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Sunday September 5th 2010

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Estonian army in action in Afghanistan

"It was well planned," said Eston­ian 1st Lt. Alar Kar­ileet, fol­low­ing an insur­gent attack near Patrol Base Masood in late Octo­ber. "The Tal­iban were in three posi­tions of four to five men each."

Tal­iban insur­gents fired on the Eston­ian patrol of sol­diers with Com­pany C, Expe­di­tionary Eston­ian Task Force, in an open field less than a half mile from the patrol base.

Marine Capt. Ryan Petersen, an artillery offi­cer and Joint Ter­mi­nal Attack Con­troller with 2nd Brigade Pla­toon, 2nd Air Naval Gun­fire Liai­son Com­pany, Marine Expe­di­tionary Brigade-Afghanistan, sat in the Eston­ian Com­bat Oper­a­tions Cen­ter at Masood as the fire­fight took place, receiv­ing coor­di­nates where enemy fight­ers were located. Shortly after, one high explo­sive artillery round landed on the insur­gent position.

"The rounds were effec­tive and sup­pressed the Tal­iban attack," said Petersen, of Mishawaka, Ind.

A sec­ond fire­fight broke out less than 10 min­utes later from a dif­fer­ent enemy posi­tion as the Eston­ian patrol moved to assess the dam­age caused by the artillery round. Petersen, still in the COC, per­formed the same actions. A sec­ond artillery round, the same kind as before, landed on the sec­ond position.

"Artillery we asked for made a direct hit on one posi­tion, and no one shot at us from there again," Kar­ileet said.

There was never a time, in more than two months of com­bat oper­a­tions, where Eston­ian sol­diers left the pro­tec­tive wire of Patrol Base Masood or Patrol Base Shamshad, located less than four kilo­me­ters away from each other, with­out the pres­ence of a force mul­ti­plier. That force mul­ti­plier came in the form of five Marines from 2nd ANGLICO, MEB-Afghanistan.

The team of Marines, led by Petersen, gave the Eston­ian sol­diers the abil­ity to fully inte­grate them­selves into Marine bat­tle spaces in the Hel­mand River Val­ley. The Marines pro­vided the liai­son capa­bil­ity with nearby 2nd Bat­tal­ion, 8th Marine Reg­i­ment, as well as the abil­ity to call for indi­rect fire and air­craft sup­port in the forms of fire mis­sions, over watch and surveillance.

Esto­nia, which is located along the Baltic Sea in North­ern Europe, is one of NATO's newest and small­est mem­bers. Eston­ian sol­diers spent the past cou­ple months work­ing to main­tain secu­rity in Masood and Shamshad. October's fire­fight was the first in the Masood Dis­trict in many weeks.

"[The Esto­ni­ans] are good infantry­men," said Maj. Matthew Maz, pla­toon com­man­der, 2nd Brigade Pla­toon, 2nd ANGLICO. "We pro­vide the nec­es­sary enablers to allow them to do what they are good at.

DVIDS
Story by Cpl. Aaron Rooks

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