10/09/2007

The first real war

The First Real War

Just three weeks after finishing their training in Devon, fledgling Royal Marines found themselves on the front line in Afghanistan. Not all of them came back

"Incoming! Take cover!" I hurl myself to the ground as tracer bullets whistle past our heads. I am with a patrol of 20 heavily armed Royal Marine commandos. The Taliban had been waiting for us. The AK-47, their preferred weapon, fires naturally high, but they’re quick to adjust their aim, and soon their bullets are ricocheting off the rocky terrain around us. To my right is

Tom Curry, a marine just a year out of training, who celebrated his 21st birthday yesterday — New Year’s Day. To my left is the troop commander, Second Lieutenant Bertie Kerr, 22, barely three weeks out of training. Both are trying to crawl to the top of the ridge to return fire.

Seven months earlier, in June 2006, I had started training with the commandos at their base in Lympstone, Devon. It was to be the most extraordinary year of my life. I would not only face gruelling physical challenges, but also witness astonishing heroism and heartbreaking tragedy. I was not training to be a commando but embedding as a film-maker to document the fresh young recruits of 924 Troop going through the longest and hardest basic military training in the world.

The successful recruits, in their late teens and early twenties, would be sent straight to Afghanistan weeks after passing out in spring 2007 — their reward for enduring eight months of training hell. My plan was to follow them not only through this hell but also into the teeth of battle against an increasingly resurgent Taliban.

I had no inkling of what I was letting myself in for.

After a few weeks with the 924 Troop rookies, I met some of the YOs (young officers) finishing their training, including Bertie Kerr. An economics and philosophy graduate from Bristol University, and the son of a Royal Navy admiral, Kerr had wanted to be a Royal Marine since he was five. Before his passing out, I joined him on some of his final training: riot-control exercises, amphibious landings off the coast of Scotland and jungle-warfare training in the United States.

Most of the time, however, I trained with 924 Troop: rope-climbing, assault courses, speed marches, abseiling, close-quarter combat. In addition, we endured survival training in extreme conditions, with limited rations and sleep. It was relentless, unforgiving and injurious. I got off relatively lightly with a dislocated finger, ruptured biceps tendon and inflamed clavicle, but many were so badly broken, they had to leave the troop for recovery.

Pain, sweat, blood and tears were being exchanged for a strongly forged comradeship, an overpowering sense of pride, self-respect and purpose in the men. I remember listening to the lads round a campfire after a particularly demanding field exercise on Dartmoor, which had involved three days of living rough in subzero temperatures, killing rabbits for food, and miles of relentless route-marching — carrying 80lb on our backs.

"I never thought you could feel this close to other blokes," said Michael Urhegyi, from the rougher end of Salford. "I’m proud I did that f***ing yomping today, but then I think, f*** me, all you lot can do it as well."

"Yeah!" replied Lee Smith, who comes from Leytonstone in east London. "That’s the thing, ain’t it"

I respect you "cos you can do something but then you respect me ’cos I can do it too."

A few weeks later I joined the recruits on a tour of Normandy to visit the D-Day beaches and British military cemetery at Bayeux. It was astonishing to watch these young marine recruits walk among the graves. They had all been given small wooden crosses and told to lay them on the grave of any Royal Marine they liked. Adam Collins, a former stunt man from Nottingham, laid his cross on the grave of a marine also called Collins. "Twenty years old," he mused. "Same age as me. God, I hope we don’t end up like this."

In mid-December, days after passing out as a fully fledged officer, Bertie Kerr left to take up his first command on the front line in Afghanistan. Two weeks after that, with the recruits home for the holidays, I left for Afghanistan and caught up with Kerr on Christmas Eve at a remote but beleaguered outpost, Kajaki. This was the site of a strategically vital dam and hydroelectric plant that the Royal Marines of M Company, 42 Commando, were defending from a Taliban force.

The Royal Marines had established an HQ near the dam and gun positions on peaks nearby, commanding long arcs of fire over the valleys and river plains, but the place was honeycombed with deserted mud-walled compounds — perfect hiding places for the Taliban, from which they could launch their small-arms and mortar attacks. The daily operations for the Royal Marines involved flushing out the enemy, engaging with them and killing them. It was relentless work. The enemy was ruthless, ferocious and suicidally courageous.

Every day and most nights I went on patrol with Kerr and his own 11 Troop of 20 men — some as fresh out of training as himself. The biggest member of the troop was a man-mountain called Tom Curry, known as Vinders (Vindaloo), who had passed out of Lympstone a year ago. He had managed to call home on Christmas Day on a satellite phone and propose to his girlfriend, Carla. "She answered the question correctly," he grinned. Five days later, Curry celebrated his 21st birthday on New Year’s Day — the eve of a serious attack on a Taliban stronghold when we were ambushed and pinned to a hillside.

As the Taliban’s bullets continued to rain down on us, Kerr gave the order for us to withdraw by crawling down the slope on our belt buckles. We finally sprinted for cover in a dry gulley. There, 11 Troop consolidated before advancing again to establish a firing line that would take the fight back to the enemy. Supported by reinforcements from

M Company and air cover from an Apache helicopter, the Royal Marines got the better of the Taliban. But it had been an exhausting fight, with one marine, Richard Mayson, badly wounded by a bullet shattering his wrist. I did my best to carry on filming, recording Kerr in his first real confrontation with the enemy. Curry was resolute and unflinching. Later, as we searched compounds for the enemy, I saw Curry shoulder-charge a mud-brick wall and go straight through it. "Nice one, Vinders!" shouted Kerr, as he led his men through the hole to clear yet another compound. To his comrades, Tom Curry had an air of invincibility. Ten days later he was dead.

It happened during another advance through deserted compounds, but Curry, leading from the front as usual, walked straight into a Taliban bullet. He was killed instantly by a head shot, and the rest of 11 Troop, being fired on from three sides, fought on with tears in their eyes, immediately dispatching his killer. Sergeant Pete McGinley, a veteran of 18 years’ service, was the first at Curry’s side. He ripped a scarf off a dead Taliban fighter and wrapped it round the huge marine’s face. "Sorry, Vinders, old mate," he said. "Don’t want the lads to see you like this — a bit untidy. We’ll remember you the way you were." He kept talking to Curry until his body could be evacuated.

Back at Lympstone, I resumed training with 924 Troop until their own passout, when I returned to Afghanistan with the successful recruits. The boys had become men and earned the right to fight on the front line, just like Tom Curry.

General Sir Richard Dannatt, chief of the general staff, warning of the dangers posed by a "strident Islamic shadow", says we face a generation of conflict in Afghanistan. That means marines who will serve there have yet to start training, have yet to leave school, have yet to be born. Meanwhile, at least for the foreseeable future, Vinders’ colleagues — men like Pete McGinley, Bertie Kerr and the rest — will continue to take all they learnt on Dartmoor to the bleak, mud-walled compounds of Afghanistan.

Commando, by Chris Terrill, is published by Century at £18.99 on September 20. It is available at the BooksFirst price of £16.99, including p&p. Tel: 0870 165 8585. An eight-part series, Commando: On the Front Line, starts on September 20, at 9pm, on ITV

Marines tied to helicopters snubbed in rescue medals

Marines tied to helicopters snubbed in rescue medals

THREE Royal Marines who embarked on one of the most daring rescue missions of the war in Afghanistan – by strapping themselves to the sides of attack helicopters – have been denied medals.

Their treatment is at odds with the decorations handed out to airmen and soldiers on the same mission. The pilots received the Distinguished Flying Cross, their co-pilots the Military Cross and an army officer also strapped to a helicopter the Military Cross.

This weekend army officers suggested that the marines were the victims of double standards, and had been snubbed because their superiors had written less glowing citations.

The decision has sparked a caustic debate among service personnel on Army Rumour Service, an internet forum. A number suggested such heroism was nothing out of the ordinary for the marines. One former sailor calling himself “Ancient Mariner” wrote: “I believe it’s covered in week 7 of the [Royal Marines’] course at Lympstone [Devon], just after the ‘leaping over tall buildings in a single bound’ module and before they learn to make bullets bounce off their chest.”

A former marine, posting as Old Booty, added that the medals were unimportant. “What is worth more, to become a corps’ legend and go down in history as ‘one of those nutters on the Apaches’, or a medal?”

The MoD used the operation in January to demonstrate how brave British troops in Afghanistan were, with one commander describing it as a “heroic leap in the dark”. “It was an extraordinary tale of heroism and bravery,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Rory Bruce.

But while the airmen and soldiers received full recognition, the three marines – Warrant Officer Class 1 Colin Hearn, Marine Gary Robinson and Marine Chris Fraser-Perry – received nothing.

The rescue occurred after Lance-Corporal Mathew Ford was wounded in an attack on Taliban leaders meeting in Jugroom Fort, south of Garmsir in Helmand. The attack was repulsed but Ford was left behind.

The Apache attack helicopter pilots suggested they could fly in, but with room for only a pilot and co-pilot on each helicopter the rescue team would have to be strapped to the sides.

Despite the danger, there was no shortage of volunteers. Hearn, a regimental sergeant-major, insisted he go. “I’m a Royal Marine, he’s a Royal Marine – there was no way we were ever going to leave him.”

Captain Dave Rigg, 30, an army engineer, was also one of the first volunteers and Fraser-Perry, 19, from Southport, Mer-seyside, said: “I felt it had to be done. I would expect the same done for me.” The fourth volunteer was Robinson, 26, from Rosyth, Fife.

They knew the Taliban would be waiting. They were disorientated when they jumped off the helicopters and one of the Apache co-pilots, Staff Sergeant Keith Armatage, ran to help, brandishing his pistol.

The five men now on the ground managed to find Ford, but he had died of his wounds. The Taliban fired on the two Apaches on the ground and the crew tried to fire back while a third Apache provided covering fire.

The team brought back Ford’s body strapped to the side of one of the helicopters, but had no time to strap themselves back on. They clung to the wings all the way back to Camp Bastion.

Rigg received the Military Cross, but the failure of the three marines to get a medal for their bravery was raised in a letter to Navy News this month by Lou Armour, a former marine.

The MoD refused to comment.

As bad as this is it doesn't really surprise me in the slightest I have heard many guys talking about the fact that people are being awarded medals for certain things while others are not for doing something no less brave in fact often more so, and also higher ranking marines being awarded medals such as the military cross even though it was the marines they were working with commiting acts of bravery and not actually themselves. These guys should definately be awarded medals and I hope all the media attention forces the MOD to rethink their decision.

12/04/2007

ISAF troops launch major Afghan offensive

ISAF troops launch major Afghan offensive

UK troops serving with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) have been taking part in a major operation in the Sangin area of Helmand province, southern Afghanistan.

The aim of the offensive, part of Operation ACHILLES, was to re-establish the authority of the Government of Afghanistan in Sangin and to create a secure, stable and prosperous environment in which reconstruction and development can take place

ISAF forces found a large weapons cache, including machine guns and rounds, mortars, rocket propelled grenades and launchers, anti-tank mines and bomb-making equipment. These were left behind as Taliban insurgents fled the area.

Brigadier Jerry Thomas, Commander of the UK Task Force in Helmand, said:

"The aim of this operation was to clear the Taliban from the Sangin area and to re-establish the authority of the Government of Afghanistan in Sangin to create a secure, stable and prosperous environment in which reconstruction and development can take place. In the last two days we have made significant gains in pushing the Taliban from the area and that operation continues."

The advance began on the evening of Wednesday 4 April 2007. Members of the UK Task Force, including Estonians and Danes, advanced from the north while US, Dutch and Canadian forces launched an air assault to the south to clear insurgents before Afghan National Security Forces move into the town.

A multi-national force of more than 1000 troops and support elements began the major advance on Sangin. A range of ISAF troops were used including British troops from the 42 Commando Royal Marines Battlegroup, the Estonian Armoured Infantry Company, and Danish Recce Squadron, all part of the UK Task Force.

Further ISAF coalition troops advanced from the south including three companies from the United States 82nd Airborne, one company of Dutch soldiers from the 11 Airmobile Brigade, and members of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment Battlegroup. They were all supported by a range of air assets including Chinook, Blackhawk and Apache helicopters.

In the early stages, ISAF forces encountered only sporadic resistance from insurgents as evidence suggested many Taliban leaders were fleeing the area. During the operation there were a small number of minor ISAF casualties, and no reported civilian casualties. It is believed a significant number of insurgents were killed.

Lieutenant Colonel Charlie Mayo, UK spokesman, said:

"We know that the senior Taliban leadership is made of up fighters from outside of the area who have coerced and intimidated the local people of Sangin into fighting for them. As ISAF has advanced and put pressure on the Taliban, there is strong evidence to suggest that this leadership has chosen to flee rather than fight.

"Prior to the operation we informed the local population of our intentions through the Governor of Helmand and also by means of radio broadcasts, letters and word of mouth. We asked the people of Sangin just to stay away from the fighting so that we could defeat the Taliban quickly.

"This operation is not directed against the ordinary people of Sangin but against the hardcore Taliban and foreign fighters who have forced the people to live under a regime of intimidation and cruelty.

"Part of the role of ISAF is to mentor the Afghan National Army who will gradually assume responsibility for the security of Sangin over the coming days and weeks. That will then allow the Government of Afghanistan to deliver the services that the people of Sangin deserve and require.

"It is critical for the long-term success of this operation and to maintain security in Sangin that the local people support the Government of Afghanistan and its own security forces."

This latest activity is part of the ongoing Operation ACHILLES launched by ISAF and Afghan National Security Forces last month, primarily to stabilise northern Helmand province. The operation has been conducted with the support of President Karzai and the Governor of Helmand.

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21/03/2007

"They've Done Us Proud"

'THEY'VE DONE US PROUD'

The commanding officer of a city Royal Marines unit has written a personal letter to the people of Plymouth revealing his feelings on the conflict and the support his men have received from home.The letter, from Lieutenant Colonel Matt Holmes of 42 Commando, has been written weeks before Plymouth's servicemen begin returning home from their deployment to Afghanistan.

Since the deployment of more than 1,000 servicemen from Plymouth's 3 Commando Brigade began in September last year, four city marines from 42 Commando have died - mostly in encounters with the Taliban.

In his exclusive letter to The Herald, Lt Col Holmes pays tribute to his fallen men and says his marines have done Plymouth, and the country, proud.

He also describes the tough conditions faced by his 700 marines in southern Afghanistan's Helmand Province, and the extreme tactics used by the Taliban.

"The men in the unit continue to impress and are doing you and their country proud," Lt Col Holmes says in his letter.

"They have been awesome. The men have been through a lot and I think, in reality, there will be few back at home who could really understand what many of the men have experienced.

"They will have been through some tense moments under fire coupled with moments of extreme adrenaline and they will have performed and carried on with their tasks regardless of the threat to them.

"They have fixed bayonets at times, and knowingly closed with the enemy in some very close-quarter and personal fighting."

He describes the Taliban as being tenacious and adds that they 'don't respect the Geneva Convention', caring little for Afghanistan's people.

"We have had instances of Taliban using women and children to shield them from us, and we have all seen the fear instilled in the local people and the poverty in which they are forced to live by the insurgents," he said.

"The Taliban are no match for the marines and we have comprehensively defeated them on every occasion, though not without cost."

He says in terms of the level of activity, its duration and the intensity of operations, it will take 'a long time' to surpass what has been achieved in Afghanistan, both tactically and operationally, by 3 Commando Brigade.

"The men will undoubtedly remember their firefights with the enemy," he said.

"They will certainly remember their first contact, and the feeling of adrenaline during the firefight, and how they coped individually and as a team.

"Memories will also include the sound of the enemy's rounds as they fizzed above their heads and lit up their faces as tracer rounds passed between them.

"The sound of the 'whooooosh' of the air-brakes on a bus as it stops on Royal Parade will probably bring back memories, for some, of an incoming rocket-propelled grenade."

Lt Col Holmes says that ultimately the deployment would have been much harder had it not been for the efforts of families and friends back home in Plymouth.

"During this deployment we have relied heavily upon the support of our families and the support of you, the people of Plymouth, and of course The Herald," he adds in his letrer.

"The home front that we have had in support of the commando group has been absolutely tremendous, and has certainly aided a close network with the public and all of our families back at home.

"This has helped us in theatre to get on with our job knowing we have the full support of those we cherish.

"We realise that it has been tough for our families; there is mutual respect.

"I know the marines will always remember the generosity of the people of Plymouth, especially when they sent parcels to us in theatre, particularly at Christmas. We found it humbling and will be for ever indebted."

16/03/2007

Marine Does Splits Over Rocket

Marine's Elvis Jump Saves Life

A LUCKY Royal Marine has told how he escaped death from a Taliban rocket — by jumping in the air like ELVIS so the speeding missile flew underneath him.

Garry Halliwell, 28, had moments to react as the 130 metres-a-second rocket propelled grenade hurtled towards him at knee height.

The commando — dubbed Geri by pals in Afghanistan — decided the last second “disco” jump was his only hope.

At the crucial moment he did an airborne SPLITS and dodged the killer rocket.

Garry, of J Company, 42 Commando, said: “I couldn’t believe it went through. My Elvis routine helped. I do it on the dancefloor.”

In reply, he blasted the attacker with a mortar, in Helmand province.

Follow the title link to see the picture its unbelievable.

09/03/2007

Pictures Of The Amazing Juliet Company By The Times

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Marine Dan Laws, 21, of J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando patrols along the ridge of their overnight Forward Operating Base in the Desert of Northern Helmand, Afghanistan. J company had been deployed on Mobile Operations group, patrolling the Taleban 'badlands' of Northern Helmand in an operation designed to disrupt and interdict the Taleban insurgency (Richard Mills/The Times)

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Royal Marines from J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando open fire with mortars onto a suspected Taleban position near Sangin in Northern Helmand (Richard Mills/The Times)

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Corporal James 'Reggie' Reddrop, 26, a Royal Marine from J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando, looks through the sights of his rifle into a compound in Tizni (Richard Mills/The Times)

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A Royal Marine of J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando, loads his 0.5 calibre gun on his WIMK as the sun comes up over the company's Forward Operating Base in the desert of Northern Helmand (Richard Mills/The Times)

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Marines from 1 troop, J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando, discuss orders at sun up at their Forward Operating Base in the Desert of Northern Helmand,(Richard Mills/The Times)

Think my lovely boyfriend (well his shadow) is in this picture although obviously cannot be sure!

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Tom Foster and Tom Crouch, Royal Marines from J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando wait for orders to dismount from their Viking armoured vehicle in Tizni (Richard Mills/The Times)

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A section of Royal Marines use their sights on their rifles to try and find where Taleban firing points are located in Sangin (Richard Mills/The Times)

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Rory Hicklin, 23, a Royal Marine from J Company, 42 Royal Marine Commando, gives cover as a Chinook helicopter brings in supplies to his company outside Naw Zad (Richard Mills/The Times

07/03/2007

J company on a mission!

Talking, Waiting, Joking, Killing.... Ten days in the talebans sights

As Nato begins its biggest offensive in the country since 2001, two Times journalists report from a risky mission into the insurgents’ heartland in lawless Helmand province. The Royal Marines of J Company, 42 Commando, sometimes sat down with local Pashtuns and sometimes skirmished. Then they fought them in pitched battle.

Day 1

Hidden eyes count out the patrol as it leaves J Company base in Geresk.

There are few places in which the marines can escape the gaze of the Taleban in Helmand. The watchers will have noted the armoured Vikings, the .50 calibre machineguns on the Land Rover weapon platforms, the recovery vehicles, the two 105mm field guns. They will have seen the J Company emblem on the turret cupolas — a grinning death’s head in a jester’s cap. There are nearly 200 Marines in more than 30 vehicles.

They carry with them thousands of litres of fuel and water, artillery shells, mortar bombs, boxloads of grenades and hundreds of thousands of rifle and machinegun rounds. Carried too are “consent-winning packs”: kites, footballs, pencil cases and coloured pens. The aim is to split the insurgent from the local population. The Marines are prepared to talk of peace, to express goodwill, to bid for hearts and minds. They are also ready for war.

The mission sounds simple. J Company has the task of searching out, disrupting and destroying the Taleban. But the enemy is expert at blending in with the local population only to emerge and fight later: morning’s friend can be afternoon’s foe. Furthermore, in a province in which the Taleban have fielded fighting columns several hundred strong, the patrol could find itself ambushed and cut off, even outnumbered, far from the nearest Nato base. British forces are already in an invidious position in northern Helmand. In Sangin they are encircled by the Taleban. In Naw Zad, another Taleban stronghold, they have only a limited ability to move.

In Musa Qala, last autumn’s cease-fire deal resulting in the withdrawal of British troops is in a precarious balance. While efforts to reconstruct parts of central Helmand have had modest success, in the north the condition remains one of war.

I travel in the back of “Beowulf”, the Viking belonging to Corporal “Tug” Wilson’s section. The 12-tonne, all-terrain vehicle with two tracked cabs is eulogised.It has survived strikes by mines, rockets and machinegun fire. Its weight displacement is supposed to be the equivalent of a Marine on skis carrying a laden rucksack, allowing it to cross ice as well as desert.

Yet it is tiny. There are seven of us in the back cab. In near darkness, to the dull roar of the engine, we rattle, lurch and sway towards Naw Zad, a human sardine-pack of weapons, ammunition, body armour and helmets, in a fug of dust in which the occasional fart drifts. I see nothing of Helmand’s deserts, mountains and fields until we stop and open the rear door. Standing on a barren plain are two tiny children, staring at us as though we are creatures from a distant planet.

Day 2

The Marines’ first contact with the Taleban is like a gentlemanly duel.

Major Ewen Murchison, the company’s commander, deploys his Vikings just beyond the outskirts of Naw Zad. An engaging, wilful man, nicknamed “the General” by his brother officers because of his company’s freewheeling enterprise, he hopes to lure the Taleban into combat, alleviating pressure on the British garrison inside.

“Basically it’s a waiting game,” Sergeant-Major Marty Pelling says as the Marines disentangle themselves from their Vikings. “We just wait here and see if we can annoy them enough to shoot at us, then we give them a good spanking.”

At first, the two sides regard one another in silence. Women and children flee. After about 40 minutes, once most civilians are clear, the Marines’ 105mm field guns fire smoke shells into a meadow to the west, as if signalling the commencement of hostilities. Minutes later, from a clearly visible position, the Taleban fire a mortar bomb, which drops short. The Marines fire back with their own mortars and a .50 machinegun. The Taleban retaliate with a rocket.

It streaks over our heads in a bolt of red and skids across the top of Major Murchison’s Viking, to explode just beyond, leaving the vehicle’s turret gunner staring in astonishment at the crater of his near-nemesis.

“Jesus, just like a commando comic,” Sergeant-Major Pelling remarks, as he lights a cigarette. He stopped smoking 16 years ago but started again soon after arriving in Afghanistan. “Only under fire though.”

He has smoked a lot recently. Major Murchison expresses his frustration at the inconclusive contact. A small, mobile force, the patrol relies on drawing the Taleban out so that they can be killed by its superior weaponry.

But that evening, from their ridge-line observation post high above Naw Zad, Tug’s men watch nine armed Talebs gather in a compound below them, alerted to the Marines’ presence by local shepherds. The marines call in mortars and artillery, with negligible effect. Next a jet drops a 500lb bomb. It fails to explode. As the jet comes in for a second run a South African Marine, a sniper, shoots one of the Talebs at a range of 1,200 metres with his .338 rifle. Two more 500lb bombs finish off the others and destroy the compound. Death can be as cheap as a bullet or dear as a smart bomb.

Day 5

“Blimey, they don’t even know about Rocky IIhere, let alone Rocky VI,” Tug says with a bulldog smile as he surveys a group of nomads who have set up camp in distant foothills to our flank. Far to the north of Musa Qala, the patrol is operating in a remote wilderness of plain and mountain, allegedly used by the Taleban as a principal supply route to the Sangin valley. The Marines move warily. It is the first time British forces have reached the area.

As they move slowly northwards, a young Marine does much of the talking with the villagers. Marine Dominic Williman, 19, is one of four men in the company trained to have a working knowledge of Pashtu. He also carries his section’s medium machinegun. He has spoken with locals, as well as firing a few thousand rounds their way.

“I’m not saying that I’ve made a difference,” he says, “but it may help for them to see their enemy — a young boy in their eyes — speak their language and offset the perception of the Brits given to them by the elders who haven’t seen a foreign soldier since the Russians.”

The villagers appear wary but not hostile. Their message is always the same: they have not seen the Taleban, they do not know any Taleban, their Government has done nothing for them, they want nothing from the British but to be left alone.But then the patrol reaches Tizni, which local intelligence sources have suggested is a rest and administration centre for Taleban fighters. It is apparently empty. As Tug leads his six Marines into the village, men start pouring out of the mosque. Within a minute more than 70 have gathered. They are turbaned, bearded, and of combat age — “Panini-sticker Talebs”, Tug calls them.

Mohammed Ali, his Hazara interpreter, agrees. “Taleban, all of them.” As the Afghans stare at Tug, he calls the rest of the patrol and seems set on searching every Afghan and the entire village. But then Major Murchison arrives. He takes off his helmet and sits down. All the Afghans sit down too. They talk for a while. The major tells them that they have nothing to be afraid of. British forces are not here to eradicate their opium poppies. They are not an occupying force like the Russians. They are here to provide security so development can take place.

That can only happen if they tell him where the Taleban are.

The men tell the major that they are frightened of the Government, whose police have robbed them. There are, of course, no Taleban in the area. They are upset because two women and two children were killed in crossfire between Nato and the Taleban last year. They want to be left alone.

The atmosphere is more wary curiosity than tension, though on a different day the same men may well see one another down a gun barrel. The meeting ends amicably enough, neither side having given anything away.

Tug still wants to search the whole place, starting with the mosque, but is ordered not to. As the major turns to leave the Afghans push a mentally handicapped man toward him.

While he grins inanely the laughing crowd turn his coloured cap upside down and ask for some money to be given to him. The major’s interpreter hands over a few dollars. The patrol leaves Tizni, benefactor to the single fool.

Day 6

“We are as afraid of you as we are of the Taleban,” the elder tells the Marines. He has just walked out from his village to parley with the patrol. After insisting that there are no Taleban in the area he walks back towards his home, a small settlement of compounds north of the Naw Zad valley. He is lying. Less than an hour later, in the empty compound of a neighbouring village, Tug discovers nearly 12,000 rounds of Kalashnikov ammunition stored in sealed green packages. Further searching reveals some 107mm rockets. Near by, farmers are weeding their fields. All deny any knowledge.

“The thing that gets me,” Tug muses, “is that we find a huge cache in a hut and some bloke doing the lawn ten metres away says he knows nothing about it. Yeah, right.”

The next proof of Taleban presence comes quickly. As the company approaches a village barely a kilometre from the cache, rockets and machinegun fire erupt. In an instant, the Marines inside Beowulf are galvanised. They all want to get out and into the gunfight.

“Get us in there, get us f***ing in there,” they murmur, as the interpreter reads a prayer from the Koran.

Another troop gets the assault task. As they pile out of their vehicles to the crash of gunfire, we hear over the radio the desperate call denoting a British casualty, “man down, man down”. In the confusion a Viking has rolled over a Marine. Both cabs — 12 tonnes — right over his torso.

Immediately, the emphasis switches to saving the man. The South African leaps out of the back with Marine “Geri” Halliwell and starts pumping 51mm mortar rounds into the Taleb positions to cover the casualty’s removal. The helicopter-borne response team of medics and doctor, on permanent standby in Camp Bastion, arrives within their target of 45 minutes, the “golden hour” in which most injured men can be saved. The fighting intensifies as the marines cover the Chinook’s arrival.

And then it’s over. Everyone is back in their Vikings. And in Beowulf, Tug’s men fall asleep. They can go from full-on fight to fast asleep in five minutes.

That night Major Murchison walks over with news of the casualty. Not only is the Marine alive, but his bones are unbroken and his insides uncrushed. The weight displacement of the Viking is more than just myth.

He explains his decisions to halt the fight. “It’s my responsibility to take you into places and bring you out alive,” he tells them. “I wasn’t prepared to push that bit further, go in, take casualties, only to have to leave it at the end of the day.” Artillery could not be used as its shells would have risked the death of innocent civilians.

“These Pashtun people here all lie to you,” Mohammed Ali tells the Major. “You should shoot two men from each village, and their cattle, and then they will tell you the truth.”

“I know they all lie to me,” he replies. “But we’re not the Russians and we don’t execute people.”

Day 7

The Talebs get a result of their own. The Marines are on the way back towards Naw Zad to raid a Taleban concentration. The Talebs hit them early.

Before the move, Tug gave a set of orders for the operation so rousing that they would have mobilised a conscientious objector to ardent militancy. Then he took Marine Gregg Packham aside. Packham has only just arrived and has not yet been in a hard fight. “OK mate, this is what it’s all about now,” Tug told him. “This is what you are here for. And we’re glad to have you with us. Stay close. You’ll be all right. Let’s get stuck in there.”

As we move off Packham is sitting opposite me. His legs shake and I don’t envy him. Only a fool laughs in the face of their first battle.

Then it all goes wrong. As the lead vehicles cross through a pass east of Naw Zad they come across an explosive device. The company halts short of it. It partially explodes. A bigger device detonates just beyond it. Next, between five and ten Taleb gunmen, concealed in rocks high above them on each side of the pass, open up.

The men cannot identify the Taleb positions. Their heavy machineguns cannot be raised to strafe the peaks. The 105mm field guns and mortars fire without effect. Two Apache helicopters arrive but would have to fly over an area suspected of containing an antiaircraft gun. So they bottle out. “Great,” remarks one of the troop commanders on hearing this. “Imagine us not getting out of the vehicle because we were worried someone would shoot us.”

All the time the Taleban are firing on the Marines, who now cannot move forward because of the likelihood of further mines. Eventually the company manages to return without casualty. For all their armour, their technology, their airpower, they have been thwarted by no more than ten men in high ground with just two bombs and some Kalashnikovs.

I never encounter a sense of personal animosity towards the Talebs from the Marines. If anything they respect them, even identify with them. “I’ve listened in on their sentries at night in the cold saying ‘it’s crap’, just like we do,” Marine Williman tells me. “Or complain that some idiot has brought them up the wrong bit of kit.”

The South African sniper adds: “They have their score and we have ours. Taleban aren’t just fighters: it’s a way of life for a lot of people here. Calling them Taleban is probably wrong too. It implies everyone who wants that way of life is a terrorist or going to shoot at you, when they’re not.”

Day 9

In many ways fighting the Taleban is the easiest part of the Marines’ war.

There is a darker side. Civilians have been wounded and killed during some operations. One Marine told me of rushing into a house from which he just been fired upon. A door slammed in his face. He put a long burst of gunfire through it and kicked it down.

Inside were were two dead, a man and a teenage boy. Neither was armed. Guns were later found in the house.

On another occasion, during a heavy engagement, he kicked in the door of a house the Marines had fired on to find seven women, children and old people inside, all badly wounded.

He dragged them into a yard and with another Marine bandaged every casualty. Two died. But the wounded six-year-old girl sticks in his mind. One of her legs was torn open by gunfire.

“People said to me afterwards, ‘Don’t worry about it’,” he tells me. “But that girl, she hadn’t been shooting at us. She was just in a house where someone else was shooting. And now she’s going to be scarred for life.”

Day 10

Rip, roar and havoc. Not a fight. A battle. Fire from the front. Fire from the flanks. Rockets and bullets scything through the air. Up to 30 Taleban in 12 different positions have opened up from close range before we are out of the vehicles. The rear door swings open and we pitch out from the warm womb of the Viking into sudden light, chattering machineguns, explosions and whipping lead: nought-to-ninety in a second on an adrenalin high. Hit the ground. Run. See an empty trench.

Dive into it. To our left one of the open-deck Land Rovers, a mobile machinegun platform is firing withering bursts at Talebs shooting from dunes beyond. Tug is to assault the position with his six Marines. They peel out of cover and take a long run leftwards.

The air zips and zings. I can see “Tommo”, the Rover commander, coolly sitting astride the lip of the ridge, in clear view of the Talebs, fire off a Javelin rocket, then jump back into his vehicle and blast away again with the machinegun. From all along the ridgeline around us Marines are firing and being fired upon.

“Let’s go, let’s f***ing go,” Tug yells and the section is up and moving into the shingle dunes as the Taleban run down a slope the other side. The Marines take cover at the edge, and fire upon targets in the village below. The nearest house is less than 100 yards away. They take fire from it and Tugs pumps a grenade through a window. A wounded chicken flaps out.

“Oh Tug, you wounded the poor little bird, finish it off mate!” Marines are laughing and shooting.

But there are more than little birds out there. I see a running black figure stop and turn, rifle up and glittering as he shoots at us. And above the automatic fire I hear the smacking retort of South African’s sniper rifle.

As artillery and mortar bombs thump into the low ground, Tug and the last three Marines become pinned down by a Taleban sniper. I see a round smack into the shingle barely 2ft from Tug’s head, the latest very close call of a heavy 3½hour fight.

Though the Taleban are pushed off their forward positions quickly enough, they regroup below and target the company with rockets and mortar bombs. I see a rocket explode right beside the section accompanied by Richard Mills, perhaps 15 feet beyond them. I do not wonder if they are hit. I am sure of it. Yet none is.

The Taleban are still shooting as the Marines return to their Vikings. As many as 20 insurgents are believed dead, but their rocket fire continues as J Company leaves the ridge. Inside Beowulf, the men assess the fight to have been in the “top five” of those they have had since arriving in Afghanistan last autumn. Then they stop talking, and begin to doze off.

Most are still asleep as the patrol returns to base. They have only two days before another long patrol in northern Helmand.

“Yeah, that was hoofing in the end,” Tug says cheerily, as his men wander away to their tents. “Another good trip courtesy of Tug Wilson Travel.”

And I wonder whether J Company’s luck will hold, whether they will all come back from the next mission.

By the camp’s gate, mounted on a blast-proof wall, the company’s death’s head jester grins and winks fixedly, as if guardian of the answer.

Follow the link to the article at the times where there is also videos of J company on this particular 10 day operation.

18/01/2007

More On Marines Heroic Rescue Attempt

Marines cling to helicopters to rescue comrade

When the 200-strong team was forced to pull back from a battle with Taliban fighters at a fortress in southern Helmand Province on Monday, they realised that L/Cpl Matthew Ford was not with them.

Not knowing whether he had been killed or wounded, the unit launched an improvised rescue attempt in which four soldiers rode astride the fixed wings of two Apache helicopters, clinging to the sides of the aircraft, as they flew back over a river into a rain of fire.

When they landed near the walls of the Taliban fortress, known as Fort Jugroom, the team found that Cpl Ford had been killed and returned with his body.

"It's a testament to the men involved that they were prepared to mount a risky operation at very short notice, using a new and completely untried procedure, returning into the line of fire in order to rescue their comrade," said Col Rory Bruce, the spokesman for British forces in Helmand last night.

"I think that shows the level of camaraderie and bravery of those soldiers involved."

It is expected that some of them will be recommended for awards for bravery.

The assault was the latest in a new phase of British operations in Helmand, which has seen a shift from the tactics employed in the first months of the British deployment to southern Afghanistan last summer. While British forces still maintain a number of "platoon houses", fortified bases in towns in north Helmand, which were subjected to intense Taliban attacks last summer, another concept is being tried against the Taliban. The Marines call it "mogging'.

Small British units are now spending weeks at a time moving through the featureless deserts of Helmand. They are re-supplied from the air and seek to emulate many of the tactical advantages of mobility and surprise traditionally enjoyed by the insurgents.

By avoiding well-used tracks and roads they reduce the threat from roadside bombs and can appear out of the desert, strike a target and disappear again.

Monday's attack, near the town of Garmser, was an example of just such an intelligence-led raid.

British military commanders stress that the object was not to take and hold the fort, but to kill experienced and tactically astute Taliban commanders, who would be hard to replace, and to disrupt Taliban re-organisation during the winter months when it traditionally prepares for a spring offensive.

"Last summer's tactics were not all of our choice, but were the result of a number of political decisions which were taken by the Afghan government," said one senior British military source.

"Mogging is not about taking and holding ground, it is about having the battle at the time and place of our choosing and moving into the Taliban's sanctuary ground.

"It is not about the numbers of Taliban killed and you will find us generally reluctant to give numbers killed.

"Monday's operation succeeded in killing a number of middle-rank Taliban leaders. We lost one soldier, which is a source of regret. But the effect on the enemy is both real and psychological."

However, the strength and tenacity of the resistance on Monday by a force of Taliban fighters numbering only around 30 against 200 Royal Marines backed by artillery and aircraft gives clear warning that the Taliban are becoming an ever more formidable force numbering fighters who do not lack for courage or motivation. The months ahead are likely to see more hard fighting.

The Telegraph also included a Picture of the rescue attempt :

Wafghan18big

17/01/2007

Heroic Marines Rescue Attempt

The Royal Marine killed in action in Afghanistan on Monday was the subject of a dramatic rescue attempt by his colleagues, the MoD has revealed.

L/Cpl Mathew Ford, of 45 Commando Royal Marines, died during an attack on a Taleban fort in the Helmand province.

When his colleagues regrouped and found he was missing, they flew back.

Four strapped themselves to two Apache helicopters which landed inside and outside the fort's wall. But they discovered he was already dead.

UK Task Force spokesman, Lt Col Rory Bruce, said the heroic mission was a "leap into the unknown".

"This is believed to be the first time UK forces have ever tried this type of rescue mission," he said.

"It was an extraordinary tale of heroism and bravery of our airmen, soldiers and marines who were all prepared to put themselves back into the line of fire to rescue a fallen comrade.

"And it was with great sadness they later found their brother-in-arms had been killed in action."

L/Cpl Ford was part of a 200-strong force, who attacked the major Taleban fort to the south of Garmsir in the southern province.

'Family devastated'

The MoD said the Apache helicopter can only carry a pilot and a gunner but there are attachments on the wings for personnel to harness themselves to in emergencies.

The fort had been a surveillance target for more than two months.

A third Apache helicopter and other units provided covering fire, as the rescue bid got under way, the MoD said.

The helicopters landed in the fort and located L/Cpl Ford's body, which they then strapped to the Apache.

L/Cpl Ford, who was the eldest of three brothers, was brought up in Immingham, North East Lincolnshire - where his mother and stepfather still reside.

He shared a flat in Dundee with his fiancée, Ina.

His mother, Joan, said: "We are all devastated by the news of Mathew's death.

"He was a larger-than-life character who lived his life to the full.

"He was a wonderful son to me and brother to Thomas and Scott and was looking forward to his future with Ina."

L/Cpl Ford's commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel Duncan Dewar RM, said the serviceman's "professionalism, reliability, and selflessness as well as his sharp wit marked him out from the crowd".

11/01/2007

J Company Out And About

British Troops Fight Four Hour Battle With Taliban

More than 100 elite British troops today fought a furious four-hour battle at close quarters with the Taliban as they built checkpoints to keep the insurgents away from a local town.

A company of Royal Marines was ambushed at dawn in Helmand by rebels hiding in trenches and compounds just 40 metres away.

The force included marines from J Company of Plymouth-based 42 Commando and from Arbroath-based 45 Commando.

They were helped by Danish and Estonian troops and the Afghan National Army.

The fight began at 6.45am after the British force went to an area 5km from their base at Camp Price, near Gereshk, as part of Operation Bauxite, to install permanent vehicle checkpoints.

The security measures are being introduced at the request of locals to stop the Taliban coming into their town and also to keep the British base out of range of rebel mortars.

Up to 50 Taliban fighters attacked the multinational forces from irrigation ditches near the hamlet of Habibolah-Kalay.

During the ferocious battle, the Taliban leapt up in groups of four to open fire, so close the British could clearly see their trademark black turbans.

Major Ewen Murchison, the commander of J Company who led the battle, said: "That is one of the fiercest fights we've been in to date in terms of both the weight of fire that was coming our way and the proximity of the Taliban to my own troops.

"We went in at first light and the fire fight started at about 6.45am. We were under heavy small arms, RPG and mortar fire.

"There were 35 to 50 Taliban flying at us from numerous fire positions in and around the compounds and trenches employing their classic shoot and scoot tactics.

"During the course of the four hours I used the full range of military weapons available to me."

British troops responded to the Taliban ambush with small arms and machine guns, before resorting to mortars and artillery.

When this failed they deployed shoulder-launched anti-tank missiles at the enemy compounds and then called in air strikes by Apache helicopter gunships.

But the tenacious Taliban refused to surrender.

The battle climaxed with a raid by two Harrier GR7 jump jets, which dropped two 1,000lb bombs on the Taliban positions, finally ending resistance.

The noise from the laser-guided explosives shook the province and sent a huge plume of smoke into the sky that could be seen 5km away at Camp Price.

No one from the multinational forces was injured in the battle. It is not known how many Taliban were killed.

Maj Murchison, who was brought up in Bearsden, near Glasgow, but now lives in Plymouth, said: "You go through the escalatory process of using your direct fire machine guns.

"If they're still not having the effect then you obviously escalate through the use of indirect fire weapons like mortars and artillery.

"And if they're still not having the effect you resort to the dropping of bombs.

"If they are well-dug in in trenches, quite often you need a 1,000-pounder to have the desired effect to neutralise the target.

"If I fire shots at them and they run away that means I've achieved my objective. If they continue to fight then I have to kill them."

As the Taliban finally fled, the British forces stormed the compounds where they found a bomb factory and weapons cache.

Maj Murchison continued: "I conducted an incursion into one of the compounds and found AK variant weapons, RPG launchers, grenades and rudimentary IED bomb making equipment, batteries, wires and explosives, so a pretty good find from my perspective."

The company commander said they had been asked to build more checkpoints by local community leaders who have seen how security improved in their area after similar measures were introduced around Gereshk in November.

He said: "We're doing it in conjunction with the locals who had a shura (council) and said to us if we could help them build some checkpoints in this area this would decrease the influx of Taliban into Gereshk town centre by about 80%. That was their figure that they gave me."

More checkpoints were built in January as the British continue their campaign to push the Taliban further away from that part of north-east Helmand.

More On This Story at http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30200-1246866,00.html

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