2008-12-31

Special Forces "surge" in Afghanistan?


In this undated photo provided by the U.S. Army, Capt. Kyle Walton, right, and Master Sgt. Scott Ford, left, talk to an interpreter in Eastern Afghanistan. Both men will recieve a Silver Star Friday, Dec. 12, 2008 in the largest Special Forces award ceremony since the Vietnam War.
(AP Photo/U.S. Army Photo, Sgt. David N Gunn)


Washington – The Pentagon is likely to send up to 20 Special Forces teams to Afghanistan this spring, part of a new long-term strategy to boost the Afghan security forces' ability to counter the insurgency there themselves.

The "surge" of elite Special Forces units would represent a multiyear effort aimed at strengthening the Afghan National Army and police units that the US sees as key to building up Afghanistan's security independence, say defense officials who asked to remain anonymous because the controversial decision has not yet been announced. The US already plans to send thousands of additional conventional forces to Afghanistan sometime next year. But it is hamstrung by limited availability since so many of those forces are still in Iraq.

The deployment of the Green Berets, the independent, multifaceted force skilled at training indigenous forces, could fill critical gaps in Afghanistan almost immediately, defense officials say...

...The deployment of the additional Green Berets has not yet been approved, but a senior defense official indicated it was very likely and would be finalized next month.
The deployment would be relatively small, probably only a few hundred individuals at first. Ultimately, other special operations forces, such as marines from Special Operations Command, Air Force special operators, and Navy Seals could be deployed under the plan.

The initial deployment of the Green Berets would expand the size of the Special Forces contingent there by 30 or 40 percent, defense officials say, and represent a significant new commitment to developing and expanding Afghan security forces.

Criticism over plan

However, the proposal is controversial. The plan is being pushed by Lt. Gen. Doug Lute, the so-called war czar under President Bush, who is poised to release a set of recommendations for how to reverse the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan in coming days. Defense officials say General Lute believes the deployment of the Green Berets could go a long way toward making up for a significant shortfall in the number of troops needed in the region.

Yet many within the tightly knit Special Forces community say the Special Forces teams already in use in Afghanistan should be employed far more effectively before any new teams, which number about a dozen men each, are deployed.
"I just don't think it's a very good use of the units if they are not going to be doing combat advising in an effective way," says one Special Forces officer with recent experience in Afghanistan. "I don't know any Special Forces who think that's really what we need over there."

"Textbook" operations for Special Forces dictates that the 12-man teams, known as Operational Detachment Alpha teams, or ODAs, should be paired with units of at least a few hundred Afghan security force soldiers. But in many cases, the Green Berets are paired with much smaller groups of Afghan forces, sometimes even one-on-one. In other cases, they are used to man checkpoints, say some Special Forces officers.

Critics worry that Lute's plan is to simply send more Special Forces units to Afghanistan without a coherent plan to support them. "Don't just throw ODAs out there as an answer," says another senior officer. "That's just the easy, lazy answer out there."

Poor use of existing forces

There are other gripes with the way the teams now deployed to Afghanistan are being used. Too few of the Special Forces teams are partnered with Afghan forces for longer than, say, a month at a time, creating an unsustainable and unproductive training relationship that runs counter to Special Forces doctrine.

Special Forces officers blame the problems on a lack of a coherent strategy for using the Green Berets in Afghanistan. Others say some Special Forces teams operate under NATO commanders from other countries and don't know how to employ the teams properly.

Perhaps most significant, Special Forces officers and experts say it would be a waste of time and resources to send additional Special Forces teams to Afghanistan unless there is a "surge" of helicopters, remote-controlled aircraft for surveilling the enemy, and other "enablers" to allow the teams that are there now to be more effective.

Roger Carstens, a retired Special Forces officer who is now a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, a think tank in Washington, visited Afghanistan a couple months ago and asked members of the Special Forces community what they thought about "surging" Special Operations Forces.

"Everyone of them said 'no SOF surge,'" he says. "What they need is an enabler surge and enduring partnerships with Afghan military and police units," he says.
Adm. Eric Olson, the senior commander of US Special Operations Command, Tampa, Fla., is expected to convey the concerns of the special operations community to Gen. David Petraeus, the new commander of US Central Command.

A new command position

The proposal would also include the creation of a new Special Forces command position, to be filled by a one-star general in Afghanistan this spring, whose job it will be to marshal resources to ensure the Special Forces units are employed properly.
The Afghan National Army, the pride of the country's budding national security apparatus, and the Afghan National Police, which is still seen as largely corrupt and weaker, need help to build up into a larger, more effective force.

Ultimately, the US would like to see at least 134,000 soldiers trained and ready to provide for their own country's security. But trainers have been hard to come by, and the mix of foreign and US forces has muted the training effort, US defense officials say.

I’ve been a little baffled about the use of Special Forces in Afghanistan (and Iraq). I have sometimes wondered if part of the "problem" may lie in the modern training and recruitment of Special Forces in the US Army.

The unit was formed in the 1950s to organize and lead large guerrilla forces behind the lines in case of war in Europe. To do this they were trained to create new irregular units from civilian cadres, not necessarily to work with already orgainzed military forces.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20081223/ts_csm/asoftsurge

2008-12-30

Coalition Forces Kill Taliban Fighters in Afghanistan

Coalition forces killed two armed Taliban militants while targeting the network’s kidnapping and roadside-bombing operations in Afghanistan’s Ghazni province yesterday, military officials reported.

In the province’s Gailan district, coalition forces targeted a Taliban militant known to coordinate and carry out the kidnappings of Afghan officials and westerners to finance their criminal activities. The targeted Taliban militant also is believed to facilitate and direct roadside bombings along Highway One in Ghazni and Zabul provinces, deliberately killing and injuring innocent civilians and coalition forces, officials said.

After coalition forces called for everyone inside to leave the targeted building peacefully, the two militants engaged the force with small-arms fire. The coalition forces killed them using hand grenades.

A search following the operation revealed multiple AK-47 assault rifles.

Posted by SOF Editor on December 29th, 2008

"Inside the Green Berets" is an unprecedented look at the functionings of one the U.S. Army's elite Special Forces Unit. The documentary is an up-close look into the work American soldiers are doing in Afghanistan, and the incredible dangers they face. The filmmakers, too, become a part of the story as they experienced the pervasive violence in Afghanistan, a country that is facing a resurgence of the Taliban.


The soldiers are a small band of brothers who live on First Base Cobra, a military base in a hotly contested region still largely under the control of the Taliban.
(© National Geographic Television & Film )

http://abcnews.go.com/International/popup?id=3228253

2008-12-29

SEALs Share War Stories From Anbar Province

WASHINGTON - Two Navy SEALs who recently returned from Iraq shared some of their combat experiences and described the progress they witnessed in Anbar province, during a panel discussion recently at the Naval Heritage Center.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian, a heavy weapons operator and breacher, and Lt. Chris, SEAL Team Five Bravo Platoon's commander, are identified only by their first names for security reasons. They spent seven months in Anbar province training Iraqi security forces to operate independently.

The SEALs painted an unfiltered picture of their experience on Camp Corregidor in the city of Ramadi, which was mortared an average of three times a day when they first arrived.

"No matter where we went, whether it was a PortoJon, the chow hall, wherever, if you left 25, 50 meters outside of your base or outside your barracks, you had to have full kit on," Brian said.

As platoon commander leading a foreign internal defense mission, Chris held the reins in "developing Iraqi security force capability to fight insurgents or terrorists, in order to create a self-sustaining and capable Iraqi security force," the lieutenant said.

During SEAL operations the platoon brought six to 10 Iraqis who either led or followed, depending on operational and tactical requirements.

"We would go in at night under the cover of darkness and get positioned to overwatch or basically provide support for an operation during the daytime," Chris said. "We're in there shaping the operation for decisive action."

"So we get setup and we're checking the environment out, looking at the battle space," Chris said. "And as the Army's coming through and we're kind of covering them, we get attacked pretty heavily."

Brian, who was closer to the enemy than Chris, recalled the ensuing ambush.

"(The platoon) was in three different operating positions. Our operating position started taking fire," Brain said. "It was ineffective - shots against the wall, stuff like that - we took a couple grenades against the side of the building."

"Shortly after, our two buddies who were down the street about 100 meters from me, they took heavy fire - rocket-propelled grenade attacks," he said. "One of my buddies got fragged pretty good."

"So when they called in a Quick Reaction Force to come pick him up, we had two Iraqis open the door and go out in the street. Well sometime during the night there was an IED left out there for him. It was either command-detonated or pressure-plate," Brian said. "It was detonated; the Iraqi lost both of his legs at the waist."

"Two other guys were hurt really bad - my buddy Joe and my buddy Elliott - took it pretty bad," Brian said. "Everybody bagged out of our operational positions. Once we heard guys were down we bagged out of there - we took off running down the street; running and gunning."

Brian, Chris and the other SEALs consolidated near their "wounded brothers."

"We grabbed both guys and brought them in a house and started taking care of the wounded to getting those guys ready for transport," Brian said.

Elliott, one of the two wounded, was the biggest corpsman on their team - weighing 250 lbs. without gear, Chris recalled.

"He was laying there bleeding out, and he was telling us how to fix Joe, with no concern for himself," Chris said. "That pretty much sums up Navy SEAL corpsmen."

Meanwhile, aerial surveillance showed "bad guys jumping roof to roof coming after us," Brian said.

"So Chris had a great idea," Brian explained. "He said, 'Everybody (get beneath) a door jamb, get down low, and I'm going to have these Bradley (infantry fighting vehicles) come through here and take off the second decks of all these houses!'"

In a bold decision, Chris ordered enough ordnance to destroy the second-story of the building in which they were taking cover, and where the enemy fighters were positioned.

"It worked great!" Chris said in a Texas twang and with a wide smile.

The tank artillery campaign crippled the insurgency, what Chris remembered as "two distinct 30-minute periods of intense" fire fights. After the heavy tank reinforcements arrived, Brian, equipped with a machine gun, said he "went through about 800 rounds total."

The mission the SEALs described was one of roughly 65 direct-action combat operations they engaged in during their time in Anbar province, including an operation on the following night.

To illustrate symbols of the cultural progress they witnessed, Brian and Chris showed photographs on a large screen before the audience.

In one image, a group of Sunni and Shiite members of the Iraqi army carry the casket of a deceased Iraqi soldier as a U.S. Army colonel looks on. The wood coffin is draped in an Iraqi flag.

"This is the norm," Chris said. "This is what you're seeing on a daily basis; combined tribal and combined religious connection at things like funerals, mission planning out on operations. It's amazing."

In another one of Chris' slides, Iraqi police and civilians celebrate boisterously on a crowded street.

"After we were able to clear the city of (the enemy) in Eastern Ramadi, the people are able to go to the market, they're able to talk with Iraqi policemen out in the street openly, U.S. forces were able to patrol out in the street," Chris said. "It used to be very dangerous for us to even go down the road because of improvised explosive devices and sniper attacks and small-arms fire attacks."

In another picture, Chris and another SEAL flank a smiling Arab.

"Tribal engagement," Chris said. "This is us with Sheik Jossum up in Sofia, which was the genesis of the whole 'tribal awakening.'"

"We trained them in foreign internal defensive and they eventually were able to bring other tribes on board and it really opened up the Anbar province," he said.

After conducting about 110 combat operations with Iraqi security forces in Anbar, the mortaring at Camp Corregidor in Ramadi stopped, Brian recalled.

"We were free to exercise on base," Brian said. "We were free to use the bathroom without having a helmet and body armor on."

Chris added, "That was about the best experience of the whole six months."

SEAL Operation in Iraq - True Story of Survival

I was recently reminded of a recent OIF SEAL operation that left one SEAL KIA and 2 others injured – 1 very severely. We always hear the sad stories about fatalities in the war, so I thought it would be nice to share one focused about the survivor.

For obvious OPSEC and PERSEC reasons, I won’t state the Team nor the full names of the men in this particular operation. I will state that the injured man’s name is Doug and we will leave it at that.

The Team was tracking a targeted insurgent who had apparently fired an RPG at a US helicopter. The Team was clearing a house when Doug and his buddy kicked in a door and ran right in on 4 hadji’s with AK-47’s who immediately opened fire on the 2 men.

Doug’s partner was KIA almost instantly. It happened so quickly they did not even have time to react to the 4 awaiting bad guys. It is amazing Doug was able to survive. In the initial hail of gunfire, Doug had his M4 shot out of his hands and lost part of his finger. This happened before he was even able to fire a shot. Since it happened so quickly, there was no opportunity to take cover and Doug played this one by the book. Instead of running and ducking for cover, realizing he lost his M4, he drew his 9mm sidearm. Doug was shot 17 times with AK47 fire!! 3 shots hit the SAPI plate on his body armor in the chest and they were deflected. 12 rounds went through his body (entered and exited soft tissue areas)! 1 round went in between his 2 testicles (talk about someone looking out for you) – due to this round he cannot have kids anymore, but his “boys” are safe. The final round hit the bottom of his SAPI plate and entered and lodged into his lower abdomen. He has a temporary colostomy bag while healing but no permanent damage thank God.

Now in the midst of this barrage of gunfire sustained by Doug, he still managed to draw his sidearm and with 18 rounds of 9mm ammunition he managed to eliminate ALL 4 bad guys. That shows what a determined SEAL is capable of doing with proper training. Keep in mind – 18 rounds he needed to take them all out and the magazine holds 14. That means he had to do a magazine exchange during the fight! And this all happened with Doug in the middle of an ambush with a KIA teammate, himself trapped inside a doorway getting sprayed with automatic gunfire and returning fire with a pistol. With the 9mm pistol he said it took numerous shots to take down each bad guy. One fucker he had to finally take down with a headshot. And this all went down before the rest of the Team closed in on this exact position. They were in other areas of the clearing area and courtyard searching for bad guys as well.

Doug was evacuated and spent 2 days at Walter Reed. He then took convalescent leave to spend some time with his wife and family after this very close call. Before he was discharged from Walter Reed and sent on his leave, Admiral Olsen wanted to meet with him and to pin his awards on him.

While speaking with Admiral Olsen and the Teams Senior Chief, Doug tells them that he wants to get back to the Team as soon as possible or at least do something at Little Creek as an advanced instructor. Admiral Olsen thought for a moment and then told Senior Chief to schedule Doug as soon as possible to attend firearms training. Doug was confused and immediately pointed out that he had already attended all the basic and advanced firearms training and was even an instructor for advanced handgun training for some of the East Coast Teams. So Admiral Olsen replied, "well young man, I guess you're gonna have to go back as a student because I understand you killed 4 bad guys during the firefight but you had to do a magazine exchange...aren't there 14 rounds in the magazine and why if you had so many rounds in the weapon did it take you that many rounds to put down the bad guys? Obviously, you need to go back for some refresher training." Doug was (needless to say) stunned and it took everyone in the room a few minutes before they realized Admiral Olsen was just fucking with him. Admiral Olsen does have a sense of humor.

Doug has been nominated for the Navy Cross. He is recovering very well and expects to return to limited duty sometime very soon (this month). This is a great lesson on keeping your calm under fire. Doug fought with the heart of a lion and is alive today because of it. Hoo-Yah Doug. We are very glad you made it! You are a true warrior of the highest caliber.

shadowspear.com

What happened when the Special Forces landed in Afghanistan?

by SEYMOUR M. HERSH
Issue of 2001-11-12
Posted 2001-11-02

Early on the morning of Saturday, October 20th, more than a hundred Army Rangers parachuted into a Taliban-held airbase sixty miles southwest of Kandahar, in southern Afghanistan. A military cameraman videotaped the action with the aid of a night-vision lens, and his grainy, green-tinted footage of determined commandos and billowing parachutes dominated the television news that night. The same morning, a second Special Operations unit, made up largely of Rangers and a reinforced Delta Force squadron, struck at a complex outside Kandahar which included a house used by Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader.

In a Pentagon briefing later that day, General Richard B. Myers, of the Air Force, the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, reported that the Special Operations Forces "were able to deploy, maneuver, and operate inside Afghanistan without significant interference from Taliban forces." He stated that the soldiers did meet resistance at both sites, but overcame it. "I guess you could characterize it as light," he said. "For those experiencing it, of course, it was probably not light." He concluded, "The mission over all was successful. We accomplished our objectives."

Myers also told reporters that the commandos were "refitting and repositioning for potential future operations against terrorist targets" in Afghanistan. But at a second briefing, two days later, he refused to say whether commando operations would continue. "Some things are going to be visible, some invisible," he said.

Myers did not tell the press that, in the wake of a near-disaster during the assault on Mullah Omar's complex, the Pentagon was rethinking future Special Forces operations inside Afghanistan. Delta Force, which prides itself on stealth, had been counterattacked by the Taliban, and some of the Americans had had to fight their way to safety. Twelve Delta members were wounded, three of them seriously.

Delta Force has long complained about a lack of creativity in the Army leadership, but the unexpectedness and the ferocity of the Taliban response "scared the crap out of everyone," a senior military officer told me, and triggered a review of commando tactics and procedures at the United States Central Command, or CENTCOM, at MacDill Air Force Base, in Florida, the headquarters for the war in Afghanistan. "This is no war for Special Operations," one officer said—at least, not as orchestrated by CENTCOM and its commander, General Tommy R. Franks, of the Army, on October 20th.

There was also disdain among Delta Force soldiers, a number of senior officers told me, for what they saw as the staged nature of the other assault, on the airfield, which had produced such exciting television footage. "It was sexy stuff, and it looked good," one general said. But the operation was something less than the Pentagon suggested. The Rangers' parachute jump took place only after an Army Pathfinder team—a specialized unit that usually works behind enemy lines—had been inserted into the area and had confirmed that the airfield was clear of Taliban forces. "It was a television show," one informed source told me. "The Rangers were not the first in."

Some of the officials I spoke with argued that the parachute operation had value, even without enemy contact, in that it could provide "confidence building" for the young Rangers, many of whom had joined the Army out of high school and had yet to be exposed to combat. "The Rangers come in and the choppers come in and everybody feels good about themselves," a military man who served alongside the Special Forces said. Nonetheless, he asked, "Why would you film it? I'm a big fan of keeping things secret—and this was being driven by public opinion."

Delta Force, which is based at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, has a mystique that no other unit of the Army does. Its mere existence is classified, and, invariably, its activities are described to the public only after the fact. "Black Hawk Down," a book by Mark Bowden about the Special Forces disaster in Mogadishu, Somalia, in 1993, in which eighteen Rangers and Delta Force members were killed, took note of Delta's special status. "They operated strictly in secret," Bowden wrote. "You'd meet this guy hanging out at a bar around Bragg, deeply tanned, biceps rippling, neck wide as a fireplug, with a giant Casio watch and a plug of chaw under his lip, and he'd tell you he worked as a computer programmer for some army contract agency. They called each other by their nicknames and eschewed salutes and all the other traditional trappings of military life. Officers and noncoms in Delta treated each other as equals. Disdain for normal displays of army status was the unit's signature. They simply transcended rank." On combat missions, Bowden wrote, Delta Force soldiers disliked working with the younger, far less experienced Rangers.

Referring to the October 20th raid on the Mullah Omar complex, some Delta members told a colleague that it was a "total goat fuck"—military slang meaning that everything that could go wrong did go wrong. According to a report in the London Observer, the complex included little more than potholed roads, the brick house used by Mullah Omar, and a small protective garrison of thatched huts. The Pentagon had intelligence reports indicating that the Mullah sometimes spent the night there; a successful mission could result in his death or capture and might, at a minimum, produce valuable intelligence. Delta had hoped to do what it did best: work a small team of four to six men on the ground into the target area—the phrase for such reconnaissance is "snoop and poop"—and attack with no warning. (One senior intelligence officer said that a member of Delta Force had told him, "We take four guys, and if we lose them, that's what we get paid for.")

CENTCOM's attack plan called, instead, for an enormous assault on the Mullah's complex. The mission was initiated by sixteen AC-130 gunships, which poured thousands of rounds into the surrounding area but deliberately left the Mullah's house unscathed. The idea was that any Taliban intelligence materials would thus be left intact, or that, with a bit of luck, Omar would perhaps think he was safe and spend the night. A reinforced company of Rangers—roughly two hundred soldiers—was flown by helicopter into a nearby area, to serve as a blocking force in case Delta ran into heavy resistance. Chinook helicopters, the Army's largest, then flew to a staging area and disgorged the reinforced Delta squadron—about a hundred soldiers—and their six-by-six assault vehicles, with specially mounted machine guns. The Delta team stormed the complex, and found little of value: no Mullah and no significant documents.

"As they came out of the house, the shit hit the fan," one senior officer recounted. "It was like an ambush. The Taliban were firing light arms and either R.P.G.s"—rocket-propelled grenades—"or mortars." The chaos was terrifying. A high-ranking officer who has had access to debriefing reports told me that the Taliban forces were firing grenades, and that they seemed to have an unlimited supply. Delta Force, he added, found itself in "a tactical firefight, and the Taliban had the advantage." The team immediately began taking casualties, and evacuated. The soldiers broke into separate units—one or more groups of four to six men each and a main force that retreated to the waiting helicopters. According to established procedures, the smaller groups were to stay behind to provide fire cover. Army gunships then arrived on the scene and swept the compound with heavy fire.

The Delta team was forced to abandon one of its objectives—the insertion of an undercover team into the area—and the stay-behind soldiers fled to a previously determined rendezvous point, under a contingency plan known as an E. & E., for escape and evasion. One of the Chinook helicopters smashed its undercarriage while pulling away from the grenades and the crossfire, leaving behind a section of the landing gear. The Taliban later displayed this as a trophy, claiming, falsely, that a helicopter had been shot down. (According to the Pentagon, the helicopter had come "into contact with a barrier.")

The failed 1993 Special Forces attack in Mogadishu, with its enduring image of a slain American dragged through the city's streets, had created a furor, and led to allegations that the soldiers had been sent in without adequate combat support. The CENTCOM planners were unquestionably eager to avoid the same mistake, and their anxiety was perhaps heightened by the fact that the attacks would be the first of the ground war. But the resulting operation was criticized by many with experience in Special Operations as far too noisy ("It would wake the dead," one officer told me) and far too slow, giving the Taliban time to organize their resistance. One Delta Force soldier told a colleague that the planners "think we can perform fucking magic. We can't. Don't put us in an environment we weren't prepared for. Next time, we're going to lose a company."

In the briefings after the raids, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and General Myers gave no indication of the intensity of the resistance near Mullah Omar's house. Rumsfeld also chastised the Pentagon press corps for relying on unnamed military sources in filing the first reports on the raids before the commandos had returned. Rumsfeld said, "You can be certain that I will answer your questions directly when I can and that we'll do our best to give you as much information as we can safely provide." He added, "This is a very open society, and the press knows—you know—almost as much as exists and almost as soon as it exists. And the idea that there is some great iceberg out there that's not known, below water . . . it's just not true."

In the days that followed, as details of the raids filtered through the military system, the Pentagon gave no public hint of the bitter internal debate they had provoked. There was evidence, however, that something had gone wrong. On Sunday, October 21st, the day after the raids, the London Sunday Telegraph reported that the United States had requested the immediate assignment to Afghanistan of the entire regiment of Britain's élite commando units, the Special Air Service, or S.A.S. American officials told me that British military authorities assigned to CENTCOM were urging the Pentagon to forgo its airborne operations inside Afghanistan and, instead, bring the war to the Taliban by establishing a large firebase in Afghanistan. The British position, one officer explained, was "We should tell the Taliban, 'We're now part of your grid square' "—that is, in the Taliban's territory. " 'What are you going to do about it?' "

The after-action arguments over how best to wage a ground war continued last week, with many of the senior officers in Delta Force "still outraged," as one military man described it. The Pentagon could not tell the American people the details of what really happened at Kandahar, he added angrily, "because it doesn't want to appear that it doesn't know what it's doing." Another senior military officer told me, "This is the same M.O. that they've used for ten years." He dismissed CENTCOM's planning for the Afghanistan mission as "Special Ops 101," and said, "I don't know where the adult supervision for these operations is. Franks"— the CENTCOM commander—"is clueless." Of Delta Force the officer said, "These guys have had a case of the ass since Mogadishu. They want to do it right and they train hard. Don't put them on something stupid." He paused, and said, "We'll get there, but it's going to get ugly."

A senior official acknowledged that there were serious problems in the war effort thus far, but said, "It's like reading a six-hundred-page murder mystery. It's solved on the last few pages, but you have to read five hundred and ninety-eight pages to get there."


http://www.papillonsartpalace.com/escape.htm

Task Force Black





September 4, 2008: One important component of the U.S. "Surge Offensive" in Iraq last year was actually a three year old, generally discreet, commando operation. This was Task Force Black (TFB). Composed of only a few hundred troops, the core of this force was operators from the British SAS and the U.S. Delta Force. Task Force Black was assigned to go after the Islamic terrorists who were actually planning and carrying out the suicide bombings that were killing thousands of Iraqi civilians a month until last year.

TFB tactics were bold and dangerous, as they went after terrorists who were on their way to an operation (either on foot with explosive belts, or suicide car bombers.) These attacks were are the most carefully planned and executed terrorist operations, and the objective of TFB was to take down the attackers before they could detonate their explosives. This is easier to do if you catch them before they are close to their target, because the bombers are not poised to set off their explosives on short notice.

Some suicide bomber teams do not rig their detonators to work until they are close to the target. They have good reason for this, for there have been accidental detonations, which kill the support staff as well as the suicide bomber. This is not good for the morale of the escorts, security detail and bomb technicians that make all the preparations for these attacks. The bombers themselves only do it once, and are not as highly trained and difficult to replace. Without the support people, who are harder to recruit than suicide bombers, these attacks are much less effective. When Israel began going after the support staff five years ago, the Palestinian suicide attacks on Israel greatly diminished, and there were more accidents from poorly made bombs, and more bombers were caught before they could reach their targets. TFB often brought along American and Iraqi troops to make a follow up sweep to grab as many of the support staff as possible.

TFB used all available intelligence resources to find terrorist gangs that were making the suicide attacks. Most of these terrorists worked for "al Qaeda in Iraq," but some were run by various Sunni Arab groups trying to get a civil war going between Sunni and Shia Arabs. The terrorists believed that such a conflict would result in a Sunni Arab victory. Three years ago, realizing that an outcome like that was highly unlikely, some of the terrorist gangs began shutting down, and there was a decline on terrorist attacks because of it. But the attacks continued, and in 2006, they increased as Shia death squads proliferated.

TFB had a rough time of it for over a year, as Shia terrorists now began setting off bombs in Sunni Arab neighborhoods. But throughout that period, the intelligence picture kept getting better. The TFB operators spent much of their time among Iraqis, so when the Surge Offensive kicked off in early 2007, there was an opportunity to hit many of the suicide bomber support groups hard. By the time the Surge Offensive wound down earlier this year, TFB had taken down (killed or captured) nearly 4,000 Islamic terrorists. Most of them were the hard to replace support staff. This was reflected in the sharp decline in the number of terror bombs going off. From a peak of over a hundred bombs a month going off in Baghdad, to as little as two. TFB suffered about 20 percent casualties through all this.

After the Surge Offensive, many surviving terrorists fled north, to Mosul and surrounding areas. The terrorists still being hunted there, mostly by Iraqis soldiers and police.

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htsf/articles/20080904.aspx?comments=Y

Pictures



Special Forces soldier nicknamed "Cowboy", securing LZ in Afghanistan.
Photo: US DoD





March 3, 2004: Sgt. First Class Mark Moody from the 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne) mans a M-60 machine gun in the turret of a High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle, while someone changes a truck tire on the way to Asadabad, Afghanistan. U.S. Army Photo by Sgt. Horace Murray. This photo appeared on www.army.mil.





Members of Operational Detachment Alpha 3336, 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne) recon the remote Shok Valley of Afghanistan where they fought an almost seven-hour battle with terrorists in a remote mountainside village.
December 15, 2008, U.S. Army photograph

Selection and training

Entry into Special Forces

Entry into Special Forces begins with Special Forces Assessment and Selection (SFAS).[23] Getting "Selected" at SFAS (Phase 1) will enable a candidate to continue on to the next four phases of the Special Forces Qualification Course (SFQC, or the "Q Course"). If a candidate successfully completes these next four phases he will graduate as a Special Forces soldier and be assigned to a 12-man Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA), or "A team."

Pipelines to SFAS

A version of SFAS was first introduced as a selection mechanism in the Mid 1980's by the Commanding General of the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School at the time, Brigadier General James Guest.

There are now two ways for male soldiers (female soldiers are not permitted to serve in Special Forces) to volunteer to attend SFAS:


* As an existing soldier in the US Army with the Enlisted rank of E-4 (Corporal/Specialist) or higher, and for Officers the rank of O-2 (1st Lieutenant) promotable to O-3 (Captain), or existing O-3s.

* The other path is that of direct entry, referred to as Initial Accession or IA. Here an individual who has no prior military service or who has previously separated from military service is given the opportunity to attend SFAS. Both the Active Duty and National Guard components offer Special Forces Initial Accession programs. The Active Duty program is referred to as the "18X Program" because of the Initial Entry Code that appears on the assignment orders.

Pre-SFAS courses

In preparation to attend SFAS, an Initial Accession (IA) recruit will typically undertake upwards of six months of full-time training before attempting Selection. This initial training consists of three parts:

1. Infantry One Station Unit Training (11X-OSUT) at Fort Benning, Georgia. OSUT is Infantry-focused Basic Combat Training (BCT) and comprises:


* 1 week (sometimes two weeks) at the 30th AG Reception Battalion where recruits are administratively prepared for entry into the United States Army.

* 9 weeks of Basic Combat Training.

* 5 weeks of Infantry Advanced Individual Training (AIT).

Successful recruits graduate from this 15-week period with the Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) of 11B (Infantryman).

2. After Infantry OSUT, recruits will attend the Basic Airborne Course (BAC or "jump school") held at the United States Army Airborne School at Fort Benning, Georgia. BAC is a three-week course designed to train a soldier in the skill of military parachuting. Should the soldier graduate this course he will receive orders authorizing him to wear military parachutist insignia.

3. Finally the recruit will attend the Special Forces Preparation and Conditioning (SFPC) Course on Temporary Duty (TDY) at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. SFPC is a four-week course that prepares both Initial Accession and non-combat arms Active Duty SF candidates for Special Forces Assessment and Selection (SFAS).

SFPC focuses on improving the strength and cardiovascular fitness of candidates, the ability of candidates to engage in military forced marches, and military land navigation. Fitness, forced marching, and land navigation are three major reasons for candidate attrition during SFAS.

Special Forces Assessment and Selection

As of December, 2007 a shortened SFAS of 14 days was approved.

Approximately 30-35% of enlisted candidates attempting SFAS are successful. Many unsuccessful candidates elect to Voluntarily Withdraw (VW), while others suffer injuries in the course of training and are "Medically Dropped." Those that successfully complete the course must then be selected by the final selection board. Many candidates who make it to the end of the course are not selected because the board deems that they lack the required attributes of an SF soldier, or that they are not yet ready to attempt the next phase in SF training.

Selection Outcomes

* Those who quit or who are Involuntarily Withdrawn (IW) by the course cadre are generally designated NTR or Not-to-Return. This generally ends any opportunity a candidate may have to become a Special Forces soldier. Active Duty military candidates will be returned to their previous units, and IA 18X candidates will be transferred to infantry units as 11B Infantrymen.

* Candidates who are "medically dropped," and who are not then medically discharged from the military due to serious injury, are often permitted to "recycle," and to attempt the course again as soon as they are physically able to do so.

* Candidates who successfully complete the course but who are "Boarded" and not selected ("Non-Select") are generally given the opportunity to attend selection again in 12 or 24 months. It must be noted, however, that the time window to attend SFAS a second time can be heavily influenced by deployment schedules, as "non-selected" candidates are assigned to infantry units in the meantime.

Successful Active Duty candidates usually return to their previous units to await a slot in the Special Forces Qualification Course (SFQC). Because an Initial Accession (IA) 18X candidate lacks a previous unit, he will normally enter the Q Course immediately, or after a short wait.

Active Duty candidates who successfully complete SFAS but who are not previous graduates of the Basic Airborne Course (BAC) are assigned a class date to attend jump school at Ft. Benning, Georgia prior to reporting to Ft. Bragg for the Q Course.

MOS, group, and language selection

Upon selection at SFAS, all Active Duty enlisted and IA 18X candidates will be briefed on:

* The five Special Forces Active Duty Groups
* The four Special Forces Military Occupational Specialities (MOS)initially open to them
* The languages utilized in each Special Forces Group

Candidates will then complete what is often referred to as a '"wish list." Enlisted candidates will rank in order of preference the MOS that he prefers (18B, 18C, 18D, 18E). Officer candidates will attend the 18A course. Both enlisted and officer candidates will list in order of preference the SF Groups in which they prefer to serve (1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 10th) and the languages in which they prefer to be trained.

Language selection is dependent on the Defense Language Aptitude Battery (DLAB) test scores of the candidate, as well as the SF Group to which they are assigned. Different SF Groups focus on different areas of responsibility (AOR), which require different languages.

A board assigns each enlisted and officer candidate his MOS, Group placement, and language. The MOS, Group, and language that a selected candidate is assigned is not guaranteed, and is contingent upon the needs of the Special Forces community. Generally 80% of selected candidates are awarded their primary choices.

Upon successful completion of the Q Course, the newly graduated Active Duty Special Forces soldier will be assigned to one of the five Active Duty Special Forces Groups.

Special Forces Qualification Course

For various reasons, 10% of selected candidates will not complete the Q Course. Ultimately, out of every three candidates who attend SFAS, only one will earn the right to wear the Green Beret. The Q Course features some of the toughest and longest training in the US military, with some courses running as long as 18 to 24 months.

When a candidate enters the Q Course, he is assigned to the 1st Special Warfare Training Group (Airborne) at Fort Bragg. IA 18X candidates and active duty candidates who have not already attended the Warrior Leader Course will attend the 3 week Common Leadership Training (CLT) course. The goal of the CLT is to provide candidates with the basic skills required to perform as Non-Commissioned Officers (NCO) at the rank of E-5 (Sergeant), which is the minimum rank of any Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA) team member. IA 18X candidates and active duty non-combat arms candidates will also attend the 3 week long Special Forces Preparation and Conditioning Course II, designed to reinforce and perfect the basic infantry skills of small unit tactics (SUT) and patrolling.

Phase II is a 13 week block of instruction in small unit tactics (SUT), Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE), and lethal hand-to-hand combat & element-of-surprise disarming techniques.

After Phase II, candidates begin Phase III, which is often called the "language blitz." Depending upon the language assigned, Phase III consists of either 9 or 15 weeks of intensive and immersive language training. Upon completion of this training, candidates are required to attain a minimum rating score in their assigned language.

Following the completion of Phase III, candidates then begin Phase IV, for specific training within one of the five initial Special Forces specialties: 18A, SF Detachment Commander; 18B, SF Weapons Sergeant; 18C, SF Engineering Sergeant; 18D, SF Medical Sergeant; and 18E, SF Communications Sergeant. 18A, 18B, 18C, and 18E training courses are 15 weeks long. The 18D training course is 48 weeks long.

The candidates culminate their Special Forces training by participating in Operation ROBIN SAGE, a 4 week long large-scale unconventional warfare exercise (Phase V), before being awarded the Special Forces tab and the Green Beret.

Further training

After successfully completing the Special Forces Qualification Course, Special Forces soldiers are then eligible for many advanced skills courses. These include the Military Free Fall Parachutist Course (MFF), the Combat Diver Qualification Course, the Special Operations Target Interdiction Course (SOTIC), and the Special Forces Advanced Reconnaissance and Exploitation Techniques Course (SFARETEC). Additionally, Special Forces soldiers may participate in special operations training courses offered by other services and allied nations throughout their careers.

Special Forces MOS descriptions

* 18A - Special Forces Officer

* 180A - Special Forces Warrant Officer

* 18B - Special Forces Weapons Sergeant

* 18C - Special Forces Engineering Sergeant

* 18D - Special Forces Medical Sergeant

* 18E - Special Forces Communications Sergeant

* 18F - Special Forces Assistant Operations and Intelligence Sergeant

* 18X - Special Forces Candidate (Active Duty Enlistment Option)

* 18Z - Special Forces Operations Sergeant

Basic Element - SF Operational Detachment-Alpha (ODA) composition

A Special Forces company consists of six ODAs (Operational Detachments Alpha) or "A-teams." The number of ODAs can vary from company to company, with each ODA specializing in an infiltration skill or a particular mission-set (e.g. Military Freefall (HALO), combat diving, mountain warfare, maritime operations, or urban operations).

An ODA classically consists of 12 men, each of whom has a specific function (MOS or Military Occupational Specialty) on the team. The ODA is led by an 18A (Detachment Commander), usually a Captain, and a 180A (Assistant Detachment Commander) who is his second in command, usually a Warrant Officer One or Chief Warrant Officer Two. The team also includes the following enlisted men: one 18Z team sergeant (Operations Sergeant), usually a Master Sergeant, one 18F (Assistant Operations and Intelligence Sergeant), usually a Sergeant First Class, and two each, 18B (Weapons Sergeant), 18C (Engineer Sergeant), 18D (Medical Sergeant), and 18E (Communications Sergeant). This organization facilitates 6-man "split team" operations, redundancy, and mentoring between a senior specialist NCO and his junior assistant.

On patrol with the 5th Special Forces in Afghanistan 1/8/2002

By Susan Sevareid, Associated Press, 1/8/2002 01:13

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) Crouching in the back of a dusty black pickup, a U.S. Army Special Forces soldier trains his rifle on two Afghans, one armed with a machine gun, found inspecting a Soviet-era T-55 tank abandoned in a dry river bed.

Two other Americans step out of the truck and cautiously approach, rifles ready, as a third Afghan pops into view.

In a country where alliances change faster than the dust clouds settle, who is a friend isn't always apparent, especially around the former Taliban stronghold of Kandahar.

The rifles lower slightly when the men on the tank, and two buddies who join them, greet the American soldiers warmly, assuring them there are no Taliban in the area. One shows a gaping bullet wound in his lower leg.

''They say they scared 'em away. That's how he got this,'' says Mike, who hauls a medical pack from the truck and begins cleaning and wrapping the leg, explaining with a few words of Pashtu and a lot of hand gestures what he is doing and how to care for the wound.

The men of the U.S. Army Special Forces, known as the ''quiet professionals,'' are reluctant to talk about their operations, and allowing journalists access to the teams for the first time was a tortuous decision for their commanders. To protect the men, the Army did not allow them to be fully identified or for photographs to reveal their faces.

Not long ago, the elite soldiers were in the thick of the war against the Taliban regime, advising and training oppositions forces and sometimes fighting alongside them, taking an unprecedented central role in a war fought thus far largely without conventional U.S. ground forces.

Fighting has quieted, and now the Americans spend more time on reconnaissance missions like the one that led the members of team Python 36 to the tank.

They survey old battlegrounds for unexploded munitions and weapons and they keep an eye out for signs of trouble. They search dusty valleys for Taliban or al-Qaida fighters and for discarded documents and other materials that might provide information on Osama bin Laden's terror network, which was blamed for the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.

They have nonmilitary tasks, too. Trained in languages and culture, the teams spend time talking to residents and shopkeepers about food and water supplies, crime and the availability of schools, police stations and other services. Such assessments are aimed at helping local authorities plan for rebuilding.

''My team understands that what they recommend shapes government policy,'' said Paul, a 29-year-old captain from Tennessee who commands Python 36.

In Kandahar, his team's soldiers watch the city from the rooftop of a building they have called home since Dec. 10. Gunfire occasionally is heard, and they keep an eye out for suspicious vehicles that venture too close. Afghan guards outside move people along.

The sparse quarters are more comfortable than usual for a team whose members have seen action in Kuwait during the Gulf War, Haiti, Bosnia and other hotspots. Other teams, operating from makeshift camps in the rugged mountains and deserts across Afghanistan, are searching for senior Taliban and al-Qaida members.

Teams in the Kandahar area have been in close calls, losing friends when a U.S. bomb went astray north of Kandahar on Dec. 5, killing three special forces soldiers. Even with the defeat of the Taliban, it remains a dangerous country. A special forces soldier was killed in an ambush in eastern Afghanistan on Friday.

The nature of the work, depending on each other for survival, brings them close.

''We do just about everything together,'' the captain said. ''We are pretty much a family.''

Frank, a 37-year-old staff sergeant from West Virginia, said the men bond regardless of age or rank. ''If it's us against the world, it's us against the world there's a lot of brotherly trust.''

Caches of munitions are being found everywhere in a nation that has known only war for nearly a quarter century.

Soon after reaching the Kandahar area, special forces soldiers found 176 anti-tank and artillery shells on the roof of the Kandahar palace where the new governor, Gul Agha, had been sworn in. The explosives were wired in a booby trap capable of creating a huge blast.

As they slowly cruise Kandahar's dirt streets, their beards scruffy and their heads wrapped in Afghan scarves, the men of Python 36 wave at grocers, old men drinking tea, boys on bicycles and armed men in passing vehicles.

''Stalle maashi! Stalle maashi!'' the Americans call out, waving as they drive past. The Pashtu greeting elicits giggles and waves back from the children, many smiles and only a few cold stares.

''We passed the wave test they're still happy to see us,'' said Ray, who's traded his Special Forces Green Beret for a traditional Woolen Pakul. The master sergeant from North Carolina speaks Pashtu, only occasionally dipping into his pocket dictionary.

Special forces commanders said Kandahar officials who have spoken with tribal elders estimate 80 percent of the city's residents are supportive of the American presence, about 15 percent are ambivalent and 5 percent are hard-core opponents.

''They either really like us or they don't know anything about us and really hate us,'' said an American named Cale.

''That's why we get out here to press the flesh a bit,'' Ray added. ''Get to know them, be aware of their customs sometimes that makes the difference.''

Whether their efforts are successful won't be known for a long time, said ''Bulldog,'' a 40-year-old major from New Hampshire.

Asked how he would know, he answered, ''I guess in 10 years from now if we can turn around and look and say: `We helped build this country and it worked.'''

http://www.groups.sfahq.com/5th/02_01_08_on_patrol_with_the_u.htm
US SF soldier uses a SOF Laser Marker (SOFLAM) to designate a target for an air strike in Afghanistan, 2001.
Photo: US Army

U.S. Army Special Operations: Fighting and the global war on terrorism

Brown, Bryan, Oct 2002

While the nation was still reeling from the September 11 attacks, U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) forces were preparing for movement into Afghanistan to begin the battle against terrorist threats. USASOC units stood trained, prepared and ready for the call to fight our nation's next war.

Within days, plans were developed to establish an operating base that would enable Army special operations forces (ARSOF) to strike back against al Qaeda. Just a few weeks after September 11, ARSOF elements departed for Karshi Kanabad, Uzbekistan. Engineers, cooks, fuel handlers and mechanics from the 528th Special Operations Support Battalion (Airborne) ensured our follow-on forces would have the necessary support to defeat the Taliban and al Qaeda.

This unique organization of special operations support assets processed 30 million dollars of supply requests and more than 500 pallets of general-- issue supplies. The 112th Special Operations Signal Battalion (Airborne) immediately provided vital connectivity for information flow using satellite telephones, Internet and video teleconferencing technology. These battalions from the U.S Army Special Operations Support Command were vital logistics assets and validated our doctrine on the use of this technology.

Another test of our doctrine, that of unconventional warfare, was at hand. The plan to defeat the Taliban and al Qaeda began with Special Forces operational detachment-- alpha (ODA) teams infiltrating into Afghanistan to establish contact with the various anti-Taliban forces. Connecting our operational detachments with the anti-Taliban forces proved to be a legitimate force multiplier in conjunction with lethal Air Force strikes. These ODAs worked side by side with the future leaders of Afghanistan. Through numerous battles and deadly firefights they continually demonstrated the ingenuity and professionalism that is a result of years of highly specialized training.

Our successful battle at Mazar-e-Sharif is a textbook example of unconventional warfare combined with lethal weaponry manned by professional soldiers. On October 20, 2001, ODA 595 linked up with Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum, commander of the largest Afghan faction of the Northern Alliance, and began an assault against the Taliban resulting in the liberation of Mazar-e-Sharif. ODA 595 is part of 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

From the time the detachment linked with Dostum until Mazar-e-Sharif was liberated on November 10, the detachment had moved more than 100 miles, much of it on horseback. The detachment had also split into smaller cells to maximize its effectiveness with Dostum's forces. The ODA noncommissioned officers became trusted advisors to the Afghan forces.

This detachment, and many others like it, called for airstrikes on enemy targets and engaged in direct combat with the enemy. The SF soldiers provided emergency medical care to wounded Afghan soldiers and gave them much needed combat supplies for the battle.

More important, a young captain who commanded an ODA and his NCOs were forming relationships with commanders who would, in a few months, help lead Afghanistan toward a new, more peaceful future. These great SF soldiers are warrior-diplomats, who continue to help establish and carry out U.S. policy on foreign soil.

Moving the SF teams and their supplies into Afghanistan was the responsibility of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR). The air component of Army special operations forces proved its worth tenfold in Afghanistan. The aviators of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment are by far the most skilled military pilots in the world. Flying specially modified MH-47E Chinooks and MH-60D Black Hawks, these fearless crews battled hostile fire, fierce sand and snowstorms to ensure our soldiers were safely on the ground and resupplied.

Using the most advanced avionics in the world, these helicopter crews flew through zero visibility conditions, often refueling in the air two and three times while covering distances in excess of 600 to 800 miles before completing a mission. Despite operating in such harsh conditions, the 160th SOAR maintenance crews kept nearly 100 percent of the helicopters flying in combat.

Our activities in Afghanistan were not limited to unconventional warfare. Around mid-October elements of the 75th Ranger Regiment executed the first combat jump since Operation Just Cause, Panama. Their mission was to seize an airfield deep in Afghanistan, later called Camp Rhino. This successful mission sent a strong message to the Taliban and al Qaeda that they were not safe anywhere and that U.S. forces could strike with lethal quickness and deadly resolve.

The Rangers' role in Afghanistan is not widely publicized but is a significant contribution to the overall success of our missions in Operation Enduring Freedom.

Direct combat action was not the only tool available to Army special operations forces. Civil affairs (CA) and psychological operations (PSYOP) soldiers worked to build trust and confidence in our mission with the local populace. Psychological operations teams quickly developed simple yet effective means for conveying information to the people of Afghanistan.

Millions of leaflets were airdropped along with tons of humanitarian rations. PSYOP planners carefully crafted the leaflets to make sure they conveyed the right message. Radio broadcasts were developed and broadcast by way of the Air Force's Commando Solo aircraft.

Civil affairs teams built support for U.S. efforts by working with the local populace to rebuild roads, bridges and schools. One of the most significant accomplishments of CA teams was ensuring the repair and opening of the Freedom Bridge between Afghanistan and Uzbekistan. This milestone event enabled even larger amounts of humanitarian relief to enter the country. The positive efforts of our CA and PSYOP soldiers will be felt for years to come.

Today, the Taliban is no longer in control of Afghanistan and al Qaeda is on the run, but this in no way means our job is over. We continue to operate in dozens of countries around the world on a daily basis where our soldiers are in harm's way. It is still a very dangerous world out there, and we still have a mission to accomplish. Our overarching goal is continued success in the global war on terrorism. To accomplish this, there are a number of priorities in USASOC.

The seamless integration of our Army Reserve and National Guard forces is essential. Part of maintaining a sustainable, viable asset includes integration of our Reserve and National Guard soldiers into our mission. During the past year, our many accomplishments could not have been achieved without our reserve component forces.

The Special Operations Support Command was augmented by three Reserve and National Guard units from the conventional forces. They trained hard, learned quickly and seamlessly integrated into the active component units that remained behind supporting the war. In addition, components of these units deployed in theater with our active forces.

In the 13-year history of this command, this is a feat that had never been attempted. The fact that this worked extremely well in the first year of the campaign, and continues to work as we move into the second year with new conventional Reserve and National Guard units attached, is a testament to the ingenuity of a leading edge special operations force.

As we speak, our National Guard SF units are taking the lead in combating any threat our forces may encounter. Without the 19th and 20th Special Forces Groups (Airborne), we would not be able to maintain our worldwide presence.

The bulk of our reserve assets are in civil affairs and psychological operations units. The high operational tempo we have placed on these units means they have played and will continue to play a major role as we combat terrorism wherever it is.

The U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School is the centerpiece of USASOC. Our unconventional warfare doctrine was shaped and molded within the schoolhouse and validated through decades of our Robin Sage training exercises. Our goal for the future in the schoolhouse is to ensure that quality instructors and doctrinal-based courses are available to continue to produce the finest special operations soldiers in the world.

One of our SOF truths is that SOF soldiers cannot be mass produced in times of crisis. This still holds true today. Ensuring that a continuous flow of trained and ready soldiers successfully complete basic and advanced ARSOF training without lowering standards is our way of guaranteeing that SOF is a viable force well into the future.

The number of students going through the schoolhouse has nearly doubled since September 11. We have been able to do this by adding instructors and courses without diminishing quality. This effort will continue because the demand is still great for ARSOF soldiers in all specialties.

As we train these soldiers, another goal is to make sure they have the finest equipment possible. Some of the equipment we are continuing to develop includes lighter yet stronger combat gear, safer parachutes, reliable weapons and improved communications gear. We owe it to our soldiers to make sure we equip them with the finest gear available.

Our leadership in this command continues to have the necessary vision to see that future battles must also be fought with the very best special operators this country can provide.

We should accept nothing less. ARSOF has a long tradition of recruiting and training only the best soldiers-often four-time volunteers-to the high standard necessary to decisively engage the enemy.

Special Forces recruiting is stronger today than it was a year ago. Not only are we continuing to recruit from within the Army to provide the ARSOF community with experienced senior soldiers, but we are also reverting to our historical recruiting practice of accessing highly talented civilians into the SF training pipeline, thereby augmenting our recruiting mission. Early indications are that this direct accession program is a success.

Once we train these soldiers, we will work hard to keep them. An increase to the special duty pay of Special Forces soldiers and the changes made to aviation continuation pay are just two of the successful incentives to encourage soldiers to remain in Army special operations forces.

Our soldiers can look back on this past year with great pride knowing that they were a part of something historic. Whether ARSOF assets are supporting the global war on terrorism, training foreign armies, or supporting home station missions, USASOC stands ready to answer the nation's call.

By Lt. Gen. Bryan (Doug) Brown* Commanding General, U.S. Army Special Operations Command

*As the Green Book went to press, Lt. Gen. Bryan D. Brown was nominated and confirmed by the Senate to the grade of lieutenant general and assignment as deputy commander, U.S. Special Operations Command, and Maj. Gen. Philip R. Kensinger Jr. was nominated and confirmed by the Senate to the grade of lieutenant general and assignment as the commanding general, US. Army Special Operations Command.

Copyright Association of the United States Army Oct 2002

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3723/is_200210/ai_n9085719/print

U.S. to Send More Troops to Search Caves of Tora Bora

New York Times
December 21, 2001
By DAVID STOUT
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/21/international/21CND-MILI.html

WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 - Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said today that he had approved the deployment of a substantial number of American troops to search the caves of Tora Bora for die-hard terrorists.

"Whatever is needed will be sent," Mr. Rumsfeld said. "And it won't be just U.S. It will be coalition forces."

Later, President Bush reiterated his commitment to doing whatever it takes to hunt down terrorists, vowing that while Osama bin Laden might "slither out" of Afghanistan he will not escape the worldwide reach of the American military.

The president, in a year-end conversation with several reporters, said the United States is prepared to send troops to other nations seeking help in pursuing terrorists. Mr. Bush repeated a theme he first voice just after the Sept. 11 attacks: other countries must be "for us or against us" in combatting terrorism.

Today, he said his message to world leaders is: "Thank you for your condolences. I appreciate your flowers. Now arrest somebody if they're in your country."

In Afghanistan, British special forces are working with the American military, and scores of American troops are already operating in the Tora Bora cave region. Several military officials have said that the man running the day-to-day operations in Afghanistan, Gen. Tommy R. Franks, has asked for hundreds more.

While Mr. Rumsfeld declined to be specific about numbers, he confirmed the reports of a sharp increase in the number of soldiers and marines who, along with Afghan forces, will be going cave to cave, looking for "information and evidence and people and weapons."

As if to dispel any notion that a lull in aerial bombing signals a quieter, somehow tamer campaign, the secretary said American troops had been instructed that, in some areas of Afghanistan, "they are entitled to assume that anyone in there is an enemy and may be dealt with" accordingly.

The American military's "rules of engagement" in dealing with pockets of Taliban and Al Qaeda resistance "have our forces leaning forward, not back," Mr. Rumsfeld said.

There has been no bombing of Tora Bora for the last two days simply because American and other anti-Taliban forces are already there, hunting through the mazes of caves and tunnels, Mr. Rumsfeld said.

Mr. Rumsfeld said that in a bombing raid on Thursday on a suspected enemy convoy in eastern Afghanistan "a lot of people were killed and a lot of vehicles damaged." The attack was made southwest of Tora Bora, according to Gen. Peter Pace of the Marine Corps, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He said the convoy was believed to be carrying suspected Al Qaeda or Taliban leadership, but he did not specify which group might have been involved.

Within an hour of the Pentagon briefing, an Afghan news agency report said the target was in fact a convoy of Afghan elders, tribal chiefs and commanders from eastern Afghanistan on their way to Kabul to attend the inauguration on Saturday of the interim Afghan government.

But the Pentagon said otherwise. "The intelligence we gathered at the time indicated to us that this was in fact leadership and we struck the leadership," the general said at the late-morning briefing. And well into the afternoon, Pentagon officials said they had learned nothing to contradict their initial intelligence, which labeled the convoy as belonging to the enemy.

The Defense Secretary is typically so circumspect in answering journalists' questions that his remarks today about the important role of American ground troops carried extra weight.

President Bush, Mr. Rumsfeld and General Franks have all repeatedly said that the war on terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks will be long, hard and dirty. Mr. Rumsfeld said the United States had received the strongest possible assurances from officials of the interim Afghan government that they share the goal of ridding the country of terrorists.

Mr. Rumsfeld said information gathered in Afghanistan to date had led to the arrest of suspected terrorists around the world "and undoubtedly" prevented other attacks.

Military officials have acknowledged that the Tora Bora region has even more caves and tunnels than they had expected - "hundreds and hundreds," as Mr. Rumsfeld put it today. Many have been destroyed by American bombing, he said, but many remain.

There were still no new answers on the question about the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden.

"We don't know if he's alive or dead," General Pace said.

And Mr. Rumsfeld, while conceding that information on Mr. bin Laden's possible whereabouts had been scarce of late, recited what he said was an axiom within the intelligence community: "The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence."

Navy SEALs Talk About Afghan Mission

December 21, 2001
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-SEALs-Afghanistan.html

CORONADO, Calif. (AP) -- Four days before the U.S. Marines touched down outside the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, the SEALs were on the ground there, miles behind enemy lines.

Their target was a private airstrip built by a wealthy Arab to reach his hunting lodge. Within two weeks, the world would know it as Camp Rhino, and the Marines there would be helping opposition Afghan forces run the Taliban out of town.

The Navy took the unusual step Thursday of having two SEALs who were among the first U.S. troops in Afghanistan speak about the 96 hours they spent outside Kandahar. Their names were withheld, and they declined questions that could compromise security.

``I've been in 16 years and this was like the big game,'' said the platoon's chief enlisted man. ``We're real fortunate to get a chance ... to be tested.''

The airstrip that would become Camp Rhino was believed to be deserted. The SEAL team, one of three based in Coronado, was sent in to make sure.

With each carrying 100 pounds of food, weapons and gear, the SEALs were dropped ``a significant distance'' from the strip. Between them and their target was a silent, uninhabited landscape of sand and dust.

``The only thing you hear is the wind,'' said a 34-year-old lieutenant from Iowa, the platoon's No. 2 in command.

It was an area so isolated they found no land mines even though Afghanistan is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world. To remain undetected, they communicated by hand signals and spoke only when necessary and in a close whisper. They left no traces, packing out even their bodily waste.

They moved at night under moonless skies, lit by a dome of stars. The lieutenant brought along a small thermometer that showed the temperature dropping into the 20s. During the day, they slept out of sight. Dirt covered their bodies.

Through night vision goggles they could see animals that resembled coyotes. During the days, U.S. jets streaking overhead.

``It's a cold, desolate place where anything could happen. You have to be prepared for anything,'' said the top enlisted man, a 35-year-old from Ohio.

They found the landing strip unoccupied and passed the word that all was clear. But as the Marines grappled with the logistics for landing, the SEALs' 24-hour mission stretched into 96 hours.

Their silence wasn't broken until Nov. 25 when the thunder of the CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters announced the arrival of the Marines. For the SEALs providing security, this was the most dangerous moment, but the landing went off without a hitch.

``I want to thank you guys for freezing for us,'' the Marines' company commander told them.

Hours later, the SEALs were gone, heading back to an unnamed base in the Middle East. Twelve days later, on Dec. 7, the Taliban abandoned Kandahar.

The Navy's elite ``Sea, Air, Land'' force has served as an advance guard for the Marine Corps in nearly every U.S. conflict since its formation in 1962. Its members are trained to handle almost any mission on any terrain, from deserts to frozen tundra to the high seas.

``That's why we exist,'' said Evin Thompson, chief staff officer for the Coronado SEAL teams.

A Silence in the Afghan Mountains

By Kevin Sack and Craig Pyes, Special to The Times
September 24, 2006

GARDEZ, Afghanistan — After completing their deployment to this remote firebase, the Green Berets of ODA 2021 left for home covered in glory.

The 10-member Special Forces team, part of the Alabama National Guard, returned to their families in the spring of 2003 with tales to tell of frenzied firefights and narrow escapes.

Its commander had nominated each of his men — as well as himself — for medals for valor. The team's performance was heralded as evidence that the Guard could play as equals with the regular Army in the war on terrorism.

But the team also had come home with secrets.

Apparently unknown to Army officials, two detainees had died in the team's custody in separate incidents during the unit's final month in eastern Afghanistan. Several other detainees allege that they were badly beaten or tortured while held at the base in Gardez.

One victim, an unarmed peasant, was shot to death while being held for questioning after a fierce firefight. The other, an 18-year-old Afghan army recruit, died after being interrogated at the firebase. Descriptions of his injuries were consistent with severe beatings and other abuse.

A member of the Special Forces team told The Times his unit held a meeting after the teen's death to coordinate their stories should an investigation arise.

"Everybody on the team had knowledge of it," the soldier said, insisting on anonymity. "You just don't talk about that stuff in the Special Forces community. What happens downrange stays downrange…. Nobody wants to get anybody in trouble. Just sit back, and hope it will go away."

What distinguishes these two fatalities from scores of other questionable deaths in U.S. custody is that they were successfully concealed — not just from the American public but from the military's chain of command and legal authorities.

The deaths came to light only after an investigation by The Times and a nonprofit educational organization, the Crimes of War Project, led the Army to open criminal inquiries on the incidents. Two years later, the cases remain under investigation and no charges have been filed.

The Times has since reviewed thousands of pages of internal military records showing that prisoner abuse by Special Forces units was more common in Afghanistan than previously acknowledged.

More than a year before the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal broke in Iraq, top officers worried that harsh treatment and excessive detentions could lead to criminal prosecutions.

In one November 2002 correspondence, a high-ranking Special Operations official said military police were detecting "an extremely high level of physical abuse" of detainees transferred from Special Forces field bases to a prison in Bagram.

An operations officer with the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force, the command supervising Special Forces teams in Afghanistan, complained in a memo that prisoners were being held for so long without charges that it "may be implied as kidnapping, a federal crime."

Early in 2003, the chief Special Forces intelligence officer in Afghanistan warned in a note to the task force commander, Col. James G. "Greg" Champion, and his top aides: "As you are all aware, alleged assaults and kidnapping [have] been occurring for quite some time. Again, I want to emphasize, this is not isolated."

The same officer reported another improper detention less than two weeks later, notifying Champion's staff in a memo that reflected his exasperation. "Today is Day 5 of this hostage crisis," wrote the intelligence officer, Maj. David Davis. He said that such unauthorized detentions amounted to "criminal conduct in my book."

There also were early warnings from outside sources about prisoner mistreatment.

In a series of meetings that began in late 2002, officials with the International Committee of the Red Cross told top U.S. commanders in Afghanistan that they had fielded a rash of detainee abuse reports involving at least five Special Forces firebases, according to previously undisclosed military documents.

The Red Cross representatives protested that the bases had, in effect, become short-term detention centers, without adequately trained personnel or effective monitoring, said several U.S. officials with knowledge of the meetings.

Most of the bases singled out by the agency were under the control of National Guardsmen with the Alabama-based 20th Special Forces Group. The compound at Gardez, then occupied by ODA 2021, was portrayed as one of the worst. Detainees there alleged they were beaten, kicked, immersed in icy water and deprived of sleep for days at a time.

The Army declined to comment on the cases involving ODA 2021 or more generally on allegations of detainee abuse.

Special Forces firebases in Afghanistan — often the first stop in a detainee's journey to a holding facility and possibly on to the prison at Guantanamo Bay — operated largely beyond the reach of human rights monitors, journalists and, at times, the military chain of command.

Because of their clandestine nature, Special Forces operations have been a concern to some in Congress and the State Department who worry that human rights violations could be occurring under a cloak of secrecy.

The handling of detainees in Afghanistan became a murky area after President Bush declared early in the war, launched in October 2001, that the Geneva Convention would not be applied to Al Qaeda, and Taliban captives would not be treated as prisoners of war. Instead, detainees were to be treated "humanely," according to a February 2002 White House directive.

The internal military records show that although senior U.S. commanders in Afghanistan issued warnings and distributed rules consistent with the Army field manual and Geneva Convention, those procedures were routinely ignored.

"You have so much freedom and authority over there," one member of ODA 2021 said. "It kind of makes you feel like God when you're out there in cowboy and Indian country."

The documents also show that in 2003 the leadership of ODA 2021 was repeatedly criticized by its superiors. One 20th Group officer said the Gardez ODA (for Operational Detachment Alpha) was "the most troubled" field team among nearly a dozen in Afghanistan. Another senior officer expressed concern in a note that the team was gaining a reputation as "a rogue unit."

That a small Special Forces detachment could be tied to two detainee deaths and two apparent cover-ups in less than two weeks reflected an almost perfect confluence of circumstances. They included the personality of the team, the unaccountability of its leadership, the evolution of U.S. policy on detentions, the failure of United Nations officials to report abuses, and the complicity of Afghan officials.

The story of the team's deployment, like the five-year American campaign in Afghanistan itself, is a tale of high-stakes but often conflicting goals. For the men of ODA 2021, it would be a place and time in which questionable deaths and unquestionable daring were all part of the same mission.

Hotel Gardez

The shooting war was supposedly over when about 300 National Guardsmen of the 20th Group's 1st Battalion arrived in Afghanistan nine months after the December 2001 ouster of the Taliban regime. Nonetheless, it was a dangerous and chaotic time.

Al Qaeda and the Taliban were in flight, but not vanquished. The new government was trying to stand up, but it was still wobbly. And, much like today, the U.S. military struggled to balance the sometimes incompatible missions of combat and reconstruction.

As this latest rotation of U.S. Special Forces hit the ground, much of the countryside remained beyond the control of the newly installed government of interim President Hamid Karzai.

It would fall to Special Forces teams such as ODA 2021 to root out Al Qaeda and Taliban stragglers and unearth caches of weapons. In Paktia, the province that includes Gardez, the task was complicated by byzantine local politics.

Tribal warlords and bandits had skirmished for centuries over the inhospitable terrain along the porous border with Pakistan. They had only been emboldened by the power vacuums and shifting alliances created after the U.S.-led invasion.

As in centuries past, power and wealth in the region flowed to those who controlled the trade routes. In 2002, that meant controlling 17 longtime checkpoints along about 50 miles of dusty mountain road between the provincial capitals of Khowst and Gardez. Both of the detainee deaths linked to ODA 2021 came as a consequence of efforts to pacify that perilous route.

For the Americans, securing the checkpoints would help them detect militants' movements and ensure the free passage of troops and supplies. For the warlords, who were regularly accused of extorting cash or produce from truck drivers, the checkpoints afforded a means to pay and feed their militias.

The Green Berets were prepared to remove illegally operated checkpoints by force, but Pentagon planners regarded the problem as a local political dispute that should be handled by the Afghans. Besides, the U.S. military was under pressure to move from combat operations to a reconstruction phase aimed at winning hearts and minds.

The stakes could not have been higher for Col. Champion, commander of the 20th Special Forces Group. Not only was the Army counting on his National Guard troops to perform like active-duty professionals, but Champion also had been placed in charge of the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force.

It was the first time since the Korean War that a National Guard unit held command over all U.S. Special Forces in wartime. If Champion succeeded, a general's star awaited his lapel.

The 20th, with about 1,600 members, is one of the Army's seven active Special Forces groups, and one of only two consisting of National Guard troops. ODA 2021 belonged to the 1st Battalion, based in Huntsville, Ala., and its 10 members came from five Southern states.

Some were longtime friends and neighbors, like Sgt. 1st Class Dan L. Smith, a world-class judo competitor who ran a gym outside Nashville, and Sgt. 1st Class Scott Barkalow, a locomotive engineer. Though many of the guardsmen had drilled together for years, most would be seeing their first combat.

The team leader, Capt. Michael M. May, 35, was a decorated Kentucky state trooper who had a cop's respect for procedure and the chain of command. A father of two, he was cautious and regarded the Special Forces as ambassadors who were helping the Afghans reclaim their country. Though some of his men were eager to round up bad guys, May focused on the team's broader mission of training Afghan troops.

"I'm going to be the one to write the letter to your kids if you get hurt or killed," he would tell his teammates.

Some clearly felt May was too passive, especially as conditions in the area deteriorated. They "wanted [us] to grab our guns and drive out the door and go do it," one team member recalled.

In Gardez, the dusty provincial capital nearly a mile and a half above sea level, the ODA settled into an adobe fort the size of a football field. They called it Hotel Gardez. It was surrounded by 25-foot mud walls and had an elevated latrine accessible only by ladder.

The region was endlessly brown, parched by drought. Being stationed there, one U.S. soldier said, was like "living in a gravel pit."

The fortress came under regular attack, most often by Taliban loyalists lobbing missiles from a pair of nearby hilltops. One day, a shell exploded in a cemetery behind the fort and the soldiers watched dogs fight over the bones of unearthed remains.

Army regulations at the base were relaxed. The guardsmen wore bushy beards and civilian clothing, a look intended to ease their approach to locals. They also adorned the grille of a red Toyota truck with a James Brown doll, thrilling local children when, at the press of a button, it sang out: "Whoa! I feel good!"

The Warlord

From their earliest days in Gardez, the members of ODA 2021 bristled at being kept on a short leash. They were particularly eager to mount an offensive against their primary nemesis, a renegade warlord named Pacha Khan Zadran.

In an assessment sent to headquarters shortly after its arrival, the team's leaders labeled the warlord "a thug" and asked permission "to take a much stronger stance" against him.

Pacha Khan was an imposing figure. With heavy eyebrows, a thick dyed mustache and trademark bandolier, he resembled a Pashtun Pancho Villa.

As the leader of the Zadran tribe, he commanded 300 to 600 armed men and, with American backing, had helped fight the Taliban. He also controlled various checkpoints along the Khowst road.

CIA and Special Forces operatives who dealt with Pacha Khan (or PKZ, as they called him), described him as brutish, mercurial and unstable. "I thought he was a windbag and a bully and just out for the money," said one U.S. intelligence analyst.

But Pacha Khan's stature grew when he became one of the signatories to the December 2001 Bonn agreement that formed the transitional Afghan government. Karzai rewarded his support by naming him governor of Paktia, then rescinded the decision after Afghan military commanders in Gardez refused to cede power to the warlord.

Pacha Khan responded by furiously bombarding Gardez in the spring of 2002. American forces were caught in the middle of the rocket attacks and the policy confusion over how to deal with the warlord.

CIA operatives and Special Forces tacticians hatched a number of plans to capture and imprison him, but senior officials in Washington always resisted. The havoc he wrought was exactly the kind of intra-Afghan dispute that the Defense Department insisted should be dealt with by the Karzai government.

Denied its preferred option, the CIA tried intimidation. As Pacha Khan was leaving a confrontational meeting at the Gardez firebase, intelligence officials arranged for three jets to buzz the compound in a display of American might. The low-level flyover sent the warlord diving beneath his car, toppling his turban, according to a witness.

Then U.S. officials embraced a plan by Gen. Atiqullah Lodin, an Afghan military commander, to pay Pacha Khan's checkpoint commanders to defect to the government. Lodin said in an interview that the CIA put up the cash. Military correspondence shows that the agency contributed at least $100,000.

One who defected for dollars was the commander of the strategic Sato Kandaw checkpoint, Ahmad Naseer, who told The Times the CIA gave him $3,000 and a pickup truck. He said an agent photographed him accepting the payoff.

By November, however, ODA 2021 had begun receiving reports that the checkpoint shakedowns had resumed.

The team's patience was already wearing thin when, on the morning of Nov. 27, 2002, a unit convoy was ambushed while passing through a steep draw on the Khowst road. The soldiers had just picked up the 1st Battalion commander, Lt. Col. Steven W. Duff, who was headed to Gardez for a Thanksgiving visit despite warnings about security along the road.

"We told him if he wants to come see us, take a helicopter — don't come down the Khowst road," a team member recalled. But Duff insisted. As his red Toyota sped through the kill zone, a sniper round slammed through Duff's left thigh.

Smith and Sgt. 1st Class Jason Howard ran off the snipers, and Duff was evacuated by helicopter. Indebted to the team, he recommended Smith and Howard, the team's senior medic, for the Bronze Star.

The team took it personally that its battalion commander had been wounded while in its care. After Pacha Khan quickly emerged as the prime suspect, the ODA redoubled its efforts to have him listed as a high-value target.

But the warlord was considered "a pseudo political figure" — untouchable unless they could tie him to the Taliban or Al Qaeda, according to an official of the Special Operations task force. If they could, he wrote, "the ballgame changes completely."

He concluded: "We do not want to get in the middle of Afghan politics, even if he is a shithead who deserves to spend a decade or two at Gitmo."

'Smear Campaign'

Five days after Duff was shot, a commando task force made an unexpected visit to the Gardez firebase in pursuit of a top-tier target believed to be in the area.

The complex mission called for ODA 2021 to join the operation, but no one had bothered to inform the team. The team's commander, Capt. May, refused to go along because of inadequate planning, according to several 20th Group officials and documents reviewed by The Times.

May's refusal infuriated the Delta Force officer in charge of the commando task force, the officials said. A month later, on his way out of the country, the officer delivered a four-page memo to Special Operations officials, in effect accusing May of cowardice and dereliction of duty.

At Champion's request, Duff looked into the accusations. Though he ultimately dismissed them as unfounded and "a smear campaign," he learned that many on May's team considered him a tentative leader, more focused on bringing his men home alive than on attacking the enemy. Duff reassigned May to the battalion's operations center in neighboring Uzbekistan.

Though Duff insisted that the transfer was unrelated to the criticism, May saw the reassignment as "a career-ending thing," said one 20th Group colleague. "Mike was stressed about this," the colleague said. He "was devastated."

In an interview, Duff said he had intended to transfer May anyway to season him for promotion. May, who referred requests for an interview to the 20th Group public affairs office, was in fact promoted to major and given a company command after returning to the U.S.

May's removal heartened those on the team who wanted to conduct more "posse operations" in the manner of the Army's Delta Force and the Navy's SEALs.

"This was an aggressive, door-kicking bunch," said one 20th Group official, "and Mike May was the control rod."

Bamian Mutiny

More than 100 miles to the northwest, in Bamian, another Green Beret team was having its own leadership problems. For many in ODA 2015, Chief Warrant Officer Kenneth C. Waller, their team commander, was too hungry for a fight and had a habit of planning risky missions without their input.

Waller was not a weekend warrior but a full-time National Guardsman. He worked at 20th Group headquarters in Birmingham and was perceived by many to be Col. Champion's "golden child." He declined to be interviewed for this article.

Late in November 2002, Waller's team discovered a large cache of weapons in the nearby Kahmard Valley. They linked it to a warlord suspected of supporting Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Waller carried the news directly to Champion's command, bypassing his 1st Battalion superiors. He argued for a full assault on the area, peppering his entreaties with reminders of 9/11 and imploring commanders to "think war."

His end runs, and his flamboyant prose, incensed Waller's superiors at headquarters. They were so annoyed by his tendency to act on his own that they marked his periodic sightings on a wall map, calling the exercise "Where's Waller?"

The team leader had trouble within his own ranks as well. The Bamian unit's senior noncommissioned officer, Master Sgt. Pasquale "Jim" Russo, sent a defiant note to battalion officials in December openly challenging Waller's proposal to raid an area that was thick with enemy fighters. "I can't think of many more principles of combat that we have not violated," Russo said of the plan.

The operation was temporarily scrubbed, redesigned and its planning assigned to a different team.

Not long after Russo's complaint, a sizable contingent of the 2015 team let battalion leaders know they preferred not to serve under Waller, several members said. It was an almost unthinkable act of mutiny.

After Maj. Tony Wheeler, a top 1st Battalion official, arrived in Bamian in early January to head the provincial reconstruction team there, he reported to Duff that the trust between Waller and his men had deteriorated beyond repair. "The team seems to see Ken as a loose canon [sic] who might get them killed for no reason," he wrote.

Duff relieved Waller of his command in Bamian and ordered him to Gardez as Capt. May's replacement. Champion signed off on the transfer. However, Duff acknowledged making the decision over the warnings of his own staff. His aides cautioned that Waller would be even less controllable in Gardez and that inserting him into the conflict with Pacha Khan might make things combustible.

"It was like throwing a match into gasoline," one Special Forces official said.

Chaotic Mission

Back in Gardez, ODA 2021 was between commanders on the night of Feb. 6, 2003, when the team set out on a "snatch mission." The plan was to swoop into the nearby village of Neknam and seize two men suspected of having ties to the Taliban.

The first was taken without incident. But before team members could grab the second, they came under intense fire that left two soldiers pinned against a wall. The team responded with small arms and hand grenades.

Because the leaderless team had failed to file proper operational plans, headquarters had no idea who was in command on the ground. To those monitoring radio communications from the scene, it appeared that U.S. forces might be attacking one another in the dark. That also made it unsafe to call in airstrikes to help end the battle.

Both suspects were finally captured, but almost immediately the team was blistered with high-level criticism.

"As you can imagine, this makes everyone in this unit look like amateurs and incompetent as well," Lt. Col. Robert E. Biller, a top Special Operations task force official, wrote to 20th Group counterparts. Biller characterized the chaotic mission as a "goatscrew."

Col. Champion promptly confined the team to its base. Then he and his staff set out to control the damage. Champion personally briefed Lt. Gen. Dan McNeill, commander of U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan. Champion's aides later reported he had succeeded in stressing the intelligence value of the captured detainees rather than the team's blunders.

"Things have died down," Maj. Jeff Pounding, a Special Operations task force official, wrote to subordinates in the 1st Battalion the following day. "We turned the emphasis of operation of a 'rogue team' to a 'time-sensitive PUC operation.' " PUC, or "person under U.S. control," was shorthand for detainee.

But the missteps continued. Two days after the raid, the team in Gardez transferred two detainees to the Bagram Collection Point, a U.S. holding facility. The detainees arrived "bagged," their mouths taped and hoods secured around their necks, according to military documents.

"As you well know," Pounding wrote to battalion officials, "this is a significant violation of the PUC handling procedures. Bagram detention facility may be doing an investigation."

Red Cross Warnings

There should have been little confusion over detainee policy among members of the 20th Special Forces Group. Champion had distributed the Army's guidelines when the 20th deployed to Afghanistan, and they had been reissued when reports of abuse first made their way to headquarters.

Only detainees found to meet Pentagon criteria for prolonged imprisonment, such as those with clear ties to Al Qaeda or the Taliban, were to be transferred to Bagram. Fearing that innocents might wind up at Guantanamo, Gen. McNeill had stressed to subordinates that he wanted terrorists, not truck drivers and farmers, said a civilian military advisor.

But it wasn't always easy for soldiers to tell the difference. Given the constant threat of ambush, their instinct often was to detain first and ask questions later. The Pentagon criteria provided plenty of latitude, allowing the detention of any suspects "who pose a threat" or "who may have intelligence value."

There was supposed to be a 96-hour limit on battlefield detentions. Sometimes prisoner transfers to Bagram were delayed because helicopters weren't available. But at other times, one 20th Group official said, Special Forces teams extended their prisoners' stays in hopes of extracting better intelligence.

State Department officials in Afghanistan said the teams seemed not to care that their door-kicking roundups and prolonged detentions might stoke local resentment even as the Army was trying to build bridges.

"They felt … there was carte blanche to carry out actions and there would be little repercussion if they made tactical mistakes," said a State Department official who asked not to be named.

By the end of 2002, the Red Cross had relayed early complaints of prisoner mistreatment to top U.S. military officials in Afghanistan. On Jan. 10, 2003, officials of the organization met with Gen. McNeill's staff, describing the 20th Group's firebases as some of the worst offenders.

Two weeks after the Red Cross meeting in Afghanistan, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld convened a working group in Washington to recommend whether the list of approved anti-terrorism interrogation methods should be expanded. McNeill asked his various intelligence-gathering units to assess the techniques that were in use in Afghanistan.

Despite the Red Cross allegations, the 1st Battalion's chief intelligence officer reported back that there were no problems. "I have not witnessed any abuse or maltreatment of PUCs," Capt. Steven D. Perry wrote. "When they detain a person, I have faith that it is for a very good reason."

On Jan. 24, 2003, McNeill's command reported on its interrogation techniques in a memo to the Pentagon. The list conformed to the Army field manual's approved battlefield methods, but the memo also requested approval of "more aggressive, creative and flexible techniques."

The wish list included food deprivation for up to 24 hours, sensory overload through loud music and extreme temperature changes and the use of muzzled dogs to create "controlled fear." Some of the requested procedures might need to be assessed for compliance with Pentagon rules for humane treatment, the memo acknowledged.

However, according to the Red Cross, many of the more coercive techniques were already being used at some of the firebases.

Blood and Grudge

ODA 2021's new commander took charge in Gardez on Feb. 7 as recriminations were still flying from the "time-sensitive PUC operation" in Neknam. For a team chafing at the second-guessing of its missions, Waller's arrival was a welcome relief.

"He wanted to be aggressive," said one team member. "We knew he had problems with his other team, but he fit right in with us."

Another team member said Waller quickly won respect. "He seemed very competent and certainly wasn't afraid in combat," he said. In mid-February, only 12 days after he had taken command, Waller and his team were returning from patrol along a road blanketed with 5 inches of snow. The red Toyota — the same truck Duff had been shot in — rumbled along in the middle of a five-vehicle convoy.

Staff Sgt. Mark "Marco" Deliz, a team engineer from Oneonta, Ala., tried to steer precisely through the tread marks carved by the two vehicles ahead. But his front right tire strayed a few inches and hit a land mine.

The explosion blew the truck 6 feet into the air, military reports said. Watching in horror from the vehicle behind, Waller could not imagine that anyone had survived.

With blood streaming down his face, Deliz stumbled out the driver's door, brushing the remains of a foot from his lap. It belonged to his teammate and passenger, Barkalow, the 40-year old intelligence sergeant from Burns, Tenn.

Deliz determined that Barkalow was still alive and gestured for someone to radio for a helicopter. Staff Sgt. Philip S. Abdow, a junior medic who had joined the team six weeks earlier, wrapped what remained of Barkalow's right leg.

After the unnerving incident, the medic accompanied Barkalow on his helicopter evacuation. Abdow reportedly acted so frantically during the flight, barking orders and cursing, that the copter crew later complained to Special Operations officials.

He was recalled to battalion headquarters for evaluation before being cleared to return to the field, according to a 20th Group officer familiar with the incident. Abdow did not respond to requests for an interview.

By several accounts, the attack had a profoundly sobering effect on the team. Before the explosion, members had merely been frustrated by political constraints on their activities. Now they shared Barkalow's loss — and some nursed an abiding grudge.

"You get mad when you see your buddies blown up," one team member said. "You stay pissed off about it."

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About this series

"Firebase Gardez" examines the deployment to Afghanistan of a decorated Alabama National Guard unit. It is the result of a yearlong investigation in the U.S. and Afghanistan by Times staff writer Kevin Sack and freelance investigative journalist Craig Pyes. It was written by Sack.

Pyes, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and frequent contributor to the newspaper, reported from Afghanistan jointly for The Times and the Crimes of War Project, a Washington-based nonprofit that describes itself as "a collaboration of journalists, lawyers and scholars dedicated to raising public awareness of the laws of war." In 2004, the group provided The Times with the first evidence of an unreported Afghan death in U.S. custody and joined with the newspaper to investigate further. That led to a military inquiry by the Army's Criminal Investigation Command that continues today.

The Times reviewed thousands of pages of internal military documents to reconstruct the period when a 10-member Special Forces combat team called ODA 2021 (for Operational Detachment Alpha) was assigned to the Gardez firebase.

Every member of the team was contacted. Most declined to be interviewed or referred reporters to public affairs officers. The Army and all of its subordinate commands — the U.S. Central Command, U.S. Special Operations Command, Army Special Forces Command, 20th Special Forces Group and the Alabama National Guard — declined to comment.

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