• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Marines to Afghanistan

tomahawk6

Army.ca Legend
Inactive
Reaction score
66
Points
530
Looks like the Marines will go to Kandahar - based on the article.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2008/01/marine_afghanistan_080109/

3,000 Marines could be headed to Afghanistan
By William H. McMichael - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Jan 9, 2008 20:15:29 EST

The Pentagon has received a U.S. Central Command request to send roughly 3,000 Marines to Afghanistan to bolster the combat troop-strapped NATO force and counter a possible spring offensive by Taliban insurgents.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who has expressed concern that six years of progress in Afghanistan could be reversed if NATO efforts falter, is expected to begin considering the request beginning Friday. He is not, however, expected to make a snap decision, according to press secretary Geoff Morrell.

“It is highly unlikely that he will approve this on the spot,” Morrell said Wednesday evening. “He has more thinking to do on this matter. It’s a serious commitment of additional troops. And he wants to discuss it with some additional people.”

The NATO International Security Assistance Force, now roughly 41,700 troops — 14,000 of them U.S. — bolsters efforts by the Afghan army and police forces to provide security and stability in war-torn country so its young government can rebuild and become more economically secure. A parallel effort by the U.S.-led Combined Joint Task Force 82 — 12,000 U.S. and 1,200 other coalition troops — focuses on defeating anti-government extremists.

If Gates decides to approve the new request, the troops — a Marine Air-Ground Task Force and a battalion that would focus on the training of Afghan army and police units — would be in place by April and spend seven months operating in southern Afghanistan, the area most vexed by Taliban attacks. It would be a “one-time-only” deployment and the troops, who would be assigned to Regional Command South, would not be replaced by additional U.S. forces, Morrell said.

RC South, headquartered in Kandahar, is currently commanded by the United Kingdom.

Sources said the Camp Lejeune, N.C.-based 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit — scheduled to deploy in mid-February — went into high gear this week, laying plans for an accelerated deployment schedule that could have the unit departing for Afghanistan on Feb. 1 and staying out past its traditional 180-day rotation. However, unit officials would not confirm that the group is planning to leave early.

“We do not have a deployment order,” or a warning order, said Capt. Kelly Frushour, spokeswoman for the Camp Lejeune, N.C.-based unit.

The 24th MEU is planning to deploy with the Nassau Expeditionary Strike Group. Cmdr. Herman Phillips, 2nd Fleet public affairs officer, said he knew of no changes to the Nassau ESG deployment schedule.

“There’s nothing planned right now,” he said.

Morrell said no units have been identified, but that they would not be drawn from neighboring Iraq. Late last year, Gates rejected a Marine Corps proposal to move Marine units from Iraq’s Anbar province to Afghanistan. The security situation in Anbar, while much improved over the past year, “remains tenuous,” Morrell said.

Gates has repeatedly complained that other NATO countries have not contributed enough combat forces and other capabilities, particularly helicopters capable of high-altitude operations, to the coalition effort. Gates has said ISAF is short about 3,500 trainers and to meet every command requirement, a total of 7,500 additional troops would be needed.

But Gates softened his tone during his December meetings with NATO defense ministers in Scotland, saying the U.S., recognizing “political realities” faced by some European governments regarding involvement in Afghanistan, would stop “hammering” its allies to contribute more and instead take a more creative approach toward resolving the shortfalls — such getting allies to contribute more funds for items such as helicopter overhaul.

“As a result, we will likely have to bear more of the combat shortfall,” Morrell said.

Violence increased markedly over the past 18 months in Afghanistan, particularly in the south — the result, U.S. officials say, of renewed Taliban assaults. But the new proposal is not a reaction to that increase but rather, Morrell said, “more a move in anticipation of what we expect to be another attempt at a Taliban spring offensive.” The idea is to get the Marines in place “to prevent, as we did last spring, another attempt by the Taliban to come back.”

The Taliban controlled Afghanistan from 1996 until late-2001, when a coalition of U.S. and Afghan warlord-led forces drove them from power. Pockets of Taliban insurgents have remained in Afghanistan ever since, some crossing into eastern Afghanistan from tribal areas in neighboring Pakistan to spring attacks on civilians and coalition forces.
 
Yup... so it would appear.

Afghanistan would get it's own "surge"! - just in time for the TB's annual spring offensive
 
I was under the impression Kandahar Airfield was bursting at the seams now, how will this impact on it?
 
I suspect the Marines will find an FOB someplace.If the Canadian mission ends in 09 the Marines will move in.
 
Actually:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/09/AR2008010903724.html

The Marine air-ground task force will go to Helmand, where its mission will be "to beat back another spring offensive," [Pentagon spokesman]  Morrell said. Fighting in Afghanistan tends to be seasonal, with a lull in winter when the weather makes travel difficult. British forces now lead the NATO command in southern Afghanistan, including Helmand...

Mark
Ottawa
 
If and when the leathernecks go in, good luck to them and Godspeed, Semper Fi. :salute:
 
Hillier welcomes news U.S. troops off to Afghanistan
Updated Thu. Jan. 10 2008 10:56 AM ET
The Canadian Press

HALIFAX -- Gen. Rick Hillier is welcoming news that the United States is preparing to send at least 3,000 Marines to Afghanistan in the spring.

The Pentagon's announcement comes after months of repeated insistence that the U.S. wasn't prepared to fill the need for troops in the country.

Hillier, Canada's chief of defence staff, says any surge of troops would accelerate progress against the Taliban and improve security in Afghanistan.

Canada already has about 2,500 troops in Afghanistan, mostly in the southern province of Kandahar, and has pushed for a larger contingent from the U.S.

Hillier says he hasn't seen any formal commitment from the United States, but he would welcome extra help from any country.

On Friday, U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates is expected to see a proposal from the Pentagon to send a ground and air marine contingent as well as a marine battalion - together totalling more than 3,000 personnel.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080110/hillier_afghanistan_080110/20080110?hub=Canada
 
This looks like awesome news.  It would certainly give the RC South commander a hammer.
 
Could be but the Squadron that is deploying is built around a CH-46E unit although the Marines can addon additional aircraft as needed.
 
tomahawk6 said:
Could be but the Squadron that is deploying is built around a CH-46E unit although the Marines can addon additional aircraft as needed.


Can you tell me how you came to that conclusion ?

(from the original posted article)
Morrell said no units have been identified,
 
I am assuming the unit going is the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit with the Nassau ARG.They are to deploy in Feb so they would be the logical unit. Call it an educated guess. :)
 
Back
Top