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#1040538 - 02/05/08 12:46 PM Battle of Qala-i-Jangi--------Video UPDATED
danescombe Offline
Absent Friend

Registered: 11/07/05
Posts: 10260
Loc: UK
Battle of Qala-i-Jangi

"In Afghanistan, nothing is ever what it seems. Including surrender." Alex Perry

The Battle of Qala-i-Jangi took place between November 25 and December 1, 2001, in Northern Afghanistan. It began with the uprising of Taliban prisoners held at Qala-i-Jangi fortress, and escalated into one of the bloodiest engagements of the war in Afghanistan. Northern Alliance fighters, assisted by British and American special forces took seven days to finally quell the revolt

VIDEO UPDATED----
See BELOW for Nat Geo Documentary Taliban Uprising ( Battle of Qala-i-Jangi)



On Nov. 24, a bright, warm Saturday, 300 Taliban soldiers who had fled the American bombardment of Kunduz, their last stronghold in the north of Afghanistan, laid down their weapons in the desert a few miles to the north of Mazar-i-Sharif. They surrendered to Northern Alliance General Abdul Rashid Dostum, who crowed that his forces had achieved a "great victory" as the pows were herded 50 at a time onto flatbed trucks.

Even by the standards of Afghanistan's warlords, Dostum has an unsavory reputation. In earlier episodes of Afghanistan's wars, he was reputed to have killed those of his soldiers who broke the rules by tying them to the tracks of his tanks. But outside Mazar, his soldiers told their prisoners that Dostum wanted to make a gesture of reconciliation to help unite Afghanistan's warring tribes. Afghan members of the Taliban would be free to return to their homes, while foreigners would be detained before being handed over to the U.N. Dostum didn't search his prisoners; that was a mistake, one he would bitterly regret. "If we had searched them, there would have been a fight," he said Wednesday, surveying hundreds of dismembered, blackened and crushed bodies. "But perhaps it wouldn't have been as bad as this."




The Taliban fighters, many of whom were foreigners, were transported from the field of surrender to a holding site in Qala-i-Jangi, a sprawling 19th century prison fortress to the west of Mazar, where Dostum stabled his horses. The convoy of prisoners had to pass through the city center; two weeks before, the Taliban had ruled the streets. The prisoners now peered out from under their blankets with shell-shocked, bloodshot eyes. The people of Mazar stared back at them with open hatred.

Things went wrong almost immediately. Once inside Qala-i-Jangi, the Taliban soldiers were asked to turn out their pockets. A prisoner, waiting until Alliance commander Nadir Ali was near, suddenly produced a grenade and pulled the pin, killing himself and the commander. In a similar attack the same night, another prisoner killed himself and senior Hazara commander Saeed Asad. The remaining men were led into underground cells to join scores of other captured Taliban fighters. Despite the grenade attacks, the Alliance guards were not reinforced.



[color:\\"green\\"] Sunday Morning [/color]
The next morning, two Americans went to meet the prisoners at Qala-i-Jangi. Their mission at the fortress: to identify any members of al-Qaeda among the prisoners. But the Americans didn't conduct the interviews one by one--another mistake. Instead, at 11:15 a.m., the pair--Johnny Micheal Spann, 32, one of the CIA agents who had been active in Afghanistan since the war's beginning, the other identified by colleagues only as "Dave"--were taken to an open area outside the cells and a group of prisoners brought to meet them. According to members of a German television crew who were later trapped in the fort with Dave, Spann asked the prisoners who they were and why they joined the Taliban. They massed around him. "Why are you here?" Spann asked one. "To kill you," came the reply as the man lunged at Spann's neck. Spann drew his pistol and shot the man dead. Dave shot another, then grabbed an AK-47 from an Alliance guard and opened fire. According to eyewitness accounts given to the German team, the Taliban fighters launched themselves at Spann, scrabbling at his flesh with their hands, kicking and beating him. Spann killed two more with his pistol before he disappeared under the crush. An Alabaman with a wife and three children, Spann became the first American to die in combat in Afghanistan.

The Taliban then overpowered the Alliance guards, killing them with their own weapons. Dave mowed down three more Taliban, then sprinted to the main building along the north wall, where two Red Cross workers had just begun a meeting with the prison governor. "He burst in and told us to get out of there," says Simon Brooks, a Briton and a Red Cross staff member. "He was really shaken up. He said there were 20 dead Northern Alliance guys, and the Taliban were taking control of the fort." As Dave stayed behind to try to rescue Spann, the two Red Cross workers climbed up to the fort's parapet, hoisted themselves over the wall and slid 60 ft. down the other side. Meanwhile, the firing had alerted a pair of TV crews. They too ran to the main building; there they found Dave and were pinned down in the ensuing fire fight.




A few hundred yards to the south, in the prison block, the Taliban freed its comrades. Three escaped through a drain under the southern wall; all were soon shot by Alliance soldiers outside the fort. The Taliban fighters, trapped in the southwestern quarter of the fort, stormed a nearby armory, making off with AK-47s, grenades, mines, rocket launchers, mortars and ammunition. Alliance soldiers held on to the southeastern corner, which included an arched gateway, a courtyard and the gatekeeper's house. Other fighters took positions on the north wall and the roof of the main building. A vicious exchange of fire across the grassy parade ground followed. ..................... Rest of Article

Wiki--Battle of Qala-i-Jangi


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BattleofQala-i-Jangi.kmz (48 downloads)
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Edited by Noisette (10/28/09 02:25 PM)
Edit Reason: Location corrected and new file uploaded @ 814 downloads
_________________________
Danescombe, whose real life name was Dave, joined the Google Earth Community Forum in November 2005 and quickly became a regular in the Fun & Games Forum. In August 2007, he became a moderator. Sadly, on March 4, 2009, he passed away following complications from surgery. He was 44 years old. Our entire Community mourns his loss.

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#1040539 - 09/17/08 09:39 PM Re: Battle of Qala-i-Jangi [Re: danescombe]
Diane9247 Moderator Offline
Humanitarian

Registered: 01/15/07
Posts: 3170
Loc: Californian in Oregon
danescombe -

Thanks for posting this riveting article and photos. How sad it is to think of how much has happened since then. Afghanistan, after a period of relative optimism, now escalates again by the day. Wasted, unfocused years...

Diane
_________________________
Women for Women International...Kiva...Panzi Hospital of Bukavu...Room to Read
Danescombe, never forgotten.



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#1040540 - 09/24/08 06:25 PM Re: Battle of Qala-i-Jangi [Re: danescombe]
danescombe Offline
Absent Friend

Registered: 11/07/05
Posts: 10260
Loc: UK
Advise --Graphic Content 18+

Nat Geo situation Critical---Taliban Uprising - The Battle of Qala-i-Jangi (House of War) -


Part One







Part Two





Part Three





Part Four

_________________________
Danescombe, whose real life name was Dave, joined the Google Earth Community Forum in November 2005 and quickly became a regular in the Fun & Games Forum. In August 2007, he became a moderator. Sadly, on March 4, 2009, he passed away following complications from surgery. He was 44 years old. Our entire Community mourns his loss.

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#1239168 - 07/10/09 06:21 PM Re: Battle of Qala-i-Jangi [Re: danescombe]
mikemurphy72 Offline
Traveler

Registered: 11/27/06
Posts: 4
Nice write-up but I need to point out that your placemark is 13.39 km off from the Qala-i-Jangi fortress. The correct coordinates are: 36 40 01.84 N 66 59 3.02 E. For an excellent written account taken from survivors who were there that day check out Horse Soldiers by Doug Stanton (2009).

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#1258733 - 09/11/09 09:44 AM Re: Battle of Qala-i-Jangi [Re: mikemurphy72]
soonerzbt26 Offline
Traveler

Registered: 03/17/07
Posts: 7
What mikemurphy72 says is correct. The coordinates originally posted are for the ancient Bactrian fortress of Balkh. The computer images shown in the documentary of Qala-i-Jangi, as well as the distance from Mazar, exactly match the fortress located at 36°40'2.27"N 66°59'1.54"E

Thank you
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DF

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#1273005 - 10/28/09 04:59 PM Re: Battle of Qala-i-Jangi [Re: soonerzbt26]
Diane9247 Moderator Offline
Humanitarian

Registered: 01/15/07
Posts: 3170
Loc: Californian in Oregon
Hello sooner and Mike, Noisette has corrected the placemark. Danescombe would have wanted it that way. smile

Diane


Edited by Diane9247 (10/28/09 04:59 PM)
_________________________
Women for Women International...Kiva...Panzi Hospital of Bukavu...Room to Read
Danescombe, never forgotten.



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