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Posts Tagged ‘eastern Afghanistan’

Afghanistan blast kills 4

NATO says an explosion has killed two of its troops outside a military base in eastern Afghanistan. Afghan authorities say Sunday’s blast in the city of Gardez killed two other people and wounded several more.

“Afghan policeman” kills six NATO troops

A gunman in an Afghan police uniform has killed six service members in eastern Afghanistan, NATO forces say. The BBC reports that the man turned his weapon on the troops during a training mission, said NATO. He was also killed in the incident in Nangarhar province.

Suicide bombers hit NATO base, Jalalabad airport


KABUL (Agencies) – The Taliban launched a pre-dawn attack on a major NATO base in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, triggering a firefight with foreign and Afghan forces that left eight militants dead.
Another 10 people, including three children, were killed in a motorcycle bombing at a market in a remote area of northern Afghanistan in an attack apparently targeting a local pro-government militia leader.
NATO later announced that three foreign troops were killed in southern Afghanistan after an insurgent attack, without giving further details.
The Taliban said 14 suicide bombers were involved in the strike on the base at Jalalabad Airport, which was the target of a similar attack in June. But the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said only one was wearing a suicide vest.
“The forward operating base received small arms fire from an unknown number of insurgents and after gaining positive identification of insurgent fighting positions an ANA (Afghan National Army) and ISAF quick reaction force was sent to the area,” it said.
Hours later, 10 people, including three children, were killed and 18 others were wounded when a motorcycle packed with explosives detonated in a market in the remote Imam Saheb district of northern Kunduz province.
District chief Mohammad Ayoub Haqyar told AFP that the explosion bore the hallmarks of previous Taliban attacks but there was no immediate confirmation of responsibility.
A pro-government militia commander was among the dead and was the likely target, he added. “It’s too early to say (for certain) but we believe Commander Abdul Manan could have been the target. He was killed,” said Haqyar.
A second motorcycle bomb attack on Saturday wounded five people, including a child, in the southern city of Kandahar, a security official and a local hospital doctor said.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said by telephone from an undisclosed location that 14 suicide bombers were involved in the attacks and that as many as 30 foreign soldiers had been killed.
Just north of Nangarhar province, of which Jalalabad is the capital, Taliban insurgents fought Afghan and ISAF troops in Kunar province for several hours. Three Taliban fighters were killed, ISAF said.

NATO choppers entered Pak to kill suspected Al-Qaeda, Taliban


KABUL (Reuters) – Two NATO helicopters killed 30 suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban elements on Pakistani soil after a rare manned pursuit across the border from Afghanistan, NATO forces said on Sunday.
The two Apache attack helicopters from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) crossed the border from eastern Afghanistan on Friday after the insurgents attacked a remote Afghan security outpost in Khost province.
ISAF spokesman Sergeant Matt Summers confirmed that the helicopters had attacked after crossing into Pakistan. He did not comment on which countriesÂ’ forces were involved, but the US is the only coalition member that uses Apaches.
The US regularly uses pilotless drone aircraft for missile strikes in PakistanÂ’s borderlands.
However, manned military flights across the border are extremely rare. ISAF said in a statement issued late on Sunday that the helicopters were following its rules of engagement when they crossed into Pakistan.
Two Kiowa helicopters returned to the area on Saturday and killed at least four more insurgents, the statement said.
ISAF was not immediately able to confirm whether the Kiowa helicopters had also crossed the border. US forces make up the majority of ISAF troops in Afghanistan’s east. A new book by veteran US journalist Bob Woodward claims that the Central Intelligence Agency also has a 3,000-man “covert army” of elite, well-trained Afghans, who conduct secret operations in Pakistan, according to The Washington Post.
The newspaper obtained an advance copy of the book, which is due for release on Monday.
Despite the presence of almost 150,000 foreign troops, violence is at its worst across Afghanistan since US-backed Afghan forces ousted the Taliban in late 2001.

Afghan war leaks skewed: Pakistan


WASHINGTON – The Obama administration Sunday lashed out at a website called WikiLeaks for posting secret US military reports on the Afghan war detailing the problems American troops have faced in battling the Taliban and in working with Pakistani allies who allegedly are also helping the Afghan insurgency.
“The United States strongly condemns the disclosure of classified information by individuals and organisations which could put the lives of Americans and our partners at risk, and threaten our national security,” President Barack Obama’s National Security Adviser James Jones said in a statement, calling Wikileaks’ action “irresponsible”.
“Wikileaks made no effort to contact us about these documents – the United States government learned from news organisations that these documents would be posted,” he said. “These irresponsible leaks will not impact our ongoing commitment to deepen our partnerships with Afghanistan and Pakistan; to defeat our common enemies; and to support the aspirations of the Afghan and Pakistani people.”
Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Hussain Haqqani joined Jones in denouncing the release of unsubstantiated information by Wikileaks alleging that Pakistani intelligence service’s was backing the Afghan militants. “The documents circulated by wikileaks do not reflect the current on-ground realities,” he said.
Rejecting the “unprocessed reports”, Haqqani said they “reflect nothing more than single source comments and rumours, which abound on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and are often proved wrong after deeper examination,” he said, after The New York Times quoted Wikileaks documents in a story.
Ambassador Haqqani drew attention to the fact that Pakistan’s Government under the democratically elected leadership of President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani is following a clearly laid out strategy to fight and marginalize terrorists. “Our military and intelligence services are effectively executing that policy.”
SCEPTICISM!
But some observers here were sceptical about the strong reaction of the Obama administration to the leaked documents that denigrate Pakistan and its security forces. “Something is not right here,” one expert said, adding that WikiLeaks could not have done it without a wink and a nod by some elements in the administration wanting to keep Pakistan under pressure.
On its part, WikiLeaks said the documents produced by military personnel and intelligence officers, which it calls the “Afghan War Diary,” cover “lethal military actions” by the US military in Afghanistan from 2004 through 2009. They also include logs of meetings with political figures, the Website said.
WikiLeaks said the reports, obtained from an undisclosed source, do not generally cover top-secret operations, or those of European or other international coalition members. It said it has delayed the release of about 15,000 reports “as part of a harm minimisation process demanded” by its source. “After further review, these reports will be released, with occasional redactions, and eventually, in full, as the security situation in Afghanistan permits,” the whistle-blower organisation said.
The New York Times, The Guardian newspaper in Britain and the German magazine Der Spiegel published portions of the reports Sunday.
The Times said the documents “portray American forces as being starved for resources and battling an insurgency that was getter larger and better coordinated year by year.”
The classified documents suggest that Pakistan, an ostensible ally of the United States, allows representatives of its spy service to meet directly with the Taliban in secret strategy sessions to organise networks of militant groups that fight against American soldiers in Afghanistan, and even hatch plots to assassinate Afghan leaders.
The more than 91,000 documents – most of which consist of low-level field reports – represent one of the largest single disclosures of such information in US history, according to media reports.
The documents provide new insights into a period in which the Taliban was gaining strength, Afghan civilians were growing increasingly disillusioned with their government, and US troops in the field often expressed frustration at having to fight a war without sufficient resources.
The documents disclose for the first time that Taliban insurgents appear to have used portable, heat-seeking surface-to-air missiles to shoot down US helicopters. Heat-seeking missiles, which the United States provided to the anti-Soviet Afghan fighters known as Mujahiddin in the 1980s, helped inflict heavy losses on the Soviet Union until it withdrew its forces from Afghanistan in 1989.
One report from the spring of 2007 refers to witnesses who saw what appeared to be a heat-seeking missile destroy a CH-47 transport helicopter. The Times first unearthed the document in its review of the files. The Chinook crash killed five Americans, a British citizen and a Canadian. Even though the initial US report stated that the helicopter was “engaged and struck with a missile,” a NATO spokesman suggested that small-arms fire was responsible for bringing down the helicopter.
Although the use of such weapons by the Taliban appears to be very limited, the disclosure that relatively low-tech insurgents had acquired such arms would have fostered the impression that the Afghan war effort was faltering at a time when US fatalities in Iraq were at record levels and the Bush administration was struggling to maintain support for the Iraq war even among its Republican base, The Washington Post opined.
Senior administration officials acknowledged to the Post they had been anxiously awaiting the documents’ release but sought to diminish their significance. “There is not a lot new here for those who have been following developments closely,” one US official was quoted as saying.
The documents also appear to suggest that ISI might have assisted insurgents in planning some attacks, at least in the past. The Pakistani government denied the allegations in the classified intelligence documents.
The documents detail multiple reports of cooperation between Retired Lt Gen Hamid Gul, who ran ISI in the late 1980s, and Afghan insurgents battling US forces in the mountainous eastern region of the country. In the latter years of the anti-Soviet insurgency, Gul worked closely with several major Mujahiddin fighters who currently are battling US troops and trying to topple the Afghan government. The documents also include reports that Gul was trying to re-establish contacts with insurgent leaders such as Gulbaddin Hekmatyar and Jalaluddin Haqqani, whose fighters have been responsible for some of the bloodiest attacks on US forces.
The United States has pushed the United Nations to put General Gul on a list of international terrorists, and top American officials said they believed he was an important link between active-duty Pakistani officers and militant groups, according to the Times.
General Gul, who says he is retired and lives on his pension, dismissed the allegations as “absolute nonsense,” speaking to the Times by telephone from his home in Rawalpindi. “I have had no hand in it.” He added, “American intelligence is pulling cotton wool over your eyes.”
Senior Pakistani officials consistently deny that General Gul still works at the ISIÂ’s behest.
Over the past decade, US intelligence has collected evidence of direct contacts between ISI and Jalaluddin Haqqani, Hekmatyar and Taliban leader Mohammed Omar. That evidence includes both human intelligence and intercepted communications, officials said.
As the new Afghan war strategy was being formulated late last year, Obama stepped up private pressure on the Pakistanis to sever ties with the Taliban, suggesting that if there wasnÂ’t improvement, the United States would begin to take matters into its own hands, reports aid.
“The key thing to bear in mind is that the administration is not naive about Pakistan,” an Obama administration official was quoted as saying in the Post. “The problem with the Pakistanis is that the more you threaten them, the more they become entrenched and don’t see a path forward with you.”
Other reports give accounts of Afghan police chiefs skimming the pay of their patrol officers or placing nonexistent “ghost” troops on their rolls so that they could pocket the additional salaries.
Another report that chronicles a massive Taliban attack on Combat Outpost Keating in eastern Afghanistan quotes frantic radio calls from an overwhelmed US lieutenant seeking air support to hold off the much larger Taliban force. The attack on the base was chronicled in a The Washington Post report this year, based on interviews with the officer and his troops.
At times the US troops show a lack of knowledge about Afghanistan, botching the names of cities and the relationships between senior Afghan officials.
The reports highlight how civilian casualties resulting from mistakes on the battlefield have alienated Afghans. Over the past year, civilian casualties in Afghanistan have dropped significantly. But many of the problems referred to in the memo-a resilient Taliban, porous borders with Pakistani safe havens and largely ineffectual Afghan government-remain. Taken together, the reports indicate that American soldiers on the ground are inundated with accounts of a network of Pakistani assets and collaborators that runs from the Pakistani tribal belt along the Afghan border, through southern Afghanistan, and all the way to the capital, Kabul.
Much of the information – raw intelligence and threat assessments gathered from the field in Afghanistan- cannot be verified and likely comes from sources aligned with Afghan intelligence, which considers Pakistan an enemy, and paid informants, The Post said. Some describe plots for attacks that do not appear to have taken place.
Some of the reports describe Pakistani intelligence working alongside Al Qaeda to plan attacks. Experts cautioned that although PakistanÂ’s militant groups and al-Qaeda work together, directly linking ISI with Al Qaeda is difficult.
The records also contain firsthand accounts of American frustration at PakistanÂ’s unwillingness to confront insurgents who launched attacks near Pakistani border posts, moved openly by the truckload across the frontier, and retreated to Pakistani territory for safety.
Behind the scenes, both Bush and Obama administration officials as well as top American commanders have confronted top Pakistani military officers with accusations of ISI complicity in attacks in Afghanistan, and even presented top Pakistani officials with lists of ISI and military operatives believed to be working with militants.
Benjamin Rhodes, Deputy National Security Adviser for Strategic Communications, said that Pakistan had been an important ally in the battle against militant groups, and that Pakistani soldiers and intelligence officials had worked alongside the United States to capture or kill Qaeda and Taliban leaders.
Still, he said that the “status quo is not acceptable,” and that the havens for militants in Pakistan “pose an intolerable threat” that Pakistan must do more to address.
“The Pakistani government – and PakistanÂ’s military and intelligence services – must continue their strategic shift against violent extremist groups within their borders,” he said. American military support to Pakistan would continue, he said.
Several Congressional officials said that despite repeated requests over the years for information about Pakistani support for militant groups, they usually receive vague and inconclusive briefings from the Pentagon and CIA.
Monitoring Desk adds: Pakistani officials inside and outside Afghanistan on Monday reacted angrily to the publication of a trove of secret US military documents that suggested PakistanÂ’s spy agency collaborated with the Taliban, and they said the US is using Pakistan as a scapegoat for its failing war, reports The Boston Globe and The Washington Post.
The ISI blasted the leaked reports, calling the accusations malicious, far-fetched and unsubstantiated.
The reports, which were released by the online whistleblower Wikileaks, raised new questions about whether the US can succeed in convincing Pakistan to sever its historical links to the Taliban and deny them sanctuary along the Afghan border – actions that many analysts believe are critical for success in Afghanistan.
A senior ISI official, speaking on condition of anonymity, denied the allegations, saying they were from raw intelligence reports that had not been verified and were meant to impugn the reputation of the spy agency.
The official said the agency was still sifting through the documents, but, he added, the allegations did not sound new and that they appeared to contain no concrete evidence of ISI backing for the Afghan insurgency.
“In the intelligence business, anything and everything is reported. If tomorrow a person walks into my office and says he saw Osama bin Laden or XYZ, I have to report that. That does not become credible information or intelligence until and unless that is corroborated,” the official said. “The majority of these reports coming out of Wikileaks fall into that category.”
The official said, however, that some of the allegations sound “very damning” and could erode support among the American public for the US alliance with Pakistan. But he said that was not a major concern.
“It is our war that we are fighting. If the Americans don’t think they can support us, sorry. Tough luck,” the official said. “We will continue to do what we are doing.”
Maj-Gen Athar Abbas, spokesman for PakistanÂ’s Army, was not reachable for comment Monday on the intelligence reports.
Other reports mention former ISI officials, including LT-Gen (r) Hamid Gul, who headed the agency in the late 1980s when Pakistan and the US were supporting Mujahideen in their fight against the Soviets in Afghanistan.
Talking to BBC, Gul, who appeared multiple times throughout the reports, denied allegations that he was working with the Taliban, saying, “These leaked documents against me are a pure fiction which is being sold as intelligence and nothing else.”
“It’s not intelligence,” Gen Gul told the BBC. “It may have a financial angle to it but more than that it is not hardcore (intelligence). I’m an old veteran. I know. This is not intelligence.”
He said the leaked documents should prompt Pakistan to drop its alliance with the US. The Americans are “facing defeat in Afghanistan and to cover that they are coming up with false allegations against Pakistan,” he said. “This is a pack of lies to malign Pakistan army and the ISI.”
PakistanÂ’s Ambassador to Afghanistan Mohammad Sadiq, said in an interview in Kabul that regardless of how the documents emerged, they cast a poor light on the Obama Administration.
Pakistani officials on both sides of the border dismissed the disclosures that Pakistani spies meet and coordinate attacks with Taliban leaders. Some officials assumed this was an intentional effort by the Obama Administration to exert pressure on their government or smear their reputation.
“You know the quality of the intelligence, it’s like WMD in Iraq,” said one senior Pakistani official. “What they are saying is not possible. If really the ISI is so bad, why are they cooperating so closely with ISI? This is a typical way of pressurising. It’s not only this case.”
The official added that “leaks are an instrument of policy in the US”. He said Pakistan takes the blame for America losing in Afghanistan.
“The whole thing has become a joke. This is really not serious. You cannot fight wars like this. When you are fighting a war, you need a more serious approach. I think the whole approach is full of farce.”

Indian camp in Afghanistan attacked by Taliban militants

Today the Taliban militants attacked the Indian road construction camp in eastern Afghanistan where numerous vehicles have been burnt.
However, in the attack in Khost province’s Domanda district, no deaths or injuries have been were reported. The suspected militant was from the mountainous eastern region bordering Pakistan who had launched an attack around 2 am.
Such attacks [...]

NATO admits killing five Afghan civilians

NATO admitted that its troops had killed five civilians, including three women, during a botched nighttime attack in February in south-eastern Afghanistan. Shortly after NATO troops who were conducting a joint patrol with Afghan forces raided a house February 12 in Gardez, the capital of Paktia province, the alliance said its forces killed two armed insurgents and found three women who were dead before its forces entered the house. It had said the women were bound and gagged.

Gen Kayani to decide about NW op: Holbrooke


WASHINGTON (Agencies) – Al-Qaeda has ‘blown it’ through its excessive brutality and is now under ‘fantastic pressure’ because of the loss of key leaders, US envoy Richard Holbrooke said Sunday.
Holbrooke said the organisation that masterminded the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States now was less an organisation that plans attacks than one that seeks to inspire Muslims to jihad. He said the US administration takes the view that ‘they have, in a sense, blown it’.
In an interview with CNN, Holbrooke said Al-Qaeda’s top external operations chief and 10 to 12 other key leaders have been eliminated in the past year ‘by activities’, an apparent allusion to US drone attacks in Pakistan’s border tribal areas. “They are under fantastic pressure,” he said.
Holbrooke acknowledged that there were still ‘terrible incidents’ like the suicide attack by a Jordanian double agent in late December that killed eight people at a CIA base in eastern Afghanistan. But he said Al-Qaeda’s excessive brutality had diminished their ideological appeal.
At the same time, he said, relations between the United States and Pakistan have significantly improved over the past year. “We feel clearly that we’re working more closely together with them. And I think that’s a very big step forward,” he said.
He said the Pakistanis have moved over 100,000 troops from their eastern border with India to the western border areas that the Taliban have long used as a safe haven. “They have two divisions in Swat right now. They have several other divisions in the south. Of course, it would be extremely valuable to go in North Waziristan. Everyone understands that,” he said.
But he said it was for the Pakistani Army to assess the situation and decide where to put its resources.
“In the last 13 months, since this (Obama) Administration took over, there has been a significant improvement across the board in the relationship between our government and the government of Pakistan,” Holbrooke said.
The American diplomat saw erosion of distinction between Afghan and Pakistan Taliban, if such a distinction ever existed, and remarked that a combination of Pakistanis’ developing a strong awareness in reaction to the Taliban brutality and high-level US-Pakistan engagement had contributed to an evolution.
“All of this, plus the recognition that the distinction between Afghan Taliban and the Pakistan Taliban, if it ever existed, has eroded, and it has led the Pakistan to take a much more forward-leaning position,” he said.
“There was above all a backlash from the excesses of the Taliban in Swat, South Waziristan and their attacks in places like Lahore, Rawalpindi, Islamabad and Karachi, have all contributed to an evolution.”
Citing the top American officials’ meetings with Pakistani civilian leadership including President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, besides Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, he said “We feel clearly that we are working more closely together with them. And I think that is a very big step forward.”
“Pakistanis captured the number two person of the (Afghan) Taliban, Mullah Baradar. That is a big deal.”
“Of course, it will be extremely valuable for them to go in North Waziristan. Everyone understands that. But that is for the Pakistani Army to decide based on their resources and their assessment of the situation. We all know that if you spread yourself too thin, there can be a backlash. And I leave that to General Kayani,” he added.
Responding to a question about the political stability in the country, Holbrooke said, “It is an internal process,” but noted a constructive democratic improvement in the situation when compared to what it was a year ago.
According to Holbrooke, political competition has now returned to the same kind that people are familiar with in the United States.
“It involves an opposition party, led by Nawaz Sharif, the government of President Zardari; it involves the discussions they are having, and the military has said very clearly that they don’t want to get involved.”

Troops seize Damadola for first time


KHAR – The security forces have concluded military operations against militants in Bajaur Agency after successfully overrunning Taliban and Al-Qaeda headquarters in Damadola.
Local military commanders told a group of media persons on Tuesday that as many as 22,00 militants had been killed since the launch of operation ‘Sherdil’ in August 2008, while 149 troops embraced martyrdom and 615 got injured.
“Damadola used to be nerve centre of terrorism because of its strategic importance linked to Afghanistan, Chitral, and Swat-Malakand region,” Commandant Frontier Corps Major General Tariq Khan said while briefing media persons at Damadola. DG ISPR Major General Ather Abbas was also present.
General Khan said the security forces had razed a key Taliban and Al-Qaeda complex dug into rocky mountains close to Mulla Salam ridge and the Afghan border after killing 75 local and foreign militants.
“There were Egyptians, Uzbeks, Chechens and Afghans killed in the operation,” he said, adding that Al-Qaeda was there and had occupied the ridges. “There were 156 caves designed as a defensive complex,” he said.
Tariq Khan said that for the first time Pakistan Army uniformed soldiers had arrived in Damadola after a recent operation and the Pakistan flag had been raised for the first time since (independence in) 1947.
Damadola, in the Bajaur tribal region, was the scene of a 2006 US drone strike that targeted Al-Qaeda number 2 Ayman Al-Zawahiri, who managed to escape.
The Commander likened the area in 2008 to an independent state run by an Afghan warrior, he identified as Qazi Ziaur Rehman, who was in charge of administration and collected tax from local people.
Maulavi Faqir Mohammad, who headed Pakistan’s umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban faction in Bajaur, received help from neighbouring Afghan province Kunar but was now on the run, the military said. “We will deal with him,” Khan said.
“We have now cleared this area till the Afghan border. Military operation is in its final stages and policing has been started,” he said, adding that Damadola covered four to six square kilometres and lies nearly 20 kilometres from the Afghan border.
He said that Army first mounted an operation in Bajaur in August 2008 and claimed victory in February last year and switched its focus to Swat-Malakand region and South Waziristan Agency. “Then this surrendered valley again turned into militants’ safe haven, we then came back and cleared the area,” he said, adding that now their leadership did not exist. Twenty-five percent of them have gone to Afghanistan, 15 percent have gone back to Swat and other native areas,” Khan claimed.
General Khan appealed to international community to help PakistanÂ’s security forces in equipment to manage the rugged border as well as assistance to the local people with food and services in a bid to keep Taliban at bay. He said that backing of local tribesmen to the security forces had played important role in the success of the operation.
Answering a question, General Khan said there were two plans for rehabilitation and reconstructions in the recovered areas but due to paucity of funds, the proposal remained dormant.
To another question about former MNA from Jammat-I-Islami, Sahibzada Haroon Rasheed Khan said he had been declared proclaimed offender for his support to militants, adding his brother had been arrested.
When his attention was drawn towards activities of Qari Ziaur Rehman, another militant commander, FC Commandant said he was also on the run and was reportedly operating out from Gangal village on other side of the border.
He also said that ISAF’s taskforce operating on the other side of the border was fully cooperating with the Pakistani security forces but due to lack of manpower, its troops were not much effective. “They had killed dozens of militants on their side of the border,” he said.
Agencies add: Pak Army revealed on Tuesday a vast Taliban and Al-Qaeda hideout dug into mountains near the Afghan border and captured in an offensive that killed 75 local and foreign militants.
Commanders gave journalists a guided tour of the bastion, carved into sheer rock within clear view of the snow-capped mountains of eastern Afghanistan and said by one general to comprise 156 caves developed over five to seven years.
The troops seized the complex in its latest offensive against militants in its semi-autonomous tribal belt.
Many townspeople stood on the roof of a pock-marked shell of a building, looking on as militiamen banged drums, danced with their assault rifles held aloft and chanting “Long Live Pakistan”.
Maj-Gen Tariq Khan told journalists on the visit that the warren of caves in the Damadola area had served as a militant headquarters until it was overrun by troops in an offensive launched in January.
“There were Egyptians, Uzbeks, Chechens and Afghans killed in the operation,” he said.
“The first Pakistan Army uniformed soldiers have arrived in Damadola after a recent operation and the Pakistan flag has been raised for the first time since (independence in) 1947”, he said.
“We have concluded operations up to the Afghan border. We think the Bajaur operations have now more or less ended as dedicated military operations.”
Journalists saw bedding such as pillows and mattresses that suggested the inhabitants had camped out for significant periods.
“Al-Qaeda was there. They had occupied the ridges. There were 156 caves designed as a defensive complex,” Maj Tariq said.
Col Noman Saeed told AFP the latest offensive had killed 75 militants. Another 76 had been arrested and 364 were forced to surrender, he said. Such death tolls are impossible to confirm independently.
As the journalists visited, hundreds of tribesmen celebrated in front of the television cameras, waving guns in the air and hailing the Army. Some vowed to form pro-government militias – known locally as lashkars – to prevent the TalibanÂ’s return.
“I am happy, the Army has brought peace to this area,” said local man Habibullah, who has one name only. “We are ready to join the lashkar.”
Many houses were decked in green and white Pakistani flags, but shops and markets destroyed in bombing runs remained closed.

Pakistan should decide on anti-Taliban offensive: Gates

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said Friday that Pakistan’s leadership has to decide for itself whether the country needed to expand its anti-Taliban campaign along the Afghan border.
Gates, who is visiting Islamabad after discussing the South Asian security situation with India, appreciated the Pakistani security forces’ offensives against Islamist militants in recent months.
“Pakistan is a [...]

Taliban militants claim responsibility

Taliban militants have claimed responsibility for an attack on a U.S. base in Khost province, eastern Afghanistan. They also said they attacked Canadian soldiers in southern Kandahar province, VOA reports.

Taliban claims attack that killed eight Americans

The Taliban on Thursday claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on a base in eastern Afghanistan that killed eight Americans, a spokesman told AFP. “We claim responsibility for the attack,” purported Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed

Czech troops in Nazi symbols row

Three Czech soldiers who served as part of the Nato force in Afghanistan have been suspended for wearing Nazi symbols, Czech defence officials say. Two are said to have adorned their helmets with symbols of SS divisions while serving in eastern Afghanistan.

8 U.S. troops killed in Afghanistan attack

Eight U.S. troops died in tribal militia attacks on two remote American outposts in eastern Afghanistan Saturday, military officials said. The attacks, which also killed two Afghan security officers, were the deadliest in months for American troops, The New York Times reported Sunday.

Fighters kill Afghan police chief

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Taliban militants have killed a district police chief in an attack on a government base in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz, officials say.

At least one other person was killed when the militants attacked the compound in Archi district.

Reports say the attackers struck before dawn with rocket propelled grenades and small arms fire.

There have been increasing levels of violence in the province of Kunduz over the past few months.

After militants launched their attack on the government compound, the police chief came out to provide assistance, district governor Shaikh Dabi told the AFP news agency.

"The Taliban ambushed him and killed him," he said.

Eyewitnesses spoke of a lengthy gun battle after the attack began.

Provincial targets

The incident comes as US and Afghan forces intensify their operations against Taliban militants in the south of the country ahead of nationwide elections next week.

On Monday, Taliban militants attacked official buildings in the city of Pul-i-Alam in eastern Afghanistan, killing five people and injuring many others.

It was the latest in a series of similar co-ordinated attacks on provincial cities in recent months.

The Taliban have vowed to disrupt the elections and have stepped up attacks in recent weeks.

But the BBC’s Martin Patience in Kabul says it is likely that violence across the country would have escalated despite next week’s elections.

Such attacks on provincial government compounds are designed to weaken the authority of the Afghan government, our correspondent says.

The Taliban target provincial headquarters because they are not guarded as closely as institutions in Kabul.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

More US troops die in Afghanistan

US soldiers bear the coffin of a soldier killed in Afghanistan

Three American soldiers died on Sunday after coming under attack in eastern Afghanistan, the international peacekeeping force, Isaf, says.

Six foreign soldiers were killed on Saturday, making it one of the worst weekends for foreign forces since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001.

The casualties come as concern grows over the aims of the Isaf mission.

On Sunday British parliamentarians said the UK mission in Afghanistan lacked a realistic strategy.

‘Very tough day’

The three US soldiers were killed on Sunday in an incident in eastern Afghanistan, Isaf says. Their patrol was hit by a roadside bomb and then came under gun attack from militants.

It has now been confirmed that six soldiers died in various incidents on Saturday:

  • Three US soldiers died in roadside bomb blasts in the southern province of Kandahar
  • A French soldier was killed in a gun battle in Kapisa province north of the capital, Kabul
  • Two more soldiers, whose nationality has not been disclosed, died in the south

"Yesterday (Saturday) was a very tough day for Isaf as we lost more brave soldiers who were striving to provide security for the Afghan population," an Isaf statement said on Sunday.

French soldier in operation in Kapisa province

The incidents come after July saw the highest monthly death toll for foreign troops since 2001.

There were 43 Americans among the 74 killed.

There are altogether currently more than 100,000 US-led troops in Afghanistan fighting a growing Taliban insurgency.

US President Barack Obama has ordered an additional 21,000 troops to the country by the end of the year.

Violence has increased ahead of presidential elections on 20 August.

Civilians and Afghan security officials have also come under attack as insurgents target election candidates and officials.

‘Poor planning’

On Sunday, British MPs said the military mission in Afghanistan had failed to deliver on its promises because troops had too many tasks.

The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee said "mission creep" had brought too many responsibilities, including fighting the drugs trade.

Poor government planning and a lack of realistic strategy and clear direction undermined the mission, the MPs said.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Suicide bombers hit Afghan city

breaking news

Suicide bombers have targeted government buildings in the south-eastern Afghan city of Khost, as the Taleban fought security forces.

Heavy gunfire and explosions were heard near the main police station, attorney general’s office, courts and a local bank branch, Associated Press reported.

The battles come amid a spike of violence in the country ahead of elections on 20 August.

The Taliban have recently carried out several attacks on provincial cities.

In May, six people were killed when militants launched simultaneous assaults on government buildings in the city of Khost.

Last week five security personnel were killed in attacks in eastern Afghanistan.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Suicide Attackers Strike Southeast Afghan City

KABUL — For the second time in a week, Taliban fighters armed with suicide vests and automatic weapons attacked a provincial capital in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, triggering hours-long gunbattles that left seven militants dead, off…

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Afghan plan

US Marines search a compound in the Garmsir district of Helmand Province, Afghanistan, 12 July 2009

By Adam Brookes
BBC News, Washington

The news from eastern Afghanistan is, on examination, mixed.

In Gardez and Jalalabad, at least six Afghan security personnel were killed in a series of coordinated attacks by suicide bombers and gunmen on Tuesday.

The bombers strapped explosives to their chests and then tried to run into government offices. One blew himself up, killing three members of the Afghan security forces. Two others were shot by police.

One tried to get into the office of the provincial governor, but was shot. Another attacked a police station. He was shot, too.

The attacks suggest a high degree of organisation and coordination, and a measure of fanatacism. But the police response suggests that the authorities are far from helpless when under attack.

Stripped mountains

News of these incidents in Gardez caught my eye.

I remember reporting on heavy fighting between Afghan and US forces near Gardez. I remember the US gunships swooping low over the plains and rocketing the mountainsides. American bombing stripped the trees in mountain villages of all their leaves.

I was reminded of those spectral images of denuded forests from World War I. The bodies of young Taleban fighters lay amid the rubble, stiffening in the dry, crisp air.

That was seven years ago.

Yet, here we are in 2009, and the same war is being fought in the same place by the same people.

"We know what we need to do. I think we know how to do it. It’s now a matter of resourcing it and executing it"

Adm Mike Mullen
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

In the course of those seven years, nothing conclusive has happened in Afghanistan.

The Obama administration is now trying to act conclusively – or at least in a fashion which will tip this conflict towards a conclusion.

By the end of this summer more than 90,000 US and Nato troops will be deployed. That is not as many as are in Iraq, but it is starting to be a military effort of comparable dimensions.

The president’s strategy review – which he announced in March – reworked some of the war’s basic assumptions.

We are now in the middle of another review – this time conducted by the new commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal.

Resigned

We expect that General McChrystal will find that without an even greater expansion in the number of Afghan security forces, the success of the overall military effort will remain in the balance.

The current plan is to expand the Afghan from 85,000 to 134,000 in the next two years or so. General McChrystal may well seek more than that – with the funding to match.

And that will prompt a further round of political soul-searching in Washington.

The increase in coalition and troop numbers have a clearly stated purpose: to provide security for the Afghan people, and to open up a space in which development and governance can start to take root.

Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was in Afghanistan last week. He said his troops were "the finest counterinsurgency force in the world".

Graph showing all US casualties in Afghanistan for 2009 only

"We know what we need to do," he said. "I think we know how to do it. It’s now a matter of resourcing it and executing it."

Some officials, though, remain concerned that Afghan capacity in development and governance will never rise to American expectations, even reduced expectations.

Even if US and Nato troops succeed in bringing a measure of security, "where is this Afghan official who will step in", asked one.

American and British officials seem resigned to the idea that Hamid Karzai will retain the presidency in next month’s elections, and they will have to put up with what they often describe as his corrupt and ineffectual administration.

One source close to Afghan policy-making says the hope is no longer for a "single writ of government country-wide". Rather, he says, "local arrangements are the key".

In practice, that may mean shoring up local power structures based on tribes or mayors or governors, rather than hoping for a central government whose power flows through the entire country; a patchwork of politics, rather than a pattern.

This intensification of the war by the Obama administration in part explains why the coalition casualties are rising.

July has seen more US, British and Nato troops die than any other month since the invasion; 56 fatalities. Two-thirds of them were from roadside bombs.

The number of attacks on coalition forces has risen precipitately. In the first five months of this year the number of attacks by "Improvised Explosive Devices" – mainly roadside bombs – were up 64% over the previous year.

Attacks using ‘direct fire’ – that means mainly automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades – were up 61%.

These are frightening numbers for a war-weary American public – though popular support for the Afghan war seems to remain relatively solid. In a recent Gallup poll, 54% of respondents said things were going well in Afghanistan.

So is the Obama plan for Afghanistan working It is too early to say.

"Check back in a year. Or two," said one military officer.

Graph showing all US casualties in Afghanistan 2001-2009


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.