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Elite US Rangers Storm Mullah's Mountain Fort
The Guardian (UK) ^ | 10-21-2001

Posted on 10/20/2001 5:39:27 PM PDT by blam

Elite US Rangers storm mullah's mountain fort

The stronghold of Baba Sahib was never conquered by Russian forces. It was a byword for invincibility to Afghans - but it fell in a single attack

War in Afghanistan: Observer special
War on Terrorism: Observer special

Paul Harris and Jason Burke, Peshawar
Sunday October 21, 2001
The Observer

The first sign that something had changed came on Friday. Unlike the previous week, there was no pause in the American bombing for the Muslim day of prayer. US attack aircraft prowled the skies above Kandahar, given the green light to go after random targets and troop formations. But among the bombs came leaflets, fluttering down to the battered and terrified people of the Taliban stronghold. They warned them to avoid potential military targets and stay in their homes. Then came four slow-moving EC-130CE planes, sweeping high over the city and broadcasting radio messages in Pashtu.

The tone was mocking and brutal as the signals cut into local frequencies with jamming equipment. The words were aimed at the Taliban fighters below, huddled over radio sets. 'You are condemned. Did you know that? The instant the terrorists you support took over our planes, you sentenced yourself to death,' they said. The war, barely two weeks old, was entering a bloody and dangerous new phase.

The attack came just after midnight yesterday: enough time for the day of prayer to have ended, but giving enough hours of darkness for the assault to be carried out during night-time. This time the aircraft would not be dropping bombs. They would be dropping highly trained, heavily armed men.

They had taken off a few hours earlier - reportedly from the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk - heading north over the Indian Ocean and through Pakistani airspace. Joining them was an escort of AC-130s, the feared gunships which had been laying waste to Taliban positions around Kandahar since the start of the week. Helicopters, based at the newly opened Pakistani airstrip of Dalbandin, 125 miles from Kandahar, also flew in to join the mission.

As the planes and choppers flew in low over hills and mountains surrounding the city, at least 100 elite US Rangers slipped out and parachuted down out of the night sky. They descended silently, each man wearing night-vision goggles that would reveal the landscape below bathed in an eerie green light. His enemies - perhaps still not knowing what was happening - would have scanned the darkness in vain, looking for an attacker they could not see.

The target was Baba Sahib, a village of mud huts on a low hilltop about five miles from the city centre. It is the base of a small Taliban garrison set up to guard a home owned by the Taliban's spiritual leader, Mullah Omar. The houses have mud walls and straw roofs. The roads are potholed and difficult to pass. The only solid building of brick and concrete is Omar's house. But the village holds a special place in the psyche of the Afghans. It and the surrounding mountains were a stronghold of the anti-Russian forces during the Eighties.

First reports seem to indicate the attack was a surprise. For the Rangers, it was time to put years of dedicated practice into action. This was the moment they had been trained for.

If, as analysts believe, the raid was a 'dry-run' for future operations, this would have been vital to demonstrate that US forces can take and secure territory inside Afghanistan. As the Rangers landed they split up into their individual weapons teams and moved quickly to secure the area.

A typical company of Rangers is equipped with two 60mm mortars and three-man teams deploying an 84mm Carl Gustav anti-armour weapon. Each company is also complemented by a weapons platoon that includes a sniper section, consisting of two-man teams. A third team section employs a .50 calibre Barrett rifle capable of penetrating light armour.

If Taliban forces had any doubts as to what was happening, they would have been dispelled by the support fire of the AC-130s, backed up by the Nightstalker attack helicopters that accompany Rangers on all their missions. When the guns from the air opened up, they would have known a battle was on its way.

The AC-130s circled low overhead, always flying anti-clockwise so as to bring the full brunt of their weaponry down upon Taliban forces below. The gunships can put a round in every metre of an area the size of eight football pitches in a single pass. Their psychological effect is almost as crippling as their firepower.

But for the Rangers on the ground the AC-130s meant security. Reports from Kandahar spoke of huge amounts of gunfire and explosions from the region of the village. Flashes and bangs lit up the night sky and some residents reported seeing American ground troops taking up positions. Reports were still sketchy last night, but direct man-to-man fighting had broken out for the first time between the Taliban and US troops.

The Taliban yesterday said they had repulsed the attack and suffered no losses. But unofficial sources in Pakistan said the Taliban 'took a mauling', leaving more than 20 fighters dead.

The Rangers stayed on the ground for two to three hours. Then, with dawn still several hours away, the withdrawal began. Under the covering fire of the gunships, troop-carrying helicopters raced into the airstrip. The Rangers ran to the rescue craft before getting the all-clear to depart. Then - the mission complete - the helicopters lifted off, turning for the Pakistani border and safety.

As the smoke from the raid drifted away, the Rangers left behind them more fresh bullet-holes and shell craters around Kandahar, adding to the rubble already accumulated over two decades of war. It is unlikely it will be the last time the Rangers will be seen there.

Though each helicopter that flew to Afghanistan returned unharmed, there were American casualties - the first in the war, but probably not the last. Two US servicemen died when their helicopter crashed while on standby for any rescue operation. After being told about their deaths in a video link from the Pentagon to Shanghai, President George Bush hailed the dead men as heroes.

As word of the raid spread through Kandahar it became clear there was to be no respite for the tattered city. US aircraft returned to the city yesterday and the bombing resumed once again.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
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To: dep
it's only appropriate that when we demonstrate that we can play that game, too, the rangers draw first blood.

"Rangers lead the way."

141 posted on 10/21/2001 12:40:27 AM PDT by The Grammarian
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To: Sidebar Moderator
Even now as you sit smugly behind your bullet proof observation windows and smirk over the vast terrain of your kingdom ... the creeping rot is working it's way into your impregnable domain.

We will not lie easy under the awful and cruel yoke of your authority. We shall resist. We shall one day find out who you REALLY are and publish it far flung across all FReeperdom.

The thread shall go to a thousand posts and you shall be rapiered up and down and up and back and sidewise. It shall be great fun. And then you shall have to change your screen name cause we all know you're just one of the gang and you NEED a good keel hauling now and then for your own benefit. We will get you.

142 posted on 10/21/2001 1:08:00 AM PDT by mercy
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To: tscislaw
A little appropriate poetry to go along with your very appropriate picture...

It's such a shame ben Lauden
that your vermin have to die
But you knew if you kept pushin'
that the eagle had to fly

And now that flames are burning bright
and things are looking bad
It's such a shame, ben Lauden
but you made my uncle MAD


143 posted on 10/21/2001 1:10:14 AM PDT by acehai
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To: blam
Putting ground forces into play, even if used only sporadically will make a huge difference in the efficacy of the air-strikes against actual troops. Gustavas Adolphus and pike squares...
144 posted on 10/21/2001 1:38:28 AM PDT by lepton
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To: appeal2
One additional advantage to sending in ground troops - they can snatch records and writings for intelligence purposes. Air-strikes can't.
145 posted on 10/21/2001 1:40:09 AM PDT by lepton
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To: WIMom
An ex-4 star general said we haven't used a calvary in war since 1865!

We tried, but the horses didn't arrive (think Teddy Roosevelt).

146 posted on 10/21/2001 1:46:21 AM PDT by lepton
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To: Rose in RoseBear
While reading this article, was anyone else reminded of the first raid in Heinlein's book Starship Troopers?

Damn, this whole thing reminds me of Starship Troopers. Remember, the only Good Bug is a Dead Bug.

147 posted on 10/21/2001 2:32:53 AM PDT by Clinton's a rapist
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To: arielb
I watched a program on MSNBC regarding the Ranger's Somalia situation. Not once, in an hour long program was Bill Clinton's name mentioned.

I suppose they figured if he wasn't mentioned, people wouldn't remember to include Somalia to his "legacy".

148 posted on 10/21/2001 5:31:09 AM PDT by csvset
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To: paul544
Unfortunatly the Talibans and Bin Laden are hiding in the mosques and schools of the major cities-witing for us to attack, and knowing that the US is too sensitive to hit those targets.

They want to fight us in the streets, where they think they have an advantage.

149 posted on 10/21/2001 5:40:24 AM PDT by imperator2
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Baba Sahib is great in a pita with some fresh lettuce, tomatoes and tahini sauce!
150 posted on 10/21/2001 5:44:33 AM PDT by KneelBeforeZod
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To: paul544
Kicking A** and taking names doo dah...oh da doo da day!
151 posted on 10/21/2001 6:10:34 AM PDT by Wu
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To: Pharmboy
ex-Special Forces guy was on FoxNews and said "We own the night" due to our IR technology.

The media was so excited about the possibility of us losing a ground war in Afghanistan. No one seems to have expected a night-time, anti-guerilla, guerilla campaign, although it should have been obvious.

152 posted on 10/21/2001 6:16:27 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
"With respect to your question, I think the Taliban Calvary is made up of Crew Cab Toyota 4x4's!"

Did you see those 'dune buggy' looking things we used in Desert Storm? Was that 50 caliber machine guns mounted on them?

153 posted on 10/21/2001 7:19:33 AM PDT by blam
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To: Aquinasfan
Based on what I've seen and read, landmines are probably the biggest threat our guys face.

Remember the vaunted Republican Guard during the Gulf War? The Talies are probably the same...this scare stuff by the media is just another flavor of "stop the war" BS.

154 posted on 10/21/2001 7:54:06 AM PDT by Pharmboy
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To: deport
Hooah!

Thanks for the ping. Great read!
155 posted on 10/21/2001 8:00:27 AM PDT by Iwo Jima
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To: Objective Reality
"ffft... "Uh, yeah, hi, it's us, the Wrath of God again. Uh, listen, Abdulla, we thought you might want to say goodbye to your friends, because you've got five seconds to live... 4... 3... 2..."

Believe it or not, the EC-130CE planes can (and do) do things like this. It's VERY heavy, specialized plateform and it's distinguished from all other 130's by it's "X" pattern vertical, the "X" is actually large antennas (amoung many hanging all over the aircraft). As an example, one was participating in the BrightStar exercise in Egypt when I was there, and as I sat at home drinking beer, ALL the Egyption television stations simultaneously started showing Mickey Mouse cartoons. It was great!

156 posted on 10/21/2001 8:10:54 AM PDT by ScreamingFist
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To: freefly
Need to read article bump.
157 posted on 10/21/2001 8:19:37 AM PDT by ScreamingFist
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To: timydnuc
Yes! Thank you for that report, and all you have done for our country! God Bless the Rangers!
158 posted on 10/21/2001 8:30:28 AM PDT by WIMom
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Thanks, I had heard something about Datsuns and Donkeys, too. Doesn't matter, they're history.
159 posted on 10/21/2001 8:33:09 AM PDT by WIMom
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To: Pharmboy
"landmines are probably the biggest threat our guys face."

Yup. A lot of the mine fields are not even mapped, no-one knows exactly where the mines are.

160 posted on 10/21/2001 8:38:06 AM PDT by blam
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