Posted on 07/19/2008 5:33:16 PM PDT by Red Steel
173rds fight not symbol of more violent Afghanistan, says Preysler
"The sky is not falling," Col. Charles "Chip" Preysler, commander of the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team, said Saturday from Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
Preysler spoke via telephone less than a week after his paratroops and their Afghan allies were involved in a fierce attack at a small post near the village of Wanat. In the July 13 battle, nine of his men were killed and 15 others wounded.
But the attack is not a sign of conditions worsening in the country, he said.
The battle occurred just after dawn at a temporary vehicle patrol base called Bella. A platoon-sized element of Chosen Company, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne) soldiers and a smaller Afghan National Army force were occupying a hastily built area as they had done many times over the 15 months theyd been in country, Preysler said. The soldiers were there on a reconnaissance mission to establish a presence and find a good location to connect with the local government, populace and Afghan National Police, he said.
The small outpost had been built just days before the attack and consisted of protective wire and observation posts surrounding strategically placed vehicles. "Thats all it was, a series of vehicles that went out there," Preysler said, adding that Bella had no road access, was difficult to resupply, difficult to reinforce and difficult to defend.
"People are saying that this was a full-up [forward operating base]/combat outpost, and that is absolutely false and not true. There were no walls," Preysler said, latter adding, "FOB denotes that there are walls and perimeters and all that. Its a vehicle patrol base, temporary in nature."
But that doesnt mean the soldiers were not prepared to take on the enemy, he said.
"Now, obviously when you halt, you start prepping your defenses, and in this case we had [observation posts] and protective wire, we had the vehicles deployed properly to take advantage of their fields of fire, and we set up like that all over the place, and we do it routinely," he said.
The Army did not "abandon" the base after the attack, as many media reporters have suggested, Preysler said.
He said the decision to move from the location following the attack was to reposition, which his men have done countless times throughout their tour, and to move closer to the local seat of government.
"If theres no combat outpost to abandon, theres no position to abandon," he said. "Its a bunch of vehicles like we do on patrol anywhere and we hold up for a night and pick up any tactical positions that we have with vehicle patrol bases.
"We do that routinely.... Were always doing that when go out and stay in an area for longer then a few hours, and thats what it is. So there is nothing to abandon. There was no structures, there was no COP or FOB or anything like that to even abandon. So, from the get-go, that is just [expletive], and its not right."
He also didnt like the medias characterization that his men were "overrun."
"As far as I know, and I know a lot, it was not overrun in any shape, manner or form," an emotional Preysler said. "It was close combat to be sure hand grenade range. The enemy never got into the main position. As a matter of fact, it was, I think, the bravery of our soldiers reinforcing the hard-pressed observation post, or OP, that turned the tide to defeat the enemy attack."
Though Preysler and his staff have seen several reports on the fight and numbers of enemy, he said true specifics still remain unclear.
"I do not know the exact numbers. But I know they had much greater strength than one U.S. platoon," he said. "I believe the enemy to number over 100 in that area when he attacked. I dont know the casualties that he took, but I know that its got to be substantial based on the different reports Im getting. We may not know the true damage we inflicted on the enemy, but we certainly defeated his attack and repulsed his attack and he never got into our position."
Preysler and his staff also object to media reports that because of the size of the attack, it could be a harbinger of change in the way militants fight in eastern Afghanistan.
"I think people are taking license and just misusing statistics, and I refuse to do that," he said. "Were in the middle of the fighting season. When we first got here last summer and started fighting here in June, we were only seeing the enemy and engaging him first about 5 percent of the time. Now were between 25 and 40 percent. We see the enemy, and were engaging him first."
When the 173rd arrived last summer, it marked the first time that a brigade-sized element operated in the upper provinces near of the Pakistan border, allowing for a much larger presence.
"By sheer numbers and sheer volume of patrols I mean this [battalion] has had 9,000 patrols in 15 months were out there taking the fight to the enemy," Were out there taking the ground that he used to own exclusively, and we have separated him from the people in many locations," Preysler said. "This is one area that is still contested, and were going to have to go back in there and fight hard to separate the insurgents from the population, and that is exactly what were going to do.
"Now, the problem is we are in the middle of a transition, [but] I would not characterize this as anything more than the standard fighting that happens in this area in good weather that the summer provides. The harvest is in, and its the fighting season. I dont see massive enemy pushes into our area. The sky is not falling, and this is what weve been facing all along in the summer."
Preysler ended the interview by lauding his soldiers.
"I get emotional about this, youll have to forgive me," he said. "These guys have fought for 15 months, and they have fought harder, and I mean this literally, they have fought harder and (had) more engagements, more direct-fire engagements, than any brigade in the United States Army in probably the toughest terrain. These guys are absolutely veterans and they know what theyre doing and they have that airborne spirit and they fought a very, very tough battle and held the ground and did everything they were supposed to do.
"I would like to also say I wish my guys who were wounded a speedy recovery and obviously condolences to the families, and thats very close and personal to us. Its tough to take casualties toward the end of any combat tour for any unit, but it signals that were in a fight, and were going to continue to fight."
Great article by Mark St.Clair clarifying the vulnerability. Thanks very much for posting.
America’s finest! R.I.P.
Communist don’t care about the truth, they care about the story getting out to the public. Our News Media is in the bag for the leftists agenda, therefore they will report negative when there is a positive and positive when there is negative.
REad about the battle from those that were there
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=56237
MSM was positively gleeful in its reporting. Should all be fired.
“It was some of the bravest stuff Ive ever seen in my life, and I will never see it again because those guys,” Stafford said, then paused. “Normal humans wouldnt do that. Youre not supposed to do that getting up and firing back when everything around you is popping and whizzing and trees, branches coming down and sandbags exploding and RPGs coming in over your head It was a fistfight then, and those guys held em off.”
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=56237
If there is a tough fight to be won the 173rd is the unit to get it done.
The latest attempt by the LSM to “create a Tet Offensive”.
Maybe we’ll see some timed events by the Taliban, AQ, and other bad actors that play in to the rest of the presidential campaign. They know that the drive-by’s will report only the bad stuff.
I think a lot freepers believed this report also..
Someone at DOD or WH should be holding daily press briefings and yelling at the lack of truth. Bring back Swartzkauff or someone who can tell it like it is.
I’ve met Col Preysler. During the few weeks I had around him, he struck me as the kind of guy I’d want commanding me in a tough fight. His initial emphasis was on coordinating all the activity in his AOR so that they achieved a strategic purpose, and weren’t just random acts of good fighting.
It is safe to say he is at least 100 times smarter about what is going on than any of the reporters who wrote articles.
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