
Clearing the Tangi: Task Force Takes Troubled Valley
Story by
Fred Baker, 03/09/2009
FORWARD OPERATING BASE AIRBORNE, Afghanistan - Flexing for the
first time the massive military muscle now deployed to this
area, coalition forces cleared one of its most troubled
insurgent hotspots, sending a forceful message to insurgent
fighters here that the coalition will go wherever, whenever it
wants.
The three-day operation wrapped up yesterday and took hundreds
of troops deep into the Tangi, a valley of narrow roads and
steep cliffs that runs along the Logar River through the
southeastern part of Wardak province opening into Logar
province.
The area has seen few coalition forces for the past eight
months after a small U.S. military team was brutally attacked
and four were killed there last summer.
Shortly after the first few soldiers with the 10th Mountain
Division's 3rd Brigade Combat Team arrived here in February,
they sent a little larger than a platoon-sized team into the
valley. The troops were blasted by roadside bombs,
rocket-propelled grenades and rifle fire. Remarkably, no one
on the patrol was killed.
But, only days afterward, two local boys who had talked with
coalition leadership during the mission were dragged from
their homes and killed. It was a strong-arm attempt to strike
fear into the local population, officials said, because the
insurgents knew that with the growing U.S presence here, the
coalition forces would be back.
Army Lt. Col. Kimo Gallahue is the battalion commander for the
2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, and runs coalition
efforts in Wardak province. He is a tall, sturdy Army Ranger,
a combat veteran and well-versed on the threat here. Truth be
told, though, Gallahue really doesn't care what brand of
insurgency he is fighting. He just wants them gone.
He had talked to the boys on that first trip.
"That type of action is criminal. It's murderous. It's meant
for intimidation of the population. So you can see why, when
given the alternative of security and better governance, the
people want it," Gallahue said. "This enemy ... they can't win
if that's their alternative, if that's the future they offer."
The Tangi Valley is a fertile breadbasket in this region. Snow
and rain run off the mountains into a valley of apple and
pomegranate orchards. Just off of Highway 1, south of Kabul,
the valley boasts one of the few paved roads in the region.
But, the narrow road and high ridges make it ideal for an
insurgent defense. Once entering the valley, there is nowhere
to go except deeper in along its winding road flanked by small
villages jutting from the hillsides. Vehicles traveling the
road are easy targets, and roadside bombs known as improvised
explosive devices are routinely buried along the 15-kilometer
route military officials dubbed "IED Alley."
This mission was launched by the 10th Mountain Division's Task
Force Spartan, which took control of the Wardak and Logar
provinces last month. The task force's deployment tripled the
firepower here, where coalition force officials initially did
not predict a serious threat developing. But as more intense
fighting began in the eastern part of the country, many
insurgents took advantage of the two provinces' small
coalition presence and remote districts.
Soldiers from two battalions led the efforts. The 3rd
Squadron, 71st Cavalry Regiment, which runs coalition
operations in the Logar province, moved northwest along the
valley road, clearing mostly villages. Gallahue had his
battalion's troops move southeast, clearing the majority of
the rural route. The two met near the provincial borders where
the 3-71st troops established a permanent coalition force
presence in the valley at a combat outpost.
At the start of the operation, U.S. Special Forces troops,
along with Afghan military commandos, descended on the valley
in an air assault, looking for some key suspects and weapons
caches. Throughout, U.S. F-15 aircraft and Apache attack
helicopters flew overhead, providing air support.
Two companies of Afghan national army soldiers, partnered with
their French mentoring company, moved side by side with U.S.
forces. Afghan national police led the searches of suspects'
homes.
For three days, soldiers cleared the route, walking the road
and through the villages and fields. It was slow, tedious work
as, step by step, anything found suspicious was reported up
the chain, and nobody moved further until any threat was
cleared.
"It's nerve-wracking. You have a lot of things going on at one
time," said Army Staff Sgt. Erik Bonnett, who was in the lead
of the dismounted clearing operations for the 2-87th. "The
worst part about it was the physical part. Being up this high
in altitude with all the gear we wear, it starts to get to
you." The valley sits at just under 8,000 feet above sea
level.
He said his troops were looking for "snail trails" or markings
on the ground where wires were run. They also looked for fresh
tracks or areas where no grass was growing because of digging.
They were always on alert for their biggest threat --
small-arms fire or rocket-propelled grenades launched from the
nearby rooftops or ridgelines.
Troops with bomb-sniffing dogs also walked the road, clearing
culverts, rock piles and any cars and trucks passing by.
Military vehicles capable of detecting buried electronic
devices also helped to clear the route.
It is Bonnett's fourth deployment to Afghanistan and, even
though the days were long and the pace was slow, he realized
the gravity of an error on his team's part.
"If I don't do my job, the end result is lives are lost,"
Bonnett said.
And insurgent fighters did not disappoint. Three bombs were
found along the route. It took soldiers nearly a half day to
dig out a large propane tank, believed to be filled with
explosive, from underneath the road. Once the tank was
uncovered, a second wire was found leading from it to where
officials believe a second bomb was buried deeper. Rather than
take any more time to unearth the second device, officials
chose to explode it place and repair the road.
Army 1st Lt. Alvin Cavalier was in the lead in the
route-clearing efforts. His truck was hit twice on the
February trip through the valley. Cavalier said finding the
bombs this time paved the way for future operations there.
"Getting hit the first couple times coming in here, you don't
want that for your guys. Getting in there and digging those
IEDs out of the road gave the guys a huge boost of confidence,
and we'll be ready to come back in here next time," Cavalier
said. "This is our battle space. We're here to clean this
place up."
There were not, however, any direct attacks on the forces this
time, which military officials said was a promising sign.
Officials attributed it mostly to the fact that they simply
had any enemy fighters outgunned.
"We took away the lines that he could attack from," Gallahue
said. "He had to make a decision. Fight and die, or not fight
at all."
Forces stopped in each village to talk to the local people.
Gallahue and others said that on this trip the villagers were
more receptive to coalition forces. Some waved at the convoys,
and others milled about in their villages. In February, some
soldiers said, nobody was out. They mostly hid in their homes.
Gallahue was optimistic at the start of the trip when he
spotted an old man walking down the road.
"That's a good sign," he said. If people are out, then the
likelihood of an attack is less, he explained. Most know when
the enemy fighters plan to strike.
Gallahue is itching to put a combat outpost on his side of the
valley, but he has just put in two outposts in the Jalrez
Valley, another problem spot in Wardak. There were three such
outposts in Wardak when he arrived, and he has already doubled
that number.
The commander said that, for the most part, the people in the
Tangi are tired of the fighting. They are eager for the
security that coalition forces bring.
"There is a certain amount of war-weariness in the population,
and they're ready for security," he said. "We're going to go
in there and turn that valley around."
Gallahue called the fight here a "true counterinsurgency," and
said it could not have been accomplished with the few troops
that were here before. His province was manned by only a
company-sized element before Task Force Spartan took over.
Effective counterinsurgencies are people-intensive, he said.
Two battalion-sized task forces are here. Task Force Catamount
is made up of soldiers from the 2-87th Infantry, and Task
Force Wolfpack is made up of troops from 4th Battalion, 25th
Field Artillery. Both focus on operations within Wardak
province. Catamount focuses on security and economic
development, and Wolfpack focuses on strengthening governance
in the province.
This weekend's show of force is likely the first of many for
this area as Gallahue and his troops ready for the spring thaw
and the anticipated increase in insurgent fighting. So far,
they have been busy setting up outposts and meeting with local
leaders, hoping to have established roots in the communities
by the time the insurgent fighters return.
In the meantime, Gallaghue said, his troops have shown they
can travel anywhere within the province to go about the
business of separating the people who want peace from those
who want to fight.
"This is Wardak province, and I'm responsible for security.
... Tangi Valley is part of that, and if we need to go in
there we can," Gallahue said. "We'll take the physical terrain
from the enemy, ... and we'll take the people away, because
the people are the prize in this fight." |