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Training Day |
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By
Ben Fenwick
Winter 2004 Print
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The 45th
Infantry Brigade has been trained to destroy armies. Now, it's
building one. An
explosion boomed from a Special Forces sniper position on a hill in
the Paktika Province of Afghanistan. Capt. Eric McElwain, USA, of
the 45th Infantry Brigade's embedded training team ran toward the
sound of guns.
In March 2004, American and Coalition troops were hunting al-Qaida
forces in the mountainous badlands that mark the border between
Pakistan and Afghanistan - tribal provinces that hold the last al-Qaida
elements and their Taliban supporters. The Special Forces team fell
under attack and set off a defensive Claymore mine - hence, the
explosion.
"[The Special Forces] had been compromised and were under attack by
30 or 40 of what they believed to be al-Qaida and al-Qaida
sympathizers. They were under heavy fire," McElwain says later.
McElwain and two other 45th team members, Capt. Chris Chomosh of
Tulsa, Okla., and Sgt. 1st Class Shayne Simmons of Vernon, Mo.,
grabbed their weapons, rallied the soldiers of the Afghan National
Army (ANA) unit they are training, and rushed to the battle.
"We ran down the wadi ... and the bullets started hitting the ground
and dirt was flying up around us," McElwain recalls. "We took cover
... and we eventually identified about four machine gun positions
firing on us."
Al-Qaida had set the trap to kill anyone trying to rescue the sniper
team. It was a double ambush.
At first, the Afghan soldiers, whom the 45th had spent the past two
months training, wanted to throw aside all they'd been taught and
act on the instincts they acquired through 25 years of war - to
attack the machine gun nests in a frontal assault.
"They wanted to charge the hill, but we held them back. It would
have been a massacre if they had," Simmons says. "I'll say this for
the ANA: They are here to fight."
Instead of charging the position, the 45th trainers persuaded their
student-soldiers to use their newfound tactics: indirect fire with
mortars, as they'd learned on the course, and a call to the Special
Forces Quick-Reaction units for cover fire.
"Our ANA were dropping mortars and rockets, and we were directing
the fire on those enemy positions," Chomosh said. "Then the [Special
Forces] guys mounted vehicles and ran around the back side of the
hill, and the al-Qaida were taking fire from the back side."
The tense skirmish went on for 20 to 30 minutes, until the al-Qaida
forces withdrew. As a result, there were no coalition casualties,
nine dead al-Qaida members, and the Special Forces were rescued. The
battle was one of the largest since the early days of the Afghan
invasion and showcased how well the men and women of the 45th
trained the ANA. The Afghans proved they could operate as an
effective, professional military force.
An
action-packed past
This achievement is the latest in a long line of successes for the
45th Infantry Thunderbirds, whose trail of hard-won victories began
in 1923 and still echoes in history - battles and places such as
Anzio, Sicily, and the liberation of Dachau. Generals such as George
S. Patton and Omar Bradley have lauded the unit's victories. The
45th was the template infantry of cartoonist Bill Mauldin's "Willie
and Joe," and its soldiers were the "G.I. Joe" of legendary war
correspondent Ernie Pyle.
After playing a key role in World War II, the unit was deactivated
Dec. 7, 1945 - exactly four years after the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
The division was called to action again during the Korean War, when
it saw combat along Pork Chop Hill and Heartbreak Ridge. Elements
remained in Korea until the end of the conflict.
When the 45th came home, it became an all-Oklahoma national guard.
By 1969, the unit disbanded into several smaller state guard units,
all of which retained the Thunderbird patch. (Learn more about the
45th's history online by reading "A Distinguished Past")
In the 1990s, the 45th became an "enhanced brigade," a light
infantry unit containing all the elements necessary to dispatch
to a conflict anywhere. This change enabled the 45th to be ready for
a new field of hostility requiring fast deployment.
In recent years, a few elements of the 45th saw duty in the first
Gulf War, the Sinai, and Bosnia, but none saw battle until Operation
Iraqi Freedom. There, a company of 45th soldiers took part in the
invasion of Iraq; one platoon even conducted the first amphibious
assault the 45th had seen since World War II.
First Lt. Christopher Ballard is one of the Thunderbirds who took
part in the battle for Baghdad. Ballard earned the Purple Heart when
Iraqi irregulars organized by Uday Hussein attacked his Humvee. A
bullet shattered the vehicle's windshield and came so close to
Ballard's head that shards of glass were embedded in his cheek.
After medics patched him up, his group boarded Army riverboats and
navigated the legendary Tigris River to a momentous landing in
Baghdad.
"When they needed the job done right, when they needed the infantry,
they called us. My platoon made that assault," Ballard recalls.
Following the terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001, the United States
entered Afghanistan not only to completely crush the Taliban regime,
but also to establish a permanent, stable democracy in the country.
The interim government called for a central, constitutional
government ruled by a president and a parliament. Further, the
government's agreement called for a standing army of 70,000,
answerable and subservient to the civilian government: the Afghan
National Army, or ANA.
Continued>>
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