Operation Mountain Thrust

Last updated
Operation Mountain Thrust
Part of the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Datec.June 19, 2006c.July 31, 2006
Location
Result Inconclusive
Belligerents
Coalition:
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2013).svg  Afghanistan
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
Flag of Romania.svg  Romania
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic [1] [2]
Flag of the Taliban.svg  Taliban
Flag of Jihad.svg  al-Qaeda
Commanders and leaders
Flag of the United States.svg Benjamin Freakley
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg David Fraser
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2013).svg Rahmatullah Raufi
Flag of the Taliban.svg Akhtar Usmani
Mullah Baqi Kakar
Mullah Mohammad Ibrahim Giwat (allegedly)
Strength
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2013).svg 3,500 security forces
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg 3,300
Flag of the United States.svg 2,300
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg 2,200
Flag of Australia (converted).svg 1,100
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg 120
Total: 11,000+
At least 2,500 insurgents
Casualties and losses

Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2013).svg 107 killed, 43 captured
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg 6 killed, 30 wounded
Flag of the United States.svg 24 killed, 50 wounded
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg 4 killed, 30 wounded
Flag of Australia (converted).svg 11 wounded
Flag of France.svg 2 killed, 1 wounded
Flag of Romania.svg 1 killed, 4 wounded
11 PMC killed

Contents

Total:
155 killed
127+ wounded
43 captured
1,134 killed
387 captured

Operation Mountain Thrust was a joint NATO and Afghan-led military operation in the War in Afghanistan. It involved more than 3,300 British troops, 2,300 U.S. troops, 2,200 Canadian troops, along with approximately 3,500 Afghan soldiers, supported by extensive air power. Its primary objective was to quell the ongoing Taliban insurgency in the south of the country.

The operation was launched in response to a significant Taliban spring offensive led by Mullah Dadullah in the provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, which had marked the most significant escalation of the war in Afghanistan since 2002. The operation was planned by Major General Benjamin Freakley. The strategy involved conducting search-and-destroy missions in the mountainous regions of Kandahar, Zabul, Uruzgan and Helmand.

The objective was to disrupt the Taliban's command structure and target their core leaders and fighters. The hope was that by doing so, it would dissuade less committed individuals from supporting the insurgents, thereby weakening their overall influence. [3]

Background

During June and July 2006, Afghanistan experienced some of the bloodiest clashes since the fall of the Taliban regime and Operation Anaconda. The Taliban demonstrated remarkable coordination in their attacks, managing to seize control of two districts in Helmand Province by the end of July, although these were swiftly reclaimed a few days later.

Throughout the fighting, the Taliban suffered significant losses, with over 1,100 fighters killed and nearly 400 captured. Much of this was attributed to heavy aerial bombing by coalition forces. However, despite these losses, the coalition itself also suffered casualties, with nearly 150 soldiers killed and 40 Afghan policemen captured by the Taliban.

Tom Koenigs, the top U.N. official in Afghanistan, told the German news weekly Der Spiegel that the Taliban numbers of casualties do not reflect success. "The Taliban fighters reservoir is practically limitless," Koenigs told the magazine in an interview. "The movement will not be overcome by high casualty figures."

The Operation and results

Due to the intense Taliban offensive and escalation of the war, Ian Hope, commander of the Canadian Princess Patricia’s battalion, became increasingly concerned. On May 17, in one of their initial battles, half of the battalion encountered around 50 Taliban fighters in Zharey. The Canadians utilized AH-64 attack helicopters to repel the insurgents. However, as they pursued the Taliban through villages and narrow farm paths, they fell into a Taliban ambush. Four RPGs destroyed a Canadian light armored vehicle before the Taliban fighting positions were neutralized by a B-1 bomber. [4]

Hope and his Canadian troops, along with U.S. special force teams in Kandahar, warned of a potential threat to the provincial capital of Kandahar City by the Taliban. Despite these concerns, Major General Benjamin Freakley remained focused on executing search-and-destroy missions in the mountains, a plan he had devised prior to arriving in Afghanistan to get NATO allies set up for operations in the country. [3]

Canadian and U.S. special force teams on the ground disagreed with diverting resources to chase insurgents in the mountains while facing a significant Taliban attack near the provincial capitals of Kandahar and Helmand. However, the operation nonetheless proceeded as scheduled and lasted for six weeks in June and July. In the end, the operation did not manage to quell the Taliban insurgency. Coalition forces had cleared some remote districts and then pulled back. Benjamin Freakley later acknowledged that the operation did not achieve anything long-term. [3] Control of the region was transferred from the Americans to other ISAF forces. Attacks continued and even intensified. On the first day that ISAF took control, August 1, a British patrol was hit by enemy fire in Helmand province; three soldiers were killed and one wounded. On the same day, 18 Taliban and one policeman were killed in an anti-Taliban coalition operation in the same province and 15 Afghan policemen were captured when they surrendered in Zabul province while a Taliban force was preparing to attack their police post. Also two days later there were several incidents in and around Kandahar, including a suicide bombing which killed 21 civilians. In the other attacks in and around Kandahar, four Canadian soldiers were killed and ten were wounded.

Known Encounters

See also

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References

Bibliography