"The big part of this operation was the shock factor we put on them," said Sgt. Matthew Weise, a team leader with Company B. "After the engineers blew the door we went through and took down the first guy. He had absolutely no clue what was happening." In the next compound, Kramer and his squad had a similar experience. "When we went in the guy didn't realize we were there for him," Kramer said. "He was helpful. He actually said 'if you find weapons here you can shoot me'." Kramer's squad did find weapons but they didn't shoot him. The final count for the three compounds was nearly 10,000 American dollars, photos and other information of intelligence value, a small arsenal of AK-47 assault rifles, bolt action rifles, shotguns, 9mm pistols, small single shot pistols, knives and bayonets and hundreds of rounds of ammunition. What was even more valuable than getting the weapons off the street was the information gathered by talking to the detainees. "The men were financiers and organizers," said Kramer. "They have already told us the location of several improvised explosive devices." The 1-505th Parachute Infantry Regiment deployed to Afghanistan in mid-September to support Afghanistan's first ever direct presidential elections. |