Operation HAMMER DOWN in an Area Immediately to the East of the Waygal River Valley
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
As a Last Resort
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Humanities Commons 1 Small Arms… As a Last Resort By Phil D. Harrison One can only contemplate the fearful moment of realisation that a situation has become dire, there are few options available, and in reality there will be ‘no quarter’ from your adversaries. At such a critical moment there is a desperate need for all systems, including small arms, to work flawlessly. The following Article discusses three historic battles, where such a situation arose. This Article aims to focus on dismounted infantry small arms and should not be considered as an exhaustive account of the battles or the circumstances surrounding those battles. I have also tried to address the small arms ‘bigger picture.’ This Article is my endeavour to better appreciate the role of small arms at three influential moments in history. The following is a ‘distillation’ of the information available in the public domain and consequently, there may be disappointment for those seeking new research findings. I hope that this ‘distillation’ may be helpful to those looking for insights into these events. The topic deserves a more lengthy discourse than can be afforded here and therefore, much has been omitted. The three battles discussed are as follows: th th (1) Ia Drang; November 14 -15 1965 (with reference to Hill 881; April-May 1967) (2) Mirbat: July 19th, 1972 (3) Wanat: July 13th, 2008 (4) Addendum (Adhesion Warfare) 2 th th (1) Ia Drang; November 14 -15 1965 (with reference to Hill 881; April-May 1967) Above photo by Mike Alford LZ-Albany LZ-X Ray http://www.generalhieu.com/iadrang_arvn-2.htm 3 As an introduction I would like to mention a brief Article from: The Milwaukee Sentinel, of Tuesday 23rd may, 1967 entitled: Men Killed Trying to Unjam Rifles, Marine Writes Home. -
Updated 02.03.2021 an Annotated List of Afghanistan Longhorn Beetles
Updated 02.03.2021 An annotated list of Afghanistan Longhorn beetles (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) M.A. Lazarev The list is based on the publication by M. A. Lazarev, 2019: Catalogue of Afghanistan Longhorn beetles (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae) with two descriptions of new Phytoecia (Parobereina Danilevsky, 2018) from Central Asia. - Humanity space. International almanac, 8 (2): 104-140.It is regularly updated as new taxa are described (marked with red). Family CERAMBYCIDAE Latreille, 1802 subfamily Prioninae Latreille, 1802 tribe Macrotomini J. Thomson, 1861 genus Anomophysis Quentin & Villiers, 1981: 374 type species Prionus spinosus Fabricius, 1787 inscripta C.O. Waterhouse, 1884: 380 (Macrotoma) Heyrovský, 1936: 211 - Wama; Tippmann, 1958: 41 - Kabul, Ost-Afghanistan, 1740; Sarobi, am Kabulflus, 900 m; Mangul, Bashgultal, Nuristan, Ost-Afghanistan, 1250 m; Fuchs, 1961: 259 - Sarobi 1100 m, O.- Afghanistan; Fuchs, 1967: 432 - Afghanistan, 25 km N von Barikot, 1800 m, Nuristan; Nimla, 40 km SW von Dschelalabad; Heyrovský, 1967: 156 - Zentral-Afghanistan, Prov. Kabul: Kabul; Kabul-Zahir; Ost- Afghanistan, Prov. Nengrahar: “Nuristan”, ohne näheren Fundort; Kamu; Löbl & Smetana, 2010: 90 - Afghanistan. plagiata C.O. Waterhouse, 1884: 381 (Macrotoma) vidua Lameere, 1903: 167 (Macrotoma) Quentin & Villiers, 1981: 361, 376, 383 - Afghanistan: Kaboul; Sairobi; Darah-i-Nour, Nangahar; Löbl & Smetana, 2010: 90 - Afghanistan; Kariyanna et al., 2017: 267 - Afghanistan: Kaboul; Rapuzzi et al., 2019: 64 - Afghanistan. tribe Prionini Latreille, 1802 genus Dorysthenes Vigors, 1826: 514 type species Prionus rostratus Fabricius, 1793 subgenus Lophosternus Guérin-Méneville, 1844: 209 type species Lophosternus buquetii Guérin- Méneville, 1844 Cyrtosternus Guérin-Méneville, 1844: 210 type species Lophosternus hopei Guérin-Méneville, 1844 huegelii L. Redtenbacher, 1844: 550 (Cyrtognathus) falco J. -
CB Meeting PAK/AFG
Polio Eradication Initiative Afghanistan Current Situation of Polio Eradication in Afghanistan Independent Monitoring Board Meeting 29-30 April 2015,Abu Dhabi AFP cases Classification, Afghanistan Year 2013 2014 2015 Reported AFP 1897 2,421 867 cases Confirmed 14 28 1 Compatible 4 6 0 VDPV2 3 0 0 Discarded 1876 2,387 717 Pending 0 0 *149 Total of 2,421 AFP cases reported in 2014 and 28 among them were confirmed Polio while 6 labelled* 123as Adequatecompatible AFP cases Poliopending lab results 26 Inadequate AFP cases pending ERC 21There Apr 2015 is one Polio case reported in 2015 as of 21 April 2015. Region wise Wild Poliovirus Cases 2013-2014-2015, Afghanistan Confirmed cases Region 2013 2014 2015 Central 1 0 0 East 12 6 0 2013 South east 0 4 0 Districts= 10 WPV=14 South 1 17 1 North 0 0 0 Northeast 0 0 0 West 0 1 0 Polio cases increased by 100% in 2014 Country 14 28 1 compared to 2013. Infected districts increased 2014 District= 19 from 10 to 19 in 2014. WPV=28 28 There30 is a case surge in Southern Region while the 25Eastern Region halved the number of cases20 in comparison14 to 2013 Most15 of the infected districts were in South, East10 and South East region in 2014. No of AFP cases AFP of No 1 2015 5 Helmand province reported a case in 2015 District= 01 WPV=01 after0 a period of almost two months indicates 13 14 15 Year 21continuation Apr 2015 of low level circulation. Non Infected Districts Infected Districts Characteristics of polio cases 2014, Afghanistan • All the cases are of WPV1 type, 17/28 (60%) cases are reported from Southern region( Kandahar-13, Helmand-02, and 1 each from Uruzgan and Zabul Province). -
AFGHANISTAN Weekly Humanitarian Update (12 – 18 July 2021)
AFGHANISTAN Weekly Humanitarian Update (12 – 18 July 2021) KEY FIGURES IDPs IN 2021 (AS OF 18 JULY) 294,703 People displaced by conflict (verified) 152,387 Received assistance (including 2020 caseload) NATURAL DISASTERS IN 2021 (AS OF 11 JULY) 24,073 Number of people affected by natural disasters Conflict incident RETURNEES IN 2021 Internal displacement (AS OF 18 JULY) 621,856 Disruption of services Returnees from Iran 7,251 Returnees from Pakistan 45 South: Fighting continues including near border Returnees from other Kandahar and Hilmand province witnessed a significant spike in conflict during countries the reporting period. A Non-State Armed Group (NSAG) reportedly continued to HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE apply pressure on District Administrative Centres (DACs) and provincial capitals PLAN (HRP) REQUIREMENTS & to expand areas under their control while Afghan National Security Forces FUNDING (ANSF) conducted clearing operations supported by airstrikes. Ongoing conflict reportedly led to the displacement of civilians with increased fighting resulting in 1.28B civilian casualties in Dand and Zheray districts in Kandahar province and Requirements (US$) – HRP Lashkargah city in Hilmand province. 2021 The intermittent closure of roads to/from districts and provinces, particularly in 479.3M Hilmand and Kandahar provinces, hindered civilian movements and 37% funded (US$) in 2021 transportation of food items and humanitarian/medical supplies. Intermittent AFGHANISTAN HUMANITARIAN outages of mobile service continued. On 14 July, an NSAG reportedly took FUND (AHF) 2021 control of posts and bases around the Spin Boldak DAC and Wesh crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Closure of the border could affect trade and 43.61M have adverse implications on local communities and the region. -
Left in the Dark
LEFT IN THE DARK FAILURES OF ACCOUNTABILITY FOR CIVILIAN CASUALTIES CAUSED BY INTERNATIONAL MILITARY OPERATIONS IN AFGHANISTAN Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 3 million supporters, members and activists in more than 150 countries and territories who campaign to end grave abuses of human rights. Our vision is for every person to enjoy all the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards. We are independent of any government, political ideology, economic interest or religion and are funded mainly by our membership and public donations. First published in 2014 by Amnesty International Ltd Peter Benenson House 1 Easton Street London WC1X 0DW United Kingdom © Amnesty International 2014 Index: ASA 11/006/2014 Original language: English Printed by Amnesty International, International Secretariat, United Kingdom All rights reserved. This publication is copyright, but may be reproduced by any method without fee for advocacy, campaigning and teaching purposes, but not for resale. The copyright holders request that all such use be registered with them for impact assessment purposes. For copying in any other circumstances, or for reuse in other publications, or for translation or adaptation, prior written permission must be obtained from the publishers, and a fee may be payable. To request permission, or for any other inquiries, please contact [email protected] Cover photo: Bodies of women who were killed in a September 2012 US airstrike are brought to a hospital in the Alingar district of Laghman province. © ASSOCIATED PRESS/Khalid Khan amnesty.org CONTENTS MAP OF AFGHANISTAN .......................................................................................... 6 1. SUMMARY ......................................................................................................... 7 Methodology .......................................................................................................... -
Transregional Intoxications Wine in Buddhist Gandhara and Kafiristan
Borders Itineraries on the Edges of Iran edited by Stefano Pellò Transregional Intoxications Wine in Buddhist Gandhara and Kafiristan Max Klimburg (Universität Wien, Österreich) Abstract The essay deals with the wine culture of the Hindu Kush area, which is believed to be among the oldest vinicultural regions of the world. Important traces and testimonies can be found in the Gandharan Buddhist stone reliefs of the Swat valley as well as in the wine culture of former Kafiristan, present-day Nuristan, in Afghanistan, which is still in many ways preserved among the Kalash Kafirs of Pakistan’s Chitral District. Kalash represent a very interesting case of ‘pagan’ cultural survival within the Islamic world. Keywords Kafiristan. Wine. Gandhara. Kalash. Dionysus, the ancient wine deity of the Greeks, was believed to have origi- nated in Nysa, a place which was imagined to be located somewhere in Asia, thus possibly also in the southern outskirts of the Hindu Kush, where Alexander and his Army marched through in the year 327 BCE. That wood- ed mountainous region is credited by some scholars with the fame of one of the most important original sources of the viticulture, based on locally wild growing vines (see Neubauer 1974). Thus, conceivably, it was also the regional viniculture and not only the (reported) finding of much of ivy and laurel which had raised the Greeks’ hope to find the deity’s mythical birth place. When they came across a village with a name similar to Nysa, the question appeared to be solved, and the king declared Dionysus his and the army’s main protective deity instead of Heracles, thereby upgrading himself from a semi-divine to a fully divine personality. -
(7Th Yr) DEWS WEEKLY EPIDEMIOLOGICAL
May 13, 2013 DISEASES EARLY WARNING SYSTEM WER-19 (7th Yr) DEWS WEEKLY EPIDEMIOLOGICAL REPORT EPREPORT SUMMARY: This report includes surveillance data from 4th May to 10th May 2013. Out of 349 functional Sentinel sites (SS), all 349 (100%) have sent their reports in Week-19 of 2013. Out of total 345,178 consultations (145,256 Male, 199,922 Female) recorded in week-19 of 2013, 108,054 (51,869 Male, 56,185 Female) consultations were reported due to DEWS target diseases. Main causes of consultations this week are Acute Respiratory Infections/ARI (19.8%) and Acute Diarrheal Diseases/ADD (10.6%) from total clients in a continuing trend from the week before. 51 (25 Male, 26 Female) deaths caused due to Pneumonia, Diarrheal diseases and Meningitis/Severely ill children, so 32 deaths (16 Male, 16 Female) caused by Pneumonia, 8 deaths (2 Male, 6 Female) caused by diarrheal diseases and 11 deaths (7 Male, 4 Female) were caused by Meningitis/severely ill children. In this reporting week, Suspected Measles Outbreak reported from Qalat district of Zabul province, Suspected Cholera Outbreak reported from Shoraba district of Kandahar province, Suspected Measles Outbreak reported from Wants waygal district of Nuristan province, Suspected scabies Outbreak reported from Asadabad district of Kunar province and Suspected Measles Outbreak reported from Keshendeh district of Balkh province. REPORTS RECEIVED FROM REPORTING SITES: As of May 10, 2013, 349 sentinel sites were functioning in eight epidemiological regions, in 34 provinces of Afghanistan. In this reporting week, 349 sentinel sites have sent their reports on new cases of DEWS target diseases, recorded during the reporting week. -
19 October 2020 "Generated on Refers to the Date on Which the User Accessed the List and Not the Last Date of Substantive Update to the List
Res. 1988 (2011) List The List established and maintained pursuant to Security Council res. 1988 (2011) Generated on: 19 October 2020 "Generated on refers to the date on which the user accessed the list and not the last date of substantive update to the list. Information on the substantive list updates are provided on the Council / Committee’s website." Composition of the List The list consists of the two sections specified below: A. Individuals B. Entities and other groups Information about de-listing may be found at: https://www.un.org/securitycouncil/ombudsperson (for res. 1267) https://www.un.org/securitycouncil/sanctions/delisting (for other Committees) https://www.un.org/securitycouncil/content/2231/list (for res. 2231) A. Individuals TAi.155 Name: 1: ABDUL AZIZ 2: ABBASIN 3: na 4: na ﻋﺒﺪ اﻟﻌﺰﻳﺰ ﻋﺒﺎﺳﯿﻦ :(Name (original script Title: na Designation: na DOB: 1969 POB: Sheykhan Village, Pirkowti Area, Orgun District, Paktika Province, Afghanistan Good quality a.k.a.: Abdul Aziz Mahsud Low quality a.k.a.: na Nationality: na Passport no: na National identification no: na Address: na Listed on: 4 Oct. 2011 (amended on 22 Apr. 2013) Other information: Key commander in the Haqqani Network (TAe.012) under Sirajuddin Jallaloudine Haqqani (TAi.144). Taliban Shadow Governor for Orgun District, Paktika Province as of early 2010. Operated a training camp for non- Afghan fighters in Paktika Province. Has been involved in the transport of weapons to Afghanistan. INTERPOL- UN Security Council Special Notice web link: https://www.interpol.int/en/How-we-work/Notices/View-UN-Notices- Individuals click here TAi.121 Name: 1: AZIZIRAHMAN 2: ABDUL AHAD 3: na 4: na ﻋﺰﯾﺰ اﻟﺮﺣﻤﺎن ﻋﺒﺪ اﻻﺣﺪ :(Name (original script Title: Mr Designation: Third Secretary, Taliban Embassy, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates DOB: 1972 POB: Shega District, Kandahar Province, Afghanistan Good quality a.k.a.: na Low quality a.k.a.: na Nationality: Afghanistan Passport no: na National identification no: Afghan national identification card (tazkira) number 44323 na Address: na Listed on: 25 Jan. -
Nuristan Province
Nuristan Province - Reference Map ! nm Qala ! Dahi Payan Main Shahr ! Lajaward Hassar Sang Awo Shahr ! Mokhawai u" ! Payen Dahi Bala Main Shahr Mokhawai ! Bala ! Khoram nm Legend ! Peow Dahi Zer nm ! ! Abrowi ! Seya Koh ! Irakh ! Dahan Royandara Rastawi ! Sele ! Etroye Posida ^! ! ! Bala Capital ! Espal Parwarda Kemyan ! ! Gawkush ! nm! ! Adaypas Dahan Zaytun !! ! Ab Pewa ! Provincial Center ! Hayot ! nm District Center Bam Now Shokho Sarlola ! ! Daha ! Sarower ! ! nm Zaran ! Dahi Jangalak ! Sawarq Khakhan ! ! ! Village Sarai Dasht nm nm Hazhdagher nmnm ! Administrative Boundaries Walf ! ! Koran wa Maghnawol Rabata Wulf Monjan ! ! Qala Robaghan ! !! ! International ! Tooghak Tagow Ayoum ! ! ! nm Sakazar nm nm Warsaj !u" ! Parwaz Yangi ! Paroch ! nm Dasht ! p Parghish Bot Province Razar ! ! PAKISTAN Yawi Yamak ! ! 36° N 36° Aylaqe nm T a k h a r Dara Dehe Tah Ab-anich Distirict ! Shaikh ! Pa'in Ghamand Milat ! ! Pastakan ! nm ! ! Kalt Shahran Khyber Dahi-taa Tal Payan ! Kandal Dahane Aw ! ! Dasht Pain Transportation ! ! Gar ! Meyan ! Pastkan ! Bala Keran Shahr nm (iskasik) Pakhtunkhwa Aska Sek Dahi Samanak Dahi Maina ! ! Amba Chashma Yesbokh ! ! Primary Road Dahi Bala Aylaqe Yesbokh ! Rawkan ! nm nm Chitral Secondary Road Welo ! nm nm nm ! Dewana Other Road Shah ! Ghaz ! ! Pari Baba Weshte nm nm nm u"! o Airport nm ! ! nm u" p Sar Airfield B a d a k h s h a n Jangal Khost Wa Atat So ! Meyan Dahi ! Fereng Pashawer Elevation (meter) Yaow ! River/Lake Ghadak Koran Wa Monjan ! ! Panam nm Peshawur ! ! nm nm River/Stream > 5000 ! Afzok Qala -
Toward a Consensus on the Nature of Contemporary Insurgency: an Analysis of Counterinsurgency in the War on Terror 2001-2010
Toward a consensus on the nature of contemporary insurgency: an analysis of counterinsurgency in the War on Terror 2001-2010 Erich Julian Elze A thesis in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy UNSW Australia School of International Studies Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences July 2013 1 “What is more important to the history of the world? The Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Moslems [sic] or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the cold war (Brzezinski 1998)?” Zbigniew Brzezinski served as the National Security Advisor to United States President Jimmy Carter. 2 Abstract “Following the terrorist attacks of September 2001, US President George W. Bush announced a War on Terror to promulgate democracy and ameliorate the conditions that spawn terrorism in the Middle East. COIN thus attained a newfound strategic influence since the initiation of regime changes in Afghanistan in 2001 and in Iraq in 2003. This study establishes a conceptual framework for judging COIN utilising the Hybrid War and Insurgent Archipelago models. The Hybrid War model best encapsulates the multi- modal nature of contemporary insurgency which has co-manifested with criminality, nationalism and politicised Islam. This thesis contends that the lack of understanding of the enemy has been of central importance in preventing victory. A case study methodology is utilised to evaluate and compare COIN conducted during the Iraq troop surge and in Afghanistan’s Kunar province. This thesis determines that the positive narrative concerning those COIN campaigns exceeds the actual correlation between COIN and reductions in violence and insurgency. -
Afghanistan: Annual Report 2014
AFGHANISTAN ANNUAL REPORT 2014 PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICT © 2014/Ihsanullah Mahjoor/Associated Press United Nations Assistance Mission United Nations Office of the High in Afghanistan Commissioner for Human Rights Kabul, Afghanistan February 2015 Kabul, Afghanistan July 2014 Source: UNAMA GIS January 2012 AFGHANISTAN ANNUAL REPORT 2014 PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICT United Nations Assistance Mission United Nations Office of the High in Afghanistan Commissioner for Human Rights Kabul, Afghanistan February 2015 Photo on Front Cover © 2014/Ihsanullah Mahjoor/Associated Press. Bodies of civilians killed in a suicide attack on 23 November 2014 in Yahyakhail district, Paktika province that caused 138 civilian casualties (53 killed including 21 children and 85 injured including 26 children). Photo taken on 24 November 2014. "The conflict took an extreme toll on civilians in 2014. Mortars, IEDs, gunfire and other explosives destroyed human life, stole limbs and ruined lives at unprecedented levels. The thousands of Afghan children, women and men killed and injured in 2014 attest to failures to protect civilians from harm. All parties must uphold the values they claim to defend and make protecting civilians their first priority.” Nicholas Haysom, United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Afghanistan, December 2014, Kabul “This annual report shows once again the unacceptable price that the conflict is exacting on the civilian population in Afghanistan. Documenting these trends should not be regarded -
Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) by James Christ
Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) By James Christ READ ONLINE If you are searched for the ebook by James Christ Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) in pdf format, then you have come on to the faithful site. We present the full variation of this book in PDF, doc, ePub, DjVu, txt formats. You may reading Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) online either download. Further, on our website you can read guides and other art eBooks online, or downloading them as well. We like to invite your consideration what our website not store the eBook itself, but we give ref to the site where you may downloading either reading online. If have necessity to downloading Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) by James Christ pdf, then you have come on to the loyal site. We own Landigal (Afghanistan War Series) txt, DjVu, ePub, doc, PDF formats. We will be glad if you come back to us again. Mon premier blog Tsangar (Afghanistan War Series) Landigal. Christ] on Amazon.com. Tsangar: Afghanistan War series; soldiers of A/1/32 in Waterpor Valley, Afghanistan, July Afghanistan war series by james f. christ - goodreads Tsangar (Afghanistan War Series), Landigal: Soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division Fighting in the Korangal Valley, Kunar Province, Shudergay (Afghanist Tsangar: afghanistan war series; soldiers of a/1/32 in - import it all Hell is the Korengal The 17 Hour Firefight: C Company/1/32 at Shudergay, April 2007 Landigal: Afghanistan War series. Soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division Landigal by james f. christ (paperback) - lulu Buy Landigal by James F. Christ (Paperback) online at Lulu.