Operation Karez

Operation Karez was a military operation between May 13–23, 2008 involving Norwegian and German ISAF and Afghan government forces against the Taliban as part of the war in Afghanistan. Their objective was to eliminate the presence of Taliban insurgents who had regrouped in the area in the aftermath of Operation Harekate Yolo in late 2007.

Operation Karez
Part of the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

Afghanistan map
DateMay 13–23, 2008
Location
Result See aftermath
Belligerents
ISAF:
 Norway
 Germany
 United States
 Croatia
 Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Taliban
Commanders and leaders
Lt. Col. Kjell Inge Bækken
Brig. Gen. Dieter Dammjacob
Unknown
Strength
250 soldiers from Telemark Battalion
60 soldiers (mainly recce, signal and logistic personnel)
est. 35 soldiers (ETT and PSD)
30 soldiers
150 insurgents
~500 support fighters
Casualties and losses
None 13-15 killed

It was the second time in half a year that Norwegian and German ISAF forces had participated in a major offensive in the restless Badghis province in western Afghanistan. It was also the first time that the professional soldiers of the Telemark Battalion had participated in actual combat.

The name of the operation derives from the Afghan word for kareez, which is a water management system used to provide a reliable supply of water to human settlements and irrigation in hot, arid and semi-arid climates.

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