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U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Pays High Price For Afghan Surge Year

KRISTIN M. HALL   06/ 5/11 12:18 PM ET   AP

JALALABAD, Afghanistan — The soldiers of the Army's famed 101st Airborne Division deployed to Afghanistan confident their counterinsurgency expertise would once again turn a surge strategy into a success but are headed home uncertain of lasting changes on the battlefield.

As the division's 24,000 soldiers return to Fort Campbell from their one-year deployment, doubts remain in the military that security in Afghanistan can last without a significant U.S. military presence for years. The division brought effective counterinsurgency lessons from Iraq, but is still waiting to see whether those strategies can take hold in Afghanistan.

What progress was made in improving security and governance came at a high price: The division known as the Screaming Eagles lost 131 soldiers, the most killed in a single deployment for the unit since Vietnam, with many more wounded or injured. The 101st has been a force in America's major conflicts since World War II, when it was first formed for the 1944 Allied invasion of Normandy.

In the eyes of many of the troops returning to Fort Campbell on the Kentucky-Tennessee line, they spent the year chasing ghosts across mountain ridges and feeling frustrated by the slow pace of the nearly ten-year war.

"It is very hard to see change," said Capt. Tye Reedy. "It was very hard to get that across to my soldiers."

The 101st had plenty of veterans from the Iraq troop surge in 2007, where they learned to protect the population and isolate them from the enemy, a counterinsurgency approach drafted by Gen. David Petraeus, who once led the division during the invasion of Iraq.

While the Iraq surge was credited with scoring progress in that war, many of the division's leaders said their challenge in Afghanistan was to keep soldiers focused in the face of setbacks.

"They have to accept that it was worth it," said Col. Andrew Poppas, commander of the 1st Brigade Combat Team, which lost 39 soldiers. "It was a fight that needed to happen and no soldier died in vain."

When explaining what the division accomplished in the year at war, the division's commander, Maj. Gen. John F. Campbell, can rattle off statistics from memory – thousands of weapons caches found, thousands of insurgent fighters killed and dozens of districts with improved security. But the one figure he often ends with is the number of soldiers under his command who were killed.

Campbell kept notecards with the names and photos of each soldier, held together by a rubber band in his uniform's pocket. By the end of the deployment, the stack was as thick as a paperback book.

On six different occasions over the year, the division lost five or more soldiers in a single event, including a helicopter crash, suicide attacks and heavy fighting.

Campbell described those losses in military lingo. "We had some very, very kinetic events," he said after arriving home at Fort Campbell. But he said the hardships bonded the troops in an indelible way.

"Each time you go visit those soldiers after one of those things, they are there fighting for their buddy on their left or right," Campbell said.

Some of the heaviest fighting came near the end of their deployment in early spring as they attempted to wrest control from insurgents who were coming over the Pakistan border in eastern Afghanistan.

"My company, or my two platoons, we landed on 150 hardened Taliban fighters and lost three men, injured another three," said Reedy, 28, commander of Charlie Company, 2-327 Infantry, 1st Brigade Combat Team. "That's one operation on the border."

In addition to fighting, troops also worked to train their Afghan military counterparts. But the relationship was strained at times, especially after incidents like one in November when a lone gunman from the Afghan Border Police shot and killed six soldiers from the division.

Cpl. Andrew Barnett, 28, from B Company, 2-327 Infantry Regiment, said trusting Afghans was difficult, especially when his unit got an intelligence report that indicated Afghan soldiers were communicating with insurgent fighters about their positions at a combat outpost in Kunar province.

"It's kind of frustrating because we're supposed to be nice and friendly and try to help them out, and we've got these guys who have infiltrated or are paying their buddies to give information," Barnett said

But 101st soldiers also took pride in helping develop the Afghan military and police into professional forces as the number of AWOL soldiers decreased and Afghan leaders took more independent control over security. That will likely be the division's lasting legacy after this year in Afghanistan.

As Reedy looks back on the tour, he tries to remind his soldiers that counterinsurgency isn't a quick fix.

"Everything we do every day is building toward the end state," Reedy said. "Leaving it a little better for the next unit and then they build on it."

___

Kristin Hall can be reached at http://twitter.com/kmhall

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JALALABAD, Afghanistan — The soldiers of the Army's famed 101st Airborne Division deployed to Afghanistan confident their counterinsurgency expertise would once again turn a surge strategy into ...
JALALABAD, Afghanistan — The soldiers of the Army's famed 101st Airborne Division deployed to Afghanistan confident their counterinsurgency expertise would once again turn a surge strategy into ...
JALALABAD, Afghanistan — The soldiers of the Army's famed 101st Airborne Division deployed to Afghanistan confident their counterinsurgency expertise would once again turn a surge strategy into ...
JALALABAD, Afghanistan — The soldiers of the Army's famed 101st Airborne Division deployed to Afghanistan confident their counterinsurgency expertise would once again turn a surge strategy into ...
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05:25 AM on 06/13/2011
Obama, Golf, Country Club
05:25 AM on 06/13/2011
Interesting:

President Obama, Golf, and country club..

The combination of those words can't get on the comments.
05:23 AM on 06/13/2011
Meanwhile back at the ranch:

President Obama goes golfing at the country club for the 11th straight weekend. He ducks the family at Camp David to play 18 holes at his customary leisurely 5-6 hour pace.

Dont believe it: Google it.
01:43 AM on 06/08/2011
it's truly sad that these soldiers die in promoting agenda of misguided potuses
06:29 PM on 06/07/2011
One hundred thirty one American lives - from just one tour of duty and one division. And that doesn't count the number of people disabled for life. Nobody wants to think of these soldiers dying and being wounded as a "vain effort." But at some point we have to accept the fact that we are not going to turn Afghanistan into a civilized place, let alone a democracy. The people are tribal and have no basis on which to form a national government with democratic institutions. Karzai is corrupt and weak and we dont have another horse in the race.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pepper1311
POGS are dirt
07:36 PM on 06/06/2011
I know the song,friends one moment trying to kill you the next. VN 12/66-7/69
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12:20 PM on 06/06/2011
Former 1/502nd trooper. Welcome home Brothers, you kicked a** again, Airborne......
10:55 AM on 06/06/2011
Vet, Father of 2... Air Force and 101 Airborne... and I'm constantly amazed at the twists and turns exhibited by HP posters losing sight of the point and using an article like this as political fodder.
This article is about sacrifice...
honor
duty
service
and the loses to military families all over the united States.
No one wishes for an end to war... more than a soldier and their family.

Bush did this, Obama should do that... where is your respect for an all
volunteer Army, ready and willing to defend to the death, your right to
speak over their sacrifice. The chest pounders... the 'bring 'em home' buddies...
most without a single clue what it is to have a loved one in the throws of battle.

I still see more 'welcome spring' and baseball flags outside homes- than Old Glory.

To all with military family...I salute you.
To my buddies, alive and gone... I salute you.

To all the Miltary, 101st, etal.

I salute you!


Have a good day, y'all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HappyBalance
People BEFORE Profits
09:38 AM on 06/06/2011
"What progress was made in improving security and governance came at a high price: The division known as the Screaming Eagles lost 131 soldiers, the most killed in a single deployment for the unit since Vietnam, with many more wounded or injured."

Just sad. Time to leave Afghanistan.
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Lauralics
Loving "Pure" Michigan
08:52 AM on 06/06/2011
Hmmm....I've got to ask this question based on some of the comments here.

We are currently under the guise of NATO bombing the living daylights out of Libya.

Do posters here believe it would have been better just to bomb the heck out of Saddam and his Country under the no-fly zone?

Should we have gone to Baghdad and hit all his palaces under the no-fly zone? Should we have hit all of his military equipment under the no-fly zone?

We didn't do any of that, just set up shop in Saudi Arabia and ran a UN sanctioned no-fly zone, was that really the smart thing to do? So many say Bush Jr. going into Iraq was wrong, illegal and I'm just not seeing that. A cat and mouse game under a no-fly zone with a "proven" brutal dictator is not the way to go EITHER.
09:21 AM on 06/06/2011
Bush knew he had no real evidence of WMD in Iraq. Inspectors found nothing. Without actual evidence, WMD was only a suspicion at most. You cannot kill people based on suspicion. That is murder. Bush and gang are mass murderers.
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Lauralics
Loving "Pure" Michigan
09:52 AM on 06/06/2011
Labrat, there ARE people who believe that we should have ousted Saddam BEFORE Bush Jr. came along. Where were you in the 90's, jeez Saddam was the number 1 bad guy and we ran a useless freakin' no-fly zone (which cost us billions with no end in sight). The First Gulf War never ended, we just ran a prison around the culprit.

You may want to pretend that Iraq was a non-issue until Bush Jr. came along, but I'm not buying it.
10:33 AM on 06/06/2011
Word, it actually turns out that Iraqis that were telling us about these weapons were lying... http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/15/defector-admits-wmd-lies-iraq-war
08:10 AM on 06/06/2011
5 American soldiers killed in Iraq today. You know, the war that Barack "ended."

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/07/world/middleeast/07iraq.html
07:54 AM on 06/06/2011
I salute the brave soldiers of the 101st Airborne Screaming Eagles with whom my brother proudly served in Vietnam. Rest in Peace Jim Rodulfo.
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Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
08:02 AM on 06/06/2011
We all should salute them. They had no choice but to do what they're told.
07:51 AM on 06/06/2011
Where have the real Americans gone, why are pansy liberals given a voice to spew there unamerican hatred about our Military veterans???
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Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
08:17 AM on 06/06/2011
I dislike Un-American War Profiteers.
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12:22 PM on 06/06/2011
Go to France....
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Lauralics
Loving "Pure" Michigan
08:35 AM on 06/06/2011
....and in the meantime, heaven forbid you should say anything against Sean Penn and his puff piece about Chavez. ;p
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12:28 PM on 06/06/2011
Right, they all ride the "WeinerMobile" which sucks up pond water.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
07:51 AM on 06/06/2011
That is the trouble with this nations military industrial complex while they sit in their air conditioned offices and collect big bonuses, American soldiers are paying the price for monetary success,when is enough,enough?
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12:34 PM on 06/06/2011
Where did you serve?
05:55 PM on 06/06/2011
What does that matter?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
10:08 AM on 06/07/2011
US Navy 1970 tru 1974 you?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
07:50 AM on 06/06/2011
Those of you who looked away from Obama's determination to keep us in this war got what you wanted after all--change, and from bad to worse.