Special Ops Soldier killed in A-Stan firefight

"There were nine airstrikes on Tuesday in support of a clearing operation..."

Keep pulling that chain...

RIP Warrior and Hand Salute
 
Bad news then, of course CSAF will claim the F-16 CAS was as effective as A-10 CAS.
I hope the Non-USAF side bitches about less than effective Daylight CAS.
Good news is the team is reportedly no longer "trapped".

One HH-60 was lost and another turned back. Why? Did they have the air cover they needed? The question may be what was the catalyst that allowed the team to take back the initiative? I heard an AC-130 was on station. When did it arrive? When did additional QRF arrive? Are the airstrikes just follow on or were they drivers? Ultimately, could A-10's have turned the battle quicker - would they have helped avoid the loss of the 60?

Godspeed to the fallen soldier.
 
The last A-10 left the country late last year. I think there's a lone Viper squadron at Bagram. Everything is gone....there's no war in Afghanistan, remember?
 
The last A-10 left the country late last year. I think there's a lone Viper squadron at Bagram. Everything is gone....there's no war in Afghanistan, remember?
The argument made (and ignored by the politicians) was removing all those airframes would increase the risk to the personnel left.
 
The Viper while not optimal, is a decent platform if the correct pods are onboard. The AC-130 may have to go in the barn at daybreak unless nothing else is around.

Why have we (I) not heard anymore on this? They rather show and talk about Obama crying:mad:
 
The last A-10 left the country late last year. I think there's a lone Viper squadron at Bagram. Everything is gone....there's no war in Afghanistan, remember?
There never was. There was OIF, and then a vacation before we went back to Iraq.
Why have we (I) not heard anymore on this? They rather show and talk about Obama crying:mad:
...there's no war in Afghanistan, remember?

There's your answer.
 
I really hate to think about how the situation may have fared differently had there been a couple A-10's on station. I don't understand how anyone knowledgeable on the subject could make the argument that the F-16 could do the A-10's job.
 
BITD BUFFs would make a moonscape around your poz. It wasn't precision, it was obliteration. And the enemy that survived would be naked and shaking with blood coming out of their ears and shit running down their legs. The Taliban deserve no better treatment. Death to them all.
 
BITD BUFFs would make a moonscape around your poz. It wasn't precision, it was obliteration. And the enemy that survived would be naked and shaking with blood coming out of their ears and shit running down their legs. The Taliban deserve no better treatment. Death to them all.

Buffs are good platforms if the crew is VERY experienced and proper sensors are onboard. I was always a little hesitant to clear hot a BUFF at 40,000 ft. which I could not/barely see and could not hear. Their playtime and payload is great, their re-attack speed not so great. They can definetly bring the hurt.
 
I really hate to think about how the situation may have fared differently had there been a couple A-10's on station. I don't understand how anyone knowledgeable on the subject could make the argument that the F-16 could do the A-10's job.

Then don't think about it. It isn't your place to. Bombs are bombs.
 
My point is, we have no idea what the situation was, but saying
I really hate to think about how the situation may have fared differently had there been a couple A-10's on station. I don't understand how anyone knowledgeable on the subject could make the argument that the F-16 could do the A-10's job.

Is armchair QB'ing before families are even notified. And by some fucking wannabe? But I digress.

I guess I don'tlike threads talking about dudes I may know being surrounded turning into a CAS argument amongst us.
 
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RIP, SSgt. McClintock.

Sharing this. Just unbelievable.

With a team from 19th Special Forces Group attached to 3rd Special Forces Group surrounded and under fire in Marjah, Afghanistan their QRF should have been launched far sooner. It wasn’t the fault of the actual soldiers, who were standing by and ready to go, but command would not let them leave their base, insisting that they wait for the next period of darkness before a team from 19th Special Forces Group was able to drive in and conduct a off-set infil to support their fellow Green Berets.

The 19th Group Team was there as part of a broader effort to re-take Marjah from the Taliban, and was coordinated with local Afghan units which were clearing adjacent valleys. Once pinned down, one team member was killed, another seriously injured. A Special Forces medic (18D) worked on the casualty for 12-hours, keeping him alive while receiving enemy fire. The casualty, “was alert and oriented” by the time he was finally evacuated according to one SOFREP source. The Department of Defense has not yet released the name of the soldier who was killed in action.

Worse yet, command would not authorize fire support from a circling AC-130 gunship due to fears of collateral damage. Recent events such as the hospital bombing in Kunduz probably resonate at command levels, but perhaps they should have been thinking more about another recent event, Benghazi, since their men on the ground faced the threat of being overrun. Eventually, the command allowed AC-130 to fire a whopping two 40mm rounds into an open field a weak show of force to the Taliban.

More of this story here...
 
Marjah's one of those places where you go in heavy with your varsity squad, not an ODA with some Afghans. That's nothing against the Team at all because this is what the war has become, but no one in their right mind would think the Afghans are capable of handling that valley.
 
2 x 40mm rounds into an open field? That's it? No fucking way......
 
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