific location beyond "near the Cap Draa Training Area" has not been publicly identified. Whether the cliff was part of a known hazard area, whether the soldiers were hiking alone or in a group, and what safety protocols were in place for off-duty recreation during the exercise, none of these questions have been addressed in official statements.

The identity of the second missing soldier has been withheld, likely pending notification of family. AP News confirmed the broad outlines of the recovery and the ongoing search, noting the international scope of the rescue effort.

As the Pentagon continues to deploy thousands of soldiers to high-stakes environments around the globe, the Morocco incident raises fair questions about how the military manages risk during downtime. Combat readiness training is essential. So is accounting for the safety of troops in the hours between drills.

Just the News noted the weeklong duration of the search before Key's body was recovered, underscoring both the difficulty of the terrain and the commitment of the multinational rescue teams involved.

The broader African Lion exercise involves coordination across dozens of allied nations, a reflection of the kind of alliance management and troop deployment decisions that define American military posture overseas. When something goes wrong at an exercise of this scale, the consequences ripple through command structures, allied relationships, and the families waiting at home.

Newsmax reported the same core facts about Key's recovery and the continued search, confirming the multinational character of the operation and the grim reality that a second American remains unaccounted for.

A soldier who deserves to be remembered

Kendrick Lamont Key Jr. was not lost in a firefight or a drone strike. He died on a rocky coastline far from home, during what should have been a few hours of rest after hard training. If the accounts suggesting he went into the water to save a fellow soldier prove accurate, his death carries a weight that no official statement can fully capture.

The military owes his family, and the family of the soldier still missing, a full and transparent accounting of what happened on that cliff. Families who send their sons and daughters into uniform deserve answers when the worst happens, whether the loss occurs in combat or on a hike along the Moroccan coast.

A young officer from Richmond, Virginia, went overseas to train with allies and serve his country. He didn't come home. That fact alone demands more than a press release and a flag-draped transfer. It demands accountability, and it demands that the search for the second missing soldier not stop until he is found.

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