http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/10/05/wafghan05.xm
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Gurkha spirit triumphs in siege of Nawzad


By Tom Coghlan
(Filed: 05/10/2006)
Daily Telegraph

The Gurkhas were never supposed to fire a shot in anger in Helmand. Their
main duty was to protect the main British Army base at Camp Bastion.

 
Capt Paul Hollingshead

Capt Paul Hollingshead, of the 2nd Battalion Royal Gurkha Rifles, on patrol
in the wadis surrounding Camp Bastion, Helmand
But as British forces found themselves fighting a full-scale war, the
Gurkhas were thrust into the front line and became involved in some of the
fiercest fire fights of the summer-long campaign.
One of the most dramatic engagements took place in the town of Nawzad, a key
strategic post in southern Helmand.
The Gurkha commanders realised that trouble was brewing when the town centre
emptied of civilians.
As night fell they heard the sounds of holes being chipped through the walls
of the buildings close to their fortified ''platoon house", the town's
police station. Then the sound of civilian electricity generators in the
town abruptly ceased, so that in the silence approaching British helicopters
could be heard sooner.
"We knew it was the calm before the storm. We sensed what was coming," said
Major Dan Rex, 35, the Gurkhas' tall, softly spoken commander.
During the next 10 days, the 40 Gurkhas sent to Nawzad to hold the police
station fought tenaciously to defend themselves as they were subjected to 28
attacks lasting one to six hours each, including five full scale efforts by
hundreds of Taliban fighters to over-run their compound.
Senior British officers say it was one of a series of gruelling attritional
sieges that have characterised the bloody first six months of the British
deployment to Helmand.
They paid tribute to the courage displayed by the 110- man mixed force from
the 1st and 2nd Gurkha Rifles, particularly those who fought so valiantly to
defend the Nawzad police station.
"I held a Shura (meeting) with the town elders to discuss the deteriorating
situation just before the attacks began," Major Rex said in an exclusive
interview with The Daily Telegraph.
"Several of those present eyeballed me throughout, and I subsequently
discovered they were the Taliban commanders coming to size me up."

 
Afghanistan graphic
The first major attack began at 1.50am when a Gurkha corporal spotted armed
men "leopard crawling" towards the compound 60 yards away. He opened fire
killing four.
Ten minutes later a coordinated assault began from three directions. Every
one of the six sand-bagged positions around the compound and on its roof
were hit by rocket-propelled grenades. The command post on the roof received
four separate hits.
For many of the Gurkhas, seven of whom had just finished training, it was
their first experience of combat. "For the first five minutes under fire I
was just so frightened," said Tkam Paha Dur, a 19-year-old Gurkha rifleman,
to the amusement of his comrades."After that it became just like a live
firing exercise."
With the Taliban closer than 50 yards, Rifleman Nabin Rai, 20, manning a
heavy machinegun on the roof, had several rounds ricochet off his weapon
before a bullet went through the gunsight and hit him in the face.
"His commander called for him to be medi-vacced out, but he refused to come
down from the roof," said Major Rex. "Later he was again hit, this time in
the helmet. He sat down and had a cigarette, then went back to his
position."
With a full moon negating the advantage of British night vision equipment,
the Taliban launched another full-scale assault the next night, using dried
up underground watercourses to move men and ammunition around the British
position.
"We took two or three RPG hits on one position and significant machinegun
fire from a range of about 20 yards," said Lt Angus Mathers, 26.
"They had used tunnels and knocked holes in the compound walls to get
close."
The Gurkhas threw 21 grenades at the Taliban position before an Apache
helicopter arrived overhead.
The pilot later described the situation as "like the Wild West", with tracer
converging on him from numerous positions. He hovered 20 yards above the
compound firing back with the helicopter's cannon while the empty shell
cases cascaded on to the heads of the Gurkhas below.
The Gurkhas faced constant danger from several snipers and Taliban mortar
teams.
"The snipers had positions in buildings two rooms back with holes cut
through the walls to give them a field of fire," said Major Rex.
British troops could not show themselves during the day and a signaller was
shot in the back, but survived his injuries. In response the Gurkhas flew in
a specialist sniper. "It was cat and mouse for a couple of days," said Major
Rex. "Then our sniper, Corporal Imbahadar Gurung, got four confirmed kills."
Two mortar positions were spotted and destroyed by aircraft but the third
continued to elude British spotters for several days. "Eventually my JTAC
(ground-air coordinator) caught the smoke as it fired out of the corner of
his eye," said Major Rex. "An American aircraft dropped a 2,000lb bomb on
the spot and that ended the mortar fire." After a particularly heavy attack
Major Rex used the Afghan police radio, which was known to be listened to by
the Taliban, to send them a message through an interpreter.
"I said 'you have two paths here. If the attacks continue you will suffer.
We are being restrained. We take no pleasure in this. We are here to help
you if you want a better life. It is in your hands.' "
By the time the attacks began to peter out the British estimated that they
had killed 100 Taliban fighters. Three British soldiers were injured.
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