hidden pixel

Battle of Debecka Pass Information

Umm QasrAl Faw1st BasraNasiriyahRaid on Karbala1st NajafNorthern DelayViking HammerSamawah1st Karbala – Al Kut – Hillah – Green Line – Karbala GapBaghdadDebecka Pass – Kani Domlan Ridge – Al Anbar1st RamadanRed DawnSpring 20041st FallujahSadr City1st RamadiHusaybah2nd NajafCIMIC-HouseSamarra2nd FallujahMosulLake ThartharAl QaimHitHadithaSteel CurtainTal Afar2nd RamadiTogether ForwardDiwaniya2nd RamadanSinbadAmarahTurkiDiyalaHaifa StreetKarbala Raid3rd NajafImposing LawU.K. basesBlack EagleBaghdad beltsBaqubahDonkey IslandShurta NasirPhantom Strike2nd KarbalaPhantom Phoenix2008 Day of AshuraNinawaSunSpring 20082nd Basra2008 Al-Qaeda OffensiveAugurs of ProsperityAbu KamalPalm Grove

· · Major insurgent attacks since the Iraq War

Bold indicates attacks resulting in over 100 deaths Purple color indicates the deadliest attack in the Iraq War

2003: 1st Baghdad2nd BaghdadNajaf3rd BaghdadNasiriyah1st Karbala 2004: IrbilAshouraBasraMosul4th Baghdad5th BaghdadKarbala-Najaf – 1st Baqubah – KufaFOB Marez 2005: 1st Al HillahMusayyib6th Baghdad7th Baghdad1st BaladKhanaqin 2006: Karbala-Ramadi1st Samarra8th Baghdad9th Baghdad10th Baghdad 2007: 11th Baghdad12th Baghdad13th Baghdad14th Baghdad15th Baghdad2nd Al Hillah1st Tal Afar16th Baghdad17th Baghdad – 2nd Karbala – 18th Baghdad3rd KarbalaMakhmourAbu Sayda2nd Samarra19th BaghdadAmirli1st Kirkuk20th Baghdad21st BaghdadQahtaniyaAmarah 2008: 22nd Baghdad2nd Balad23rd Baghdad4th Karbala24th BaghdadKarmah2nd BaqubahDujailBalad Ruz 2009: 25th Baghdad26th BaghdadBaghdad-MuqdadiyahTaza27th Baghdad2nd Kirkuk2nd Tal Afar28th Baghdad29th Baghdad30th Baghdad 2010: 31st Baghdad32nd Baghdad3rd Baqubah33rd Baghdad34th Baghdad35th Baghdad1st Pan-Iraq36th Baghdad37th Baghdad2nd Pan-Iraq38th Baghdad39th Baghdad40th Baghdad

2011: 41st Baghdad3rd Pan-IraqKarbala-Baghdad42nd Baghdad

The Battle of Debecka (Dibagah) Pass, sometimes known as the Battle of Debecka Ridge or Debecka Crossroads, or otherwise referred to as the Alamo of the Iraq War [1], was a successful operation launched by U.S. Special Forces to secure a major crossroads near the village of Debecka (Dibege, دیبه‌گه in Kurdish), between Mosul and Kirkuk in northern Iraq. It was notable for its use of the Raytheon/Lockheed-Martin Javelin anti-tank missile. The weapon demonstrated how lethal and crucial technology can be in determining the outcome of a battle. The light unarmored SOF and Peshmerga (KDP) force faced a mechanized force of Iraqi infantry and tanks. The numerically inferior US and KPD force was able to defeat the Iraqi mechanized infantry & tank force with combined air-to-ground strikes, superior maneuvering, and the use of the Javelin missiles.

Contents

Objective

On April 6, 2003, 26 United States Army Special Forces were given the task to capture a strategically important junction between Mosul and Kirkuk, near the village of Debecka (Dibege, دیبه‌گه in Kurdish). Were it captured, it would sever Highway 2 and impede Iraqi movement in the north, as well as provide a springboard to eventually drive on and capture the important Kirkuk oil fields.[1]

The battle

On the eighteenth day of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the US Special Forces moved in for the attack. The battle began with an aerial bombardment from B-52 bombers. The US Special Forces troops linked up with the Peshmerga resistance, and reached the base of the ridge.

Peshmerga troops then proceeded to clear a minefield before them. Iraqi troops attacked and stopped the coalition force from destroying a large dirt berm. The coalition force made their way over the top of the ridgeline, and engaged the Iraqis in bunkers, capturing about twenty Iraqi soldiers. Coalition troops then returned and destroyed the berm, as they would need an avenue of escape should withdrawal from the area prove necessary.

Coalition troops then mounted a small hill known as Press Hill, obscuring an approach to the crossroads from the south. They were faced with an Iraqi mechanized company with hundreds of troops [2], and a four-and-a-half-hour battle began. Early into the battle two Iraqi armored personnel carriers (APCs) were destroyed along with two occupied Iraqi troop trucks by Javelin anti-tank missiles. Soon after two more Iraqi APCs were destroyed along with another Iraqi transport truck, again by Javelin anti-tank missiles. The attacking Iraqis halted the offensive and laid down fire from defensive trenches. As the battle wore on, the Iraqi attack became less and less organized.

Later, three Iraqi trucks approached the coalition company with headlights flashing. This was likely an attempt to fool Special Forces operators into believing that it might be a surrender. However, it was merely a ploy to initiate the final attack. A phalanx of three Iraqi armored personnel carriers and three troop trucks, supported by four T-55 tanks, moved forward to attack the coalition lines. Coalition troops maneuvered up the ridge to their final position in order to suppress the offensive. Well coordinated air-strikes and aggressive action by ground forces stopped the Iraqi advance and helped secure a tactical coalition victory.

An embedded BBC news crew filmed an air-to-ground fratricide event on April 6 in conjunction to this combat operation. The event took place near Dibagar. A combined Army Special Forces element supporting a Kurdish (KDF) infantry team controlled a Navy F-14. The BBC correspondent stated that the aircrew asked for a 9-line Close Air Support (CAS) brief, but was told there was no time and provided a visual only target talk on. The aircrew said they saw a road, an intersection, and some vehicles. The JTAC cleared the attack, but the F-14 was visual with the KDP/SPECOPS troop and imbeded BBC news crew and dropped a GBU-16 (1000LB) Laser Guided Bomb; killing approximately 19 and wounding approximately 46. Among the causalties were senior KDP representitives and a BBC news employee who had arrived on the battlefield to observe the operation. The whole incident was filmed by BBC correspondents and is available online at "liveleak.com & BBC website". This fratricide incident is the biggest blue-on-blue loss of life during OIF-I.

References

  1. ^ Lowery, Nathan (Winter 2005), "The Battle for Debecka Crossroads", Tip of the Spear: 79–85
  2. ^ Shanker, Thom (Sept. 22), "How Green Berets Beat the Odds at an Iraq Alamo", New York Times: A7

2. Lowery, Nathan S., "The Battle for Debecka Crossroads", Tip of the Spear, Winter 2005

Further reading

External links

Iraq portal
· · Iraq War
Prior events

Disarmament crisis · WMD claims · Rationale · Popular opinion · Public relations · February interview · Biological weapons

Invasion

Multi-National Force · Timeline · Battle of Nasiriyah · Invasion of Baghdad · Debecka Pass · Firdos Square statue · Mission Accomplished Speech

Occupation

Military operations Coalition Provisional Authority · Iraq Interim Governing Council · Insurgency · Human rights · Civil war · Execution of Saddam Hussein · U.S. troop withdrawal · Insurgent attacks · Aircraft loses

Opinions

Opposition · Protests · Criticism · Legitimacy · United Nations · International community · Associated people

Controversy

Mahmudiyah killings · Blackwater Baghdad shootings · Haditha killings · Ishaqi incident · Mukaradeeb wedding party massacre · Baghdad airstrike · Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse · Iraq War documents leak · Baghdad Museum looting

Aftermath

Refugees · Duelfer Report · Damage to Baghdad · Aid and Investment · Economic reform · Financial cost · Casualties · Chilcot Inquiry

Timeline

2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010

Iraq War at Wikinews · Commons

Categories: Battles of the Iraq War involving the United States | Battles of the Iraq War involving Iraq | Battles of the Iraq War in 2003

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Fri Jun 3 09:18:14 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.