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In eastern Afghanistan, Operation Anaconda begins.
Army Chief Warrant Officer Stanley L. Harriman , of the Third Special Forces Group, is killed by friendly fire from an Air Force AC-130 aircraft along the road from Gardez to the Shahi Kot Valley.
Seven American Special Operations Forces soldiers are killed as they attempt to infiltrate the Shahi Kot Valley on a low-flying helicopter reconnaissance mission. Around 3 a.m. local time a MH-47 Chinook helicopter was hit by an rocket-propelled grenade, causing a soldier to fall out and damaging a hydraulic line. The helicopter made an emergency landing a half-mile away.
A second helicopter on the mission picked up the first helicopter's crew and flew to where the crew member had fallen. The soldiers soon came under heavy fire, and six were killed. The remaining soldiers returned fire and retrieved the bodies before returning to base.
It is not certain whether the fallen soldier died immediately or was killed by opposing soldiers.
American aircraft strike a vehicle near the village of Shikin , killing 14, including women and children.
Maj. Bryan Hilferty states that the "major battle ended three or four days ago". The U.S. sends 400 of its troops back to base.
U.S.-led forces overtake the valley and cave complexes.
General Tommy Franks declare Operation Anaconda over, "an unqualified and complete success". However others noted that it ended in confusion and uncertainty about how successfully it had destoyed al-Qaeda and Taliban forces. The Commanders of the British Royal MarinesThe Royal Marines are the United Kingdom's amphibious forces and a core component of their Rapid Reaction Force. They are lightly equipped, able to operate independently in all terrains, and highly trained as a commando force. History The first unit of En, deployed at the request of The Pentagon, thought the operation was a military disaster.
In the wake of Operation Anaconda, relations between US and UK forces on the ground soured further when 'Stars and Stripes, the magazine for American forces and their families, openly criticised the Royal Marines for returning "empty-handed" from their search for al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters&.[claiming] that Britain's contribution to the campaign was "disappointing".' Numerous Canadian soldiers from the 3rd Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (3PPCLI) where involved with Operation Anaconda, and several Canadian snipers were given commendations from the U.S military for their actions in the operation.