A team of Special Air Service soldiers who were surrounded by Taliban hordes in Kandahar have been rescued in a dramatic desert operation.
Around
20 elite SAS troops were left stranded in the province hundreds of
miles from friendly forces when the militants took over.
As enemy fighters closed in they sent an SOS request to Special Forces bosses back in Britain calling for immediate extraction.
But they could not use Kandahar airfield –
once home to 26,000 international troops at the height of the military
campaign – because it had already been overrun by Taliban. So the SAS
soldiers fought their way to a secret desert location where they went
into hiding. The coordinates of the location were then relayed back to
Special Forces headquarters in a series of coded messages.
Meanwhile, RAF chiefs planning the
evacuation of British nationals and entitled Afghans from Kabul airport,
had to find a transport aircraft capable of landing and taking off
again in the desert.
On Wednesday night
online flight trackers picked up a UK Hercules transport aircraft
flying over the Gulf, until it turned off its Identification Friend or
Foe sensors. This ensured flight radars could not follow its route
towards the area of desert scrub which SAS troops had identified as a
possible landing strip.
The aircraft,
from the RAF’s Special Forces wing, made a dramatic landing in the dead
of night with the crew wearing digital night-vision goggles.
A
source said: ‘It was a very hush, hush mission. Kandahar had fallen to
the Taliban on Friday and the guys were down there for five days after
that. The enemy were rampant and killing a lot of Afghan Special Forces
whom the SAS had been working with. So it was a very urgent mission.
‘Credit to the Hercules crew from 47
Squadron for landing the aircraft at night on rough terrain and getting
her airborne again with the guys and their equipment aboard. It was
textbook.’
The aircraft reappeared on Thursday morning on flight trackers as it approached an international military base in Dubai.
Frustratingly
for SAS chiefs the C-130J which rescued their troops is due to be
retired as part of the latest reorganisation of the RAF.
The
Hercules is the RAF’s major tactical transport aircraft and in its
current versions, has been the backbone of UK operational mobility since
it was brought into service in 1999. Praised as ‘highly flexible’ by
the RAF, it has the ability to airdrop a variety of both stores and
paratroopers, while landing and taking off from natural surfaces, such
as a desert strip.
To conduct these missions, Hercules crews are highly skilled in low-level flying and trained to perform in both day and night.
The
plan to rescue the stranded SAS troops was put together by the Joint
Special Forces Aviation Wing. The aircraft and crew came from the RAF’s
47 Squadron. It comes as Taliban fighters were on the move last night to
take over a key Afghanistan province currently outside of their
control.
2 comments:
The Herc is one hell of an aircraft. During the Vietnam war somebody actually landed one on an aircraft carrier.
God Bless Special Forces and their support teams. Good Job.
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