Victory Point (43 page)

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Authors: Ed Darack

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SVD:
The Dragunov Sniper Rifle was produced in the Soviet Union, China, and Iraq. A favorite of the well-trained Chechan snipers, this coveted 7.62 × 54 mm weapon is rare.
 
RPK
: Best described as an AK-47 with a bipod, the RPK also has a longer muzzle than the AK-47, but fires the same type of ammunition (7.62 × 39 mm) and has an effective range of up to one thousand meters.
 
PK:
The favored weapon of Ahmad Shah, the PK medium machine gun is a bipod-mounted, belt-fed machine gun that fires 7.62 × 54 mm rounds. The PK is relatively lightweight, and is fed through metal drums containing anywhere from 100 to 250 rounds.
 
RPG-7:
Initially designed as an unguided, shoulder-launched, antitank weapon utilizing an armor-penetrating shaped charge; al-Qaeda fighters often use the RPG-7 as an integral part of a coordinated ambush with other weapons such as the PK and IED strikes. It has a maximum range of just over nine hundred meters, at which point, if it hasn’t struck a target, the warhead will self-detonate.
 
PP87 82 mm Mortar:
Used frequently in nighttime ambushes of Camp Blessing, this Chinese-made mortar tube can launch a projectile out to 4,660 meters (2.8 miles). Because it breaks down quickly into three pieces, Ahmad Shah’s men used these mortar systems in both
Red Wings
and
Whalers.
 
Type 63-2 107mm Rocket:
A North Korean- and Chinese-manufactured unguided rocket containing eighteen pounds of TNT, the Type 63-2 was designed to be launched in twelve-tube multiple-launch vehicles or on single-tube launchers. Throughout the Kunar, however, insurgents and terrorists would simply lean these up against rocks behind the crest of a ridge near the intended target, then launch them. Because the 63-2 utilizes an electric actuator, it could be set on timers, allowing insurgents time to egress back to their safe houses long before an attack began. Inaccurate, these were used as harassment and terror weapons, but nevertheless inflicted causalties.
 
IED:
Most Marines consider the Improvised Explosive Device, or IED (frequently referred to as a “roadside bomb”), to be the most insidious of all weapons used by insurgents and terrorists. IEDs come in an infinite number of designs and types, from command-wire-triggered land mines, to massive radio-controlled “daisy chained” artillery shells (multiple artillery shells, each with a detonator, electrically interconnected to one another). While the Marines of ⅔ utilized a number of techniques to mitigate the threat of IEDs, they ultimately found that the most effective and enduring came from establishing relationships with locals, who would point the Marines in the direction of caches of materials used to make IEDs—as well as identifying those responsible for building, emplacing, and triggering them.
APPENDIX II
INTERVIEWEES
All are members of the 2nd Battalion of the 3rd Marine Regiment, unless otherwise noted
 
Allan, Nigel J.R. (Afghanistan Historical Expert)
Anes, Mario Corporal
Bambey, John 1st Lieutenant
Bartels, Matthew 1st Lieutenant
Bradley, Justin Corporal
Brown, Richard Lance Corporal
Burgos, Chris Corporal
Capuzzi, Peter Captain
Chizmadia, Jesse 1st Lieutenant
Cirencione, Salvatore Corporal
Cooling, Norman Lieutenant Colonel (Battalion Commander, 3/3)
Corcoral, Kyle 1st Lieutenant
Crisp III, Lee Staff Sergeant
Diss, Corey Lance Corporal
Donnellan, James Lieutenant Colonel
Eggers, Keith Sergeant
Fisher, Cody Corporal
Geise, Steward 1st Lieutenant
Grissom, Kelly Captain
Guyton, Nick 1st Lieutenant
Hagan, Christopher 1st Lieutenant
Kinser, Patrick 1st Lieutenant
Konstant, J.J. 1st Lieutenant
Lemons, Roe 1st Lieutenant
Long, Robert 1st Lieutenant
MacMannis, Andrew Lieutenant Colonel
Middendorf, Ben 1st Lieutenant
Perna, Mark Lance Corporal
Pigman, Jamie HM3 (Navy Hospital Corpsman)
Plunk, Joshua Corporal
Priddy, Andrew Major (operations officer, 3/3)
Rashman, Zach Captain
Ratkowiak, Casmer Captain
Rock (The Rock) (Interpreter)
Roy, Joe Corporal
Sandvick-Monroe, Jeremy Lance Corporal
Scholl, Mike Lance Corporal
Scott, Robert Major
Seiffert, Lance 1st Lieutenant
Strand, Richard (Afghan Historical Expert)
Sultan (Interpreter)
Tracy, Matt Captain
Turner, Regan 1st Lieutenant
Waters, Perry Captain
Westerfield, Scott Major
Wood, Tom Major
Others, undisclosed
After Action Reports, undisclosed
REFERENCES
BOOKS
Afghanistan
(Map). 1:1,500,000. Nelles Verlag, Germany.
Afghanistan
(Map). International Travel Maps, 1:1,000,000. Vancouver, B.C. 2002.
Afghanistan Country Handbook: A Field Ready Reference Publication
, DOD- 2630-AFG-018-03, October 2003.
Basic Pashto: Language Survival Guide
, Monterey, CA: Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center, October 2002.
Borovik, Artyom.
The Hidden War: A Russian Journalist’s Account of the Soviet War in Afghanistan.
New York: Grove Press, 1990.
Bowden: Mark.
Black Hawk Down.
New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1999.
Campaigning
(MCDP 1-2) U.S. Marine Corps Headquarters, United States Marine Corps, Washington, D.C., 1997.
Coll, Steve.
Ghost Wars.
New York: Penguin Press, 2004.
Edwards, David B.
Before Taliban: Genealogies of the Afghan Jihad.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.
Ewans, Martin.
Afghanistan: A Short History of Its People and Politics.
New York: HarperCollins, 2002.
Giraldo, Jeanne K. and Harild A. Trinkunas.
Terrorism Financing and State Responses: A Comparative Perspective.
Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007.
Grau, Lester W.
The Bear Went over the Mountain: Soviet Combat Tactics in Afghanistan.
London: Frank Cass Publishers, 1998.
Gunaratna, Rohan.
Inside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror.
New York: Berkley Books, 2002.
Jalali Ali Ahmad and Lester W. Grau.
The Other Side of the Mountain: Mujahideen Tactics in the Soviet-Afghan War.
Quantico, VA: The United States Marine Corps. Studies and Analysis Division, 1995.
Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Close Air Support (CAS).
Joint Chiefs of Staff. Washington, D.C., 2003.
Jones, Schuyler.
An Annotated Bibliographyof Nuristan (Kafiristan) and the Kalash Kafirs of Chitral
, Part One. Hisorisk-filofiske Meddeleslser udviget af Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, vol. 41, no. 3. Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1966.
Kaplan, Robert D.
Imperial Grunts: On the Ground with the American Military.
New York: Random House, 2005.
Krulak, Victor H.
First to Fight: An Inside View of the U.S. Marine Corps.
Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1984.
McMichael, Scott R.
Stumbling Bear: Soviet Military Performance in Afghanistan.
Brassey’s Inc., 1991.
Naylor, Sean.
Not a Good Day to Die.
New York: Berkley Caliber, 2005.
O’Neill, Bard E.
Insurgency and Terrorism.
Brassey’s Inc., 1990.
Pakistan
(Map). 1:1,500,000. Nelles Verlag. Germany
Palka, Eugene J.
Afghanistan: Geographic Perspectives.
New York: McGraw-Hill / Duskin, 2004.
Rashid, Ahmed.
Taliban.
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001.
Rubin, Barnett R.
The Fragmentation of Afghanistan: State Formation and Collapse in the International System
, Second Edition. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002.
Small Wars Manual
(Reprint of 1940 edition). NAVMC 2890. U.S. Marine Corps. HQMC, Washington, D.C.
Sun-Tzu.
The Art of War.
Translation by Samuel B. Griffith. Oxford University Press, 1963.
Tactics
(MCDP 1-3). U.S. Marine Corps. Headquarters, United States Marine Corps, Washington, D.C., 1997.
Tanner, Stephen.
Afghanistan: A Military History from Alexander the Great to the Fall of the Taliban.
Cambridge: Da Capo Press, 2002.
USASETAF/OEF VI Insurgency / Counterinsurgency—Historical Perspectives.
Leader Preparation Monograph #1. 2004.
Warfighting
(MCDP 1). U.S. Marine Corps. Headquarters, United States Marine Corps, Washington, D.C., 1997.
Yousaf, Mohammad and Mark Adkin.
Afghanistan: The Bear Trap—the Defeat of a Superpower.
Casemate, 2001.
MAGAZINE, NEWSPAPER, AND SPECIALTY / SCHOLARLY ARTICLES
Ali, Imtiaz. “Spotlight on Terror: The Father of the Taliban: An Interview with Maulana Sami ul-Haq.
TerrorismMonitor.
Volume IV, Issue 2. May 23, 2007.
Brown, Bryan D. “U.S. Special Operations Command: Meeting the Challenges of the 21
st
Century.”
Joint Forces Quarterly
, Issue 40, May, 2006.
“Cotton: World Markets and Trade.” U.S. Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service Tobacco, Cotton, and Seeds Division, Washington, D.C. 1996.
Donahue, Colonel Patrick, and Colonel Michael Fenzel, U.S. Army. “Combating a Modern Insurgency: Combined Task Force Devil in Afghanistan.”
Military Review.
March-April 2008.
Jiskani, Mithal M. “Cotton Diseases.”
Industry and Economy.
Issue No. 27, 2001.
Magruder, Major J. H. III. “The Marine Corps Officers’ Mameluke Sword.” USMCR (Reproduced from the November 1954 issue of the
Marine Corps Gazette
, chapter 2).
Marzban, Omid. “Shamshatoo Refugee Camp: A Base of Support for Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.”
TerrorismMonitor.
In-Depth Analysis of the War on Terror. Volume V, Issue 10. May 24, 2007.
Rahmani, Waliullah. “Afghanistan’s Veteran Jihadi Leader: An Interview with Qazi Mohammad Amin Waqad.”
TerrorismMonitor.
Volume IV, Issue 1. May 3, 2007.
Raman, B. “The Curious Case of Amjad Farooqi.”
Asia Times
, September 30, 2004.
Shahzad, Saleem Syed. “At War with the Taliban.”
Asia Times
, May 23, 2008.
MILITARY PAPERS
Cannon, Jim. “A Brief History of the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines.” Historical Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. Washington, DC. 20380. March 1972.
Cooling, Colonel Norman L. “To Integrate or to Deconflict, That Is the Question: An Examination of Contemporary Challenges in Conventional and Special Operations Forces Command and Control.” U.S. Marine Corps. Naval War College. November, 2007.
“Finally, a Talkative Talib: Origins and Membership of the Religious Students’ Movement. Confidential—Entire Text. 1995. Islamabad, Pakistan. Document Number: 1995ISLAMA01792. Unclassified 21 May 2003 by the United States Department of State Review Authority.
Hill, Lieutenant Colonel David E. Jr. “The Shaft of the Spear: US Special Operations Command, Funding Authority, and the Global War on Terrorism.” United States Army. USAWC Strategy Research Project. U.S. Army WarCollege. Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. March 15, 2006.
Scott, Lieutenant Colonel Robert R. and Major Scott Westerfield. “The Island Warriors in OEF VI.”
INDEX
Page numbers in
Italics
indicate map references.
A-10 Thunderbolt II “Warthog,”
Abbas Ghar,
Abdur Rahman Khan (“Iron Emir”)
AC-130 Gunship
Adams, Anthony (Lance Corporal)
Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight (ACOG)
Advanced Echelon (ADVON)
Afghan Arabs
Afghan Border Security
Afghan Bureau (of the ISI)
Afghan National Army (ANA)
Afghan National Police (ANP)
Afghan Security Forces (ASF) ,
Afghan Services Bureau (Maktab al-Khidmat al Mujahidin al Arab, or MAK)
Afghanistan
American Invasion of
Civil War
General Overview
Human Geography and History
Physical Geography
Afghan-Pakistan Border
Africa
Afzal, Mawlawi
AH-1W Super Cobra
AH-64 Apache (Call Sign
Shock
)
Air Force Combat Controllers
Air Support Operations Center (ASOC) (U.S. Air Force),
AK-47 Kalashnikov Rifle
Al Anbar Province of Iraq
Al Asad, Iraq
Alexander III of Macedonia (Alexander the Great)
Alexandria, Egypt
Algeria
Alingar Valley
al-Qaeda
al-Rahman, Jamil
al-Zawahiri, Ayman
Amin, Hafizullah
Amin, Ruhola
Amrey Creek
Amrey Road
Amrey
Amu Darya River (formerly the Oxus River)
Anaconda
, Operation
Anaya, Luis “Doc,” (Navy Hospital Corpsman Third Class)
Anticoalition Milita (ACM)
Apocalypse Now
(movie)
Arabian Sea
Arabs
Aral Sea
Arref, Haji,
Arsenic (tainted water wells)
Asadabad, Afghanistan (AKA Chagha Serai)
Asadabad-Jalalabad Road
Ashvakas,
Asia, Central
Asia, South,
Asia, Southeast

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