Battle of Grayana

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Battle of Grayana
Part of 1999-2005 Vulkaria War
Canadian Battle Group Lays Foundation for Development DVIDS49880.jpg
Oriol-5, one of the squads deployed to rescue crew from a downed TAH-60A Vulture.
DateSeptember 30th-October 1st, 2000
Location
Result Insurgent victory
Belligerents
 Zamastan
 Quetana
HaduastanFlag.png Haduastan
Supported by:
CCA Peacekeeping
MalvarianLiberationFrontFlagUpdated.jpg MLF insurgents
Strength
160 initial forces
3,000 rescue forces
19 aircraft
16 helicopters
9 utility vehicles
3 trucks
2,000–4,000
Casualties and losses
 Zamastan 23 killed
73 wounded
2 helicopters destroyed
700–1,000 killed

The Battle of Grayana, also known as the Grayana Incident, was the first major combat operation in the Second War in Vulkaria against the Malvarian Liberation Front insurgency and Coalition forces. On September 30th, 2000, three TAH-60A Vultures were shot down in the town of Grayana, about 10 miles east of Amstelveen during a raid to capture a high profile insurgent commander, Van'a Kamoni. The ensuing rescue mission and battle resulted in 23 Zamastanian, 6 Quetanan, and 2 Haduastan soldiers being killed. There were between 315 and 2,000 insurgent casualties.

Coalition troops were forced to withdrawal after rescuing their stranded and wounded comrades, and the battle of Granaya was considered a loss. In the aftermath of the battle, a dead Quetanan soldier was dragged through the streets of Granaya, which was shown on international television—to public outcry. The battle thusly served to shift public opinion of the war in a negative direction, especially when it led to President Abram Mullen devoting an additional 50,000 troops to the conflict.

Background

Order of battle

Raid

Aftermath

Published accounts