Battle of Takur Ghar

Here Irish:

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Executive Summary of the Battle of Takur Ghar​
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Released through the Department of Defense, May 24, 2002
In the early morning hours of March 4, 2002, on a mountaintop called Takur Ghar
in southeastern Afghanistan, al Qaeda soldiers fired on an MH-47E helicopter carrying a
Special Operations Forces (SOF) reconnaissance element. This fire resulted in a Navy
SEAL, ABH1 Neal Roberts, falling out of the helicopter, and began a chain of events
culminating in one of the most intense small-unit firefights of the war against terrorism;
the death of all the al Qaeda terrorists defending the mountain top; and, sadly, resulting
also in the death of seven U.S. servicemen. Despite these losses, the U.S. forces involved
in this fight again distinguished themselves by conspicuous bravery. Their countless acts
of heroism demonstrated the best of America’s Special Operations Forces (SOF) as
Army, Navy and Air Force special operators fought side by side to save one of their own,
and each other, and in the process secured the mountain top and inflicted serious loss on
the al Qaeda.
U.S. SOF had been monitoring for well over a month a large-scale pocket of
forces in the Shah-e-Kot valley, southeast of Gardez, Afghanistan. In February, the
headquarters for U.S. ground forces in Afghanistan, TF MOUNTAIN, commanded by
MG Hagenback, conceived a classic military “hammer and anvil” maneuver—codenamed
Operation ANACONDA—to clear out this threat. U.S. and Afghan forces in
Gardez would push from the West in an effort to clear an area of reported high
concentrations of al Qaeda in the western part of the Shah-e-Kot valley. ANACONDA
planners believed this maneuver would cause the enemy to flee east into the blocking
positions of awaiting American soldiers from the 10​
th Mountain and 101st Airborne

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Divisions located in the eastern sector of the valley. Augmenting the conventional forces
would be small reconnaissance teams. These teams were drawn from U.S. and Coalition
SOF - they included U.S. Navy SEALs, U.S. Army Special Forces, and U.S. Air Force
special tactics operators. The plan was to position these reconnaissance (“recce”) teams
at strategic locations where they would establish observation posts (OPs) to provide
information on enemy movements and direct air strikes against observed enemy forces.
This was done in several locations resulting directly in effective airstrikes on observed al
Qaeda positions and the death of hundreds of al Qaeda in the Sahi-Kowt area. ABH1
Neil Roberts served in one of these reconnaissance teams.
In war, however, things rarely go exactly as planned - the enemy has a “vote”.
Operation ANACONDA proved to be no exception. Rather than flee, these disciplined
and well trained al Qaeda soldiers stood and fought, and at times were reinforced – all
along a series of draws and trails at the southern end of the valley near Marzak, dubbed
the “ratline.” The enemy halted the Afghan forces pushing east toward “the Whale” – a
distinctive terrain feature southeast of Gardez – and the Afghan forces then withdrew
back to Gardez. Because of a brief period of bad weather and the unexpectedly heavy
enemy resistance, only a portion of the TF MOUNTAIN troops inserted into their
intended positions on D-Day. Some of those that did insert, fought under intense mortar
and small arms fire. SOF, well hidden in their observation posts, used direct fire
weapons, and coordinated close air support bombing onto enemy fighting positions. This
provided some relief for the TF MOUNTAIN forces, especially in the south at HLZ
Ginger east of Marzak. MG Hagenbeck repositioned his soldiers to the northern end of​
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the Shah-e-Kot valley and attacked the al Qaeda from this direction. As the battle
became more fluid, TF MOUNTAIN recognized the need to put U.S. “eyes” on the
southern tip of the valley and the “ratline.” They needed additional observation posts
near HLZ Ginger to provide surveillance and to call in U.S. air power on the numerous
concentrations of enemy forces. A 10,000-foot, snow-capped mountain, named Takur
Ghar, appeared to U.S. planners as a perfect location for an observation post. It
dominated the southern approaches to the valley and offered excellent visibility into
Marzak, two kilometers to the West. The mountaintop also provided an unobstructed
view of the “Whale” on the other side of the valley. Takur Ghar was a perfect site for an
observation post, and unfortunately, the enemy thought so too. The enemy had installed
a well-concealed, fortified force, which included a heavy machine gun perfectly
positioned to shoot down coalition aircraft flying in the valley below.
On 2 March, 2002, U.S. forces began planning to insert forces into two
observation posts the following night. Two MH-47Es from 2nd Battalion, 160​
th Special
Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne) would insert two teams; one MH-47E - Razor
04, would emplace a team to the north while the other MH-47E - Razor 03, would deploy
a team of U.S. SEALs and an Air Force combat controller (CCT) on Takur Ghar. Late
the next evening, the two helicopters took off from their base north of “the box,” as the
ANACONDA operational area became known to U.S. soldiers.
At approximately 0300 local time, Razor 03, carrying ABH1 Roberts’ team,
approached its HLZ in a small saddle atop Takur Ghar. Originally planned to go in

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earlier to an offset HLZ, maintenance problems with one of the helicopters and a nearby
B-52 strike in support of TF MOUNTAIN delayed the insert. As Razor 03 approached,
both the pilots and the men in the back observed fresh tracks in the snow, goatskins, and
other signs of recent human activity. Immediately, the pilots and team discussed a
mission abort, but it was too late. An RPG struck the side of the aircraft, wounding one
crewman, while machinegun bullets ripped through the fuselage, cutting hydraulic and oil
lines. Fluid spewed about the ramp area of the helicopter. The pilot struggled to get the
Chinook off the landing zone and away from the enemy fire. Neil Roberts stood closest
to the ramp, poised to exit onto the landing zone. Roberts and an aircrew member were
knocked off balance by the explosions and the sudden burst of power applied by the pilot.
As Neil and the crewman reached to steady each other, both slipped on the oil-soaked
ramp and fell out of the helicopter. As the pilots fought to regain control of the
helicopter, other crewmembers pulled the tethered crewmember back into the aircraft.
Un-tethered, Neil fell approximately 5-10 feet onto the snowy mountaintop below. The
crew managed to keep the aircraft aloft until it became apparent it could fly no more.
The pilots executed a controlled crash landing some seven kilometers north of where
Petty Officer Roberts fell off the helicopter. He was now alone and in the midst of an
enemy force.
Nobody knows exactly what transpired over the next few minutes on that
mountaintop. There were no surveillance aircraft over the mountaintop at the time
Roberts fell from the helicopter. Based on forensic evidence subsequently gathered from
the scene, we believe Roberts survived the short fall from the helicopter, likely activated​
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his signaling device, and engaged the enemy with his squad automatic weapon (SAW).
He was mortally injured by gunfire as the closed in on him.
Meanwhile, following Razor 03’s controlled crash landing, the SEALs did a quick
head count that confirmed what they already knew—Petty Officer Roberts was missing.
TSgt John Chapman, the team’s Air Force combat controller, immediately contacted a
nearby AC-130 for protection. A short time later, Razor 04, after inserting its “recce”
team, arrived on the scene and picked up the downed crewmen and SEALs, taking them
to Gardez. The SEALs and pilots of Razor 04 quickly formulated a plan to go back in
and rescue Roberts, despite the fact that they knew a force of heavily armed al Qaeda
manned positions on Takur Ghar. An AC-130 gunship moved to Takur Ghar and reported
seeing what they believed to be Roberts, surrounded by four to six other individuals.
Knowing how the al Qaeda brutally treated prisoners, Roberts’ teammates and
commanders knew that time was running out on Neil Roberts. Razor 04, with its cargo of
five SEALs and TSgt Chapman, departed Gardez and returned to Roberts’ last known
location on the mountaintop. There were no known nearby, suitable landing zones - other
than where Roberts had fallen. Inserting the rescue team at the base of the mountain was
not an option – they would lose valuable time making the 2 to 3 hour climb up the
mountain. Their only real chance of success was to reinsert in the same proximity of
where Razor 03 had taken intense enemy fire.
At about 0500 local time, Razor 04 approached the HLZ atop of Takur Ghar.
Despite enemy fire cutting through the MH-47E, all six members of what had been a
“recce” element were safely inserted, and the helicopter, although damaged, returned to
base. Once on the ground near Roberts’ last known location, and using the waning​
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darkness for cover, the team assessed the situation and moved quickly to the high ground.
The most prominent features on the hilltop were a large rock and tree. As they
approached the tree, TSgt Chapman saw two enemy personnel in a fortified position
under the tree. TSgt Chapman and a nearby SEAL opened fire, killing both enemy
personnel. The Americans immediately began taking fire from another bunker position
some 20 meters away. A burst of gunfire hit Chapman, mortally wounding him. The
SEALs returned fire and threw hand grenades into the enemy bunker position to their
immediate front. As the firefight continued, two of the SEALs were wounded by enemy
gunfire and grenade fragmentation. Finding themselves in a deadly crossfire with 2 of
their teammates seriously wounded and one killed and clearly outnumbered, the SEALs
decided to disengage. They shot two more al Qaeda as they moved off the mountain
peak to the Northeast - with one of the wounded SEALs taking “point.” As they moved
partly down the side of the mountain for protection, a SEAL contacted the overhead AC-
130—GRIM 32—and requested fire support. GRIM 32 responded with covering fire as
the SEALs withdrew.
Back at the US staging base, the Ranger quick reaction force (QRF)—a
designated unit on standby for just such situations, was put on alert and directed to move
forward to a safe landing zone at Gardez. This was to position them closer to the fight,
within 15 minutes response time. The 23-man QRF loaded on two waiting MH-47Es:
Razor 01 and Razor 02. Razor 01 carried 10 Rangers, an enlisted tactical air controller
(ETAC), a combat controller (CCT) and a Pararescueman (PJ). Razor 02 carried 10
Rangers. Taking off from their base, the QRF had little knowledge about what was​
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actually happening on Takur Ghar due to very limited communications. As the QRF
flew toward Gardez, the embattled SEALs, withdrawing from Takur Ghar, requested
their immediate assistance. Headquarters approved the request and directed the QRF to
proceed quickly to the problem area and insert their team at an “offset” HLZ - not the
same landing zone where Razors 03 and 04 had taken fire. Due to intermittently
functioning aircraft communications equipment, the Rangers and helicopter crews never
received the “offset” instructions which also hampered attempts to provide tactical
situational awareness to the QRF commander aboard Razor 01. Communications
problems too plagued headquarters’ attempts to determine the true condition of the SEAL
team and their exact location. As a consequence, the Rangers went forward believing
that the SEALs were still located on top of Takur Ghar, proceeding to the same location
where both Razors 03 and 04 had taken enemy fire.
At about 0545 local, Razor 01 and 02 flew toward the Takur Ghar landing zone.
At this point, the QRF was unaware that a squad of al Qaeda fighters, who by this time
had already killed two Americans, were poised and expecting their arrival. The sun was
just beginning to crest the mountains to the east when Razor 01 approached from the
south. On final approach, an RPG round exploded on the right side of the helicopter,
while small arms fire peppered it from three directions. The pilots attempted to abort the
landing, but the aircraft had taken too much damage. The right side mini-gunner, SGT
Phil Svitak, opened fire but was hit by an AK-47 round and died almost immediately.
The helicopter dropped ten feet and landed hard on the snow-covered slope of the landing
zone. Both pilots were seriously wounded as they crash landed their crippled aircraft.​
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The helicopter nose was pointing up the hill toward the main enemy bunkers - where
TSgt Chapman had been killed. The impact of the crash knocked everyone to the
helicopter floor. The Rangers, CCT and the eight-man Chinook crew struggled under
intense fire to get up and out of the helicopter fuselage. The rear door gunner and a
Ranger opened fire out the back of the aircraft, killing an al Qaeda soldier. SGT Brad
Crose and CPL Matt Commons survived the initial landing but were struck and killed by
enemy fire as they exited the rear of the aircraft. Another Ranger, SPC Marc Anderson,
was hit while still inside the aircraft, dying instantly.
Despite the intense small arms fire, the PJ, Senior Airman Jason Cunningham,
and another medic remained inside the helicopter and began treating the wounded. At the
same time, the surviving Rangers quickly assembled at the helicopter ramp to assess the
situation and fix the enemy locations. Using their M-4s, the Rangers killed two more al
Qaeda, including an RPG gunner. Using natural rock outcroppings as cover, they began
maneuvering to better positions. The Ranger platoon leader formulated a plan to assault
the bunkers on top of the hill - but after an initial attempt to do so, he quickly realized he
would need a larger force. Instead, the Air Force combat controller worked to get close
air support on station. Within minutes, U.S. aircraft began to bomb and strafe the enemy
positions, dropping 500lb bombs within 50 meters of the SOF positions. By 7 am local
time, the Rangers were no longer in danger of being overrun. They consolidated their
position and established a casualty collection point to the rear of the helicopter.
After the shootdown of Razor 01, Razor 02 was directed to move to a safe area
and await further instructions. Later, Razor 02 inserted the other half of the QRF with its​
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force of 10 Rangers and an additional Navy SEAL at an “offset” landing zone, down the
mountain some 800 meters east and over 2,000 feet below the mountaintop. The Navy
SEAL linked up with the SEAL “recce” element, which was by now some 1000 meters
from the mountaintop. The Rangers’ movement up the hill was a physically demanding
2-hour effort under heavy mortar fire and in thin mountain air. They climbed the 45-70
degree slope, most of it covered in three feet of snow, weighted down by their weapons,
body armor and equipment.
By 1030 am local time, the men were completely exhausted, but still had to defeat
the enemy controlling the top of the hill - a mere 50 meters from their position. With the
arrival of the ten men of Razor 02, the Rangers prepared to assault the enemy bunkers.
As the Air Force CCT called in a last airstrike on the enemy bunkers and with two
machineguns providing suppression fire, seven Rangers stormed the hill as quickly as
they could in the knee-deep snow - shooting and throwing grenades. Within minutes, the
Rangers took the hill, killing multiple al Qaeda. The Rangers began to consolidate their
position on the top of the mountain, which the platoon leader deemed more defendable -
and safer for their wounded. The Rangers, Army crewmembers, and Air Force personnel
began moving the wounded up the steep slope; it took four to six men to move one
casualty – it was a difficult and slow process.
As the soldiers moved the wounded, additional al Qaeda began firing from a small
ridgeline some 400 meters to the rear of the downed helicopter’s position. The wounded
at the casualty collection point were completely exposed to the enemy fire, as were the PJ
and medic tending to them. While the Rangers maneuvered to return fire, enemy fire​
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struck the Army medic and PJ at the casualty collection point as they worked on their
patients. Rangers and helicopter crewmen alike risked their lives, exposing themselves to
enemy fire, to pull the wounded to the relative safety of nearby rocks. Once again, the
combat controller called in close air support, and a few well-placed bombs and Ranger
machinegun fire eventually silenced the enemy fire. Unfortunately, this attack claimed
another life. The stricken PJ, Senior Airman Jason Cunningham, eventually succumbed
to his wounds. Throughout the ensuing hours, the Americans continued to take sporadic
sniper and mortar fire.
The Rangers consolidated their position, moved their dead and wounded to the
top of the hill, and waited for a night extraction. The enemy air defense and ground
situation in the vicinity of Takur Ghar did not lend itself to another daylight rescue
attempt using helicopters. Throughout the day, observation posts on adjoining hilltops,
manned by Australian and American SOF, called in fire on al Qaeda forces attempting to
reinforce the mountaintop.
At about 2015 local time, four helicopters from the 160​
th SOAR extracted both
the Rangers on Takur Ghar and the SEALs down the mountainside. Two hours later, the
survivors and their fallen comrades were back at their base. A team of experienced
medical staff of the 274
th Forward Surgical Team, operating out of the Bagram airport
tower, awaited the eleven wounded personnel. Their quick and professional medical
treatment likely saved the hand of a wounded pilot. By morning, all the wounded were
headed to hospitals in Germany and elsewhere. Operation ANACONDA would continue
for another 19 days. These same units continued to play a decisive role in defeating the

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al Qaeda in the largest Coalition ground combat operation thus far in the war against
terrorism.
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I wear a Ranger KIA bracelet bearing the name of Matt Commons. I will never forget the ultimate sacrifice that Matt and 6 other brave men made on top of that remote mountain. My thoughts and prayers are with Matt Common's incredible family, and the friends and families of the other men who died five years ago today. I am also thinking of the heroic men who returned and continue to live with that battle seared into their memories...

Specialist Marc A. Anderson, 1st BN 75th Ranger Regiment
Corporal Matthew A. Commons, 1st BN 75th Ranger Regiment
Sergeant Bradley Crose, 1st BN 75th Ranger Regiment
Sergeant Philip J. Svitak, 2nd BN 160th SOAR
Senior Airman Jason Cunningham, 38th Rescue Squadron, USAF
Tech. Sgt. John A. Chapman, Combat Controller w/ 24th Special Tactics Squadron USAF
Petty Officer 1st Class Neil Roberts, SEAL Team 2, USN

RIP and Blue Skies men...
 
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