Battle of Pacora River Bridge

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Battle of Pacora River Bridge
Part of the United States invasion of Panama and Operation Nifty Package
Panama location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Pacora River Bridge
Battle of Pacora River Bridge (Panama)
Date20 December 1989
Location
Pacora River Bridge, Panama
9°06′06.4″N79°16′38.5″W / 9.101778°N 79.277361°W / 9.101778; -79.277361
Result American victory
Belligerents
Flag of the United States.svg United States Flag of Panama.svg Panama
Commanders and leaders

Flag of the United States.svg Maj. Kevin M. Higgins

Flag of the United States.svg Maj. Gilberto Perez (Reinforcements)
Flag of Panama.svg Unknown
Units involved

Flag of the United States.svg US Army Special Forces

Flag of the United States.svg US Air Force Special Operations

Coat of arms of Panama.svg Panama Defense Forces

  • Battalion 2000
Strength

24 Green Berets [1]
3 UH-60s [2]

2 AC-130s
~30 troops
1 V-300 Mk.II [3]
2 V-150s [3]
7+ trucks
Casualties and losses
None 4 killed
1 wounded
17 captured
3 armored vehicles captured
4+ large trucks destroyed [3]
1 pick-up truck destroyed [2]

The Battle of Pacora River Bridge took place as an opening action of the United States invasion of Panama and was fought between the United States Special Forces (commonly referred to as the Green Berets) with air support from the 1st Special Operations Wing of the United States Air Force and the Panama Defense Forces Battalion 2000. The major action of the battle lasted roughly 5 hours through the night of the 20th, and was a resounding U.S. victory, preventing PDF forces coming from Fort Cimarron from intervening in U.S. military actions in Panama City to the west of the bridge. [3] [1] [4]

Contents

Background

Both the 7th SFG (A) and the 1st Special Operations Wing were part of Task Force BLACK, which was activated on December 18, 1989 and was under the command of Col. Robert C. Jacobelly. [4] Leading up to the time of the invasion (referred to as H-hour), the 7th SFG (A) was transported to Albrook AFB. The first mission for the 7th SFG (A) was for Company B of the 3rd Battalion and was a reconnaissance mission to observe the movements of Battalion 2000 at Fort Cimarron but they had already left the fort by the time of the company's arrival. [5] [6] What was initially another reconnaissance mission involving Company A of the 3rd Battalion was changed to a direct action mission to seize the Pacora River Bridge and prevent Battalion 2000 from reaching Panama City. [5]

PDF attack on Albrook AFB

Ten minutes after midnight, as Company A, under the command of Maj. Kevin M. Higgins was preparing to load into 3 UH-60s from the 1st Bn 228th Aviation Regiment in Hanger 450, small arms fire broke out at the Air Force base in a surprise attack by the PDF and bullets ripped through the hanger. [5] [4] The troops departed while under fire, and soon after the PDF withdrew. [5] Two U.S. troops were injured in the attack. [3]

Transport and setup

U.S. forces would have taken up ambush positions on the embankment to the left of the bridge Pacora River Bridge.png
U.S. forces would have taken up ambush positions on the embankment to the left of the bridge

On the way to the bridge, the Blackhawks briefly became lost. [1] While nearing the bridge, the pilot of the helicopter in the lead spotted a column of six PDF vehicles approaching from the east. [5] Upon landing in an adjacent cow pasture, the U.S. troops ran up the 35 ft (11 m) embankment next to the road and set up ambush positions. [2] [4] During this, the first vehicle in the Panamanian column arrived at the east end of the bridge. [1] Troops in the company were armed with 66mm light antitank weapons (likely M72 LAWs), M-249s, M-16s, AT-4 rockets and M203 grenade launchers. [1] [2]

Battle

A map of the ambush made by Maj. Kevin M. Higgins Battle of Pacora River Bridge map.png
A map of the ambush made by Maj. Kevin M. Higgins

Immediately as the column appeared, three Green Berets fired their LAWs with two making direct hits. [5] The column was then fired on by the company's SAWs and grenade launchers. [5] With the PDF forces halted, Maj. Higgins contacted the Air Force Combat Controller who had a nearby AC-130 direct fire onto the column devastating it. [5] As the PDF troops fled their vehicles, the AC-130 continued to circle and provide intelligence to the ground. [5] Just after this, three more PDF vehicles arrived at the bridge and were fired on and destroyed by a second AC-130. [2] Both aircraft continued to fire at enemy forces on either side of the bridge until most of the PDF broke contact and fled. [2] The PDF forces tried to evade the fire coming from the AC-130s by the hiding under the bridge, but the Green Berets on the ground covered the girders with machine gun fire and buckshot rounds from their M203s. [1] During the night the ground forces were augmented by elements of the 7th SFG's A Company, 1st Battalion as the PDF made several failed mounted attempts to flank the U.S. forces and capture the bridge. [1] At daybreak Task Force BLACK's quick reaction force arrived under the command of Maj. Gilberto Perez. [5] The QRF then cleared the east side of the Pacora River near the bridge and captured 17 PDF soldiers. [5] The U.S. forces then met up with 82nd Airborne the next day. [3]

Aftermath

The United States suffered no casualties during the battle and inflicted heavy losses on the Panamanian forces with four killed, one wounded, and 17 captured. [2] Virtually all vehicles in the column were rendered inoperable and the three armored vehicles were abandoned by the PDF nearby and captured. [3]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "SCUBAPRO Sunday – Operation Just Cause". Soldier Systems. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Krivdo, PhD., Dr. Michael E. ""Hold That Bridge," the 7th Special Forces Group and Operation JUST CAUSE". U.S. Army. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hills, Andrew. "1989 US Invasion of Panama". The Online Tank Museum. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 4 ""No Ordinary Signal Unit" The 112th Signal Battalion in Panama". ARSOF History. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 United States Special Operations Command History (PDF). US Army. 2007. pp. 41–42. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
  6. "JUST CAUSE and the Principles of War - Bennett (continued)". WHO's SCROLL. William H Ormsbee. Retrieved 10 April 2025.