At around 10:30 on the night of 26 April, 50 U.S. Army Rangers from
3rd Battalion,
75th Ranger Regiment, alongside 40 Afghan commandos from the
Special Security Forces (Kteh Khas), were inserted near the target site by helicopter. Almost immediately after landing the force came under heavy fire from entrenched enemy positions from multiple directions, with the firefight being described as "close quarters with enemy fire coming at 360 degrees". As the joint American/Afghan force pushed through the difficult terrain under fire, they reportedly called in airstrikes from
AC-130 gunships,
F-16 fighter jets,
AH-64 Apache attack helicopters, and
drones. Due to conditions early in the raid, the second assault force was diverted to a backup landing zone. At the landing zone, the Rangers fast-roped out of their helicopter under small arms fire, with one suffering a fall to the ground. An investigation into the raid determined that this decision to divert to a secondary landing position placed the second assault force close to ISIL-KP fighters who were already engaged in combat with “Battle Position-south”, causing them to be caught in crossfire with friendly forces while they moved North to their objective. A team of Rangers from the primary assault force was preparing to breach the door of an enemy compound when a Ranger fell through the rooftop of the compound of which he was using to provide suppressive fire. When teammates rushed to assist, a suicide bomber detonated in a courtyard on the other side of the structure. Following the explosion, the team of Rangers engaged in several close-quarter firefights within the compound, killing an individual referred to as “OBJ Nascent Calvia”. Sgt. Joshua Rodgers, a Ranger team leader, suffered a gunshot wound to his leg, continuing to fight until suffering a second fatal wound. Separately, Sgt. Cameron Thomas and two other Rangers engaged the enemy from a prone position until increased enemy fire forced them to fall 10 feet onto a lower terrace. After falling, Sgt. Thomas notified his teammates that he had been wounded and was having trouble breathing. Under fire, his teammates stripped his equipment and began searching his body for wounds. Another Ranger was grazed by a bullet but left the battle on his own choosing. The raid lasted for more than three hours up to about 3:30 a.m. and resulted in the death of the intended target with
the Pentagon calling it as a success in degrading the group's ability to fight.
Casualties Among the dead were two Army Rangers identified as 22-year-old Sgt. Joshua Rodgers of
Bloomington,
Illinois and 23-year-old Sgt. Cameron Thomas of
Kettering,
Ohio. Both of them enlisted in the
Army out of high school and were on their third deployments. Their rewards and decorations include the
Army Good Conduct Medal,
Army Achievement Medal,
Army Service Ribbon,
Global War on Terrorism Service Medal,
Afghanistan Campaign Star, and the
NATO Medal.
United States Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis honored Rodgers and Thomas in a statement, saying ''"The families and fellow Rangers of Sgt. Joshua 'Josh' Rodgers and Sgt. Cameron Thomas have my respect and sympathies. Fighting alongside their Afghan partners, Josh and Cameron proved themselves willing to go into danger and impose a brutal cost on enemies in their path. They carried out their operation against [the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-Khorasan] in Afghanistan before making the ultimate sacrifice to defend our nation and our freedoms."'' Abdul Haseeb, several other ISIL-KP leaders, and about 35 other militants were killed in the raid according to the U.S. Military. == Aftermath ==