Zherai Kandahr — The mission started in the moonlight.
A rocket launched an explosive rope (called a MICLIC) hundreds of meters into the green zone of Zherai district where soldiers of the 2-101st have been skirmishing with Taliban for the past four months.
(Photo: The right side of the road shows the damage of one of the 33 IED-blowing rockets launched during an operation into Kandalay.)
We felt the shock wave from an explosion of almost 2,000 pounds of C4, which was designed to wipe out a swath of potential IEDs along a narrow strip of up to a hundred meters long. Then soldiers of Alpha, Bravo, Charlie and Delta Companies of 1-502nd Battalion trudged into the dense vegetation and mud walls separating alternating rows of grapes, pomegranates, corn and marijuana.
The sun had yet to rise.
This operation was part of a brigade-sized push by 2-101st and a roughly equivalent number of Afghan soldiers. The operation, meant to cut off Taliban routes and safe havens around Kandahar, has been downplayed by coalition forces following the hype surrounding the Marjah offensive caused a public backlash in neighboring Helmand Province and President Hamid Karzai publically denounced it early this summer.
The now soft-pedaled offensive, dubbed “Dragonstrike” by the brigade, is actually a big deal. Over the coming weeks, thousands of U.S. and Afghan soldiers will push into the most difficult areas of Zherai, home for about 80,000 Afghans and where the Taliban movement began.(Photo: A young boy injured by a grenade he claims was thrown by the Taliban. U.S. soldiers, however, suspect the boy might be responsible.)
They hope to clear, then hold the green zone along the Arghandab River, establishing small outposts in the most volatile areas, and using Afghan forces to help occupy them.
“This is going to make history,” said Capt. Lorne Grier, whose Delta company led the push into the tangled groves and towns that have never been held by U.S. or Afghan forces, and in some cases have never entered.
Soldiers slept in pomegranate orchards They set up strong points in abandoned, bombed-out compounds and worked off maps shot from overhead. And they methodically checked residences, huts and hovels for weapons or signs of elusive fighters.
From early morning until late in the night soldiers stepped carefully, searched out thick mud huts with little more than straw inside. Engineers blew up small caches of weapons and poured out jugs of ammonium nitrate. But the enemy they wanted so badly too encounter, had mostly fled the suicidal odds, some so quickly they hadn’t had time to engage the batteries of their pressure plated IEDs.
Read article at globalpost

2 comments:
I look forward to your reports every week, especially when it concerns the 1-502. It gives me such perspective on the challenges our troops are facing everyday. Thank you.
Thank you! I just spoke to my soldier-son on the phone for the first time in months and he said they are in Kandalay. Google led me to you. I will be checking back soon.
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