US military releases video in honor of the Battle of Mogadishu 26 years ago today

A Life Aloft

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Twenty-six years ago today, U.S. Forces from Task Force Ranger set out for the Somali city of Mogadishu to capture the Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aideed.

That day would be remembered years later for the downing of two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters and the intense urban fighting that followed, coined “Battle of Mogadishu,” which inspired the events of the film “Black Hawk Down.”

In remembrance of the battle’s 26th anniversary, the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) shared footage from the downing of the U.S. helicopters in a Facebook post.


After the helicopters went down, Task Force Ranger worked to protect the crash sites from Somali mobs and a numerically superior force of Somali fighters. In the resulting battle, 17 members of the task force were killed and 106 more were wounded. Somali death tolls in the battle are estimated in the hundreds.

“We commemorate the lives lost on that historic day in 1993. We will never forget,” the post reads.

The U.S. involvement in Somalia began initially as an effort to support U.N. peacekeeping efforts during Operation Restore Hope. According to Smithsonian Magazine, the U.N. started providing assistance in 1992 for Somalis suffering from famine.

The U.S. forces prepared to intervene after Aideed began attacking those U.N. peacekeepers. According to the Smithsonian, the plan was to arrest two of Aideed’s lieutenants and gathered leaders of his Somali Habar Gidir clan. Rangers planned to helicopter in and deploy from fast-ropes to surround a three-story building in Mogadishu where the militant clan leaders would be gathered.

A ground convoy was prepared to carry away those Rangers and their captives. In total, the plan called for the use of 19 aircraft, 12 vehicles, and about 160 troops; however, what was meant to be a quick “snatch-and-grab” mission became an 18-hour firefight through the urban center of Mogadishu.
In the opening minutes of the operation, Somali crowds gathered in the spectacle, but eventually turned hostile.

Two of the Black Hawk helicopters were brought down by ground fire and U.S. forces jumped to action in an effort to rescue those helicopter crews.

Among those rescue efforts, two Delta Force Soldiers Master Sgt. Gary Gordon and Sgt. 1st Class Randy Shughart elected to respond alone to one of the crash sites, despite growing mobs. The two fended off numerous attackers before being overwhelmed and killed as they attempted to save one of the pilots, Michael Durant.

“They were textbook special ops guys,” Durant said in a 2008 interview with Defense Media Network. He said they showed no signs of panic as they held off attacks for about 15 minutes. Durant was eventually captured by Somali fighters, and held prisoner for 11 days.

Gordon and Shughart were later awarded the Medal of Honor for their defense of the downed helicopter.

Despite the professional efforts of U.S. forces, much of the media fallout from the battle fixated on Somali mobs dragging U.S. bodies through the streets of Mogadishu and according to the Smithsonian, then-President Bill Clinton elected to remove U.S. forces from Somalia by March 1994.



Three Veterans Recall the Battle of Mogadishu

Col. (ret) Larry Perino, Col. (ret) Lee VanArsdale, and Master Sgt. (ret) Kyle Lamb, all participants in Operation Gothic Serpent, reflect on the events that took place twenty-five years ago during the Battle of Mogadishu in an event organized by the Modern War Institute at West Point.

 
There is actually a whole lot of stuff going on around the main events people don’t know even if they’ve read the two main books to come out of the incident.

The blog and notes that Blackhawk Down is based around into more detail and points of view like Captain Steele and his “casualty collection point” which was essentially he Alamo for the Rangers too wounded to continue that had to be left behind by whatever could push to the first crash site.

There were also two more Hawks “brought down” in the event. 1 you see in the movie as the Casevac bird that puts in the medics and takes hits. There was a second hawk to get shot up. Between the two you had one make it back to the airfield and another make a forced landing at the city docks where it was left to the crew to maintain their own security as nobody was available to get out to them.

This event also featured one of the largest fast medical trauma mobilizations the US had ever undertaken at the time. There was a small medical capability on site with the task force, but the mass of casualties exceeded its capacity before the fight was even really on. This triggered a lot of events resulting in a hanger full of beds and hands to handle the mass influx of wounded. My dad’s best friend literally packed his ER in Saudi, threw its supplies and people into a C-141 that just appeared out of thin air, and in a matter of hours and was in Mogadishu putting lines into guys to keep them from bleeding to death. You had that going on throughout Europe and Centcom. Had it not been for their actions a whole lot more names would have been added to the rolls.
 
Also, a week prior, another 60 took an RPG hit and went down in the city. The surviving crew has an interesting story, but it was overshadowed by what happened a few days later.

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I will have to check out those books @Lawman mentioned, was unaware of them.

It is so sad that young people today seem to have no interest in the history of our nation's conflicts. I seriously feel like most American's under 30 years old probably don't remember any conflict between Vietnam and the second Gulf War. I've been asked by graduates of the likes of Stanford and Berkeley in recent years if United 93 and Black Hawk Down were "really" true stories. Sheesh. Isn't that stuff taught in history classes by now?
 
I will have to check out those books @Lawman mentioned, was unaware of them.

It is so sad that young people today seem to have no interest in the history of our nation's conflicts. I seriously feel like most American's under 30 years old probably don't remember any conflict between Vietnam and the second Gulf War. I've been asked by graduates of the likes of Stanford and Berkeley in recent years if United 93 and Black Hawk Down were "really" true stories. Sheesh. Isn't that stuff taught in history classes by now?
A lot of people today don’t know we have/had US forces in Iraq and Syria directly fighting against ISIS.
 
So dragging this thread back up...

There is a Documentary on Amazon Prime that just hit. I put it on while washing the cars. Blackhawk Down: The Untold Story.

It deals with the incident from the point of view of the 2-14th Infantry (10th Mountain DIV) and the Paki/Mala force that went in to rescue the Rangers/Delta guys. Really great documentary that helps explain a lot of stuff you didn't see if your only exposure to the events was the Movie depiction of Black Hawk down. Also demonstrates some raw sheer courage from guys you don't normally hear about when the topic is discussed.
 
Thanks so much for posting this....just took a look at the promo....going to watch the film.


Also have to second/recommend Michael Durant's two books.

 
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