The Afghan War Diary (AWD for short) consists of messages from several important US military communications systems. The messaging systems have changed over time; as such reporting standards and message format have changed as well. This reading guide tries to provide some helpful hints on interpretation and understanding of the messages contained in the AWD.
Most of the messages follow a pre-set structure that is designed to make automated processing of the contents easier. It is best to think of the messages in the terms of an overall collective logbook of the Afghan war. The AWD contains the relevant events, occurrences and intelligence experiences of the military, shared among many recipients. The basic idea is that all the messages taken together should provide a full picture of a days important events, intelligence, warnings, and other statistics. Each unit, outpost, convoy, or other military action generates report about relevant daily events. The range of topics is rather wide: Improvised Explosives Devices encountered, offensive operations, taking enemy fire, engagement with possible hostile forces, talking with village elders, numbers of wounded, dead, and detained, kidnappings, broader intelligence information and explicit threat warnings from intercepted radio communications, local informers or the afghan police. It also includes day to day complaints about lack of equipment and supplies.
The description of events in the messages is often rather short and terse. To grasp the reporting style, it is helpful to understand the conditions under which the messages are composed and sent. Often they come from field units who have been under fire or under other stressful conditions all day and see the report-writing as nasty paperwork, that needs to be completed with little apparent benefit to expect. So the reporting is kept to the necessary minimum, with as little type-work as possible. The field units also need to expect questions from higher up or disciplinary measures for events recorded in the messages, so they will tend to gloss over violations of rules of engagement and other problematic behavior; the reports are often detailed when discussing actions or interactions by enemy forces. Once it is in the AWD messages, it is officially part of the record - it is subject to analysis and scrutiny. The truthfulness and completeness especially of descriptions of events must always be carefully considered. Circumstances that completely change the meaning of an reported event may have been omitted.
The reports need to answer the critical questions: Who, When, Where, What, With whom, by what Means and Why. The AWD messages are not addressed to individuals but to groups of recipients that are fulfilling certain functions, such as duty officers in a certain region. The systems where the messages originate perform distribution based on criteria like region, classification level and other information. The goal of distribution is to provide those with access and the need to know, all of the information that relevant to their duties. In practice, this seems to be working imperfectly. The messages contain geo-location information in the forms of latitude-longitude, military grid coordinates and region.
The messages contain a large number of abbreviations that are essential to understanding its contents. When browsing through the messages, underlined abbreviations pop up an little explanation, when the mouse is hovering over it. The meanings and use of some shorthands have changed over time, others are sometimes ambiguous or have several meanings that are used depending on context, region or reporting unit. If you discover the meaning of a so far unresolved acronym or abbreviations, or if you have corrections, please submit them to wl-editors@sunshinepress.org.
An especially helpful reference to names of military units and task-forces and their respective responsibilities can be found at http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/enduring-freedom.htm
The site also contains a list of bases, airfields http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/afghanistan.htm Location names are also often shortened to three-character acronyms.
Messages may contain date and time information. Dates are mostly presented in either US numeric form (Year-Month-Day, e.g. 2009-09-04) or various Euro-style shorthands (Day-Month-Year, e.g. 2 Jan 04 or 02-Jan-04 or 2jan04 etc.).
Times are frequently noted with a time-zone identifier behind the time, e.g. "09:32Z". Most common are Z (Zulu Time, aka. UTC time zone), D (Delta Time, aka. UTC + 4 hours) and B (Bravo Time, aka UTC + 2 hours). A full list off time zones can be found here: http://www.timeanddate.com/library/abbreviations/timezones/military/
Other times are noted without any time zone identifier at all. The Afghanistan time zone is AFT (UTC + 4:30), which may complicate things further if you are looking up messages based on local time.
Finding messages relating to known events may be complicated by date and time zone shifting; if the event is in the night or early morning, it may cause a report to appear to be be misfiled. It is advisable to always look through messages before and on the proceeding day for any event.
David Leigh, the Guardian's investigations editor, explains the online tools they have created to help you understand the secret US military files on the war in Afghanistan: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/datablog/video/2010/jul/25/afghanistan-war-logs-video-tutorial
Reference ID | Region | Latitude | Longitude |
---|---|---|---|
AFG20071201n1097 | RC EAST | 33.0442009 | 69.50367737 |
Date | Type | Category | Affiliation | Detained |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007-12-01 15:03 | Other | Planned Event | NEUTRAL | 0 |
Enemy | Friend | Civilian | Host nation | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Killed in action | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Wounded in action | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
TF Fury Operation Winter Stand
01 Dec 07 - 01 Apr 08
AO Eagle Level 1/2
Mission Statement
Task Force Eagle conducts persistent counter-insurgency operations to disrupt the enemy throughout AO Eagle from December 2007 to April 2008 IOT permanently separate the enemy from the population, demonstrate the IRoAs resolve to continue to provide security as the ACM withdraw and set conditions to disrupt ACM infiltration in the spring.
Purpose
To set conditions for the long term transformation of Eastern Paktika by exploiting the winter void in enemy presence through persistent and extended ANSF/CF engagement in remote ACM staging areas. Ensure enemy forces are permanently separated from those remote population centers that are forced to provide sanctuary and, in so doing, prevent ACM from re-seeding in the spring.
Key Tasks
Interdict winter enemy infiltration across the border
Partner with ANSF, establishing remote patrol bases and conducting extended winter operations
Maintain freedom of maneuver in AO Eagle through winter months to continue targeted engagement and CMO in areas habitually used by enemy forces as staging areas and sanctuary
Conduct focused IO (US/ANSF/GOV) that seizes the initiative throughout AO Eagle and prevents ACM from regaining the momentum in the spring.
Continue to threaten enemy sanctuary and permanently separate the enemy link to the population in all remote villages deemed as critical for staging and transit to the Afghan interior (ring road)
Surge and maintain persistent ANSF/CF presence into isolated sections of all 10 districts.
Execute high-tempo, winter CMO, HCA and HA operations
Conduct 7-17 day patrols in designated villages from mobile, well-equipped, winterized patrol bases
Carry out persistent engagements, develop enduring relationships and establish reliable early warning networks in designated villages
Endstate
ENEMY: Enemy is unable to transit through Eastern Paktika without being reported by villagers through an extensive, well established and reliable ANSF/CF early warning network. Local population actively denies support.
POLITICAL: Respect for the provincial government by the population increases and district governments begin to expand their presence and ability to deliver services to the people through the winter months.
MILITARY: ANSF capacity increased to the degree that independent battalion and brigade level operations are possible with US enablers (CAS, CCA, QRF, Intelligence).
ANA: Unilateral complimentary operations and joint remote patrol base manning
ABP: Increase presence at border outposts (FOB Munoz, Margah, Sangar).
AUP: Dramatically increase recruiting through a sustained effort throughout the winter months, emphasizing it during every leader engagement.
ECONOMIC: Fill the critical gap in agrarian production with necessary winter grain and seed storage capacity, targeted increases in HCA and HA delivery, continued support for winter wheat seed harvesting and establishment of snow clearing contracts to facilitate commerce.
SOCIAL: Physical and Psychological separation of the enemy from the remote population centers enables population (with full tribal buy-in) to more readily reject ACM and more willingly invest in district and provincial governments. Pashtu Wali protection is voluntarily offered to coalition Soldiers and ANSF at remote patrol bases.
INFRASTRUCTURE: Road construction/remediation facilitates commerce and Coalition/ANSF force projection throughout the winter. Finalize planning for water management projects that will begin the process of collecting and moving water ISO 08 growing season.
INFORMATION: Establishment of the District Reconstruction Officer program across AO Eagle, fully manned and focused on making district centers the focal point for information dissemination and provincial/national news distribution, increasing PTS enrollment and countering ACM IO.
Report key: AA3701EC-D804-4531-A32C-71E9D0C69CBC
Tracking number: 2007-360-152953-0171
Attack on: NEUTRAL
Complex atack: FALSE
Reporting unit: CJTF-82
Unit name: CJTF-82
Type of unit: None Selected
Originator group: UNKNOWN
Updated by group: UNKNOWN
MGRS: 42SWB4702856300
CCIR:
Sigact:
DColor: GREEN