Marines Deliver in
Mountain Storm
Colonel Kenneth F. McKenzie, Major Roberta L. Shea, and Major Christopher
Phelps, U.S. Marine Corps
Proceedings, November 2004
U.S. MARINE CORPS
In its deployment to Afghanistan earlier this year, the 22d Marine
Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) highlighted the contributions
Marine air- ground task forces make to joint commands and validated the
effectiveness of hard predeployment training.
In winter 2004, the U.S. Central Command committed its theater reserve,
the 22d Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) (MEU[SOC]),
into central Afghanistan
to serve as the main effort of Combined Joint Task Force (CJTF) 180’s
Operation Mountain Storm. The operation was designed to preempt a long-anticipated
Taliban “spring offensive” and help set the conditions for successful
voter registration and national-level elections.
The operational concept developed by CJTF-180 planners called for the
22d MEU to enter Afghanistan through the southern airfield of Kandahar
in March 2004. The physical and logistical challenges were daunting.
Located in southern Afghanistan, Kandahar airfield lies just ten miles
southeast of the former Taliban capital, Kandahar City. The ship-to-shore
movement to Kandahar airfield required the MEU to traverse southern
Pakistan’s Baluchistan region, one of the most rugged and remote lands
in the world. Avoiding the 8,000-foot ridges with rotary-wing aircraft
lengthened the transit to 420 miles.
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U.S. MARINE CORPS
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Difficult Terrain
After force closure at Kandahar, the MEU struck north 80 miles to operate
in the Oruzgan Province area. By way of bone-jarring routes leading
north from Kandahar City, there are only two main passes that afford
operational access to Oruzgan Province. They cut through the 8,000-foot
ridgeline that separates Oruzgan from Kandahar Province and were to
occupy much of the MEU’s attention as it transitioned to Tarin Kowt,
the capital of Oruzgan.
Oruzgan Province stretches about 130 miles north to south and 95 miles
east to west. With poor unpaved “roads” and deep, narrow passes, Tarin
Kowt was home to Mullah Omar and his family during the Soviet occupation
in the 1980s. The province, long considered a Taliban stronghold, is
suited ideally to insurgency because of its geography and isolated populace.
It is dominated by some of the most hardline ethnic Pashtuns in the
country—people who reflect the rugged mountains around them.
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| Marines of Battalion Landing Team 1/6 search
for enemy personnel and weapons in an Oruzgan Province village during
Operation Mountain Storm. (MARINES ROBERT STURKIE) |
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At the heart of the MEU’s area of operations (AO) was Tarin Kowt, a
small town of 17,000. The lush vegetation that follows several watersheds
leading down to the town contrasts sharply with the steep, arid mountains
that surround it. At the bottom of the Tarin Kowt “bowl” (at 4,400 feet)
was an old abandoned dirt airstrip that became the centerpiece of the
22d MEU’s air-ground operations.
Mission Analysis
Before forces began to move, MEU planners and subordinate commanders
visited Bagram twice to conduct detailed planning with the CJTF-180
staff, the core of which came from the Army’s 10th Mountain Division.
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The task force staff incorporated the 22d MEU’s staff in all facets
of operations plan development. Thus, the MEU clearly understood the
joint task force (JTF) commander’s intent. Two early decisions by CJTF-180
were key to effective operations: the MEU was to function as a Marine
air-ground task force (MAGTF) and was assigned its own AO, with attendant
freedom of movement.
Based on analysis of the campaign plan, 22d MEU planners developed
a mission statement:
The MEU’s primary task was to set the conditions for a safe election
process leading to establishment of a secure and stable government in
Afghanistan. This entailed finding and defeating anticoalition forces,
securing major population areas, and supporting civil-military operations
across the MEU’s AO—with the emphasis on voter registration.