hidden pixel

Operation Shurta Nasir 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

· · Battles and operations of the Al Anbar Campaign

Fallujah killings1st RamadanSpring 2004 (1st Fallujah1st RamadiHusaybah) – 2nd FallujahAbu GhraibSayeed (Al QaimHitHadithaSteel Curtain) – Haditha Incident2nd RamadiRamadan 2006Al MajidAlljahDonkey Island2008 AQI OffensiveAbu Kamal2009 AQI Offensive

Operation Shurta Nasir or Operation Police Victory or the Battle of Hīt was an operation led by U.S. troops and Iraqi SWAT teams trying to capture the town of Hīt from Al-Qaeda forces. The goal of the mission was to eject the Al-Qaeda from the city and establish three Police Stations there to cement authority to the town. The Al-Qaeda retreating would be caught in the net of encircling U.S. troops which numbered 1,000 men. The operation was a success, and Hīt was captured and freed from the terrorists.

Contents

The trouble with Hīt

Main article: Hīt during the Iraq War

Hīt was home to 80,000 people at the time of the Iraq War. The Al-Qaeda took the town, and have been being a preadator on it, implanting IEDs all over the highways that led to Hīt. U.S. troops had been trying to capture Hīt for a long time, but the Al-Qaeda have been unstoppable. The Sheikh Hikat, the leader of Hīt, was very mad about the monkey business that was afoot. He met with Sergeant Martin Moore of the 5th Special Forces Group and Moore came up with an idea called Operation Shurta Nasir, or "Operation Police Victory" named for the Iraqi SWAT teams that would help the U.S. take over the town.

Operation Shurta Nasir

The time has come for the U.S. to take Hīt. 1,000 U.S. troops encircled the town, waiting for the task force of 26 men to force the Al-Qaeda to run into the U.S. net. Mohammed Sent, a wanted Al-Qaeda leader, was in the town with his entourage of Al-Qaeda troops. The task force moved into the town, and they blew their way through locked gates with explosives. The Arabic translator for Moore, Sammy, told the citizens in Arabian to hide and take cover. Then, the U.S. troops moved into a house, and saw two self-proclaimed "College Students". They were really Al-Qaeda, and they were arrested. They would only be fully apprehended when one Police Station was built. 25 Iraqi Policemen and 6 U.S. Marines were sent to reinforce the task force. The U.S. troops moved out, and they engaged the Al-Qaeda in street fighting. Sent escaped the fighting, and took flight. The town was secured, and the retreating Al-Qaeda save for Sent were killed or captured by the net.

Aftermath

With Hīt secure, three Police Stations were built. The IEDs were disarmed, and Hīt was secure. However, there was more fighting to come in later years, and the city was shifted to Iraqi Government hands. The town of Hīt was safe, but Sent was not captured yet. He is still wanted. Later, General David Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, walked the streets of Hīt without wearing a helmet or body armor eating ice cream, and wasn't imperaled at all. This proved Hīt's security and safeness.[1]

See also

2007 in Iraq Hīt during the Iraq War List of coalition military operations of the Iraq War Iraq War Hīt

References

  1. ^ Doyle, Bill: Behind Enemy Lines

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

 

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 Thu Aug 11 08:51:53 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.