![]() ![]() The SF soldiers used emergency PRC-90 radios and signal mirrors to communicate with the supporting aircraft during the battle. Estimates of enemy deaths were from 100 to 300 personnel due to the SF team and supporting aircraft. Many of the bombs were dropped ‘danger close’. The team was supported with air strikes that kept the Iraqi troops from overrunning the team’s position. The team leader, Balwanz, called in for air support. In the first ten minutes of the battle 40 Iraqi soldiers lay dead and many more were wounded. Within minutes the team was engaged in a battle with the 150-man Iraq force. The team was in a tenuous position – miles behind enemy lines, lightly armed, and vastly outnumbered with no ground mobility vehicles to evade. The unarmed adult was allowed to leave – which he did in haste.īefore long the team had armed Bedouin tribesmen in their immediate area and which was followed with the arrival of Iraqi soldiers. ![]() Not long after that an adult with Bedouin headdress approached the team with children. The team decided to change their location and began movement to another area. The children left the team’s location unharmed. The SF detachment reached a critical decision point – what to do with the children. The team was soon discovered by three children – a boy and two girls. The soil was very difficult to dig into so the hide site was less than optimal. The area had more people in the area than the team had anticipated and intelligence reports had indicated. There were people tending to cattle and sheep, women were collecting firewood, and children were playing. The team finished the process of building the hide site before dawn on the morning of Februand settled in to observe the highway.Īs the morning sun came up the team could see and hear a lot of civilian activity in the area. The highway was one of the main routes that ran from Baghdad south through the Euphrates river valley. The eight team members dug in at a location about 300 meters east of Highway 7 that offered a good observation point. ODA 525 had infiltrated in two MH-60 Black Hawks from Task Force 160 and moved overland with their heavy rucks (175 lbs) to the target area. Once infiltrated, at night, the team would move by foot overland to the target area, select the hide site, and begin the process to dig in and camouflage the area before early morning light. Most teams would insert via MH-60 or MH-47 helicopters from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) at a location far from the observation site yet within walking distance. Add to that the equipment and materials needed to dig and camouflage the hide site. Rucks and other equipment could easily reach over 150 pounds. In addition, other equipment such as a GPS, knife, compass, and medical kit were hung in various configurations on their combat vests. The teams would carry rucksacks that contained water, food, radios, ammunition, batteries for the radios, and more. They were on watch for movements of SCUD missiles, elements of the Republican Guard, and other significant enemy activities. These Special Reconnaissance (SR) teams were emplaced in enemy territory in support of both the XVIII Airborne Corps and the VII corps. Each team had at least one communicator responsible for sending and receiving messages from the command and control node. The teams had at least three members – sometimes 8 or more. ![]() Many were put in areas over 150 miles inside Iraq – far from friendly forces. On the night of January 23, 1991, the day before the ground offensive of Desert Storm began, Special Forces reconnaissance teams were inserted deep behind enemy lines in Iraq to gather and report intelligence of Iraqi troop movements. This 5th Special Forces team would soon find itself fighting for survival against an overwhelming enemy force. On February 23, 1991, SFODA 525, led by CW2 Chad Balwanz, was inserted by helicopter at night and moved to a hide site to observe traffic moving south along Highway 7 at a location north of the Euphrates River. A few of the SF teams had to fight enemy combatants until they were exfiltrated by helicopter. Some of these Special Forces teams were compromised by civilians who discovered their location. Army teams of Green Berets were infiltrated deep behind enemy lines to conduct surveillance and reconnaissance missions. ![]()
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