
1st Platoon recently made Army Knowledge On-line headlines. The
story, published on 10 May 2005 was featured news of the day. Unfortunately,
there are no pictures at this time that we are able to put on the
web for this assault due to operational security/ force protection
measures. However, stay tuned for photos of the awards ceremony
honor the brave bullies who performed with valor on that day. Below
is the full story:
Paratroopers deal blow to Taliban
in remote valley
By Pfc. Jon H. Arguello
May 10, 2005
QALAT, Afghanistan (Army News Service, May 9, 2005) – Paratroopers
engaged a Taliban force last week in a remote valley of southeastern
Afghanistan, and after an outnumbered scouting party was reinforced,
dealt what was described as a significant blow to the insurgents.
The May 3 battle in the Arghandab Valley of the Deh Chopan district,
about 175 miles northeast of Kandahar, was part of the Coalition’s
spring offensive, dubbed “Operation Determined Resolve,”
with the aim of denying sanctuary to insurgents in preparation for
fall elections, said a spokesman for Combined Joint Task Force 76.
Initial reports indicate about 20 insurgents were killed and one
wounded in the battle. One Afghan National Police officer was killed
and five wounded, and six U.S. service members were wounded.
Intel leads scouts into steep, narrow valley
The battle took shape after scouts in the Zabul Province received
intelligence reports that insurgent forces happened to be in the
same area. A group of seven Coalition scouts and 14 Afghan National
Police headed toward the suspected location. “We had been
working with local police,” said Staff Sgt. Patrick Brannon,
scout squad leader from Jacksonville, Ill. “Some of the information
we had received led us to 18,000 DshKa heavy machine gun rounds,
so we new their information was legitimate.” Further intelligence
reports placed 80 – 150 Taliban operating in the area. “We
were informed that the Taliban were threatening the people for cooperating
with Coalition forces,” said Brannon. “We moved east
through a valley,” said Spc. Joseph Leatham, from El Mirage,
Ariz., describing the movement toward the Taliban position. “We
were surrounded by walls – steep cliffs. It was a very uncomfortable
feeling.”
Afghan man complains of beating
Ten minutes into the voyage, an Afghan man approached the convoy.
The man had been recently released by the Taliban after having been
beaten and threatened with execution for cooperation with Coalition
forces. “The guy said he was about to be executed and that
there were about 30 Taliban in the area,” said Sgt. Nick Pak
from Tampa, Fla. “He had a note around his neck threatening
the people and demanding that there be no schools.” While
explaining what had happened, two Taliban members were spotted and
identified by the man. Once confirmed as Taliban, the Afghan National
Police opened fire. Almost simultaneously, the convoy began receiving
small arms fire from multiple directions. The scouts received approval
to engage the enemy and sent a sniper team to an over-watch position.
Outnumbered scouts return fierce fire
“As soon as we got to the top, we got RPG and small arms fire,”said
Spc. Nicholas Conlon, a scout sniper from Bridgewater, Mass. “Pieces
of rocks were breaking off all around us,” added sniper team
leader Sgt. Derek Huss, from Deer Park, Wash. “One [RPG] hit
real close.” At this point, all the scouts were engaged in
a heavy exchange of fire. The scouts attempted to seal off the objective
so the enemy could not escape. The fierce exchange was ordered to
continue so that reinforcements could trap the Taliban and eliminate
them. The outnumbered scouts engaged and re-engaged the insurgent
forces three times before reinforcement from friendly forces could
arrive.
HMMWV hit by RPG
“The enemy was trying to overrun our truck, so we broke contact,”
said Brannon. As the Scouts tried to maneuver into a better position,
one of the Humvees took several rocket-propelled grenade hits and
burst into flames. “I yelled ‘You’re on fire!
You’re on Fire!’ to the other truck,” said Pak.
The truck’s gunner continued to fire his .50-cal machine gun
as the Humvee was engulfed in flames. “The truck was on fire
but Leatham was still rocking the .50-cal,” said Pak. “The
truck started rolling backwards,” said Leatham. “I was
still shooting and Sergeant Huss was trying to stop the truck. Sergeant
Brannon was providing cover fire so I could get out of the vehicle.”
Helicopter attempts to land reinforcements
“We were pinned down pretty bad,” said Sgt. Michael
Ortiz, the assigned medic from Denver. “At that point, Chosen
Company tried to land but they couldn’t.” “I laid
down suppressive fire with the Mk-19 so the bird could land,”
said Pfc. Nathan Reilly, from Greensburg, Pa. “The landing
zone was really hot and they couldn’t land.” As much
as the scouts laid down cover fire the landing zone was taking too
much fire for the reinforcements to land. The scouts, who had been
engaged in the firefight for more than two and a half hours, watched
as the CH-47 Chinook aborted the landing and flew away. “You
can’t imagine how scary it is to be in a fire fight like this
and after two and a half hours of fighting, to see the support leave,”
Ortiz said.
Paratroopers land in hot LZ
“The scouts were in contact and at that point we were a QRF,”
said 1st Lt. Les Craig from Erie, Pa., and platoon leader of 1st
Platoon, or the “Bullies” as they are called by Chosen
Company. Chosen Company is part of 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry
(Airborne), who were operating in the area. The 2-503rd was part
of the Southern European Task Force originally based in Vicenza,
Italy, and now part of CJTF-76 in Afghanistan. “We got reports
that the landing zone was hot while we were in the air,” said
Craig. “The other friendly forces that had landed were already
in contact.” The helicopter finally was finally able to land
and 1st Platoon’s “Bullies” poured from the Chinook
ready to relieve the embattled scouts.
Although 1st Platoon didn’t receive any immediate fire, suspicious
activity was all around.
“I was trying to get a feel of where our Soldiers were,”
said Craig. “We knew there were bad guys but we didn’t
know where they were,” said Sgt. 1st Class David Cavataio,
the Bullies’ platoon sergeant from Chicago. “We set
up security and started pushing up.”
Taliban takes cover in village
Soon after setting up an over-watch position, insurgent forces were
spotted. “When we got clearance and confirmation that they
had weapons, we opened fire, but they opened up on us at the same
time and the exchange started,” Cavataio said. The plan was
to systematically clear one of the nearby villages of danger, explained
Craig. “From the south part of the town, we began clearing
the village from east to west,” said Craig. “There were
high walls and locked doors everywhere.” The Taliban had sealed
the village to make it difficult for Coalition Forces to clear by
barricading and locking all doors and gates. The platoon had to
make use of sappers to get through the mud hut maze. The platoon,
left with little choice, bypassed clearing the hamlet and pushed
through to the edge of the village into an orchard.
Platoon takes RPG, machine-gun fire
Craig’s Soldiers received a volley of rocket propelled grenades
wounding Pfc. Mathew King in the leg. “The round didn’t
explode,” said Craig. “The fins cut into his leg and
the round landed ten to fifteen feet in front of me and the RTO
(Soldier carrying the radio).” Craig and his men continued
to move forward through withering machine gun fire seeking cover
behind trees and rocks. “I thought, ‘the only way we
will get through this is if we push forward,’” said
Craig. “It was raining branches in the orchard. My RTO tried
to move forward and when he got up, a tree basically fell on him.”
The paratroopers were pinned down until a machine gunner put down
enough suppressive fire for the Soldiers to move forward toward
the enemy. “Specialist Lewis fired a 200-round burst and that
bought us a couple of seconds to bum rush the objective,”
Craig said. “We approached the enemy but we thought all the
guys were already engaged because no one was responding.”
Creek bed enables surprise approach
The element closed in on the enemy undetected, moving parallel to
a sunken creek with steep rocky slopes. As the team moved past the
bunker to make a limit of advance, Capt. Dirk Riggenberg, Chosen
Company’s commander, moved into Choay’s old position
between the wall and the bunker. Chosen’s commander received
fire from a well-concealed position along the creek wall. An alert
M-249 Squad Automatic Weapon gunner moved to into position and ended
the fight. By the end of the battle, more than 17 enemy combatants
had been confirmed killed by Chosen Company, nine captured and more
possibly killed by the 2-503rd scouts.
Enemy ferocity surprised some
“I expected there to be stiff resistance but not as severe
as this,” said Riggenberg. Chosen Company’s first sergeant,
though, said he wasn’t surprised by the enemies’ dedication.
“They’ve been fighting for so many years,” said
1st Sgt. Scott Brzak. “They have nothing to lose and everything
to gain.” The effect the battle has had on his Soldiers is
a positive one, said Brzak. “The Soldiers now know that they
can depend on and trust the buddy to the left and right of them,”
Brzak said. “They know their buddy will lay down their life
for them. They also now know how the enemy operates and can pass
this experience on to the rest of the company and the battalion.”
After-action report positive
All wounded ANP and U.S. Soldiers were evacuated to Kandahar Airfield
for medical treatment. They were reported in stable condition. Two
U.S. wounded Soldiers were treated and returned to duty. The other
four Soldiers were transported to Landstuhl Medical Center in Germany
for further treatment and are reportedly in stable condition. Six
insurgents were detained and questioned. The village leader was
also detained after villagers reported him as a Taliban member.
Coalition forces are also meeting with local leaders to coordinate
assistance to the village. A number of questions have been raised
as to the significance of the battle. The ferocity with which the
insurgent fighters defended their position is atypical of the hit
and run and improvised explosive device tactics the Taliban had
been using since being removed from power. “This is going
to force them to rethink their strategy,” Riggenberg said.
“I think our tactics will force them to fight and die or surrender.
I think we put them on their heels. They now know that the American
Army still has the energy to hunt them down.”
(Editor’s note: The Army News Service added information to
Pfc. Jon Arguello’s story from a CJTF-76 news release and
telephonic reports from Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.)
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