Special Operations Forces in Afghanistan CONTENTS LEIGHNEVILLEisan Australianintelligence specialist,currentlystudying foradegreeinInternational Security.Hehaspublished INTRODUCTION 3 anumberofarticlesonthe • Aftermath ofthe Sovietoccupation: the 'AfghanArabs' - the subjectandhasexcellent contactsintheUS,UKand Taliban- September2001: '9/11' -AhmadShah Masoud Australianspecialforces. the Jawbreaker' mission RAMIROBUJEIROhas OPERATION 'ENDURING FREEDOM' 6 becomeafrequentand popularcontributortoOsprey • Operation 'CrescentWind' Military'sbookseriessince • SOFstructure: CombinedJointSpecial OperationsTaskForce illustratingWarrior23,US MarineinVietnam(1998).He (TaskForce Dagger, TFK-Bar, TFSword) - CombinedJointTask isanexperiencedcommercial Force, Mountain (TF64, TF58, TFJacana) - JointInteragency artistwholivesandworks TaskForce, Counterterrorism (TFBowie) - CoalitionJoint inhisnativecityofBuenos Civil-MilitaryOperationsTaskForce Aires,Argentina.His professionalbackground includesmanycommissions OPERATIONS OCTOBER-DECEMBER 2001 11 asafigureillustratorandstrip cartoonistforclientsallover • ODAdeployments: the PanjshirValley- the Kandaharraids EuropeandtheAmericas, the NorthernAlliance- Mazar-e-Sharif- Kabul, Konduz & includingmanyyears'work Kandahar forIPCMagazinesinGreat • ToraBora- ZhawarKili Britain.Hismaininterests arethepoliticalandmilitary historyofEuropeinthefirst OPERATION 'ANACONDA', 2002 20 halfofthe20thcentury. • The Shah-e-KhotValley- Takur Ghar FRONTCOVER:April 102007; USSpecialForcesfromthe UNITED KINGDOM SPECIAL FORCES 25 7thSpecialForcesGroupin anup-armouredGMVprovide • SAS- Operation 'Trent' overwatchforaBritish • SBS- Qala-ijangi mountedpatrolinWMIK LandRoversinSangin OTHER COALITION SPECIAL District,HelmandProvince, Afghanistan(USArmyPhoto OPERATIONS FORCES 29 bySpcDanielLove). • Australia- Canada- Czech Republic- Denmark- France BACKCOVER,TOPRIGHT:A Germany- Italy- Lithuania- Netherlands- NewZealand GroundMobilityVehicle-an Norway- Poland- Romania adaptedHumvee-ofthe US3rdSFGround.M240B machinegunsaremounted SPECIAL OPERATIONS SINCE 'ANACONDA' 42 ontheroofandonaswing armaheadofthedoorfor • NATO takes over: InternationalSecurityAssistance Force thefrontseatpassenger. • CJSOTF- TaskForce 88- UKSpecialForces- the future of (DeptofDefensephoto). ISAF? BACKCOVER,BOnOMRIGHT: MembersofaSFOperational WEAPONS & EQUIPMENT 48 DetachmentAlpha;their faceshavebeenobscured • Small arms- supportweapons- SOFvehicles- airassets forsecurityreasons.Their armour-carryingvestsare Appendix: Private security contractors 56 amixtureofSPEAR,Eagle andBlackhawkmodels;their weaponsareamixtureof SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 59 'plainvanilla'M16A2s,M4A1s withACOGsights,and(cen PLATE COMMENTARIES 60 ter)acollapsible-stockM249 witha200-roundassault pack.(Photocourtesy"JZW"). INDEX 64 Elite • 163 Special Operations Forces in Afghanistan Leigh Neville · Illustrated by Ramiro Bujeiro Consultant editor MartinWindrow FirstpublishedinGreatBritainin2008byOspreyPublishing, Dedication MidlandHouse,WestWay,Botley,OxfordOX2OPH,UK 443ParkAvenueSouth,NewYork,NY10016,USA Thisworkisdedicatedto mylategrandfather, W02 Edward A. Farrelly, who litthefire; andtothemen and womenwho ©2008OspreyPublishingLtd. haveserved, and continuetoserve, in both Operation Allrightsreserved.Apartfromanyfairdealingforthepurposeofprivatestudy, 'Enduring Freedom' andthe International Security research,criticismorreview,aspermittedundertheCopyright,Designsand Assistance Force- guys, thisone'sforyou. PatentsAct,1988,nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,storedina retrievalsystem,ortransmittedinanyformorbyanymeans,electronic, Author's note electrical,chemical,mechanical,optical,photocopying,recordingorotherwise, withoutthepriorwrittenpermissionofthecopyrightowner.Inquiriesshouldbe Somelocationsmentioned inthistexthavedeliberately addressedtothePublishers. been keptvague, ashavesomespecificoperationaldetails ACIPcatalogrecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary which mayimpacton Coalitiontactics, techniquesand procedures. Someunitnames, locationsand roles have ISBN:9781846033100 also been omitted oralteredforreasonsofoperational security. EditedbyMartinWindrow Pagelayoutby:KenVailGraphicDesign,Cambridge,UK Acknowledgments IndexbyGlynSutcliffe TypesetinHelveticaNeueandITCNewBaskerville OriginatedbyPPSGrasmere,Leeds,UK Manyofthecontributorstothisworkcannot benamed PrintedinChinathroughWorldPrintLtd. astheycontinuetoworkinthespecial operationsor intelligencefields; so, to 'JZW', 'A', 'Oax', 'J', 'HO', 'ISO', 08 09 1011 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 'Jim' andtheother'anonymousbynecessity' folkswho assisted me- thankyou so mUCh. Iwould also liketothank FORACATALOGOFALLBOOKSPUBLISHEDBYOSPREYMILITARYAND MathewR, Keith W, Paul B, RolfHand Kathyand EddieS AVIATIONPLEASECONTACT: fortheircontinued support. NORTHAMERICA OspreyDirect,c/oRandomHouseDistributionCenter,400HahnRoad, Artist's note Westminster,MD21157 E-mail:[email protected] Readersmaycareto notethattheoriginal paintingsfrom whichthecolourplatesinthis bookwerepreparedare ALLOTHERREGIONS availableforprivatesale. All reproduction copyright OspreyDirectUK,PO.Box140Wellingborough,Northants,NN82FA,UK whatsoeverisretained bythe Publishers. All inquiries E-mail:[email protected] should beaddressedto: OspreyPublishingissupportingtheWoodlandTrust,theUK'sleading RamiroBujeiro, CC28, 1602Florida, Argentina woodlandconservationcharity,byfundingthededicationoftrees. The Publishersregretthattheycan enterintono www.ospreypublishing.com correspondenceuponthis matter. AMF MilitialocallyrecruitedbyCoalitionforces OEF Operation'EnduringFreedom'(umbrellacodenamefor ANA AfghanNationalArmy US/CoalitionforcesinAfghanistan,distinctfromISAF) CAG CombatApplicationsGroup(1stSFOperational 'OGA' 'OtherGovernmentAgency'(USmilitaryslangforCIA) Detachment- Delta,USArmy) OP observationpost CENTCOM USmilitarycommandresponsibleforMiddleEast SAD SpecialActivitiesDivision(ofUSCIA) &CentralAsia SAM Surface-to-airmissile CJC-MOTF CoalitionJointCivil-MilitaryOperationsTaskForce SAS SpecialAirService(British) CJSOTF CombinedJointSpecialOperationsTaskForce SASR SpecialAirServiceRegiment(Australian) CJTF-M CombinedJointTaskForce- Mountain SEAL Sea,Air,Land(USNavySOFunits) COS CommandementdesOperationsSpecia/es(coordinating SF SpecialForces(USArmy) entityforallFrenchmilitarySOF,similartoUSSOCOM& SFSG SpecialForcesSupportGroup(Britishairborneforce BritishSFDirectorate) providingback-upforSFoperations,e.g.securitycordons CTC CounterTerroristCenter(ofUSCentralIntelligenceAgency) andORF) DA directaction(combatmissions,asopposedtointelligence- SMU SpecialMissionUnit gathering) SOAR SpecialOperationsAviationRegiment(USArmy) DEVGRU USNavalSpecialWarfareDevelopmentGroup SOF specialoperationsforces(genericterm) ISAF InternationalSecurityAssistanceForce(NATO) SOPs Standardoperatingprocedures JIATF-CT JointInteragencyTaskForce-Counterterrorism SOTG SpecialOperationsTaskGroup(Australian) JSOC JointSpecialOperationsCommand(US) SR surveillance&reconnaissance HALO HighAltitudeLowOpening(parachutejump) SSE sensitivesiteexploitation HVT HighValueTargets(enemyleadership) UKSF UnitedKingdomSpecialForces(British) ODA,ODB,ODC OperationalDetachmentsAlpha,Bravo, USSOCOM UnitedStatesSpecialOperationsCommandOoint Charlie(USArmySpecialForces) servicescoordinatingentityforallmilitarySOF) 2 SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES IN AFGHANISTAN 'IN0TRODUCTION An'operator'fromaUSAnny SpecialForcesOperational ne ofmyfirst and lasting memories was my trip from Kandahar DetachmentAlpha(ODA)poses airfield into the city for the first time. We were in the Toyota forapre-missionphoto.Over civilianclothinghewearsthe trucks, rolling 'hard' because they had been getting hit a lot. SPEARRBA(SpecialOperations That meant we had an extra AMF in the back and we went windows ForcesEquipmentAdvanced downwith muzzles out. Iwas a bitnervous, and didn'twantto make any Requirements,RangerBodyAnnor) mistakes in front ofthe Team guys. plate-carrierwithwoodland 'The grizzled SF veteran who had been briefing me on their team's patterncover;thisiscompatible withtheMOLLEload-bearing SOPs wasn't making me any calmer ... I remember as we were leaving pouchequipment.Theweapon the base he turnedbackto me andsaid "There'sone more requirement isaMk11 Mod0semi-automatic ifyou're gonna ride in our truck ... you gotta like Creedence"; then he 7.62mmsniperrifle- basically put in a cassette of CCR's greatest hits. The nervousness melted right anenhanced-accuracy7.62mm away, and Iwas calm and tappingmyfoot as I cruisedinto Kandaharfor versionofthevenerableM16. Readersshouldnotethatinall the first time to the sound ofclassic rock. I'll never forget it. That was non-publiclyreleasedimages Afghanistan.' USArmy specialoperator, Afghanistan throughoutthisbook,allfaces andidentifyingcharacteristics Afghanistan is a land that has rarely known peace. The 19th century ofspecialoperatorshavebeen sawbloodydefeats inflictedon the Britishand theirIndianArmyin both digitallyobscured,forreasonsof personalsecurity.(Courtesy'JZW') the First (1838-42) and Second (1878-80) Anglo-Afghan Wars. During andsince the 1979-89occupationbySovietforces in an attemptto shore up a communist regime, Afghanistan has been fought over by rival governments, factions, tribes and warlords. In fact, these particularepisodesofwidelyreportedturmoilhavedifferedonlyin degree, and notin nature, from the pattern oflife th~tthatregion has known over many centuries: warfare in Afghanistan is essentially based on ethnic or communal rivalries rather than modern ideological quarrels. The defining moment in the country's modern history, which sowed the seedsfor all laterevents,was the Sovietinvasion in 1979.1 Installinga puppetgovernmentunderBabrakKarmalin the capital, Kabul, the Soviets boasted that they would eliminate the anti communist mujahideen (fighters) in a few short months. But those local fighters would receive massive covert support from the West, andactivereinforcementbyIslamicvolunteersfrom manycountries. Ten years later the Soviets withdrew, after suffering anything from 35,000 to 50,000 troop deathsandup to three times thatnumberof othercasualties. The experience thoroughlydemoralized the Soviet Army for a decade thereafter, and released many thousands of physically and psychologically crippled veterans into a society that itselfproved to be on theverge ofpoliticalcollapse. 1 SeeMen-at-Arms178,Russia'sWarinAfghanistan 3 An iconicimageofSpecial ForcesinAfghanistan. Fromthe HarleyDavidsonmerchandize, Realtreehuntingjacketand Confederateflag, itissafe toassumeaSouthernODA. (Courtesy'JZW') The 'Afghan Arabs' and the Taliban During the 1980s the looselyalignedMghan mujahideen groups were reinforced by the so-called 'Mghan Arabs', an eventual 30,000 volunteers from across the Islamic world, fuelled by the Koranic imperative to jihad. Amongst these was a man whose name would rise to notorious prominence in later years - Usama bin Laden. The wealthySaudi son ofa construction magnate, bin Laden developed an Islamic charity to support the Mghan Arabs. This organization, centred on a guesthouse for foreign fighters over the Pakistani border in Peshawar, became known as al Qaeda or 'the Base'. Blooded in the Soviet-Mghan War, many of these volunteers went on to fight in otherconflicts involvingIslamic peoples, from Kashmir and Chechnya to Kosovo.2 In the vacuum leftbythe departingSoviets, the mujahideenfactions fought against the ailing central government before its inevitable collapse in 1992. Hope for a new central government was short-lived, as the seven major mujahideen factions descended into a bitter civil war for control of the country. These struggles naturally extended southwards over the political border into and beyond the so-called Tribal Territories along Pakistan's north-west frontier; vast numbers of Mghans had fled across the borders during the Soviet occupation, and the notional powers of the Pakistani government over the Tribal Territorieswere exercised onlycovertly. The Taliban The Taliban arose in 1994 from a small group of Pashtun religious students (talibs) in southern Mghanistan. Under the leadership of the one-eyedclericMullahMuhammadOmartheTalibanbecameapopular movement, railing against the brutal excesses of the rival warlords and 4 2 SeeElite146,TheYugoslavWar(2) AFGHANISTAN September2001 Province(velayat)Boundary @ NationalCapital 1------,~-'--r-----rI 2--,~O ...1..._-r_-L-__ Miles 2~O Kilomete/s the corruption spread by the ubiquitous opium trade. Their solution, (USDeptofDefense) however, was to bring the country under their own Dark-Age interpretationofskarialaw;supportedbyPakistaniintelligence (the lSI), the Taliban movementgrewquickly. BinLaden returned toMghanistan in 1996afterbeingforced to leave hisrefugeinSudan.HebroughtwithhimacadreofalQaedafighters, and soon attracted manyMghanArabveterans. As a gift to Mullah Omar, Bin Ladendonatedvehicles,builtroads,andrecruitedthelargestjihadistarmy ofmodem times - al Qaeda's Brigade 055 - which Bin Laden deployed againstthe SkuraNazarorNorthernAlliance ofanti-Taliban groups. Everything changed on 11 September, 2001. Two days before the terrorist attacks which killed 2,973 people in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania, Ahmad Shah Masoud, the leader of the Northern Alliance, was assassinated in his headquarters in the Panjshir Valley in a suicide bombing by two al Qaeda terrorists posing asjournalists. Al Qaedahad eliminated the United States' closestallyinMghanistan. 5 In the aftermath of '9/11' America received pledges of military support from many nations, from the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and Canada to France. Indeed, on 12 September, for the first timeinhistory, NATOinvokedArticle5ofitsfoundingcharterproviding for mutualprotectionofmemberstatesagainstattack; thispavedtheway for NATO participation, and the eventual deployment toMghanistan of the International SecurityAssistance Force (ISAF). 'Jawbreaker' The first US ground forces to set foot inside Mghanistan did so a scant 15 days after '9/11'. This small team, codenamed 'Jawbreaker,' inserted covertly from the former Soviet airbase of Karshi-Khandabad (K2) in Uzbekistan,whereaformidable USpresencewasbuilding, andlandedin the PanjshirValley in a Russian-built but CIA-operated Mi-17 helicopter in the pre-dawn darkness ofSeptember 26. These eight men were not members of any military unit, but of the Central Intelligence Agency's paramilitary Special Activities Division (SAD) and Counter Terrorist Center (CTC). To the men ofthe Special Forces, theywould be known colloquiallybythe acronym OGA- 'Other GovernmentAgency'. Consistingofformerspecialoperators, communicationsandlinguistics experts, the team brought with them satellite communications enabling their 'ground truth' intelligence reports to be available instantly to headquarters staffat CIA Langley and Central Command (CENTCOM), the military command responsible for Operation 'Enduring Freedom' (OEF) - the forthcoming US/Coalition operations in Mghanistan. Jawbreakeralso carried 3million dollarsin UScurrencyin non-sequential $100 bills, which would be used to shore up Northern Alliance support to OEF. TheJawbreakerteamfacilitated the plannedinsertion ofthefirstUS ArmySpecialForces detachmentswith NorthernAlliance commanders; assessed potential air targets for CENTCOM; provided an in-country combatsearch-and-rescue (CSAR) capability; andwould provide bomb damage assessments for the coming air campaign. OPERATION 'ENDURING FREEDOM' Operation 'Enduring Freedom' began officially on the evening of 6 October, 2001 with Operation 'Crescent Wind' - the Coalition air campaign targeting Taliban command-and-control and air defence facilities. Most of the Taliban's ageing SA-2 and SA-3 SAMs, along with their attendant radar and command units, were destroyed on the first nightofoperations,aswere theirsmallfleetofMiG-21 andSU-22aircraft. With the threat of high-altitude SAMs negated and total air dominance quicklyestablished, aerialtargetingsoonfocused onTaliban infrastructure, leadership and troop targets, as well as known al Qaeda facilities. These targetswere struckbya range ofUSAF, USN andBritish RAF aircraft types, including the venerable B-52H and the B-1B long range bombers alongwith the AC-130 Spectre, operatingfrom bases at K2 and in Pakistan. The way was now clear for deployments on the ground. The structure of the special operations forces committed to 6 OEFwas basicallyas follows: UndertheoverallleadershipofCenTommyFranks, CoalitionForces ODAoperatorsmeetwithGen Commander, CENTCOM,fourmajortaskforceswereinitiallydedicated TommyFranksinOctober2001. to OEF: the CombinedJoint Special Operations Task Force (CJSOTF); Notethepakolhats, Mk11 sniper Combined Joint Task Force-Mountain (CJTF-Mountain); the Joint rifle(left),and M4A1carbine fittedwithasoundsuppressor InteragencyTaskForce-Counterterrorism OIATF-CT);andtheCoalition andtheACOG4xopticalsight. Joint Civil-Military Operations TaskForce (CJCMOTF). (USSOCOM/DODphoto) CJSOTF comprised three subordinate task forces: Joint Special Operations Task Force - orth OSOTF-North), known as Task Force Dagger;Joint Special Operations Task Force - South OSOTF-South), aka TaskForceK-Bar;andthesecretiveTaskForceSword (laterTaskForce11). Initial SOFstructure, Operation 'EnduringFreedom' CENTCOM I I I I CJSOTF CJTF-M JIATF-CT CJCMOTF (TF Bowie) JSOTF-N (TF Dagger) JSOTF-S (TF K-Bar) TF Sword (TF 11) TF 64 TF 58 TFJacana 7 Task Force Dagger JSOTF-North, led by ColJohn Mulholland, was formed around his 5th Special Forces Group, with integral air assets from the 160th Special OperationsAviationRegiment (SOAR). Daggerwasassignedto the north of Mghanistan, and tasked with infiltrating Special Forces ODA (Operational Detachment Alpha) teams to advise and support the warlordsofthe NorthernAlliance. These ODAsweregenerallycomposed of a Special Forces A Team supported by an Air Force Special Tactics team, andworkedjointlywith CIAassets alreadyon the ground. The Army Special Forces' motto De Oppresso Liber ('To Liberate the Oppressed') hints at one ofthe key skills ofArmy SF- Foreign Internal Defense (FID): infiltrating foreign countries and raising, training and advising indigenous guerrilla forces. Within the 13-man ODA teams each SF operator has a different primaryspecialty, from demolitions to communications to engineering, but is cross-trained in others. Several ODAs are supported by an ODB (Operational Detachment Bravo), which provides intelligence product, medical and logistical support to the ODAs. Both the ODB and the ODAs are led by an ODC (OperationalDetachmentCharlie), generallyan SFbattalioncommand element. The ODAs are also supported by integrally attached USAF Special Tactics operators - usually Combat Controllers (CCTs) trained to guide close airsupport. Some ODAs, particularlyiftaskedwith direct action (DA) missions, may also be supported by USAF Pararescue Jumpers, who are specialistcombatmedics. Task Force K-Bar JSOTF-South, TF K-Bar, was led by Navy SEAL Capt Robert Harward, andformed arounda core ofNavySEALTeams 2, 3& 8and theArmy's 1stBn/3dSF Group. The SEALs are structured in 16-man platoons, six of which comprise a SEAL Team. Platoons in OEF were most often deployedinsensitive site exploitation (SSE) orDAmissions,whilefour man sub-elements were assigned to surveillance and reconnaissance (SR) operations. The SEALs are generally considered to be more focused on direct action when compared with the unconventional warfare and FID focus ofArmy SF. K-Bar nevertheless concentrated on SSE and SRtaskings, although some 3dSFGroup ODAswere deployed in the FID role alongside 5th SF Group. K-Bar was additionally the homefor several SOFunitsfrom otherCoalition nations, includingthe German Kommando Spezialkrafte (KSK), Canada's Joint Task Force 2 (JTF-2), and New Zealand's 1stSpecialAir Service Group (NZSAS). Task Force Sword TFSword/ TF 11 was theJSOC's so-called 'hunter-killer' force, with the mission ofcapturing or killing senior leadership or 'high-value targets' (HVTs) in both al Qaeda and Taliban. Sword was structured around a two-squadron component of Special Mission Unit (SMU) operators from the Combat Applications Group (CAG) and the Naval Special Warfare DevelopmentGroup (DEVGRU), supportedbyRangersecurity teams, and the intelligence specialists ofGreyFox, NSAand the CIA. CAG- 1stSF Operational Detachment-Delta- are modelled on the British 22nd Special Air Service Regt (22SAS), and are the US Army's 8 primary direct action, hostage rescue and special reconnaissance unit.