US marines launch huge assault on Taliban town 29/04/2008 - 07:01:23
US Marines in helicopters and Humvees flooded into a Taliban-held town in southern Afghanistan’s most violent province early today – the first major American operation in the region for years.
Several hundred marines pushed into the town of Garmser in pre-dawn light, stretching Nato’s presence into an area littered with poppy fields and classified as Taliban territory.
US commanders say Taliban fighters have been expecting an assault and have been setting up improvised explosive devices in response.
It was not known how much resistance the marines would face in Garmser, where British troops have a small base on the town’s edge, but whose main marketplace is closed because of the Taliban threat.
The assault in Helmand province – backed by US artillery in the desert and fighter aircraft in the sky – is the first major task undertaken by the 2,300 Marines in the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, which arrived last month from Camp Lejuene, North Carolina for a seven-month deployment. Another 1,200 Marines arrived to train Afghan police.
Major Tom Clinton, the American commander at Forward Operating Base Dwyer, a British outpost 10 miles west of Garmser, said the Taliban had undoubtedly seen the marines moving into the area in recent days.
But he said the fact that the marines were assaulting the town by helicopter and were moving through by foot was probably a surprise.
“There’s all kinds of reports of (Taliban) commanders telling their guys to grab their stuff and get out there” to fight, said Major Clinton, 36, of Swampscott, Massachusetts.
“It’s no secret they know we’re here. It’s just a question of when and where” an assault would happen.
The marines’ mission is the first carried out by US forces this far south in Helmand province in years. An operation late last year to take back the Taliban-held town of Musa Qala on the north end of Helmand involved US, British and Afghan forces.
Helmand province is the world’s largest opium poppy growing region and has been a flashpoint of the increasingly violent insurgency the last two years. British troops – who are responsible for Helmand – have faced fierce battles on the north end of Helmand.
Most US troops operate in the east, along the border with Pakistan, but Britain - with 7,500 troops – and Canada – with 2,500 troops in neighbouring Kandahar province – have not had enough manpower to tame the south.
More than 8,000 people died in insurgency-related violence last year. Militants set off more than 140 suicide bombs. Taliban fighters have been increasingly relying on roadside bombs and suicide attacks after being routed in force-on-force battles in the past.
Marines had prepared yesterday by cleaning weapons and handing out grenades. The leader of one of three companies involved – Charlie Company commander Captain John Moder – said his men were ready.
“The feeling in general is optimistic, excited,” said Capt Moder, 34, of North Kingstown, Rhode Island. “They’ve been training for this deployment the last nine months. We’ve got veteran leaders.”
Many of the men in the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit served in 2006 and 2007 in Ramadi, the capital of the Anbar province in western Iraq. The vast region was once al Qaida in Iraq’s stronghold before the militants were pushed out in early 2007.