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Battle of Mogadishu

Date:3–4 October 1993


Location:Mogadishu, Somalia
Result:

■Tactical U.S./U.N. victory

■Strategic SNA victory

■U.N. withdraws 3 March 1994

■U.S. withdraws 25 March 1994

Belligerents

UNOSOM II ■ United States

■ Pakistan

■ Malaysia

Somali National Alliance (SNA)

Alleged: al-Qaeda

Commanders and leaders

William F. Garrison

Mohamed Farrah Aidid

Strength

160 military

12 vehicles (9 HMMWVs)

19 aircraft (16 helicopters - 8 Black Hawks and 8 Little Birds)

4,000–6,000 militiamen and civilian fighters

Casualties and losses

U.S.
18 killed

73 wounded

1 captured

Malaysia

1 killed

7 wounded

Pakistan

1 killed

2 wounded

SNA Militia and civilians

SNA claims a range of 315 to 500 Somali casualties. US sources estimate a range of 1,500 to
3,000 casualties, including civilians. Up to 700+ killed. Est. 1,500+ wounded. 21 captured.

Militia source states 315 killed, 812 wounded

*Note: Task Force Ranger achieved the mission objectives of capturing specific Aidid
lieutenants, but the political fallout from the resultant battle and consequent eventual U.S.
withdrawal from Somalia could classify this as a Pyrrhic victory.

The Battle of Mogadishu, more commonly referred to as Black Hawk Down or, locally, as the
Day of the Rangers (Somali: Maalintii Rangers), was part of Operation Gothic Serpent and was
fought on 3 and 4 October 1993, in Mogadishu, Somalia, between forces of the United States
supported by UNOSOM II, and Somali militiamen loyal to the self-proclaimed president-to-be
Mohamed Farrah Aidid who had support from armed civilian fighters.

A U.S. Army force in Mogadishu, consisting primarily of U.S. Army Rangers from Bravo
Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment; C Squadron, 1st Special Forces Operational
Detachment-Delta (1st SFOD-D), better known as "Delta Force"; as well as Air Force Combat
Controllers and Air Force Pararescuemen and helicopters from 1st Battalion, 160th Special
Operations Aviation Regiment, attempted to seize two of Aidid's high-echelon lieutenants
during a meeting in the city. Shortly after the assault began, Somali militia and armed civilian
fighters shot down two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters. The subsequent operation to secure and
recover the crews of both helicopters drew the raid, intended to last no more than an hour,
into an overnight standoff in the city. The battle resulted in 18 deaths, 80 wounded, and one
helicopter pilot captured among the U.S. raid party and rescue forces. One Pakistani soldier and
one Malaysian soldier were killed as part of the rescue forces. American sources estimate
between 1,500 and 3,000 Somali casualties, including civilians; SNA forces claim only 315 killed,
with 812 wounded. The battle is now referred to as the First Battle of Mogadishu to distinguish
it from the Second Battle of Mogadishu of 2006.

Summary

Task Force Ranger—which consisted of an assault force made up of U.S. Army Delta Force
operators, Army Rangers, Air Force Pararescuemen, Air Force Combat Controllers, four Navy
SEALs from the Naval Special Warfare Development Group, and an air element provided by the
160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment—under Major General William F. Garrison's
command executed an operation that involved traveling from their compound on the city's
outskirts to the center with the aim of capturing the leaders of the Habr Gidr clan, led by
Mohamed Farrah Aidid. The assault force consisted of nineteen aircraft, twelve vehicles
(including nine Humvees), and 160 men.

During the operation, two U.S. Black Hawk helicopters were shot down by RPGs and three
others were damaged. Some of the wounded survivors were able to evacuate to the
compound, but others remained near the crash sites and were isolated. An urban battle ensued
throughout the night.

Early the next morning, a combined task force was sent to rescue the trapped soldiers. It
contained soldiers from the Pakistan Army, the Malaysian Army and the U.S. Army's 10th
Mountain Division. They assembled some hundred vehicles, including Pakistani tanks (M48s)
and Malaysian Condor armoured personnel carriers and were supported by U.S. MH-6 Little
Bird and MH-60L Black Hawk helicopters. This task force reached the first crash site and rescued
the survivors. The second crash site had been overrun by hostile Somalis during the night. Delta
snipers Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart volunteered to hold them off until ground forces
arrived. A Somali mob with thousands of combatants eventually overran the two men. That
site's lone surviving American, pilot Michael Durant, had been taken prisoner but was later
released.

Abandoned "Green Line" dividing the warring factions in North and South Mogadishu (January
1993).

The exact number of Somali casualties is unknown, but estimates range from several hundred
to over a thousand militiamen and others killed,with injuries to another 3,000–4,000. The
International Committee of the Red Cross estimated 200 Somali civilians killed and several
hundred wounded in the fighting, with reports that some civilians attacked the Americans. The
book Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War estimates more than 700 Somali militiamen
dead and more than 1,000 wounded, but the Somali National Alliance in a Frontline
documentary on American television acknowledged only 133 killed in the whole battle.The
Somali casualties were reported in The Washington Post as 312 killed and 814 wounded. The
Pentagon initially reported five American soldiers were killed, but the toll was actually 18
American soldiers dead and 73 wounded. Two days later, a 19th soldier, Delta operator SFC
Matt Rierson, was killed in a mortar attack. Among U.N. forces, one Malaysian and one
Pakistani died; seven Malaysians and two Pakistanis were wounded. At the time, the battle was
the bloodiest involving U.S. troops since the Vietnam War and remained so until the Second
Battle of Fallujah in 2004.

On 24 July 1996, Aidid was wounded during a firefight between his militia and forces loyal to
former Aidid allies, Ali Mahdi Muhammad and Osman Ali Atto. He suffered a fatal heart attack
on 1 August 1996, either during or after surgery to treat his wounds. The following day, General
Garrison retired.

Background

In January 1991, Somalian President Mohammed Siad Barre was overthrown in the ensuing civil
war by a coalition of opposing clans. The Somali National Army concurrently disbanded and
some former soldiers reconstituted as irregular regional forces or joined the clan militias. The
main rebel group in the capital Mogadishu was the United Somali Congress (USC), which later
divided into two armed factions: one led by Ali Mahdi Muhammad, who became president, and
the other by Mohamed Farrah Aidid. In total, there were four opposition groups that competed
for political control – the USC, Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF), Somali Patriotic
Movement (SPM) and Somali Democratic Movement (SDM). In June 1991, a ceasefire was
agreed to, but failed to hold. A fifth group, the Somali National Movement (SNM), later
declared independence in the Somalia's northwest portion in June. The SNM renamed the
unrecognized territory Somaliland, with its leader Abdirahman Ahmed Ali Tuur selected as
president.

In September 1991, severe fighting broke out in Mogadishu, which continued in the following
months and spread throughout the country, with over 20,000 people killed or injured by the
end of the year. These wars led to the destruction of the Somalia's agriculture, which in turn led
to starvation in large parts of the country. The international community began to send food
supplies to halt the starvation, but vast amounts of food were hijacked and brought to local
clan leaders, who routinely exchanged it with other countries for weapons. An estimated 80
percent of the food was stolen. These factors led to even more starvation, from which an
estimated 300,000 people died and another 1.5 million people suffered between 1991 and
1992. In July 1992, after a ceasefire between the opposing clan factions, the U.N. sent 50
military observers to watch the food's distribution.
U.S. president George H. W. Bush (left) visiting Somalia to witness the efforts of Task Force
Somalia that was in direct support of Operation Restore Hope.

Operation Provide Relief began in August 1992, when the U.S. President George H. W. Bush
announced that U.S. military transports would support the multinational U.N. relief effort in
Somalia. Ten C-130s and 400 people were deployed to Mombasa, Kenya, airlifting aid to
Somalia's remote areas and reducing reliance on truck convoys. One member of the 86th
Supply Squadron, USAFE's only contribution to the operation, was deployed with the ground
support contingent. The C-130s delivered 48,000 tons of food and medical supplies in six
months to international humanitarian organizations trying to help Somalia's more than three
million starving people.

When this proved inadequate to stop the massive death and displacement of the Somali
people (500,000 dead and 1.5 million refugees or displaced), the U.S launched a major coalition
operation to assist and protect humanitarian activities in December 1992. This operation, called
Operation Restore Hope, saw the U.S. assuming the unified command in accordance with
Resolution 794. The U.S. Marine Corps landed the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit in Mogadishu
and, with elements of 1st Battalion, 7th Marines and 3rd Battalion, 11th Marines, secured
nearly one-third of the city, the port, and airport facilities within two weeks, with the intent to
facilitate airlifted humanitarian supplies. Elements of the 2nd Battalion; HMLA-369 (Helicopter
Marine Light Assault-369 of Marine Aircraft Group-39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Camp
Pendleton); 9th Marines; and 1st Battalion, 7th Marines quickly secured routes to Baidoa,
Balidogle and Kismayo, then were reinforced by the 3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion and the
U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division.

Mission shift

On 3 March 1993, the U.N. Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali submitted to the U.N. Security
Council his recommendations for effecting the transition from UNITAF to UNOSOM II. He
indicated that since Resolution 794's adoption in December 1992, UNITAF's presence and
operations had created a positive impact on Somalia's security situation and on the effective
delivery of humanitarian assistance (UNITAF deployed some 37,000 personnel over forty
percent of southern and central Somalia). However, there was still no effective government,
police, or national army with the result of serious security threats to U.N. personnel. To that
end, the Security Council authorized UNOSOM II to establish a secure environment throughout
Somalia, to achieve national reconciliation so as to create a democratic state.

At the Conference on National Reconciliation in Somalia, held on 15 March 1993, in Addis


Ababa, Ethiopia, all fifteen Somali parties agreed to the terms set out to restore peace and
democracy. Yet, by May it became clear that, although a signatory to the March Agreement,
Mohammed Farrah Aidid's faction would not cooperate in the Agreement's implementation.

Aidid began to broadcast anti-U.N. propaganda on Radio Mogadishu after believing that the
U.N. was purposefully marginalizing him in an attempt to "rebuild Somalia". Lieutenant General
Çevik Bir ordered the radio station shut down, in an attempt to quash the beginning of what
could turn into a rebellion. Civilian spies throughout UNOSOM II's headquarters likely led to the
uncovering of the U.N.'s plan. Aidid ordered SNA militia to attack a Pakistani force on 5 June
1993, that had been tasked with the inspection of an arms cache located at the radio station,
possibly out of fear that this was a task force sent to shut down the broadcast. The result was
24 dead, and 57 wounded Pakistani troops, as well as 1 wounded Italian and 3 wounded
American soldiers. On 6 June 1993, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 837, declaring
total war on Aidid and his forces.

On 12 June, U.S. troops started attacking targets in Mogadishu in hopes of finding Aidid, a
campaign which lasted until 16 June. On 17 June, a $25,000 warrant was issued by Admiral
Jonathan Howe for information leading to Aidid's arrest, but he was never captured. Howe also
requested a counter-terrorist rescue force after the Pakistanis' deaths.

Attack on safe house

On 12 July 1993, a U.S.-led operation was launched on what was believed to be a safe house
where Aidid was hiding in Mogadishu. During the 17-minute combat operation, U.S. Cobra
attack helicopters fired 16 TOW missiles and thousands of 20-millimeter cannon rounds into
the compound, killing 60 people. However, the number of Somali fatalities was disputed. Abdi
Qeybdiid, Aidid's interior minister, claimed 763 dead, including women and children who had
been in the safe house. The reports Jonathan Howe got after the attack placed the number of
dead at 20, all men. The International Committee of the Red Cross set the number of dead at
54. As it happened, Aidid was nowhere in sight.

The operation would lead to the deaths of four journalists – Dan Eldon, Hos Maina, Hansi Kraus
and Anthony Macharia – who were killed by angry Mogadishu mobs when they arrived to cover
the incident, which presaged the Battle of Mogadishu.

Some believe that this American attack was a turning point in unifying Somalis against U.S.
efforts in Somalia, including former moderates and those opposed to the Habar Gidir.

Task Force Ranger

On 8 August 1993, Aidid's militia detonated a remote controlled bomb against a U.S. military
vehicle, killing four soldiers. Two weeks later another bomb injured seven more. In response,
U.S. President Bill Clinton approved the proposal to deploy a special task force composed of 400
U.S. Army Rangers and Delta Force operators. This unit, named Task Force Ranger, consisted of
160 elite U.S. troops.

On 22 August, the unit deployed to Somalia under the command of Major General William F.
Garrison, commander of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) at the time.

The force consisted of:

■B Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment

■C Squadron, 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (1st SFOD-D)

■A deployment package of 16 helicopters and personnel from the 160th Special Operations
Aviation Regiment (160th SOAR), which included MH-60 Black Hawks and AH/MH-6 Little Birds.

■Navy SEALs from the Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU)

■Air Force Pararescuemen and Combat Controllers from the 24th Special Tactics Squadron.

On 21 September, Task Force Ranger captured Aidid's financier, Osman Ali Atto.

First Black Hawk Down

At around 02:00 on 25 September, Aidid's men shot down a 101st Airborne Division Black
Hawk with an RPG and killed three crew members at New Port near Mogadishu. The
shootdown was a huge SNA psychological victory.

Order of Battle

The crew of Super 64 a month before the Battle of Mogadishu. From left: Winn Mahuron,
Tommy Field, Bill Cleveland, Ray Frank and Mike Durant.

Units involved in the battle:

■Task Force Ranger, including : ■C Squadron, 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta
(1st SFOD-D) – aka "Delta Force"

■Bravo Company, 3rd Ranger Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment

■1st Battalion, 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne) (The Night Stalkers)
with MH-6J and AH-6 "Little Birds" and MH-60 A/L Black Hawks
■Combat Controllers and Pararescuemen from the 24th Special Tactics Squadron

■Navy SEALs from the Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU)

■CVN-72 USS Abraham Lincoln & Carrier Air Wing 11

■Task Force-10th Mountain Division, including: ■1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment

■2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment,

■3rd platoon, C Company, 1st Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment

■15th Battalion, of the Frontier Force Regiment, Pakistan Army

■19th Lancers of the Pakistan Army

■10th Battalion, of the Baloch Regiment of Pakistan Army.

■Included with the TF was the 977 MP Co.

■U.N. Forces ■19th Battalion, Royal Malay Regiment of the Malaysian Army

■11th Regiment, Grup Gerak Khas (few GGK operators during rescue the Super 6-1 crews)

■7th Battalion, Frontier Force Regiment of the Pakistan Army

USC/SNA

Fiat-Oto Melara Type 6616 Armored Car seized from USC/SNA leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid's
weapons cantonment area.

The size and organizational structure of the Somali militia forces involved in the battle are not
known in detail. In all, between 2,000–4,000 regular faction members are believed to have
participated, almost all of whom belonged to Aidid's Somali National Alliance. They drew largely
from his Habar Gidir Hawiye clan, who battled U.S. troops starting 12 July 1993.

The Somali National Alliance (SNA) was formed 14 August 1992. It began as the United Somali
Congress (USC) under Aidid's leadership. At the time of Operation Gothic Serpent, the SNA was
composed of Col. Omar Gess' Somali Patriotic Movement, the Somali Democratic Movement,
the combined Digil and Mirifleh clans, the Habr Gedir of the United Somali Congress headed by
Aidid, and the newly established Southern Somali National Movement.
After formation, the SNA immediately staged an assault against the militia of the Hawadle
Hawiye clan, who controlled the Mogadishu port area. As a result, the Hawadle Hawiye were
pushed out of the area, and Aidid's forces took control.

Engagement

On Sunday - 3 October 1993, Task Force Ranger, U.S. special operations forces composed
mainly of Bravo Company 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, 1st Special Forces Operational
Detachment-Delta (better known as "Delta Force") operators, and the 160th Special Operations
Aviation Regiment (Airborne) ("The Night Stalkers"), attempted to capture Aidid's foreign
minister Omar Salad Elmi and his top political advisor, Mohamed Hassan Awale.

The plan was that Delta operators would assault the target building (using MH-6 Little Bird
helicopters) and secure the targets inside the building while four Ranger chalks (under CPT
Michael D. Steele's command) would fast rope down from hovering MH-60L Black Hawk
helicopters. The Rangers would then create a four-corner defensive perimeter around the
building while a column of nine HMMWVs and three M939 five-ton trucks (under LTC Danny
McKnight's command) would arrive at the building to take the entire assault team and their
prisoners back to base. The entire operation was estimated to take no longer than 30 minutes.

The ground-extraction convoy was supposed to reach the captive targets a few minutes after
the operation's beginning. However, it ran into delays. Somali citizens and local militia formed
barricades along Mogadishu's streets with rocks, wreckage, rubbish and burning tires, blocking
the convoy from reaching the Rangers and their captives. Aidid militiamen with megaphones
were shouting, "Kasoobaxa guryaha oo iska celsa cadowga!" ("Come out and defend your
homes!").

The Raid

At 13:50, Task Force Ranger analysts receive intelligence of Salad's location.

At 15:42, the MH-6 assault Little Birds carrying the Delta operators hit the target, the wave of
dust becoming so bad that one was forced to go around again and land out of position. Next,
the two Black Hawks carrying the second Delta assault team came into position and dropped
their teams as the four Ranger chalks prepared to rope onto the four corners surrounding the
target building. By mistake, Chalk Four being carried by Black Hawk callsign Super 67, piloted by
CW3 Jeff Niklaus, was accidentally put in a block north of their intended point. Declining the
pilot's offer to move them back down due to the time it would take to do so, leaving the
helicopter too exposed, Chalk Four intended to move down to the planned position, but intense
ground fire prevented them from doing so.
The ground convoy arrives ten minutes later near the Olympic Hotel and wait for Delta and
Rangers to complete their mission(target building).

During the operation's first moments, Ranger PFC Todd Blackburn, from Chalk Four, fell while
fast-roping from his Black Hawk Super 67 while it was hovering 70 feet (21 m) above the
streets. The film Black Hawk Down shows that he slipped when the helicopter was forced to
take evasive maneuvers to avoid an incoming RPG fired from a nearby rooftop, although,
according to Bowden, video does not show the helicopter moving. Blackburn suffered an injury
to his head and back of his neck and required evacuation by SGT Jeff Struecker's column of
three Humvees. While taking PFC Todd Blackburn back to base, SGT Dominick Pilla, assigned to
SGT Struecker's Humvee, was killed instantly when a bullet entered his head. When SGT
Struecker's Humvee column reached the base and safety, all three vehicles were riddled with
bullet holes and smoking.

At about 16:20, one of the Black Hawk helicopters, callsign Super 61 piloted by CW3 Cliff "Elvis"
Wolcott and CW3 Donovan Briley, was shot down by an RPG. Both pilots were killed in the
resulting crash and two of the crew chiefs were severely wounded. SSG Daniel Busch and SGT
Jim Smith, both Delta snipers, survived the crash and began defending the site.

An MH-6, callsign Star 41 and piloted by CW3 Karl Maier and CW5 Keith Jones, landed nearby
and Jones left the helicopter and carried Busch to the safety of the Helo while Maier provided
cover fire from the Little Bird's cockpit, repeatedly denying order to lift off while his co-pilot
was not in the Bird. He nearly hit Chalk One's LT DiTomosso arriving with Rangers and Delta
operators to secure the site. Jones and Maier evacuated SSG Busch and SGT Smith, though SSG
Busch later died of his injuries, being shot four times while defending the crash site.

A Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) team, led by Air Force Pararescueman TSgt Scott Fales,
were able to fast rope down to Super 61's crash site despite an RPG hit that crippled their
helicopter, Super 68, piloted by CW3 Dan Jollota. Despite the damage, Super 68 did make it
back to base. The CSAR team found both the pilots dead and two wounded inside the crashed
helicopter. Under intense fire, the team moved the wounded men to a nearby collection point,

where they built a makeshift shelter using Kevlar armor plates salvaged from Super 61's
wreckage.

There was confusion between the ground convoy and the assault team. The assault team and
the ground convoy waited for 20 minutes to receive their orders to move out. Both units were
under the mistaken impression that they were to be first contacted by the other. During the
wait, a second Black Hawk helicopter, callsign Super 64 and piloted by CW3 Michael Durant,
was shot down by an RPG at around 16:40.
Most of the assault team went to the first crash site for a rescue operation. Upon reaching the
site, about 90 Rangers and Delta Force operators found themselves under heavy fire. Despite
air support, the assault team was effectively trapped for the night. With a growing number of
wounded needing shelter, they occupied several nearby houses and confined the occupants for
the battle's duration. Outside, a stiff breeze stirred up blinding, brown clouds of dust.

At the second crash site, two Delta snipers, MSG Gary Gordon and SFC Randy Shughart, were
inserted by Black Hawk Super 62 – piloted by CW3 Mike Goffena. Their first two requests to be
inserted were denied, but they were finally granted permission upon their third request. They
inflicted heavy casualties on the approaching Somali mob. Super 62 had kept up their fire
support for MSG Gordon and SFC Shughart, but an RPG struck Super 62. Despite the damage,
Super 62 managed to go to the New Port and safety. When MSG Gordon was eventually killed,
SFC Shughart picked up Gordon's CAR-15 and gave it to Super 64 pilot CW3 Michael Durant. SFC
Shughart went back around the chopper's nose and held off the mob for about 10 more
minutes before he was killed. The Somalis then overran the crash site and killed all but Durant.
He was nearly beaten to death, but was saved when members of Aidid's militia came to take
him prisoner. For their actions, MSG Gordon and SFC Shughart were posthumously awarded the
Medal of Honor, the first awarded since the Vietnam War.

Repeated attempts by the Somalis to mass forces and overrun the American positions in a
series of firefights near the first crash site were neutralized by aggressive small arms fire and by
strafing runs and rocket attacks from AH-6J Little Bird helicopter gunships of the Nightstalkers,
the only air unit equipped for and trained for night fighting.

A relief convoy with elements from the Task Force 2–14 Infantry, 10th Mountain Division,
accompanied by Malaysian and Pakistani U.N. forces, arrived at the first crash site at around
02:00. No contingency planning or coordination with U.N. forces had been arranged prior to the
operation; consequently, the recovery of the surrounded American troops was significantly
complicated and delayed. Determined to protect all of the rescue convoy's members, General
Garrison made sure that the convoy would roll out in force. When the convoy finally pushed
into the city, it consisted of more than 100 U.N. vehicles including Malaysian forces' German
made Condor APCs, four Pakistani tanks (M48s), American Humvees and several M939 five-ton
flatbed trucks. This two-mile-long column was supported by several other Black Hawks and
Cobra assault helicopters stationed with the 10th Mountain Division. Meanwhile, Task Force
Ranger's "Little Birds" continued their defense of Super 61's downed crew and rescuers. The
American assault force sustained heavy casualties, including several killed, and a Malaysian
soldier died when an RPG hit his Condor vehicle. Seven Malaysians and two Pakistanis were
wounded.

Mogadishu Mile
The battle was over by 06:30 on Monday, 4 October. U.S. forces were finally evacuated to the
U.N. base by the armored convoy. While leaving the crash site, a group of Rangers and Delta
operators realized that there was no room left in the vehicles for them and were forced to
depart the city on foot to a rendez-vous point on National Street. This has been commonly
referred to as the "Mogadishu Mile". U.S. forces suffered one casualty during the mile, Sgt.
Randal J. Ramaglia, after he was hit by a bullet in the back, and successfully evacuated.

In all, 18 U.S. soldiers were killed in action during the battle and another 73 were wounded in
action. The Malaysian forces lost one soldier and had seven injured, while the Pakistanis
suffered two injured. Somali casualties were heavy, with estimates on fatalities ranging from
315 to over 2,000 combatants. The Somali casualties were a mixture of militiamen and local
civilians. Somali civilians suffered heavy casualties due to the dense urban character of that
portion of Mogadishu. Two days later, a mortar round fell on the U.S. compound, killing one
U.S. soldier, SFC Matt Rierson, and injuring another twelve. A team on special mission to
Durant's Super 64 helicopter had 2 wounded, Boxerman and James on 6 October.

Two weeks after the battle, General Garrison officially accepted responsibility. In a handwritten
letter to President Clinton, Garrison took full responsibility for the battle's outcome. He wrote
that Task Force Ranger had adequate intelligence for the mission and that their objective
(capturing targets from the Olympic Hotel) was met.

Known casualties

After the battle, the bodies of several of the conflict's U.S. casualties (Black Hawk Super 64's
crewmembers and their defenders, Delta Force soldiers MSG Gordon and SFC Shughart) were
dragged through Mogadishu's streets by crowds of local civilians and SNA forces.Through
negotiation and threats to the Habr Gidr clan leaders by ambassador Robert B. Oakley, all the
bodies were eventually recovered. The bodies were returned in horrible condition, one with a
severed head. Michael Durant was released after 11 days of captivity. On the beach near the
base, a memorial was held for those who were killed in combat.

Pakistan

A Pakistani soldier was killed and two Pakistanis were wounded.

Malaysia

Lance Corporal Mat Aznan Awang, driver of a Malaysian Condor armoured personnel carrier,
was killed when his vehicle was hit by an RPG on 3 October. He was posthumously promoted to
Corporal, and awarded the Seri Pahlawan Gagah Perkasa (Gallant Warrior/Warrior of Extreme
Valour) medal.

Somalia

Ambassador Robert B. Oakley, the U.S. special representative to Somalia, is quoted as saying:
"My own personal estimate is that there must have been 1,500 to 2,000 Somalis killed and
wounded that day, because that battle was a true battle. And the Americans and those who
came to their rescue, were being shot at from all sides ... a deliberate war battle, if you will, on
the part of the Somalis. And women and children were being used as shields and some cases
women and children were actually firing weapons, and were coming from all sides. Sort of a
rabbit warren of huts, houses, alleys, and twisting and turning streets, so those who were trying
to defend themselves were shooting back in all directions. Helicopter gun ships were being
used as well as all sorts of automatic weapons on the ground by the U.S. and the United
Nations. The Somalis, by and large, were using automatic rifles and grenade launchers and it
was a very nasty fight, as intense as almost any battle you would find."

Reliable estimates place the number of Somali insurgents killed at between 800 to as many as
1,000 with perhaps another 4,000 wounded. Somali militants, however, claimed a much lower
casualty rate. Aidid himself claimed that only 315 – civilians and militia – were killed and 812
wounded. Captain Haad, in an interview on American public television, said 133 of the SNA
militia were killed.

Military fallout

In a national security policy review session held in the White House on 6 October 1993, U.S.
President Bill Clinton directed the Acting Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral David E.
Jeremiah, to stop all actions by U.S. forces against Aidid except those required in self-defense.
He reappointed Ambassador Robert B. Oakley as special envoy to Somalia in an attempt to
broker a peace settlement and then announced that all U.S. forces would withdraw from
Somalia no later than 31 March 1994. On 15 December 1993, U.S. Secretary of Defense Les
Aspin stepped down, taking much of the blame for his decision to refuse requests for tanks and
armored vehicles in support of the mission. A few hundred U.S. Marines remained offshore to
assist with any noncombatant evacuation mission that might occur regarding the 1,000-plus
U.S. civilians and military advisers remaining as part of the U.S. liaison mission.

The Ready Battalion of the 24th Infantry Division, 1–64 Armor, was sent from Fort Stewart,
Georgia, to Mogadishu to provide heavy armoured support for U.S. forces. On 16 December
1993, Joint Task Force United Shield was approved by Clinton and launched on 14 January 1994.
On 7 February 1994, the Fleet arrived and began the withdrawal of UNOSOM-II's forces. The
U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 897, which redeployed military assets to cover the U.N.
troops' withdrawal from Somalia. On 6 March 1994, all of the remaining U.N. troops were
withdrawn, ending UNOSOM-II. On 24 April 1994, Boutros-Ghali admitted defeat and declared
the U.N. Mission was over.

Policy changes and political implications

US president Bill Clinton presenting the Medal of Honor to the widow of Master Sergeant Gary
I. Gordon, who served as Sniper Team Leader in the United States Army Special Operation
Command with Task Force Ranger in Mogadishu.

The mission in Somalia was seen by many as a failure. The Clinton administration in particular
endured considerable criticism for the operation's outcome. The main elements of the criticism
surround the administration's decision to leave the region before completing the operation's
humanitarian and security objectives, as well as the perceived failure to recognize the threat Al-
Qaida elements posed in the region as well as the threat against U.S. security interests at home.
Critics claim that Osama bin Laden and other members of Al-Qaida provided support and
training to Mohammed Farrah Aidid's forces. Osama bin Laden even denigrated the
administration's decision to prematurely depart the region stating that it displayed "the
weakness, feebleness and cowardliness of the US soldier".

The loss of U.S. military personnel during the Black Hawk Down operation evoked public
outcry. Television images of American soldiers being dragged through the streets by Somalis
were too graphic for the American public to endure. The Clinton administration responded by
scaling down U.S. humanitarian efforts in the region.

On 26 September 2006, in an interview on Fox News with Chris Wallace, former President Bill
Clinton gave his version of events surrounding the mission in Somalia. Clinton defended his exit
strategy for U.S. forces and denied that the departure was premature. He said conservative
Republicans had pushed him to leave the region before the operation's objectives could be
achieved: "...[Conservative Republicans] were all trying to get me to withdraw from Somalia in
1993 the next day after we were involved in 'Black Hawk down,' and I refused to do it and
stayed six months and had an orderly transfer to the United Nations."

Clinton's remarks would suggest the U.S. was not deterred from pursuing their humanitarian
goals because of the loss of U.S. forces during Black Hawk Down. In the same interview, he
stated that, at the time, nobody thought Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaida had anything to do
with Black Hawk Down's events. He said the mission was strictly humanitarian.

Fear of a repeat of the events in Somalia shaped U.S. policy in subsequent years, with many
commentators identifying the Battle of Mogadishu's graphic consequences as the key reason
behind the U.S.'s failure to intervene in later conflicts such as the Rwandan Genocide of 1994.
According to the U.S.'s former deputy special envoy to Somalia, Walter Clarke: "The ghosts of
Somalia continue to haunt US policy. Our lack of response in Rwanda was a fear of getting
involved in something like a Somalia all over again."Likewise, during the Iraq War when four
American mercenaries were killed in the city of Fallujah, then dragged through the streets and
desecrated by an angry mob, direct comparisons by the American media to the Battle of
Mogadishu led to the First Battle of Fallujah.

Links with Al-Qaeda

There have been allegations that Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda organization was involved in
training and funding of Aidid's men. In his 2001 book, Holy War, Inc., CNN reporter Peter
Bergen interviewed bin Laden who affirmed these allegations. According to Bergen, bin Laden
asserted that fighters affiliated with his group were involved in killing U.S. troops in Somalia in
1993, a claim he had made earlier to the Arabic newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi. The Al-Qaeda
fighters in Somalia are rumored to have included the organization's military chief, Mohammed
Atef, later killed by U.S. forces in Afghanistan. Another al-Qaeda operative who was present at
the battle was Zachariah al-Tunisi, who allegedly fired an RPG that downed one of the Black
Hawk helicopters; he was later killed by an airstrike in Afghanistan in November, 2001.

Aidid's men received some expert guidance in shooting down helicopters from fundamentalist
Islamic soldiers, most likely Al-Qaeda, who had experience fighting Russian helicopters during
Soviet-Afghan War.

Four and a half years after the Battle of Mogadishu, in an interview in May 1998, bin Laden
disparaged the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Somalia. He denied having orchestrated the
attack on the U.S. soldiers in Mogadishu but expressed delight at their deaths in battle against
Somali fighters.

Published accounts

In 1999, writer Mark Bowden published the book Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War,
which chronicles the events that surrounded the battle. The book was based on his series of
columns for The Philadelphia Inquirer about the battle and the men who fought.

Black Hawk pilot Michael Durant told his story of being shot down and captured by a mob of
Somalis in his 2003 book In the Company of Heroes.

In 2005, Staff Sergeant Matthew Eversmann, a U.S. Army Ranger and Chalk Four's leader
during the battle, compiled several different accounts into a book called The Battle of
Mogadishu.
In 2011, Staff Sergeant Keni Thomas, a U.S. Army Ranger recounted the combat experience in
"Get It On!: What It Means to Lead the Way."

Howard E. Wasdin's SEAL Team Six (2011) includes a section about his time in Mogadishu
including the Pasha CIA safe house and multiple operations including the Battle of Mogadishu
where he was severely wounded.

In 2013, Michael Whetstone, Company Commander of Charlie Company 2-14 Infantry


published his memoirs of the heroic rescue operation of Task Force Ranger in his book Madness
in Mogadishu.

Film

Bowden's book was adapted into the 2001 film Black Hawk Down, produced by Jerry
Bruckheimer and directed by Ridley Scott. Like the book, the film describes events surrounding
the operation, but there are differences between the book and the film, such as Rangers
marking targets at night by throwing strobe lights at them, when in reality the Rangers marked
their own positions and close air support targeted everything else.

Documentary

The True Story of Black Hawk Down (2003) is a TV documentary which premiered on The
History Channel. It was directed by David Keane.

Rangers Return in 2013

In March 2013 two survivors from Task Force Ranger returned to Mogadishu with a film crew
to shoot a short film Return to Mogadishu: Remembering Black Hawk Down which debuted in
October 2013 on the 20th anniversary of the battle. Author Jeff Struecker and country
singer/songwriter Keni Thomas relived the battle as they drove through the Bakaara Market in
armored vehicles and visited the Wolcott crash site.

Super 61 Returns To US

In August 2013, remains of Super 61, consisting of the mostly intact main rotor and parts of the
nose section were extracted from the exact location where it crashed returned to the United
States due to the efforts of David Snelson and Alisha Ryu, and are on display at the Airborne &
Special Operations Museum at Fort Bragg, Fayetteville, North Carolina.

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