Fire Strike 7/9
Page 14
‘Right, we’re out of here. Good hunting, Widow Seven Nine. Stay safe.’
As the Apaches banked away from the battlefield and set a course for Camp Bastion, I asked the F-15 to do one more attack run. Two of the four caves had been hit: I wanted the third taken out, leaving the one for us to explore on foot. I got Dude Zero Three to put a GBU-38 into the tunnel mouth, and then he had to bug out, low on fuel.
The F-15 was ripped by Recoil Four One and Recoil Four Two. It was 1630 as the Harriers came into the overhead, and both 4 and 5 Platoon were ordered to recommence their advance on foot. As they pushed into the village proper I got the Harriers flying shows of force. The battlefield had fallen absolutely silent. There was no further incoming — not a sausage.
The OC’s orders were to get the entire company in to Rahim Kalay by last light. As the foot soldiers advanced, Throp fired up the Vector and we drove in alongside them. There was nothing else moving apart from us lot. We reached the centre of the villages passing by the shredded remains of the white saloon car, which was still a raging inferno.
The OC split the company into smaller units, each tasked to check out enemy positions. The main compound had been totally flattened. It reeked of burning, death and scorched flesh. I’d never known that bone could burn, but it had blazed and vaporised in those airstrikes. There were corpses and bits of unrecognisable, bloody mess everywhere.
Along with Jason ‘Peachy’ Peach, the B Company sergeant major, I crawled into the one remaining cave entrance. The others had been hit by the GBU-38s and collapsed. By the light cast from our head torches, we could see there were two dead bodies in the far recesses of the cave. Both the enemy dead were still clutching their weapons. I guess they’d crawled in here after being hit by the Apache’s cannon fire, and this is where they’d died.
There were cases and cases of ammo in the tunnel, plus dozens of sleeping positions and boxloads of food. The enemy had prepared a real stronghold here, from where they could have withstood the longest of battles. At the far end of the tunnel there were side entrances, which had to connect to other tunnels and rat runs. But with the entire cave system having been pounded from the air, neither of us fancied taking a crawl further inside.
With the battle well and truly over, the OC ordered the Czech unit down from the high ground. The lads took their vehicles over to the south side of the canal. There they did a walk-around inspection of the woodstrip — the enemy position that the Apaches had malleted with cannon fire and flechette darts.
There they found an interlinked trench system with cleared arcs of fire, plus sleeping gear and caches of food and ammo. There were fourteen bodies in the woods, including one guy who appeared to be fixed to a tree trunk. He had tiny red stains all over his robe, and an AK-47 slung around his neck. He’d been peppered with flechettes, the tungsten darts nailing him to the tree.
Towards the western edge of the village one of the lads found the sniper point from which Sandy most likely had been shot. The enemy sniper had been firing through a tiny aperture. It was completely hidden from view, and we’d have had little hope of finding the gunman. There was one hole for the rifleman, and one for a spotter, just as our sniper units tended to operate.
A series of interlinked defensive positions were strung across Rahim Kalay. The OC had chosen this as the ‘easy’ route of advance into Adin Zai, as that’s what the Intel had told him. In fact, this had been a fortress manned by hundreds of enemy fighters — complete with underground arms stores, bunkers, sniper holes, trench lines and a series of hidden tunnels to move around in, unseen from the air.
Had the Apaches not discovered that first compound position, and flushed the enemy out, we would have advanced on foot into the mother of all ambushes. Our attempt to take Rahim Kalay would have been met by a wall of death. It didn’t bear thinking about how many of the lads of B Company would have been smashed in there. We would have lost far more than we had already that day.
As darkness crept into the silent village, we manoeuvred the Vector between two compounds that provided a little cover. We were to the north-east and on the far side of the village. To the north lay the open desert, and to the east stretched the Green Zone. Whatever enemy had survived the onslaught, it was into there that they would have fled.
It was 1900 by now, and for the first time since the day’s battle had begun the company HQ element, the platoon commanders and the FST gathered together. In every soldier’s mind was the same thought: that we’d lost Corporal Sandford, had two other serious casualties, and very nearly lost the battle. It was unbelievable that we hadn’t lost more lads, and largely thanks to the Apache pilots that we hadn’t.
Butsy talked for a while about Corporal Sandford’s death, the way 6 Platoon were holding up, and what to do with Sandy’s personal kit. Then he spoke of the assault plan, and what we might have done to prevent losing anyone. The OC was clearly gutted at losing one of his own. He took this very personally, almost as if it was his own failing.
‘This is my analysis of what happened today,’ the OC said. ‘We stirred the hornets’ nest. We stirred and we stirred and suddenly it erupted. What resulted was a long and intensive massive firefight. Air assets were made available as we needed them, and we couldn’t advance until we’d neutralised pockets in that hornets’ nest, and that’s what we did.
‘For an hour or more there was that massive, pitched battle,’ the OC continued. ‘Air, artillery and mortars were pounding the enemy positions, and back on the ground we still had troops in contact who needed water and ammo. We captured two-thirds of the village, and 4 Platoon were in the north trying to link up with the Czechs.
‘That was today’s battle.’ The OC paused. ‘Throughout all of this, the ‘‘what if” is could we have done anything to prevent Sandy’s death? The only way to have avoided it would have been not to do the mission. And bear in mind the worst-case scenario: losing more soldiers during the initial firefight, which would have made it harder to get out.’
The OC took a thoughtful pause. ‘Then, we would have come back in on foot and hit all of what the enemy had prepared for us here. It would have been a modern-day Rorke’s Drift. We’d have been sucked in with no way out. We’d have been forced to fight our way out, taking massive casualties.
‘We may have thought we were up against a rag-tag enemy,’ he continued. ‘We are not. Their ferocity and their ability to coordinate fire is clear. They have front-line trenches with cleared arcs; reserve trenches set fifty metres back, with sentry positions out front with RPGs. Their tactic has been to hit us, engage, fall back and draw us in to an ambush-and-surround position. We’ve been very, very lucky today.’
The OC gave orders that we were to consolidate our positions into all-round defence, and remain in Rahim Kalay that night. In the morning we would patrol out towards Adin Zai. And we would stay on the ground and dominate the territory.
After the briefing Major Butt did a walk around the company’s positions. It took him two and a half hours, and he got to say a few words to every one of the men. He knew how that would boost their morale. He came back via our position, and Sticky doled him out a cup of coffee, which was the OC’s chosen brew.
‘Fantastic,’ he remarked, as he took a sip. ‘Just what I needed. Bloody fantastic, lads.’
I glanced at my watch. It was 0200 hours. I’d been curled up on the dirt next to the Vector, dozing, my TACSAT propped against my ear. I had no air, but I was scanning whilst I kipped, just in case I got anything unexpectedly.
We fully expected to get hit again that night, but I’d only get air if the enemy launched a full-on attack. In a way it was a good thing. I was totally exhausted, and all I wanted was to get my bracket down. As Butsy chatted away to the others, I drifted off into the sleep of the dead. Overnight, I kept getting woken by the odd crackle of gunfire, or the crunching explosion of grenades. I’d do a quick scan of the airwaves, but with no warplanes on station I’d drift off to sleep once more.
Dozing fitfully in between the worst attacks, I shook myself awake proper at 0400. I had air for the company stand-to. I got a pair of A-10s, and had them flying low-level shows of force over our positions. That way, if the enemy were planning anything major they could see that we had Warthogs on hand to smash them.
It was then that I learned just how fierce the fighting had been overnight. The OC described it as a night of ‘enemy in the wire’, with close-quarters fighting in the pitch darkness. Butsy hadn’t slept a wink as he’d kept doing the rounds of his lads to bolster their morale. The enemy had probed us from every direction, and the lads had spent the dark hours wired, and wondering from where next the enemy were going to try to hit us.
One young soldier had told the OC about an enemy fighter who had simply refused to die. He’d shot the enemy fighter three times, but still the guy was trying to press home his attack. Eventually, the young lad had bayoneted him to death. It was clear the enemy were pumped up on drugs, for nothing else could have kept them going like that.
After stand-to I had the A-10s ripped by a pair of F-15s, call signs Dude Zero Three and Dude Zero Four. The F-15 was fast becoming one of my platforms of choice, particularly after the way that lone pilot had performed during the previous day’s battle.
I got chatting to the pilots, and it turned out that one was a woman. Emma proved to be a friendly type, as the American girls often are.
‘I haven’t spoken to a pretty lass in weeks,’ I told her. ‘What you wearing up there?’
‘I’m flying in my suspender set and bra, Widow Seven Nine. What you wearing down there?’
‘I’m minging,’ I told her, truthfully. ‘I smell like a damp dog. And I haven’t brushed my teeth for six days.’
She laughed. ‘Gee — I guess that’s what I can smell from up here then.’
The Intel coming down from the Rahim Kalay elders was that forty-one enemy had been killed, not to mention the wounded. Plus at least thirty-six enemy fighters were missing. We’d also taken out a full mortar team with mortar tube, and a further mortar team without the tube.
As if to confirm what the elders were telling us, the F-15 pilots spotted scores of tractors on the village outskirts, hauling out the dead and injured. We let them go about their grim work unmolested.
We would respect the enemy dead, and for sure they had enough of them right now.
Thirteen
THUNDER RUN
Two days later I was back at FOB Price, en route to Camp Bastion. For the next week at least my war was over. I’d been ordered to return to the UK, for — of all things — an AIDS test.
I was gutted to be leaving the 2 MERCIAN lads, especially as they were poised to take Adin Zai and occupy a swathe of the Green Zone. And I was pissed as hell to be leaving my FST, and handing over my JTAC role to a stand-in. But I had no option. Orders were orders.
Two months earlier I’d managed to stab myself in the leg with a discarded needle. The enemy often drugged themselves up before battle, shooting up with heroin or amphetamines. Their positions were littered with syringes, and of all the places I’d chosen to take cover I landed on a druggie’s needle.
I’d been just six days in theatre, and the soldiers of 42 Commando had been ordered to take Sangin town on foot. They’d been on their way back to the UK at the end of their tour, when they were told to do one more mission. I got embedded with the commando, as the JTAC for the Sangin operation.
In briefings we were told this was going to be the biggest op of 42 Commando’s entire tour. I’d never done a live drop before — controlling aircraft with live ordnance over a battlefield. I guessed this was going to be my baptism of fire.
Only three of us from the FST could go on the mission, and Sticky had drawn the short straw. We were embedded with Juliet Company, a bunch of kich-arse Commandos. There were 120 Marines in the company, and I was the JTAC in charge of the air. A lot of these lads were big, ugly, grizzled bastards, and I didn’t think they’d take kindly to me dropping a bomb on their mates by accident. One of the commando’s own JTACs came to have words with me. He was at the end of his Afghan deployment, and he was a qualified JTAC instructor.
‘Bommer, when we go out on this op you’re the JTAC heading it up,’ he told me. ‘Everything that’s going to happen you’re going to lead it. I’ll listen in, and only intervene if I have to. You need to find your feet and find them fast. You OK with that?’
I swallowed hard. ‘If there’s anything, can I ask you the question, boss?’
He shook his grizzled head. ‘No, mate. I’ll step in if needed. I’m giving you your head, Bommer. You’ll do all right, and if you don’t I’ll be on to you.’
So be it. I was in at the deep end.
We drove up to Sangin via the desert. The night before the assault we laagered up in the open, just short of the 611, the main road into town. We had C Squadron of The Light Dragoons — my parent regiment — in Scimitar light tanks doing overwatch of the road, to stop the enemy from planting mines or IEDs, or setting ambushes. The enemy knew of our intentions, and they were coming to join the party. Half a dozen top Taliban commanders had arrived from their northern stronghold of Musa Qaleh, each bringing sixty to eighty fighters with them. We were two companies of Royal Marines — some 240 men — up against several hundred enemy fighters.
The CO of 42 Commando gave us the final mission brief in our desert laager: ‘Secure Sangin centre through shock action, moving from inside to out to secure. Gain positions with or without force; deny enemy firing points. Hold all until relieved by Task Force Fury.’
Task Force Fury was troops from the US 82nd Airborne’s 4th Combat Team. They would be inserted in a massive heli-borne
operation to the west of Sangin, with us coming in from the east in a pincer movement. At the same time units of The Light Dragoons would move in from the open desert, conducting a highly visible feint, in an effort to fox the enemy.
The CO finished his brief with these immortal words. ‘Not all of you will be coming out of Sangin’. That drove it home: there were going to be a few lads getting whacked in there.
The airspace above Sangin had been formulated into a High Density Air Control Zone (HIDACZ), which was akin to an enormous ROZ broken down into individual sectors. We had a ‘king JTAC’ in control of the HIDACZ, and orchestrating the air from FOB Robinson. His call sign was Widow Seven Zero.
I got the alert via Chris that our forward unit had spotted an enemy mortar team setting up under cover of darkness. I got a description of the target, then radioed for air.
‘Widow Seven Zero, Widow Seven Nine,’ I put the call through to the king JTAC. ‘Sitrep: visual mortar base plate setting up. Request immediate air support.’
‘Widow Seven Nine, Widow Seven Zero, affirm. Bone Two Three is five minutes out of your ROZ.’
I had a B-1B semi-stealth bomber inbound. The American pilot came up on the air.
‘Widow Seven Nine, this is Bone Two Three: request an AO update.’
‘Bone Two Three, Widow Seven Nine. Sitrep: company-plus sized group stationary to the south of route 611, in overwatch of enemy mortar team setting up. Coordinates of mortar base plate are 59372057. Elevation 1,850 feet. Line of attack east-to-west. Nearest friendly forces four hundred metres south. Readback.’
The B-1B pilot read the coordinates back to me and confirmed the attack details. As we began the talk-on, I had to put myself into the mindset of the pilot in his cockpit. It felt just like being at JTAC school, only this was for real.
‘This is what you’re looking for,’ I told him. ‘There’s a rectangular compound to the north of the 611. Just to the east of it is a small track leading north-east to south-west.’
‘Visual with the compound and track,’ the pilot confirmed.
‘On the track directly to the west of the compound — one times white pickup parked under trees. Next to that, at nine o’clock: three times male pax, setting up mortar base plate.’
‘Searching… Visual on
the white pickup. Visual male pax. Preparing my attack run: what d’you want on target?’
‘I want a GBU-38. Nearest friendlies four hundred metres south.’
‘Affirm, one times GBU-38. Tipping in.’ A pause. ‘Sixty seconds to target. Call for clearance.’
As the giant bomber arrowed through the darkened sky, I heard a voice cutting in on my frequency.
‘Break! Break!Bone Two Three, Widow Four Six: I’m now the call sign clearing you in to do this drop.’
What the fuck — I had another JTAC trying to break in and take control of my mission. Before I could say anything, the B-1B pilot was back on the air.
‘Widow Seven Nine, this is Bone Two Three — who the hell’s controlling this drop?’
‘I’m the call sign with eyes on,’ I told him. ‘I’m the controlling station.’
‘I’m over target without dropping,’ the pilot announced. ‘Widow Seven Nine, that’s an aborted drop. I’m coming around for a new attack run.’
‘Roger that,’ I replied. ‘Stand by.’
I couldn’t believe it. My first live drop, and it was a fuck-up due to some bastard JTAC trying to take it off me.
‘Widow Seven Nine, Bone Two Three, banking around. Two minutes to my attacking run.’
Bringing around a B-1B was like turning the Titanic. It was a big beast of thing, hence the two minute delay. I’d told the forward unit of our company to pull back from the 611, to get a safe distance from the drop. They were no longer visual with the mortar team, so I had no eyes-on telling me whether it was a live target or not. It was all going to rat shit. The commando’s JTAC got on the net to the guy who had been trying to take over my drop.
‘Mate, you listen to me: you do that again and I’ll get you sacked. You fucking leave the JTAC on the ground to do his job. You’re not fucking jumping in. Got it?’
The JTAC on the other end said he understood, and that it wouldn’t happen again.