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Operation Hammer Down

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US assault in Afghanistan

Operation Hammer Down
Part of theWar in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Two US Army soldiers with an Afghan soldier during Operation Hammer Down
Two US Army soldiers with an Afghanistan soldier during Operation Hammer Down
Date24 June 2011 – 30 June 2011
Location
Gambir Jungle, Pech River Valley, Kunar Province, Northeast Afghanistan
Result

Success:

Enemy operations disrupted.

Foreign-fighter training camps reduced.

Enemy lines of communication severely disrupted.
Belligerents
 Afghanistan
United States
Taliban
Commanders and leaders
United StatesColonel Colin P. TuleyUnknown
Casualties and losses
US: 5 killed
Dozens wounded
Taliban: Approximately 124 killed
51 Wounded
Eastern Afghanistan

Major operations

Airstrikes

Major insurgent attacks
2002

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

Massacres

Other

Operation Hammer Down was a seven-dayU.S.-led assault offensive in June 2011 designed to eliminate foreign fighters and training camps in theWatapur Valley ofKunar Province inAfghanistan in preparation of an eventual push into the Western Pech area. The operation's primary objective was to destroy suspected training camps at the northern end of the Watapur in order to interdict the flow of insurgents through the valley and forbid theTaliban from increasing their manpower in the western Pech. This operation was conducted by the2nd Battalion 35th Infantry, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division (Task Force Cacti) as a battalion-wide mission that spread each element throughout the area of operations[1]

Detailed Account

[edit]

Along with Afghan National Army soldiers, US forces were dropped off on a high ridgeline by helicopter just before midnight on June 24, 2011. With all their gear, the soldiers could not scale down the mountain at first. This was until they found a natural land bridge, only to be intercepted by Taliban forces. The firefight lasted four days, and the US forces became "combat ineffective[2]" with only 15 soldiers. Eventually, it got to the point where evacuation was necessary. After destroying the sandbags and walls they were using for cover, the US troops were told to go to an evacuation point where friendly forces would evacuate them. However, once they got to the evacuation point, the helicopters designated to pick them up couldn't reach them due to harsh weather conditions, so they had to attempt to fix the sandbags and wait. Ultimately, they were evacuated and left the area.[3]

Result/Significance

[edit]

In the end, Enemy operations in the Pech and Watapur valleys were disrupted, the Taliban fighter training camps were reduced, and the Enemy lines of communication were severely disrupted. So, this operation was partially successful, and the US forces significantly impacted the rest of the offensive in thePech andWatapur Valleys. In the end, another squad was sent in, and they quickly took the camps due to the disruption caused by Operation Hammer Down.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ryan D. Wadle, Ph. D. (2014)."HAMMER DOWN The Battle for the Watapur Valley, 2011"(PDF). Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press US Army Combined Arms Center. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 6 June 2015. Retrieved16 September 2017.
  2. ^Mulrine, Anna (7 September 2011)."Battle for Afghanistan's Gambir Jungle: Into the 'Valley of Death'".Christian Science Monitor.
  3. ^Mulrine, Anna (10 September 2011)."Battle for Afghanistan's Gambir Jungle: What was it all for?".Christian Science Monitor.

External links

[edit]

Media related toOperation Hammer Down at Wikimedia Commons

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