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Operation Red Dagger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2008 military operation in Afghanistan

Operation Sond Chara
Part of theWar in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

Royal Marines during Operation Red Dagger
Date11–26 December 2008
Location
ResultCoalition victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom
AfghanistanIslamic Republic of Afghanistan
Denmark
Estonia
AfghanistanTaliban
Commanders and leaders
United KingdomBrigadier Gordon Messenger RMUnknown
Strength
United Kingdom 1,500
Denmark 700
Estonia ~140 (total size of regiment deployed in Afghanistan)
500insurgents with 10,000 reinforcements in Helmand province alone.
Casualties and losses
United Kingdom 5+ killedRoughly 100 confirmed killed at minimum (+1 senior commander)
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

Royal Marines taking part in Operation Sond Chara. Photo Cpl. John Scott Rafoss USMC

Operation Sond Chara (Red Dagger inPashto) was a campaign in theWar in Afghanistan with aims and objectives centred on fourTaliban strongholds near the town ofNad-e-Ali inHelmand Province,Afghanistan. The operation was named after the commando patch worn by members of3 Commando Brigade Royal Marines. 1,500 British troops were involved, supported byDanish,Estonian and Afghan forces in the pre-Christmas offensive, commencing on 7 December 2008 with a night attack on Taliban defences in a village south of the operational area.

The offensive was intended to secure the area around the provincial capital ofLashkar Gah after an increase in insurgent attacks there (including a 300-man Taliban assault), as well as helping to safeguard a planned voter registration programme.

The hard-fought battles were against well-armed insurgents, who held fast and retaliated with 107mm rockets but eventually withdrew under a barrage of British mortar, tank, and missile fire. British troops were fighting knee-deep in mud during First World War-style trench battles.[1] Some sections of the Marines fought while advancing over 60 km under fire and in poor conditions.CQB fighting was common, and some commanders reported fighting at ranges of 30 metres or less.

By its climax on 25 December 2008, 100 Taliban fighters, one reportedly a senior commander, were killed. By the end of the offensive five British soldiers, including an Australian serving with British forces, had been killed.[2]

After a raid south ofLashkar Gah, £2 million worth of opium was found, alongsideIEDs and other assorted drugs and explosives.

BrigadierGordon Messenger, commander ofTask Force Helmand, classes the campaign as "very successful".

In respect of the Muslim festival ofEid al-Adha, a two-day ceasefire starting on 8 December 2008 was upheld.

Recommencing operations on 11 December, 42 Commando Royal Marines attacked both from the ground and the air onNad-e-Ali, securing an area which had been an insurgent stronghold. Commandos backed by the 2nd Battalion The Princesses of Wales's Royal Regiment and the Afghan National Army attacked and captured the town ofShin Kalay, west ofLashkar Gah. K Company (Black Knights) fought in the trenches surrounding the area, forcing the withdrawal of the insurgents. Royal Engineers found their efforts to build patrol bases hampered by heavy rain turning the ground into a sea of mud.

Lima Company, 42 Commando saw the most ferocious close-quarters fighting during the 360-degree battle for Zarghun Kalay, northwest ofLashkar Gah, on 17 December. They were supported by Juliet Company during the following days.

By the end of the operation the Marines of Lima Company Group had covered over 60 km on foot in the most arduous conditions. Involved in intense firefights by day, and 'yomping' (walking) by night, the Marines slept rough, eating wherever and whenever they could for 17 days.

Troops involved

[edit]

Recce Platoon 1st Battalion Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment 1PWRR

The following troops were involved in the operation[3]

  • B Company (Armoured Personnel Carriers)
  • Royal Danish Engineers Regiment
  • Combat Engineers Section
  • 1st Battalion Royal Canadian Regiment (OMLT)

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toOperation Sond Chara.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"UK forces take key Taleban bases". BBC. 4 January 2009. Retrieved5 January 2009.
  2. ^Smith, Michael (4 January 2008)."Taliban bases fall after major offensive". Timesonline.co.uk. Retrieved10 January 2009.[dead link]
  3. ^"IN PICTURES: Op Red Dagger strikes in Helmand (mod.uk)". Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved5 January 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
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