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The War
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American forces are making historic progress in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the
Global War On Terror, yet the
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Operation Viper Shake Photos
(Click
photos to enlarge.)
KORENGAL
CLIFFS - U.S. Army Spc. Andrew Harvey trudges across the steep
cliff sides surrounding Korengal Valley, Afghanistan, during
Operation Viper Shake, April 21, 2009. During the operation,
Soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division's Company C, 1st
Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, hiked to elevations of more
than 2,500 meters to disrupt violent extremists operating in
one of Afghanistan's most hostile areas. U.S. Army photo by
Sgt. Matthew C. Moeller |
U.S.
Soldiers establish a patrol base during Operation Viper Shake
in the mountains surrounding Korengal Valley, Afghanistan,
April 21, 2009. The troops are assigned to the1st Infantry
Division's Company C, 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment.
U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Matthew C. Moeller |
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Outpost Gives Hint of Challenges in Afghanistan
Story by
Jim Garamone
Date: 04.23.2009
COMBAT
OUTPOST DEYSIE, Afghanistan - Nothing illustrates the
difficulties of combat in Afghanistan's Regional Command East
like this base on the Gardez-Khowst road.
Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
visited the base on April 22 to hear from the Soldiers on the
ground what life is like in Afghanistan. He flew from Kabul to
Forward Operating Base Airborne, and then to this combat
outpost.
Mullen met with leaders and service members who explained
their duties and talked about the challenges they face.
The area is "geographically challenging," said Army Brig. Gen.
Mark Milley, deputy commander for operations of Combined Joint
Task Force 101. The camp guards what will become a macadamized
road. The right of way is marked, and construction equipment
soon will move in. The outpost is more than 8,000 feet above
sea level, and lowlanders can feel the lack of oxygen.
Mountains surround the camp, and the Soldiers of the
reconnaissance troop of the 25th Infantry Division's 4th
Brigade Combat Team work with Afghan soldiers to ensure the
safety of local people who are building the road.
Roads are important in Afghanistan - and almost nonexistent.
One Soldier spoke of driving along what he thought was a road,
but it turned out to be a dry streambed.
Because roads represent the good intentions of government,
they have become a way for federal and provincial officials to
show they are trying to improve the lives of average Afghans.
But roads also become targets that the Taliban and other enemy
groups attack, Milley said.
Without roads, goods cannot get to market, medical care is
limited, and tribes and families become isolated. U.S. and
Afghan soldiers provide security so progress can continue. The
Taliban and their allies kill innocent people and intimidate
road crews as a last-gasp measure to show the government is
ineffective, Milley said. "They will not be successful," he
added.
Follow-through is almost a mantra to the general, who said
finishing the road will demonstrate the government's
commitment to the tribes and families. American and Afghan
troops being in the area also represent commitment and
follow-through to the people, he noted.
Regional Command East has twice the number of combat brigades
that it had this time last year. All are in tough battle
spaces, Milley said. In the north, the 1st Infantry Division's
3rd Brigade Combat Team operates in the Hindu Kush mountains,
which top 16,000 feet in some places.
"It is some of the toughest infantry fighting country in the
world, and those soldiers are doing a great job in a very
tough fight," Milley said.
An enhanced brigade out of Fort Polk, La., operates with a
French battalion in Parawan province; and a Polish brigade
operates in Ghazni province.
The 10th Mountain Division's 3rd Brigade Combat Team is the
newest brigade in the area, brings about 3,500 additional
soldiers into the region south of Kabul, the Afghan capital.
Operating in the southern portion of Regional Command East is
the 25th Infantry Division's 4th Brigade Combat Team out of
Alaska. In addition, Regional Command East has an aviation
brigade, engineers and logisticians, as well as the
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets and
medical facilities needed to maintain the force in the field.
Essentially, five brigades are responsible for security in an
area about the size of North and South Carolina, Milley said.
The enemy is as varied as the topography.
Terror groups in the region are fractious, with no single
unifying philosophy or goal, the general said. "They are
murderous groups who want nothing but power for themselves,"
he said. "They have no vision for the future, and the Afghan
people understand this. Still, they intimidate the population
and think nothing of killing innocent men, women and children
to further their sick ambitions."
Westerners talk about the Taliban, but the enemies are varied,
though their tactics are similar. The Hakkani network, an
extremist group led by Hekmatyar Gulbaddin, Taliban groups
dedicated to the overthrow of the Pakistani government, and
local groups that simply want power all are part of the mix.
"They distrust each other, but can sometimes come together
with commonality of purpose," Milley said.
The general said he does not like to attach a number to the
enemy presence, but when pressed, he said the various groups
have between 7,000 and 11,000 combatants. But then, he added,
the discussion becomes "Who is a combatant? Is an Afghan who
joins a raid to feed his family because there is no work in
his village a combatant or just someone being used?"
Separating the enemy from the people is the key to winning in
Afghanistan, Milley said, and the enemy has four options.
"They can fight and die, they can surrender, they can throw
their weapons away and run or they can reconcile," he said.
The American effort in the nation is built around classic
counterinsurgency strategy. U.S. forces aim to provide
security for the people. Once they establish security, they
need to hold the area to prevent the enemy from moving back
in. There must be development to provide jobs and
opportunities for the people.
Building governance at local, provincial and federal levels is
vital. "The people must see the government as a benefit to
them," Milley said. "They must turn to the government for
help, rather than the enemy."
But the most important portion of the counterinsurgency
strategy is training Afghans to take on the security
challenge. "The best counterinsurgency fighter is an
indigenous fighter," Milley said. "If a stranger comes into a
village, a local Afghan will notice in ways that we can't.
They'll know if the man is trouble or not. Security forces
must be the face of the government. If so, people will turn to
them."
The Afghan national army is the most respected institution in
the country, Milley said. "The Afghan soldiers can whip the
enemy's butt every time," he said. But there are not enough of
them, with 82,000 in the service.
"The Afghan army must be a bigger factor," the general said.
In Regional Command East, two Afghan army corps work with
Combined Joint Task Force 101. More kandaks - Afghan
battalions - are scheduled to join the fight in the region.
Ultimately, part of the solution in the country is a
professional police force. Training the Afghan police has been
a problem, but it is proceeding, Milley said. Police live
among the people, he explained, and are best suited to
understand local concerns and -- more importantly -- to know
those in the area who cause trouble.
Afghanistan's border with Pakistan runs 450 miles down the
eastern portion of Regional Command East's area. It has a
mountainous terrain, and the people of the border area have
tribal and family ties on both sides. At least 2,000 footpaths
run across the border in the Regional Command East area alone,
Milley said, and another 200 paths can handle at least burros.
The Afghan border police have been receiving training and
equipment. They are becoming more effective, the general said,
but more needs to happen.
On the Pakistan side of the border, the Frontier Corps has
made strides in combating Taliban fighters who use the region
as a safe haven.
"What has to happen now is coordinating our operations,"
Milley said. U.S., Afghan and Pakistani officials sit down
regularly to talk about common challenges. At the tactical
level, U.S., Afghan and Pakistani units are allowed to contact
each other, and they do, the general said.
But Pakistan remains a problem. Taliban fighters continue to
take refuge in the country, and while the Frontier Corps is
effective in Baijur, they are not operating in other areas.
"This is going to require a concerted effort," Milley said.
Combined Joint Task Force 101 will turn over command of the
region to a headquarters built around the 82nd Airborne
Division later this summer. |
Cavalry
Troopers Help Keep Sadr City Safe
Story by Sgt. Joshua Risner
Date: 04.23.2009
BAGHDAD
- Sunlight is fading in Sadr City as Soldiers of Charlie
Company, 2nd Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade
Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, along with Iraqi Soldiers
with 2nd Co., 3rd Bn., 42nd Iraqi Army Division, move down
streets lined with houses in an effort to keep the city safer.
"We're essentially trying to hit target houses and known
bed-down locations of bad guys," said Greensboro, Ga. native
1st Lt. Mark Reinke, a platoon leader with Charlie Co.
At pre-planned locations, they knock on doors and enter with
the permission of the inhabitants to look for contraband,
intelligence and people of interest.
"We do a lot of cordon-pretty much knock, and searches to try
to get all the weapons out of the area because [Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki] said that no weapons are allowed in Sadr
City," Reinke said. "So by taking the weapons, we're trying to
keep the streets safer."
Taking weapons off the streets has more value to security than
just keeping them out of insurgent hands, Reinke explained.
"In the past, we've had family feuds spill onto the streets
which sometimes involved shooting," he said.
The search yielded promising leads and positive results at a
few locations.
"We found a photo album with pictures we believe to be of a
bad guy we are looking for. Now we have his picture so maybe
we can get a better positive ID of him," Reinke explained. "We
also found a weapon on a guy who claimed to be an Iraqi
policeman, who is believed to be working with a target we are
trying to find, so we're using that to help build a case."
In addition to finding results during search operations, the
patrols conducted by C Co. Soldiers have positive effects on
the community, according to Reinke.
"We provide a presence both night and day in the area to
hopefully deter anybody from doing something they would really
regret in the future," he said.
Soldiers of 2-5 Cav., most of whom are tankers by trade, have
largely abandoned their tanks in favor of Mine-Resistant
Ambush-Protected vehicles and their feet to get them where
they need to go.
"These guys are tankers but to operate in these conditions,
you have to be on the ground and that's what they do," said
1st Sgt. Glenn Aldrich from Houston. "I've been in the Army
for 21 years and I've never had a group of Soldiers as good as
the ones I have right now ... to be doing what they're doing
the way they're doing it."
For the troops of C Co., the missions in Sadr City may not be
what they are normally accustomed to, but they take to it with
determination and excellence, according to Spc. Jimmy Howard,
a Dallas native with C Co.
"We, and pretty much all of combat-arms Soldiers, are doing
the job of an infantryman and a [military policeman] because
that's what the mission requires," he said. "Whatever it takes
to get the mission done, we'll do it."
The sun has already set as C Co. troops make it back to Joint
Security Station Comanche, their home away from home in the
Iraqi urban jungle. They are sweaty and they are tired but
they have accomplished their mission for the day. Now they
will get some sleep and prepare for the next opportunity to
keep their sector safe. |
Prominent Insurgent Killed During Operation in Logar
4/19/2009
KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghan national security forces and
International security assistance forces are able to confirm
that an insurgent was killed during an operation in Mohammed Agha District, Logar province yesterday. The death of
prominent insurgent Abdullah will cause severe disruption to
militant networks in Logar and has been welcomed by local
citizens.
ANSF and ISAF conducted an operation against Abdullah, who was
located in a heavily defended insurgent compound. The event
was in response to intelligence provided to ISAF as a result
of several successful missions against Logar insurgent
networks during the past three months.
Abdullah was directly responsible for numerous attacks in
Kabul and Logar that resulted in both Afghan civilian and
security forces personnel being killed. He was believed to be
active in recruiting young males to take part in insurgent
attacks. His death will significantly inhibit Logar-based
insurgent activities.
During the operation ANSF and ISAF forces were attacked by
armed insurgents using heavy machine guns and rocket propelled
grenades from an identified insurgent compound. ANSF and ISAF
soldiers utilized controlled close air support to defeat the
insurgents. Three insurgents were killed, including one woman,
and two males were detained. A subsequent search of the
compound revealed explosives and military equipment. Earlier
media reports identifying these individuals as civilians were
incorrect.
"Logar locals are extremely pleased that another insurgent in
Mohammed Agha district has been stopped from conducting
further brutal attacks," said Capt. Mark Durkin, ISAF
spokesman. "Logar insurgent networks have been seriously
disrupted by this operation." |
Army
Pfc. Matthew Swanson takes up a fighting position overlooking
a road where insurgents are known to travel, during a patrol
with Alpha Company, 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 10th
Mountain Division, Task Force Spartan, in Logar province,
Afghanistan. (Click photo to enlarge.) |
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