Feral Jundi

Monday, April 20, 2009

Military News: Turning Tables, U.S. Troops Ambush Taliban With Swift and Lethal Results

Filed under: Afghanistan,Military News — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 6:44 PM

   It sounds like these guys got some payback out there, and good for them.  What I really liked about this story, was the idea of getting back to basics with ambushes.  For scenarios like this, most every lesson we have learned about the basics of ambushing, were learned time and time again in wars past.  So it was cool to see them apply those lessons, and throw in today’s high tech stuff to get the job done.  The knife kill was interesting as well, and you don’t hear of too many of those in this war. –Matt

 

Edit:  Check out Tim’s article on the subject here. 

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Turning Tables, U.S. Troops Ambush Taliban With Swift and Lethal Results

By C. J. CHIVERS

April 17, 2009

KORANGAL OUTPOST, Afghanistan — Only the lead insurgents were disciplined as they walked along the ridge. They moved carefully, with weapons ready and at least five yards between each man, the soldiers who surprised them said.

Behind them, a knot of Taliban fighters walked in a denser group, some with rifles slung on their shoulders — “pretty much exactly the way we tell soldiers not to do it,” said Specialist Robert Soto, the radio operator for the American patrol.

(more…)

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Media News: Tactical Success, Strategic Defeat–A Raid in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Media News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 2:54 AM

   Doug brought this to my attention, and it is a very interesting look at the speed in which the Taliban was able to distribute their propaganda about this raid in Afghanistan.  It really doesn’t matter if the guy was a bad guy or not, the perception was that he was not, and that the raiding party was in the wrong.  Although I am sure if our military media machine was able to pre-plan the media release and information distribution about this raid before the Taliban did, like Doug was telling me, then they could have controlled the message better.  The enemy is able to twist the details, and do whatever they can to make us out to be the bad guys, and that is exactly what they did here.  They could say ‘of course this man had an AK 47 in his hand, there were men that came in the middle of the night, and he had no idea who they were’.  No mention that he was a bomb maker. 

   With that little twist to the details, the Taliban could easily promote a concept that this guy was innocent, and that the Americans are the Russians incarnate. We must do a better job of defeating the Taliban propaganda machine, during raids like this.  And yes, maybe it would have been better to find a different way of nabbing this guy.  Like using the local police, or just sitting the guy out until he moves away from the village.  

   Either way, if we are to do any actions in these villages, we must look at it from their perspective, and from the Taliban’s perspective, and figure the best way to navigate that deal.  The information operations effort must do better than this, to stay ahead of this enemy.  

   I will even take it a step further. The Taliban could easily take a new media approach, and I am sure they have.  As soon as a raid happens, a Taliban info warrior blogs the crap out of it, and gets that info out to their network.  That network puts their slant on it, and keeps expanding the net.  New media has the potential to spread this fast, and spread it amongst a key group of opinion leaders out there in the jihadist networks. And then guess who monitors this kind of stuff?  The anti-war and human rights crew, and the pure gold of Info War for the Taliban, is to get the international community thinking that they have been wronged, or that the ISAF forces are committing the next ‘Mai Lai Massacre’.

   PMC’s and PSC’s need to be aware of the Taliban media machine as well.  They would love to create another Nisour Square situation, and pull start the population hate machine against western security contractors.  Things to think about. –Matt 

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Tactical success, strategic defeat

Afghan outrage at U.S. raid highlights challenges facing new military push

By Pamela Constable

The Washington Post

March. 1, 2009

FORWARD OPERATING BASE ALTIMUR, Afghanistan – The U.S. soldiers entered the sleeping village in Logar province in the dead of night on Feb. 20, sure of their target and heavily armed. They surrounded a mud-walled compound, shouting commands, and then kicked down the gate as cries of protest erupted within.

Exactly what happened next is disputed, but shots were fired and a man inside fell dead. Four other men were grabbed and arrested. Then the soldiers departed, leaving the women to calm the frightened children and the rumors to spread in the dark.

By midmorning, hundreds of angry people were blocking the nearby highway, burning tires and shouting “Death to America!” By mid-evening, millions of Afghan TV news viewers were convinced that foreign troops had killed an unarmed man trying to answer his door.

“We are afraid of the Taliban, but we are more afraid of the Americans now,” said Abdul Ghaffar, a truck driver in the raided village. “The foreign forces are killing innocent people. We don’t want them in Afghanistan. If they stay, one day we will stand against them, just like we stood against the Russians.”

(more…)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Funny Stuff: iPhones and the Taliban

Filed under: Afghanistan,Funny Stuff — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:47 PM

    I guess I will have to go back and edit this story about the Taliban hating the mobile phone by destroying towers?  Obviously the iPhone changed their mind. lol.  This also reminded me of the Taliban using Skype story as well. Anyone seeing a trend? –Matt

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Mullah Zaif

 

Mullah Zaif, the former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, says he is ‘addicted’ to his iPhone

 

iPhones and the Taliban:

February 7, 2009

Somewhere outside Kabul

Mullah Zaif, the former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, says he is ‘addicted’ to his iPhone

I could not believe my eyes. We had arrived to interview Mullah Zaif, the Taliban’s former ambassador to Pakistan who is now under virtual house-arrest on the outskirts of Kabul, when he walked into the room, sat down on the couch and pulled out an iPhone.

A former member of the Taliban! An iPhone! How times have changed.

During Taliban rule, which ended when the US and its allies rolled in and took control of Kabul in 2001, the leadership had banned just about anything associated with modern technology.

(more…)

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Funny Stuff: Taliban Training Films Presents ‘The Tao of Lord Humongous’

Filed under: Afghanistan,Funny Stuff — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:14 PM

Sunday, November 16, 2008

News: Logistics Hell in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News,Pakistan — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:21 PM

 

     If there was any an indicator of how things are going in a war, you can always look at the health of the logistics tail.  And to me, just looking at these three stories that cover Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is obvious that there are some serious security issues with logistics going on.  

     The first story is one that I posted before, about Commando Security (a local national security company in Afghanistan) and their efforts in the war.  The loss of life and the amount of actual fighting that this PSC is doing is stunning. Stacks of coffins…fighting daily?  

     The second story is about Pakistan shutting down the Khyber Pass. The Taliban and the various tribes are raping these convoys.  Just lask week, these guys were able to attack a convoy and steal some Humvee destined for Afghanistan.  The pictures of these things in Taliban hands are embarrassing to say the least.

     The final story is about Highway One in Afghanistan, and how dangerous that has become.  It sounds like IED hell, and the Taliban and company are certainly applying the lessons of Iraq to their own campaign in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

     On Feral Jundi, we talked about this before.  That our achilles heel in the war over there is logistics.  The Taliban know this, and they are doing what they can to shut it down and/or plunder it.  All I know is that Task Force Odin better get busy and get some eyes on these routes, and start working with the hunters to protect these routes.  Or maybe out of pure human decency, they could also give a heads up to these PSC’s that are operating over there. That means communicating with PSC’s like Commando Security, or we can continue to stand by while these forces get mutilated by these guys.  

     The other thing that bothers me about this, is commerce. If we want the Afghani people to be happy with their government, security of commerce must be a priority.  Take charge of the roads and own them.  That means patrol, post overwatch on stretches of road, and work with the villages that are near these roads.  Set up a text messaging/mobile phone road watch crew, and pay them to report on Taliban activity in the villages and roads.  Do something to empower the local populations, and get the police busy on this stuff.  The security of logistics and commerce on these roads are vital, and we must do a better job of protection of said  activities.  –Head Jundi 

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 Taliban

Baitullah Mehsud’s Taliban pose in front of a captured US Humvee. Baitullah’s Taliban flag is draped over the hood. Photo from AFP. 

‘Every moment is frightening’

Private security personnel easy targets in Afghanistan

Tom Blackwell,  National Post  

Published: Monday, October 20, 2008

As he girded himself for another shift protecting a massive NATO supply convoy this week, Rozi Mohammed made a frank admission: The work terrifies him.

“We are afraid of IEDs, we’re afraid of rockets, we’re afraid of bullets, we’re afraid of ambushes,” said the boyish-looking 18-year-old, an AK-47 slung over his narrow shoulders. “Every moment is frightening.”

He has good reason to be fearful. Just this year, about 160 of Mr. Mohammed’s colleagues have been killed defending such convoys against almost daily Taliban attacks. Only the day before, two died in a roadside blast.

In his compound, a stack of empty coffins sits ready for the next victims.

“Every day, we have seen our men wounded and killed,” the teenager said.

Mr. Mohammed does not belong to any military or police organization. He is part of Afghanistan’s growing private army: security contractors who fill the gaps in the foreign military and development mission here, protecting diplomats, aid workers, outposts and the all-important convoys.

To satisfy the voracious appetite of thousands of NATO troops for food, fuel and other supplies, hundreds of trucks a week must traverse highways that more and more are rife with insurgents.

(more…)

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