Small Wars Journal

The Lost Lessons of “Black Hawk Down”

Thu, 10/03/2013 - 9:28am

The Lost Lessons of “Black Hawk Down” by Benjamin Runkle, War on the Rocks.

Today marks the 20th anniversary of The Battle of Mogadishu, the American operation in Somalia later immortalized by Mark Bowden’s seminal non-fiction book “Black Hawk Down” and dramatized in Ridley Scott’s exhilarating but slightly less non-fictional movie of the same name. On October 3, 1993, 160 U.S. Army Rangers and other special operations forces launched what was supposed to be a routine raid to capture two lieutenants of Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aideed. But when two MH-60L helicopters providing fire support were shot down, the operation became a desperate search and rescue mission in which U.S. forces were besieged overnight by thousands of heavily armed Somali militiamen. Fourteen hours after the operation’s start, eighteen Americans were dead, 84 were wounded, and one pilot was missing.

The incredible valor and drama of Task Force Ranger’s ordeal over those two days has, unfortunately, tended to draw attention away from the broader campaign to capture Aideed, whom U.S. and international forces had been hunting since the previous June, when Aideed’s Somali National Alliance ambushed and mutilated 24 Pakistani peacekeepers . This manhunt was part of a broader operation which – along with the “Black Hawk Down” battle itself – carries important tactical, operational, and strategic lessons. As debates rage about intervention in Syria and the renewed threat posed by Somali-based al-Shabaab, the 20th anniversary of the most dramatic U.S. military operation between Vietnam and  Afghanistan offers an important opportunity to revisit those lessons, which remain relevant two decades later…

Read on.

Comments

Move Forward

Sat, 10/05/2013 - 10:13pm

In reply to by Move Forward

Apparently news is happening in Libya as well:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/06/world/africa/Al-Qaeda-Suspect-Wanted-…

Unfortunately, SOF raiding and SF FID can't solve it all or we would not have had Mali and Afghanistan with terrorists hiding farther from coasts to thwart the instant and temporary raiding and cruise missile gratification. Adequate Army and Marine general purpose forces remain essential for permanent solutions to problems and stabilized troubled nation states that are in our vital national interests.

Move Forward

Sat, 10/05/2013 - 10:03pm

Apparently, improvements in 20 years of technology and practice using them makes a difference according to the LA Times and several other papers:

<blockquote>The official said the location of the Shabab leader was recently pinpointed by intelligence intercepts, part of a growing effort to track the group's senior ranks using surveillance drones, electronic intercepts and contacts with friendly Somali clan leaders.</blockquote>

On the other hand, perhaps the "War on the Rocks" article likewise is correct about this from the LA Times article:

<blockquote>The raid also points to a growing willingness to put U.S. troops on the ground to fight the Shabab after years of trying to contain the threat by using drones and by backing African troops sent to Somalia in an effort to stabilize the war-torn country.
</blockquote>

Both quotes are from the same Los Angeles Times article:

http://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-us-commandos-raid-somali…

Just giving Dave an early start on the October 6th abbreviated headlines...:)