In Afghanistan with the 101st Airborne Division

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In Afghanistan with the 101st Airborne Division Text and Photographs by Paul Avallone Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), trudge up steep slopes in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan. 70 ARMY September 2008

ell em we re here, too, the soldier tells me in the gray light before sunrise on a ridgeline 7,800 feet up in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan. Not just the marines, he adds with what could be scorn but is simply understandable envy. He s a Currahee, from the U.S. Army s 2nd Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (BCT), whose lineage is traced directly to the famous Band of Brothers from the 101st Airborne Charlie Company, 2-506th, moved into the Hesco-barriered Charbaran District Center, in Afghanistan s Paktika Province, and assumed control of most of the battlespace of the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team, which was redeploying to Italy after 15 months in country. September 2008 ARMY 71

The soldiers, known as Currahees, aggressively patrol the Charbaran district of Paktika day and night, crossing stream beds (above) and plodding up and down barren hills (right). Before the arrival of the 173rd Airborne, there was no police outpost in the area. The rugged terrain served as a staging area for the Taliban for operations into other areas of the province. Division s World War II history. Currahee, a Cherokee word meaning stand alone, is also the name of the mountain in Georgia upon which the Band of Brothers trained. But that was 65 years ago, and hardly anyone knows these Currahees now. By namesake, it s appropriate, perhaps, that these men of Charlie Company are in these hills, though much higher up, trudging with much more gear, fighting a much more elusive enemy than their Company E forebears. Although it is summer now, the altitude, along with the PAUL AVALLONE, a former Green Beret, served in Afghanistan in 2002 03 and was an embedded journalist there with the 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry) in 2006. He has written several articles in ARMY Magazine, most recently in the June issue ( Settling into Afghanistan ). 72 ARMY September 2008

slight breeze, makes for the uncomfortable cold, enhanced greatly by the fact that the two dozen or so soldiers of this platoon are soaked to the skin in sweat from last night s 4-hour movement here. It was a cross-country trek, in hidden draws and gullies, up and down the hills each soldier in 50 to 60 pounds of body armor and kit, plus another 30 pounds at least in weapons, extra ammunition and water. The platoon s mission was to reach this ridgeline around midnight, then hunker down and overwatch a stretch of dirt road about 700 meters away for Three soldiers from Charlie Company bend away as a 120 mm mortar round lights the night, illuminating the loose rock that makes walking difficult. A platoon from Charlie Company heads into the hills on a road patrol. During daylight patrols, the soldiers assert their presence to the scattered settlements and introduce themselves to the villagers as guests of the Afghan government. 74 ARMY September 2008

A tribal elder speaks during a shura, or council meeting, in Paktika Province as an Afghan National Police officer pours chai. Members of Charlie Company talk with tribal elders in Paktika. The soldiers try to assure locals that their government is committed to restoring and maintaining security in the longneglected region. 76 ARMY September 2008

The commanding officer of Charlie Company, accompanied by some of his soldiers, shares his views at the shura with local residents in Charbaran District. the next eight to 12 hours. It was on that stretch that a convoy of a company of the 173rd Brigade would march, en route to a forward operating base (FOB) to redeploy to their Vicenza, Italy, home after their 15-month tour was hit by an improvised explosive device (IED) just days earlier. There were no injuries or deaths, but it was a warning to Charlie Company, which had just moved into a temporary patrol base at the district center a few miles away: The Taliban are out there, and they like to use familiar IED sites. Each night a different element of the company has overwatched that road from different vantage points and in movements like this platoon s the previous night exhausting, draining up and down the hills. The soldier adds, concerning the marines, They re doing six months here, and we re doing 15. The soldier s complaint is valid. His 4th BCT, along with his 101st Division Headquarters, came to Afghanistan at about the same time as the marines, in March, yet it s the marines who seem to be getting most of the media attention in the States. When the soldiers are back at the FOBs, where there is Internet and Armed Forces Network television, they see the coverage from back home. It focuses on the marines deployed in Helmand Province to help the British forces there fight an entrenched Taliban enemy. They read the e-mails from family and friends saying, Thank God you re not with the marines. The 2nd Battalion originally deployed to Kandahar (the neighboring province to Helmand, which, like Helmand, is under NATO command) as a tactical task force (TTF) in support of the Canadians in Kandahar and the British in Helmand. The marines arrival stripped the battalion of its mission, and it was moved east under U.S. command, in limbo for more than a month until it could assume control of the majority of the departing 173rd s battlespace. The soldiers liked being the TTF and were looking forward to the action they d be seeing in Helmand; now they had been moved out. Now the battalion s three line companies were dispersed to three different remote rural district centers on a quickly drawn-up operation to interdict and disrupt the Taliban infiltration routes (known as rat lines ) to and from neighboring Pakistan. Charlie Company arrived in country less than five months after the 173rd came to Charbaran District, a remote, 7,000-foot elevation, with a scattering of settlements almost too small to be called villages. Back in November 2007, just before the snows, the 173rd hastily erected a Hesco-barriered compound. In the spring, 78 ARMY September 2008

Charlie Company soldiers drive a stake that will soon support concertina wire. The effort beefed up exterior security with more fences and sandbags at Charbaran District Outpost. local contractors were paid to build two brick-and-mortar structures and a surrounding rock wall; the place became the Charbaran District Center. Built in a bowl surrounded by hills, the center was manned by two small platoons of Afghan National Police (ANP). A few weeks before Charlie Company s arrival, the Taliban attacked and overran one of the two hilltop cinder-block observation posts but were fought off by the remaining ANP defenders below. The Currahees arrival this spring was a 5-hour ground convoy in newly delivered mine resistant ambush protected (MRAP) vehicles over risky dirt roads and a 12-minute air assault via CH-47 Chinook helicopters. They parked the MRAPs inside the sparse, electric-powerless compound, utilizing the vehicles as weapons platforms, command posts and off-and-on generators to keep the radios and high-tech equipment charged. They beefed the center s exterior security with more Hescos, sandbags and fences of concertina wire, while aggressively patrolling the area, day and night, up and down the hills. The daytime patrols were mostly to assert their presence to the village settlements, to introduce themselves to the villagers as the American guests of the Afghan government, here to assure the locals that their central government was serious about wresting power from the Taliban and maintaining security in this longneglected region. The nighttime patrols were to take up their positions and lay in wait, hoping the enemy would come, hoping for a successful ambush. That s what would make all that climbing and stumbling in the dark, slipping in the loose rock, sometimes sliding butt-to-the-ground, always struggling for breath beneath that nearly hundred-pound load, worthwhile. Even if the enemy doesn t show his face to fight, most likely they are watching the Taliban. A Charlie Company lieutenant radios at dawn. Even in summer, it can be cold in the 7,000-foot elevation of their theater of operation. 80 ARMY September 2008

Newly delivered mine resistant ambush protected vehicles (MRAPs) traveled 5 hours over dangerous dirt roads to transport Charlie Company to the Charbaran outpost. The team uses the vehicles as weapons platforms, command posts and generators. Probably, they had seen the Currahees come in, and they had lain low or moved out the long way around; either way, they were not going to confront the American soldiers. They were likely waiting for the Americans to leave hoping they would, the sooner the better perhaps correctly assuming that, spread so thin throughout the southern portion of their battlespace, the American brigade could not stay and hold every remote, sparsely populated district, including places like Charbaran. And they would be right. After a couple of weeks, Charlie Company was directed to pack up and move out, leaving the district center to the ANP and relocating to permanent FOBs, combat outposts and firebases to replace the departing units of the 173rd. On July 13, with only a few more days left in their 15- month tour, nine soldiers in the 173rd were killed in a battle with more than 200 Taliban militants, the deadliest attack on U.S. troops in Afghanistan in three years. A soldier on patrol carries extra ammunition magazines for the M203 grenade launcher attached to the barrel of an M16 assault rifle. 82 ARMY September 2008