Friday, August 29, 2008

The Battle In Southern Afghanistan -- How One Battle Was Won By Afghan And Coalition Forces

GARMSIR DISTRICT, AF - Marines with Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, NATO – International Security Assistance Force conduct operations in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan. Photographer: Staff Sgt. Robert Piper, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit Public Affairs.

How British Forces Took Garmsir From
The Taliban -- The Independent


"Annabel", as the British had codenamed the tiny biblical Helmand village of mud compounds, was no more. The shattered wreck of crumbling walls and a giant crater left by a 2,000lb aerial bomb bore testament to the ferocity of the fighting that had taken place.

This was the front line between British forces and the Taliban pouring over the border from Pakistan. Until a few weeks ago, it was prime enemy territory, an unforgiving warren of trenches that British troops entered at their own peril.

Looking out over the deceptive calm of the newly planted corn fields, Captain George Aitken said: "We uncovered 37 bunkers. We found their sleeping bags. It was First World War trench warfare around here."

Just 100km (60 miles) north of the Pakistani province of Baluchistan, these small compounds in Garmsir were deserted by farmers long ago to be replaced by the invaders from the south. Garmsir – it means "too much heat" – proved a thorn in the British side for a long time. The impenetrable front line was 100 metres from a lookout where the British soldiers and insurgents could eyeball each other.

Read more ....

My Comment: Kudos to The Independent for publishing this story .... I expected this story to come from a military blog or independent reporter. When I read stories like the above .... i am always wishing for more detail and information.

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