U.S. command errors preceded Taliban attack on Afghan outpost

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KABUL — A
series of command errors set the stage for a Taliban attack on a remote
American outpost four months ago, which left eight U.S. soldiers dead
in one of the war’s most lethal ground assaults, according to a
military report released Friday.

The American military’s investigation into the Oct. 3 onslaught at a small installation known as Combat Outpost Keating, in eastern Afghanistan’s
Nuristan province, praised soldiers and their junior officers for
“heroically” repelling an attack by an insurgent force five times their
size.

But the report called for sanctions against at least
two higher-up commanders, according to officials familiar with its
contents. Only the report’s executive summary was made public.

The probe concluded that necessary measures needed
to protect the soon-to-be-abandoned outpost were not taken, leaving it
vulnerable to attack. It cited key lapses in surveillance, and said
intelligence gatherers had become “desensitized” to reports of
insurgents massing in preparation for an attack.

At the time of the onslaught, the outpost, set amid
rugged terrain near the Pakistani frontier, was already slated for
closing. The military had concluded it did not serve any purpose in
halting cross-border infiltration by insurgents, who merely made slight
alterations in their route to avoid it.

The planned shutdown was in line with orders by Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, who had taken over in midsummer as commander of Western forces in Afghanistan, to pull troops out of isolated areas and divert resources instead to protecting population centers.

However, the uprooting of Combat Outpost Keating was
delayed for several months by logistical problems. In the meantime,
word that the base was soon to be abandoned spread among villagers in
Kamdesh district — and insurgents operating in the area. That rendered
it an “attractive target for enemy fighters,” the military report said.

About 300 attackers, who struck before dawn, nearly
managed to overrun the outpost, which was defended by just 60 troops.
After hours of chaotic fighting, the insurgents were finally driven off
by airstrikes. About 150 of the attackers were killed, the military
said.

The incident was eerily similar to an attack on another outpost in eastern Afghanistan
in 2008. That confrontation, which came to be known as the Battle of
Wanat, killed nine American soldiers and triggered two major
investigations. It is now considered a textbook example of command
misjudgments in assessing the threat to a small outpost.

(c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.

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Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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