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2008-12-12 Afghanistan
20 Shots, 20 Kills - Marines Prevailed in a Day of Battle
Members of 2nd Batallion, 7th Marines in the Stan. Update on story posted earlier this year.
It started out just like any other patrol in a war-ravaged Afghan province.

Hardened by months of combat, sneak attacks and roadside ambushes, the Marines were ready for a fight. Rolling through the hardscrabble village of Shewan in Afghanistan's Farah province on August 8, the leathernecks of the Twentynine Palms, Calif.-based 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment knew enemy eyes were upon them.

It was a village they'd had on their radar for months. Taliban insurgents and their al Qaeda helpers were constantly harassing the Marines charged with holding back the anti-coalition flood in their 37,000 square mile operational area -- and insurgents were using Shewan as an occasional base for attacks.

They knew the rows of mud compounds held bad guys. But on the tail end of the 10-mile patrol, they never could have expected the hornets nest they were destined to stir up.

"I was prepared for contact but I wasn't expecting any," a Marine unit leader told Military.com. "It turned out later that there was a big meeting of enemy leaders in the town that we had interrupted, and we inadvertently trapped them inside of their compound."


Continued from Page 1

It all started with a rocket propelled grenade shot at around 1:00 pm, and it ended nearly eight hours later with more than 50 enemy killed and only one injured Marine. For months, 2/7 had absorbed ambush after ambush from their hit-and-run opponents, suffering one of the highest casualty rates of any Marine unit deployed in Iraq or Afghanistan.

The unit would be a symbol of the festering conflict in Afghanistan, where few NATO allies are willing to pitch in when the fight turns nasty and the full-force of American might is distracted by the high-profile conflict in Iraq.

But on August 8, in what would be known as "the battle of Shewan," it was payback time.

In an exclusive email exchange with Military.com, the platoon commander who led the Marines on that ill-fated patrol described the pitched battle in vivid detail. His Marines preferred that their story be recounted anonymously, so Marine officials declined several requests to name the specific platoon and company involved in the hours-long battle.

What the story shows is a typically aggressive response to an enemy that for once decided to emerge from the shadows. And it also serves as an illuminating look at how, no matter the adversity and casualty count, U.S. forces continue to fight with the will and determination to win, no matter the odds.

"We didn't win the fight because of our superior firepower. We were severely outnumbered, and outgunned," the platoon commander told Military.com. "From that first counter ambush assault we gained the momentum and maintained it until the enemy finally fled from the battlefield eight hours later."

Ambush Unleashed

Less than two hours into the patrol one of the Marine Humvees took fire from an enemy RPG team about 150 yards away. The grenade sailed harmlessly by, but the platoon sergeant swung his rifle, fired and killed the shooter while another Marine dropped a second man, the platoon commander said. The unit continued to receive sporadic small arms fire for the next hour, but pressed on with their patrol.

Then all hell broke loose.

About 10 insurgents ambushed the Marines' vehicles from an irrigation ditch and more fired on the patrol from a nearby trench line. Though a group of Marines tried to push through the enemy position, they were rebuffed by heavy fire and another Humvee was rocked by a volley of RPG rounds.

As the Humvee burned with its vehicle commander still inside, the Marines pounded the insurgent positions with M249 fire while AK bullets ricocheted off their vehicles. The platoon commander rushed to the downed vehicle to pull the stricken Marine to safety.

"All of a sudden we took an intense amount of machine gun fire from the tree line and at this point numerous machine guns opened up on my vehicle and the dismounted crew trapped in the kill zone," the platoon commander wrote. "This began 20 minutes of intense fighting as the platoon battled to recover the Marines from the kill zone."

All this was too much for one of the platoon's designated marksmen, who crawled to the top of a berm -- exposing himself to enemy fire -- and began to plink off the insurgent gunners firing at the burning Humvee.

"The enemy fired over 40 RPGs from the tree line but were unable to effectively engage the Marines trapped in the kill zone because of the high amount of accurate fire being directed at them," the platoon commander said. "The enemy was reinforcing the tree line and replacing fighters as quickly as we were killing them."

So the designated marksman kept his cool and continued to fire.

"The designated marksman merely adjusted [his sights] and sighted in on targets as they revealed their positions by engaging him," the platoon commander added. "He rapidly acquired and prosecuted these targets again and again, firing his rifle with exceptional accuracy ... until all of the Marines were recovered from the kill zone."

In all, the designated marksmen fired 20 shots, racking up 20 dead fighters.

Finally the Marines were able to roll in an MRAP vehicle to recover the wounded Marines, and the platoon pulled back out of the enemy's range to "redistribute ammunition and [come] up with a quick game plan," the platoon commander said.

Went back for more

The fighters never expected the Marines to return and were surprised to see leathernecks swarming through their trenches and targeting two strongholds with close air support.

"We took another 60 or so RPGs, some rockets and mortars ... but as we attempted to assault we started taking more fire from another compound," the platoon commander wrote. "The enemy had established a defense with mutually supporting positions."

Unable to continue the assault because of the intensity of fire, and with enemy trucks pulling into the compounds and disgorging insurgent fighters, two Marines crawled through a hail of machine gun fire to get more precise coordinates for an aerial bombing run. From only 75 meters away -- well within "danger close" restrictions -- the two Marines called in air strikes until the enemy eventually withdrew from the area.

In all, what started as an ambush by 30 insurgent fighters swelled to a full-fledged assault by an estimated 250 enemy militants. The 30 or so Marines of 2/7's platoon killed more than 50 insurgents in the eight-hour battle, the Corps says.

"It turned out later that there was a big meeting of enemy leaders in the town that we had interrupted and we inadvertently trapped them inside of their compound," the platoon commander wrote. "They must have thought that if they ambushed us we would cut and run. This was not the case."

Posted by GolfBravoUSMC 2008-12-12 10:58|| || Front Page|| [11143 views ]  Top

#1 Hard-hit 2/7 returns from Afghanistan

Posted by GolfBravoUSMC 2008-12-12 11:31||   2008-12-12 11:31|| Front Page Top

#2 My pop was a Navy Corpsman that served with E/2/7 1MARDIV in Korea in 1953. While the 5th Btn. was engaged in the Vegas, Carson and Reno outpost battles he was reassigned to them after most of their corpsmen were WIA or KIA.

His mind is mostly gone now and some days he doesn't recognize me but whenever he is read an account of the 2/7 from any era he brightens up and pays particular attention.

Love of your old outfit - it never fades.

God Bless these guys.
Posted by GORT 2008-12-12 13:22||   2008-12-12 13:22|| Front Page Top

#3 And deh Gawd bless your Dad.
Posted by .5MT 2008-12-12 13:49|| www.cybernations.net]">[www.cybernations.net]  2008-12-12 13:49|| Front Page Top

#4 Gort, my father was a 23 year Navy corpsman, who served on the USS Bunker Hill (CV-17) and the Texas. He is 92 years and has finally begun to tell me stories of his military exploits (Purple Heart, Bronze Star with Combat V for Valor, 11 Battlestars, 2 Presidential Citations, etc). All these years he has kept it pent up inside, but the last year Dad has opened up.

I want to thank you for your Dad's service, and I'm sorry to hear that his mind is fading. May God Bless the both of you.
Posted by Sonny Ebbeamp1305 2008-12-12 14:15||   2008-12-12 14:15|| Front Page Top

#5 Ah, the joy of Quantico! oooooahhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Posted by Last Breath Farm Resident 2008-12-12 16:11||   2008-12-12 16:11|| Front Page Top

#6 Sonny and GORT: my best to both your dads. 
Posted by Steve White 2008-12-12 17:38||   2008-12-12 17:38|| Front Page Top

#7 We had the homecoming/memorial ceremony at the MAGCC parade ground today for 2/7.
Posted by Pappy 2008-12-12 17:50||   2008-12-12 17:50|| Front Page Top

#8 Congrats Pappy. Looks like your Marines were well prepped and ready to kick some ass. Another great Marine episode to add to the lore. Very well done 2/7 Marines!
Posted by Woozle Elmeter 2700 2008-12-12 18:18||   2008-12-12 18:18|| Front Page Top

#9 congrats to your men and you, Pappy
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2008-12-12 18:28||   2008-12-12 18:28|| Front Page Top

#10 What's the big deal? This is what United States Marines DO. Why would we expect anything less? I mean, after all, they ARE the best in the world, right?

"Greater the deed, greater the need
Lightly to laugh it away
Shall be the mark of the English USMC breed
Till the Judgment Day."

Nice work, Marines. Semper Fi!
Posted by Jolutch Mussolini7800 2008-12-12 19:22||   2008-12-12 19:22|| Front Page Top

#11 Something doesn't compute. It tells of only one wounded but we are told of a guy trapped in a flaming vehicle (and not about him being freed from it) plus wounded Marines with an S;
Posted by JFM">JFM  2008-12-12 19:54||   2008-12-12 19:54|| Front Page Top

#12 One wounded. Previous stories mentioned one other Marine suffered a concussion. I guess that was the guy his buddies rescued from the vehicle.
Posted by ed 2008-12-12 21:31||   2008-12-12 21:31|| Front Page Top

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