in red On 26 September 2010, Norgrove and three Afghan colleagues were travelling in the
Chawkay District (also known as Tsawkay and Sawkay) of eastern
Kunar Province when they were kidnapped by local insurgents. However, this claim cannot be fully substantiated due to the confidential nature of its sources. Her family has regarded the claims as "ridiculous." They have also claimed, "Linda was passionately against war, disliked the military with a vengeance and mostly sided with Afghans rather than western governments." Dressed in men's clothing by her captors, she was taken first into the mountains and then brought to the Dewegal Valley in Chowkai District (which crosses the
Korengal Valley). US Army troops from Bravo Company, 2/327 Infantry, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division began a 12-day search supported by Afghan army, police and commando units under the codename "Enterprise". A house-to-house search was conducted and roadblocks posted at the valley entrance to prevent Norgrove's captors from transferring her eastward into Pakistan. The difficult terrain (with few roads) complicated and slowed the process; the search efforts succeeded in containing the kidnappers in the vicinity and several local Taliban members were killed.
Negotiations It was unclear at first who had kidnapped Norgrove and her colleagues. A Taliban commander, the Pakistan-based Mohammed Osman, was reported to demand the release of Aafia Siddiqui in return for Norgrove's freedom. Siddiqui, known as "Lady al-Qaeda", had received an 86-year prison sentence in the US on 26 September. "We are lucky that we abducted this British woman soon after the ruthless ruling by an American court on Aafia Siddiqui. We will demand the release of Aafia Siddiqui in exchange for her", said Osman. Other Afghan sources denied any link to Osman. US military sources identified Norgrove's captors as Kunar Taliban, and
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said they were from a
Salafist group affiliated with the local Taliban, known as
Jamaat al Dawa al Quran. An Afghan intelligence official later identified her captors as local commanders Mullah Basir and Mullah Keftan. Negotiations for Norgrove's release were conducted through local tribal elders. The three Afghans captured with Norgrove were released on 3 October.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said that the primary fear was that she "was going to be passed up the terrorist chain, which would increase further the already high risk that she would be killed." The British foreign office asked the media not to release details about Norgrove's personal life while she was in captivity to avoid attaching "trophy value" to her kidnapping.
Rescue attempt and death Intelligence reports indicated that a group of local elders were calling for Norgrove to be executed "like the Russian" (a possible reference to the
Russian war in Afghanistan). The intelligence prompted Cameron and Hague to approve a United States special operations effort to rescue Norgrove during her 13th night of captivity. The operation was spearheaded by "SEAL Team Six",
Navy SEALs from the
Naval Special Warfare Development Group. The SEALs staged a predawn raid on the Taliban hillside
compound hideout, where Norgrove was held in a shack, on 8 October 2010. The stronghold was surrounded by high, thick perimeter walls in a densely wooded area in the village of Dineshgal, up a steep mountain in the
Korengal Valley. At approximately 3:30 am, 20 SEALs and about 24 US Army Rangers from the
75th Ranger Regiment (wearing
night-vision goggles) approached the compound,
fast roping from two
CH-47 Chinook helicopters. They were fired on from the compound and from a nearby position by Taliban armed with
AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenades, and suicide vests. Two American snipers aboard a helicopter killed two guards using sound-suppressed rifles. An
AC-130 Spectre gunship provided the US troops on the ground with
close air support, killing two fleeing Taliban. The Rangers secured enemy positions on the nearby hills, and all six Taliban gunmen who fought the US forces were killed. During the gunfight, Norgrove's captors dragged her outside the building where she was being held, but she apparently broke away from them. Video footage of the raid showed an explosion in her vicinity; Norgrove was then found, injured, in a
fetal position in a gully. Norgrove was removed from the scene via helicopter and received medical care, but she died. It was reported initially that she had been killed by one of her captors setting off a
suicide vest. According to
The Guardian, insurgents often put on suicide vests if they think they are in danger of being attacked. Taliban commanders Mullah Basir and Mullah Keftan (who were holding Norgrove) were among those killed in the raid, according to an Afghan intelligence official. Other women and children in the compound were uninjured, and no members of the rescue team were wounded. ==Joint investigation==