Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force – North (CJSOTF–N), also known as Task Force Viking, was the U.S. joint task force responsible for the northern front during the initial period of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq (OIF Rotation I). It secured Kirkuk, Mosul, and the northern oil fields; prevented 13 Iraqi Army divisions from defending Baghdad or reinforcing defensive operations against American and British troops advancing in the south, and thwarted Turkish efforts to subvert Kurdistan.
Originally, the task force planned to infiltrate northern Iraq via Turkey.[5] However, Turkey refused to grant permission for an invasion of Iraq from its soil or over its airspace. Coalition commanders instead undertook a complicated and roundabout infiltration via Jordanian airspace beginning the evening of 20 March 2003. This operation was known as "Ugly Baby". The "Ugly Baby" operation was the longest infiltration mission since World War II and the longest MC-130 Combat Talon II infiltration in history.[6]
After much diplomatic maneuvering, Turkey finally allowed American overflights on 23 March.[7]
A friendly fire incident near Pir Daoud on Sunday, 6 April 2003, killed 18 members of Task Force Viking and injured 45. An F-15 mistakenly dropped a bomb on the position of US Special Forces and Peshmerga troops instead of on the Iraqi tank 1 mile (1.6 km) away. One of the injured was Wajih Barzani, the brother of Masoud Barzani, leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and later President of Iraqi Kurdistan.
Shortly after its 10 April 2003 liberation, the Turkish government began to covertly dispatch their own special forces troops to Kirkuk. Disguised as aid workers, they were to train and equip members of the Iraqi Turkmen Front to destabilize Kurdistan and provide Turkey a pretext to intervene with a large "Peace Keeping" force. Elements of the 173rd under the command of ColonelWilliam C. Mayville Jr. identified and intercepted the Turkish soldiers, and escorted them back across the border with no shots being fired.[9]
The 1st Special Forces Command (Airborne) (Provisional) paid tribute to the Airmen, Marines, and Soldiers of Task Force Viking during a stone laying ceremony at the U.S. Army Special Operations Command Headquarters' Memorial Plaza on 30 June 2015. "Today we commemorate an event, which at the time, I don't think any of us knew would be as meaningful or as significant as it would turn out to be – which is often the case I've come to learn in these sorts of things," said Lt. Gen. Charles T. Cleveland, commanding general, USASOC, and Task Force Viking commander.
^Bruni, Frank (22 March 2003). "A NATION AT WAR: ANKARA; Turkey Sends Army Troops into Iraq, Report Says". New York Times. Retrieved 16 December 2008. Turkish troops moved across the border into northern Iraq tonight, hours after the country's leaders announced that they had opened their airspace to American military planes bound for Iraq. Between 1,000 and 1,500 Turkish soldiers crossed into Iraq at Cukurca, in the far east of Turkey near where it borders both Iraq and Iran, Turkish military officials said
^Ware, Michael (24 April 2003). "The Turks Enter Iraq". Time magazine. Archived from the original on 25 April 2003. Retrieved 16 December 2008. ...a dozen Turkish Special Forces troops were dispatched ... [to] Kirkuk [under] the pretext of accompanying humanitarian aid ... "We were waiting for them," says a U.S. paratroop officer... The 173rd Airborne commanders suspect an amalgam of local Turkoman parties under the banner of the Iraqi Turkoman Front (ITF) were to be used by the covert team to wreak havoc.
"Global Scouts"(PDF). NDIA Symposium. US Army Special Operations Command. 5 February 2004. Archived from the original(PDF (fm PowerPoint)) on 14 March 2007. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
Krump, Captain Jamie L. (Winter 2004). "Joint and Expeditionary Fuel Logistics in Northern Iraq (Quartermaster Commentary)". Quartermaster Professional Bulletin. Fort Lee, Virginia: US Army Quartermaster Center and School. ISSN0896-9795.
Zimmerman, Dwight (2007). "Task Force Viking at Debecka Pass". Beyond Hell and Back: How America's Special Operations Forces became the World's Greatest Fighting Unit. St. Martin's Press. pp. 241–284. ISBN978-0312363871.
"Task Force Viking, Northern Iraq, 2002-2003". Special Warfare: Special Edition, USASOC 2035. Fort Bragg, North Carolina: John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School. 2017. ISSN1058-0123.