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Korangal valley campaign
Part of the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
DateJune 28, 2005 - April 14, 2010
LocationKorangal Valley, Kunar province, Afghanistan
Result Taliban victory
(US troops withdraw, Taliban strategic victory)
Belligerents
United States
Flag of Afghanistan Afghanistan
Afghanistan Taliban insurgents
Strength
120 US soldiers Unknown
Casualties and losses
US casualties
42 killed and several hundred wounded
ANA casualties
Larger number of soldiers killed than US forces
Unknown


The Korangal Valley campaign was a series of military operations conducted by ISAF forces against Taliban insurgents in the Korangal Valley in Kunar province, Afghanistan, from June 2005 to April 2010. The campaign ended with a US withdrawal from the valley, after suffering heavy casualties, and a Taliban takeover of the area.

On June 28, 2005, a US special forces operation, called Operation Red Wings, was conducted in Korangal in an attempt to find and eliminate a Taliban commander. A four-man Navy Seals team was ambushed on a ridge above the valley; three members were killed, and a Chinook helicopter sent to rescue them was shot down, killing another 16 soldiers, including eight more Navy Seals. The fourth member of the team was missing in action for several days before being rescued.

In April 2006, US Marines took over the sawmill and lumberyard in the valley and used them to build the Korangal Outpost. After that, they continued in an attempt to penetrate the six-mile-long valley, but never made it more than halfway. The only area that US forces controlled was the northern part, while the southern part of the valley was under Taliban control from start to finish. There were only two missions to the valley’s southern end since 2005. In the words of the executive officer of Second Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment, it would have taken a battalion-size force to make a foray there.[1]

Most of the opposition encountered by Coalition troops were not Taliban or Al Qaeda members, but the Korangalis themselves. From time to time some Taliban forces and Al Qaeda operatives passed through the valley, but the hostility mostly came from the valley's inhabitants. Later on the Korangalis joined the insurgency. The valley was used as a route for infiltrating weapons and fighters into Afghanistan.[2]

US positions were attacked with rockets and mortars on an almost daily basis and their patrols ambushed after advancing only a few hundred meters outside the wire.

After years of sustained fighting and casualties with little evident progress, the US military closed Korangal Outpost on April 14, 2010 a decision made by Gen. Stanley McChrystal. Five days after the US retreat, a video aired by Al Jazeera showed Taliban fighters among the remains of the former American outpost.[3] Forty-two American service men died fighting in the Korangal and hundreds were wounded, primarily between the years of 2006 and 2009. Many Afghan soldiers died there as well, in part because they had poorer equipment. The valley has been dubbed "The Valley of Death" by American forces.

For his actions during a firefight in Korangal in October 2007, staff sergeant Salvatore Giunta received the United States military's highest decoration for valor, the Medal of Honor. He was the first living person since the Vietnam War to receive the award. When his patrol was ambushed on October 25, 2007, Giunta managed to save his teams' sergeant, sergeant Joshua Brennan, from being dragged away by two Taliban fighters and captured. When Giunta saw Brennan being taken away, after he was wounded in the initial burst of fire, he rushed the enemy killing one of the fighters and wounding the second. After that, he carried Brennan to safety, however Brennan died a few days later of his wounds.

Professional British photographer Tim Hetherington won the World Press Photo award for 2007 with a shot he took while reporting on the war in Korangal valley for Vanity Fair magazine in January 2008.[4] Sebastian Junger's (2010) book War documents his experiences while embedded with a US Army company in the Korangal valley.

References[]

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