Battle of Ganjgal

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DateSeptember 8, 2009
Location
Ganjgal village, Kunar Province, Afghanistan
34°47′24″N 71°09′29″E / 34.79°N 71.158°E / 34.79; 71.158
Result Taliban victory
Battle of Ganjgal
Part of the War in Afghanistan

U.S. Army's "Battlescape" diagram
DateSeptember 8, 2009
Location
Ganjgal village, Kunar Province, Afghanistan
34°47′24″N 71°09′29″E / 34.79°N 71.158°E / 34.79; 71.158
Result Taliban victory
Belligerents
United States
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Afghanistan Taliban
Commanders and leaders
Unknown
Units involved

Joint United States/Islamic Republic of Afghanistan

No specific units
Strength
United States 16 Embedded Forces[3]
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 60 soldiers
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 30 border policemen[4]
Approx. 150-200 insurgents[3]
Casualties and losses
5 killed[5]
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 8 killed
2 killed

The Battle of Ganjgal took place during the War in Afghanistan between American and Afghan forces and the Taliban in Kunar Province, Afghanistan on September 8, 2009.[3][5] Complaints that the coalition casualties were avoidable and caused by a failure of the chain of command to provide fire support for the team triggered an official investigation and a series of reprimands to several US military officers.[6] Army Captain William D. Swenson and Marine Corporal Dakota Meyer received the Medal of Honor for their actions during the battle. Meyer is the first living Marine to receive the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War, and Swenson is the fifth living soldier and second officer to receive the Medal of Honor since the Vietnam War. Two other Marines at the battle, Staff Sgt. Juan Rodriguez-Chavez and Capt. Ademola Fabayo, received the Navy Cross.[7][8]

On September 3 an Embedded Training Team (ETT) led a combined group of Afghan Army and National Police forces on a patrol operation around Dam Dara, a village about a mile from Ganjgal. The villagers reacted cordially but the ETT and its Afghan allies took small arms fire upon leaving Dam Dara from a small group of men on a ridge outside the village. After the brief attack the village elders of nearby Ganjgal renounced the attackers and requested that the coalition forces return to their village to conduct a census of military age males and assist in the rebuilding of the local mosque. The original date of September 7 was pushed back by the ETT at the last minute in order to ensure that their National Police forces were adequately prepared for the coming operation.[3]

Engagement

Aftermath

References

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