Archive for the ‘News and Events’ Category

Taliban attacks California Guard soldiers

Monday, December 21st, 2009

TalibanArmy Spec. Kathy Tanson, 20, of Corning in Northern California, helped repel a double ambush. (Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times)

U.S. troops fight off two groups of militants on a treacherous mountain road in eastern Afghanistan while returning from an agricultural mission in rural villages.

December 20, 2009 | 9:03 a.m.
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Reporting from Dubai, United Arab Emirates – A California Army National Guard group was attacked Saturday by a “complex double ambush” from Taliban fighters along a treacherous mountain road in eastern Afghanistan while the unit was returning from helping farmers in isolated villages, the Army reported today.

The Californians’ slow-moving six-vehicle convoy was attacked by two groups of Taliban militants firing medium machine guns and AK-47s. Most of the vehicles were hit and one was slightly disabled with a flattened tire and a bullet hole in the windshield, the Army said.

The Guard soldiers, from the 40th Infantry Division, returned fire at the groups, one in a cave in the mountain, the other hiding across the Kunar River. The U.S. estimates that 15 to 20 Taliban fighters were engaged in the ambush.

Spc. Kathy Tanson, the only woman among the soldiers, raked one of the ambush sites with fire from a 50-caliber machine gun mounted atop one of the U.S. vehicles.

There were no reported injuries among the California group. Infantry soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 32nd Regiment, were quickly ordered into the area and engaged in an hourlong fight with the militants, again with no U.S. casualties, the Army reported. Artillery and aircraft also pounded the Taliban positions.

The California group is part of a Pentagon agribusiness development program to win support from rural villagers by helping them improve the yield of their crops and the health of their livestock.

The troops had gone to the village of Naray in Kunar province to hold an inoculation program for more than 400 cattle, goats, donkeys and sheep. To get to the site, their convoy had to venture along a winding, boulder-strewn 60-mile road, which follows the wide, fast-moving river.

The road is littered with three dozen wrecks of civilian convoys destroyed by Taliban attacks in recent months or by drivers’ inability to negotiate sharp turns. Kunar has been the scene of some of the most intense fighting between U.S. troops and the Taliban — including one attack on an outpost that killed eight soldiers.

The livestock vaccination visit occurred Thursday and the attack came Saturday as the troops were returning to their home at Forward Operating Base Wright.

Tanson, 20, from Corning in Northern California, volunteered to be part of the unit because of her expertise in farming techniques and managing livestock. All 64 members of the team are volunteers.

Lt. Robert Parry, spokesman for the California unit, who was in the convoy, said the attack will not deter the agribusiness development team from venturing to other villages to help with irrigation, crop rotation and livestock management.

“It’s our intent to go where we’re needed,” Parry said by cellphone. “This is not the first time we’ve been shot at. This goes with the territory. We have a soft mission in a hard area.”

tony.perry@latimes.com
Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times

MIAP Nov 18 – 15 Unclaimed Veterans

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Nov 18
All,

Here are some pictures of a very wonderful service this last Wednesday.

Thank you all for attending in person or in spirit.

We gave Honor and Respect to these veterans in a way that moved my heart and soul. I hope yours as well.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/24786655@N08/?saved=1

fred

He could not leave a comrade behind

Monday, September 7th, 2009

T he sound of feet shuffling in the woods, high on a ridge in remote Afghanistan, was the only warning that Sergeant Jared C. Monti and the 15 men under his command were about to be attacked. Before they could even react, they were bombarded with rocket-propelled grenades and machine-gun fire.

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The ambush by mountain tribesmen allied with the Taliban came so suddenly and with such ferocity that some members of Monti’s unit “had their weapons literally shot out of their hands,’’ according to an Army report.

Monti, a 30-year-old staff sergeant from Raynham, shouted orders and radioed for support as he found cover behind some large rocks. An officer a few miles away asked whether he could pinpoint the enemy’s position.

“Sir, I can’t give you a better read or I’m gonna eat an RPG,’’ Monti replied.

But later, when one of his men was wounded and lying in the open, Monti braved intense fire to try to rescue him – not once, but three times. It cost him his life.

Three years later, after an Army review of Monti’s actions that day, President Obama will award him the Medal of Honor, the highest recognition for valor in the US military. When Monti’s parents, Paul and Janet, accept the award in a White House ceremony on Sept. 17, it will be only the sixth time the Medal of Honor has been awarded since Sept. 11, 2001, and the first time someone from Massachusetts has earned it since the Vietnam War.

Monti’s story reveals not just the courageous actions of a 12-year Army veteran. It also illustrates the extreme conditions of combat in Afghanistan, where increasing numbers of US forces are dying, and the sheer chaos of the war.

Everything went wrong for Monti and his patrol. The unit was left on that narrow ridge longer than intended, exposing it to a much larger enemy. And while Monti’s display of “extreme personal courage and extraordinary self-sacrifice,’’ as the Army described it, helped turn the tide, disaster struck again when the soldier Monti tried to save was killed in a freak accident while being airlifted out. Including Monti, four soldiers died.

“True valor is not defined so much by results,’’ an Army general wrote in recommending Monti for the medal, “as it is by the depth of conviction that inspires its expression. On rare occasions, the actions of men are so extraordinary that the nobility rests, not in their outcome, but in the courage of their undertaking.’’

 

‘He was very humble’