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Combat
Outpost Serves as Frontline in Afghanistan Fight

Army Staff Sgt. Robert Rios, right, and Pfc. Michael Halter,
Company A, 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, lead a
patrol down during a village assessment in the Jalrez Valley
of Afghanistan's Wardak province, March 12. This was the
troops' first stop in the village as they worked their way out
from the nearby combat outpost Apache. |
3/31/2009
WASHINGTON - Next to a small village in Afghanistan's fertile
Jalrez Valley, a platoon of U.S. soldiers busy themselves
fortifying a fighting position, stringing concertina wire,
aiming mortars, and filling lots and lots of sand bags.
"Apache," a U.S. military combat outpost, is housed in an
abandoned former district agricultural building. It is flanked
by a school and medical clinic on its east. Villagers tend to
an orchard that runs along its west side, and to the north a
handful of farmers care for cattle and crops.
It seems an unlikely spot for coalition forces to go
toe-to-toe with the Taliban and other enemy fighters who use
this valley for staging attacks in nearby areas, such as the
capital city of Kabul. But the outpost is the front line in a
fight against an enemy that hides among the local population
in the villages and in the mountains.
Pushing troops out of larger forward operating bases and into
community-based combat outposts was successful in Iraq for
holding areas cleared of enemy forces. It is this same
strategy that military officials in Afghanistan's Wardak
province hope will quash enemy activity in one of the
country's most dangerous valleys.
"Our presence alone is the security," said Army Capt. Matthew
Thom, commander of Company A, 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry
Regiment. "I believe that since we're here ... our permanent
presence is going to prevent that kinetic activity."
The 10th Mountain Division's 3rd Brigade Combat Team has more
than tripled the firepower here since taking over operations
in Wardak and Logar provinces last month. It has doubled the
number of combat outposts to six in Wardak.
Before, only a company patrolled an area where two
battalion-sized task forces now operate. Everything about the
troop's presence here projects power, and that is exactly the
message military officials want to send to the enemy fighters
expected to return to the area as the weather warms.
"I am fully confident that they would be foolish to attack
us," Thom said. "Nobody wants that, but I feel that we are
postured according to the threat level very well. I believe
that our posture alone is going to prevent that from
happening."
Thom's troops landed, literally, in the valley about a month
ago, in an air assault mission that many of the soldiers
described as the most difficult of their careers. In the
bitter-cold, early morning hours, the infantry troops launched
with full combat packs from hovering helicopters into
waist-deep snow and began a five-mile trek to what is now
their outpost.
The mud building that would become their home was abandoned
and cold. There was no electricity or water. Like most
outposts here, conditions are, to say the least, austere,
especially at the start. The troops themselves build up the
outposts, securing them first, and then adding comforts such
as heat.
There is no running water and no cold storage, which means no
cooked meals and no showers. Troops suffice with heated,
packaged Army meals and keep clean with "lots and lots of baby
wipes."
But, for the most part, the infantry soldiers are happy. It's
not a bad life as far as infantry goes, they said. There is a
roof over their heads, and they are not sleeping on the
ground. Mail is delivered fairly regularly, and soldiers rely
on comfort items sent from home. Conditions are better now
that during the unit's first deployment to Afghanistan a few
years ago, the unit's veterans said. One platoon sergeant went
four months without a shower then, he said.
"Life is good," Thom said. "This is definitely not Bagram
[Airfield], but I really don't want it to be that. We have
what we need to do our jobs, and too much more becomes a
distraction. We stay really busy."
Security is provided from three outposts along the Jalrez
Valley, which stretches west about 15 miles from the
provincial capital of Maydan Shahr. About 70 small villages
are scattered through the valley, with multiple tribes in
each.
Thom divides the responsibility for the villages between
platoons, and military leaders spend their days patrolling,
meeting with tribal leaders and assessing villages' needs.
The U.S. troops bring with them much-needed funds for
construction and renovations. But still, some in the area are
wary that the troop's presence will draw more fighting to the
valley, and that their families and livelihoods could be
caught in the crossfire.
"When we come here, we kind of bring a sense of war with
[us]," Thom acknowledged. "There is some skepticism, but I
believe the better part of the population is happy we're
here."
The commander's fight in the valley demonstrates the evolution
of the traditional infantry role. Once focused primarily on
operations surrounding killing or capturing the enemy, now
Thom and his troops find themselves at the tip of the spear in
what he called a true counterinsurgency fight. The soldiers
spend less of their time looking for the enemy and more time
befriending the local people in an effort to drive a wedge
between those who support an insurgency and those who don't.
"Now we have to be dual-hatted. We have to have that ability
to conduct kinetic operations and counterinsurgency
operations, and that's what we do," Thom said. "We knew coming
into this country there was a kinetic threat, but we were
going to beat the kinetic threat with the counterinsurgency
fight."
Patrols are focused around assessing villages and meeting
local leaders. Military officers mentor district government
leaders and help them strengthen their local support. And
millions of dollars in Commanders' Emergency Response Program
funds are funneled into local projects such as repairing
wells, refurbishing schools and building roads.
And for their efforts, the troops hope the local people will
point out anyone in their villages who would threaten the
security in the area.
But Army 1st Lt. Mark Hogan, a Company A platoon leader, said
the soldiers don't dangle dollars for projects over the heads
of the tribal leaders in exchange for intelligence.
"I can help them, and if they become our friends, they want to
give us information. It helps us help them," Hogan said. "The
concern is their security. My guys are going to be able to
secure themselves. Them giving us information is for their own
safety."
Hogan said that if local residents deliver up the names and
locations of enemy fighters operating in the area, U.S. and
Afghan forces can be more strategic about removing them from
the local population. One military officer referred to the
precise operations as "surgical."
Hogan said this allows his forces to strike first, using less
firepower and with safety measures in place to protect
civilians.
The platoon leader acknowledges that is the delicate balance
he must strike operating within a civilian population. One
wrong move, or misplaced mortar, and Hogan jeopardizes
alienating the population he is trying win over and knocking
the legs out from under coalition counterinsurgency efforts.
The U.S. forces operating before in this valley offered a
blunt assessment of the threat for Hogan and his forces.
"You don't come into the valley without fighting your way
out," he said.
But the troops have been there a month now, and so far there
have been no attacks. Hogan and the soldiers in his command
are hopeful that the increased troop strength may have staved
off some attacks. And they are pushing hard to establish roots
in the communities so that when the enemy fighters return,
they find themselves without the support they enjoyed in
previous years.
Still, only time will tell -- as the days warm and snow melts
on the surrounding hills, and enemy fighters begin to move
through the passes -- whether Hogan can place stock in the
fruits of this different fight.
The young infantry officer, who seven years ago would have
been spending his days here engaged much differently, is now
not itching for that kind of a fight.
"If we can come here and improve this valley and walk away
without firing a shot, the closer the war is to being over,"
Hogan said. |
Senior
Insurgent Killed in Coalition Operation
3/30/2009
KABUL, Afghanistan - A senior insurgent, Mullah Abdul Bari,
was killed in southern Afghanistan on March 25, in a counter
Improvised Explosive Device operation conducted by the Afghan
national army and International Security Assistance Force
The known IED and suicide bomb facilitator was located by ANA
and ISAF soldiers on Wednesday morning. A short battle
followed which left Bari and two of his accomplices dead. The
area had been under surveillance for some time preceding the
operation in order to protect Afghan civilians.
Bari had been identified as a primary IED facilitator, and was
responsible for the coordination of IED emplacement in Uruzgan
province.
"The removal of Bari will help reduce the number of IEDs and
make the area safer for the people of Afghanistan," said
Brigadier-General Richard Blanchette, ISAF spokesperson. "This
joint operation also demonstrates the steadily increasing
capabilities of the ANA." |
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