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budanski
11-15-2003, 11:42 AM
Special Forces Officer Honored for Heroism in Mazar-e-Sharif Prison Battle
http://www.defendamerica.mil/articles/nov2003/a111403a.html

http://www.defenselink.mil/daimages/photos/nov2003/index/ii111403k.jpg

U.S. Army Maj. Mark Mitchell, Special Forces soldier, is pinned with the second highest military decoration for valor, the Distinguished Service Cross, for combat actions in Operation Enduring Freedom, Afghanistan, by Gen. Bryan "Doug" Brown, commander, U.S. Special Operations Command, Nov. 14, at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla. U.S. Army photo by Jennifer Whittle

MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE, Nov. 14, 2003 — The first Distinguished Service Cross awarded since the Vietnam War, and the highest military decoration awarded to date in the war on terror, was presented today to Army Special Forces Maj. Mark Mitchell.

Mitchell earned the medal for his leadership during the Battle of Qala-I-Jangi Fortress during Operation Enduring Freedom. He was the ground force commander of a rescue operation where he ensured the freedom of one American and posthumous repatriation of another.

Central Intelligence Agency Director George Tenet, and Gen. Bryan “Doug” Brown, commander, U.S. Special Operations Command, presided over the award ceremony at the command’s headquarters in Tampa, Fla.

“On Nov. 25, 2001 at Mazar-e-Sharif, Maj. Mark Mitchell demonstrated why courage is one of the four traits that in special operations is non-negotiable,” Brown said after pinning the award on Mitchell. “He demonstrated one of our core values – courage, courage under the most dire of circumstances, and another core value of commitment, commitment to fellow Americans. He willingly led an attack in the face of overwhelming odds.”

Mitchell, however, seemed uncomfortable in the spotlight. More than 30 of his family members attended the ceremony, including family members of CIA agent Johnny “Mike” Spann, the first American killed in Afghanistan.

“It is a tremendous honor, but I don’t consider myself a hero,” Mitchell said. “I am not personally convinced that my actions warranted more than a pat on the back. Wearing the Special Forces foreign-service combat patch on my shoulder and serving with the finest soldiers in the world is enough. I was just doing my job and our mission was accomplished.”

Mitchell’s award citation states that he received the nation's second-highest military award for “extraordinary heroism in action” during the battle of Qala-I-Jangi Fortress in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan, during November 2001, while assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) as a ground forces commander.

The details of how the bloody battle started are still unconfirmed. However, most reports from eyewitnesses indicate that the three-day conflict erupted when an a Taliban enemy prisoner of war drew a grenade while being searched, pulled the pin and killed himself and a Northern Alliance commander.

The suicide attack triggered the uprising and an estimated 500 Taliban prisoners being held in Qala-I-Jangi, which means “House of War,” stormed two CIA agents working at the facility who were interviewing prisoners. Spann, one of ambushed agents, died at the prison and the other agent escaped.

Mitchell, 38, a Desert Storm veteran, heard of the attack when a Northern Alliance soldier rushed into a facility his unit was preparing for humanitarian workers and told him that he and his men were needed immediately at the prison.

Mitchell organized a team of 16 British and American soldiers and sped to the prison about 25 kilometers away.

When they arrived, Mitchell led his soldiers into battle against prisoners who had armed themselves with rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, machine guns, and rifles they collected from armories at the prison. Armed with a rifle and pistol, Mitchell, wearing no body armor and head protection, climbed to the highest point of the fortress to survey the battleground.

From that vantage point, Mitchell’s men began to call in air strikes on the Taliban. Later that evening, Mitchell and his men withdrew from the prison to plan the next day’s operations.

The following morning, Mitchell’s men returned to the fortress and were greeted by a barrage of gunfire. Mitchell and his unit requested more air support, but misfortune struck when a bomb fell near Mitchell’s team injuring nine of his soldiers.

After evacuating his injured men for most of the day, Mitchell returned to the fortress under the cover of darkness with five men and directed more air strikes on the enemy positions. By morning of the third day, most of the prisoners had been killed, and those who remained were killed when the Northern Alliance rolled into the compound with tanks. Other Taliban later killed themselves rather than surrender. John Walker Lindh, the Californian who traveled to Afghanistan to help the Taliban, was captured when the battle ended.

Mitchell’s award credits “his unparalleled courage under fire, decisive leadership and personal sacrifice,” which it said “were directly responsible for the success of the rescue operation and were further instrumental in ensuring the city of Mazar-e-Sharif did not fall back in the hands of the Taliban.”

Mitchell is now assigned to Special Operations Command Central.

Haiw
11-15-2003, 01:52 PM
feeling confused about the red shoulder patches....anyone can clear the fog?

NcDeuce
11-15-2003, 02:00 PM
The general at left is wearing the United States Army Special Operations Command patch.


The stylized spearhead alludes to the shoulder sleeve insignia worn by the 1st Special Service Force and signifies the heritage and traditions that the U.S. Army Special Operations Command will perpetuate. The unsheathed black dagger symbolizes total military preparedness and has long been associated with Army Special Operations Forces. The insignia is worn and displayed with the addition of a black and red airborne tab above, indicating the airborne status of the command.

Besides being in the United States Army Special Operations Command: I know the troops in the 160th SOAR wear this patch and I also believe Delta Force operators wear them for their Class A photos and such.

NcDeuce
11-15-2003, 02:02 PM
By the way, isn't Major Mitchell part of 5th Group?

Argyll
11-15-2003, 02:10 PM
Is he not a CCCT?
Strange that he does not wear the Special Forces Treble bolts ?
If he's USAF that would make more sense?

FuturePara
11-15-2003, 02:15 PM
If he was USAF he wouldn't be wearing US Army Class A's and a Special Forces Tab.

NcDeuce
11-15-2003, 02:18 PM
Cool, I just found this article, it confirms his current unit. If I remember correctly, he has a picture in The Hunt for bin Laden.


Early Thursday afternoon, around the time the invasion of Iraq began, Friedericke Marshell flipped on the television set, hoping to catch the "Days of Our Lives." When she realized that her soap opera had been pre-empted by war coverage, Marshell watched for a few minutes, then turned off the set.

"The more I see, the more I worry," she said. "If you watch too much, it consumes you."

Her husband, Army Reserves Sgt. Michael Marshell, is in Kuwait.

Or at least, he was when he called earlier that day.

"He said, 'I'm OK, I'm not near anything real big,' " the Milwaukee woman said. "He said, 'It's been real crazy here, but I'm OK.' "

In Brookfield, Mark Mitchell's family learned at halftime of Marquette's NCAA tournament game with Holy Cross that the ground war had begun. Both Mitchell, a 37-year-old U.S. Army major, and his father, Terry, are graduates of Marquette. Mitchell is stationed at Special Operations Command Central in Doha, Qatar.

"We know he's not out there in the middle of the desert. He's 800 miles from Baghdad, and hopefully that's far enough," said Terry Mitchell, an attorney with a law practice in Hartland.

"He's in the command center that's basically calling all the shots."

With war erupting in the Persian Gulf, dozens of Wisconsin families with relatives serving in the region are feeling these same pangs of worry. While there is a widespread belief that U.S. forces will quickly prevail over the outgunned Iraqi army, the threat of chemical or biological weapons - and the general danger of a war zone - causes concern.

Kathy and Terry Mitchell said they are less worried about their son now than they were during his previous service in the Middle East because they know he is not in the field, but stationed at a command center far from the front lines.

Mark Mitchell serves with the Army's 5th Special Forces Group. He's a Green Beret who was on the front lines in Kuwait and Iraq during Desert Shield and Desert Storm. He also served in Afghanistan and is set to be decorated for his service there.

But with Iraq launching missiles Thursday and the possibility of chemical or biological weapons attacks, all U.S. military personnel stationed in the region are at risk.

"He's not going to be on the front lines, he's not going into Iraq," Terry Mitchell said. "But they're still running around with gas masks and chemical weapons suits because the Iraqis could possibly send a missile that far."

Friedericke Marshell says she has "complete and utter confidence that her husband will be fine and that through God's will, he'll guide him wherever he needs to go."

Michael Marshell has been a member of the Army Reserves for 16 years, since before he and his wife met. When they married in 1995, she didn't worry about the possibility of a call to active duty or war. The reserves were a way for Michael to practice his self-discipline, stay in shape and hang out with his friends.

For Friedericke, known as "Fred" to her friends, it was a way to have one weekend a month and two weeks a year to herself while her husband was on reserve duty.

She was flabbergasted when she found out he would be headed to the desert for a year. Her husband got the call Feb. 7. A week later, on Valentine's Day, she drove him to Fort McCoy, near Tomah. She hasn't seen him since.

Three weeks ago, he was sent overseas.

Keeping busy has helped. Friedericke Marshell works at both a beauty salon and a tanning salon, and she's taking classes to become a cosmetology instructor. Her 16-year-old stepson, T.J., still comes to stay with her every other weekend.

Still, when she's alone watching "Oprah," she cries at the first hint of a sad or inspirational story. She cries when she remembers her husband's departure, or when she becomes overwhelmed with pride in him.

She gets upset, too, when she thinks about T.J. being forced to spend a year without his father, or when she sees war protesters causing a scene.

The Mitchells have been in regular contact with their son through e-mail since he has been at Camp As Sayliyah.

"In Desert Storm, the only communication we had were letters and the occasional phone call. Now, at least, we have e-mail," Kathy Mitchell said.

While their son was in Afghanistan, the Mitchells said, they did not hear from him for a long time, and that made them worry.

Then one day, they were watching CNN and recognized his voice in an interview done by a reporter near the front lines. Terry Mitchell said that the TV report never showed Mark's face, but they knew that voice was his.

Thursday morning, Terry Mitchell received an e-mail from his son, apparently sent after orders had been given to do the surgical airstrikes in southern Baghdad that were aimed at taking out Iraq's leadership.

"Now, we have crossed the Rubicon confident of ultimate victory and there is no turning back," the e-mail said.

Mark Mitchell noted that many of his friends are in harm's way near the front lines, and that we all are living "during historically significant times."

Mark Mitchell, who speaks fluent Arabic, said he was confident that the people of Iraq are looking forward to Saddam Hussein being driven from power.

He wrote: "The vast majority of Iraqis are eagerly awaiting liberation and they will not be disappointed.

Argyll
11-15-2003, 02:20 PM
Very very true,he'd be in Blues!!
I never thought of that!!

Uncle Sam
11-15-2003, 03:12 PM
http://www.defenselink.mil/daimages/photos/nov2003/index/ii111403k.jpg

http://www.flyingtigerssurplus.com/images/products/bgP998.jpg
1ST SPECIAL OPERATIONS (Command)



http://www.1armystore.com/Smart/graphics/s5.jpg
SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND CENTRAL (SOCC)

California Joe
11-15-2003, 03:29 PM
Whatever happened to the British soldiers that were put in for American decorations for their actions there?

96B
11-15-2003, 03:47 PM
http://www.usmedals.com/prodpixLarge/F002.jpg

Haiw
11-15-2003, 04:08 PM
Whatever happened to the British soldiers that were put in for American decorations for their actions there?
SBS nco who led the british patrol got a MOH back-stage

Argyll
11-15-2003, 04:22 PM
A big congratulations to Maj.Miller,his deeds and heroism is a credit to his fellow professionals.................outstanding !!

California Joe
11-15-2003, 04:43 PM
Outstanding.

ST4
11-15-2003, 05:15 PM
Its about time that the government give a Special Forces operator a medal that is devered. What I am trying to say is that In OEF, many Special Forces operations received Bronze Stars for calling in bombs and fighting the enemy while the convential forces were receiving the Silver Star for actions that were less than what SF operators did. I am not saying that convential forces are lesser to SF, it is just the higher military brass I have a problem with.