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Posts Tagged ‘Helmand’

NATO air strike “kills Afghan soldiers”

Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry says a NATO air strike killed four Afghan soldiers on Dec. 15 in southern Afghanistan, apparently mistaking them for insurgents. Defense Ministry spokesman General Mohammad Zahir Azimi said the soldiers had left their base in Musa Qala district, in Helmand Province, when they came under fire from NATO planes.

Blasts in Afghanistan kill 15

Officials in Afghanistan say a roadside blast has killed 15 civilians in the southern part of the country.

Authorities said early Saturday the explosion happened Friday in the Khansheen district of Helmand province.

NATO airstrike kills 15 in Afghanistan

NATO says it is investigating allegations of civilian casualties during a coalition airstrike in southern Afghanistan.
The alliance said Monday that 15 insurgents were killed overnight in a joint Afghan-NATO operation against a senior Taliban leader in the Baghran district of Helmand province.

Danish soldier killed, NYT photographer wounded

A Danish soldier has been killed in a firefight in the southern Afghan province of Helmand. The Danish military said on October 23 the soldier’s unit was engaged in a gun battle while patrolling an area east of its base in Bridzar.

“U.S. may be needed in Afghan south for years”

The commander of the U.S. Marine Corps says it likely will take a few years to transfer security duty to Afghan forces in the country’s key southern provinces.
General James Conway says some American forces in Afghanistan probably will turn over combat duties to Afghan forces in 2011. However, he adds, that probably will not include Marines battling insurgents in Helmand and Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban.

“U.S. may be needed in Afghan south for years”

The commander of the U.S. Marine Corps says it likely will take a few years to transfer security duty to Afghan forces in the country’s key southern provinces.
General James Conway says some American forces in Afghanistan probably will turn over combat duties to Afghan forces in 2011. However, he adds, that probably will not include Marines battling insurgents in Helmand and Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban.

Afghan soldier kills three British soldiers

An Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman says an Afghan soldier has killed three British soldiers in southern Afghanistan.
Spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi gave no immediate further details, but reports said the incident happened while the soldiers were on joint patrol near Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province.

Afghanistan a ‘contest of wills’: Petraeus


WASHINGTON – The July 2011 deadline for beginning US troops withdrawal from Afghanistan “is the beginning of a process, not the date when the US heads for the exits,” Gen David Petraeus told Senators on Tuesday.
But while Petraeus – who is being questioned during his Senate Armed Service Committee confirmation hearings to be appointed new commander of US forces in Afghanistan – emphasised his support for the deadline set by President Barack Obama, he also said that the pace of any US withdrawals next year should be “responsible” and determined by conditions on the ground at the time.
His careful explanation reflects the ongoing tension between the military, which wants to stay longer in Afghanistan, and some within the Obama administration, who favour a rapid drawdown and a shift to a smaller military footprint.
Petraeus was chosen last week by Obama to take command in Afghanistan after the previous commander, Gen Stanley A McChrystal, was fired over comments he and his several aides made in a Rolling Stone article.
Petraeus is expected to be easily confirmed, perhaps later this week.
The General assured Afghanistan and Pakistan of enduring American commitment to the region as he also underlined PakistanÂ’s role in the Afghan reconciliation process, saying that US relationship with Pakistan was vitally important.
“That relationship (with Pakistan) is crucially important. And we have worked very very hard (at it) as did Admiral Mullen (chairman Joint Chiefs) and as did by the way General McChrystal,” he said referring to the American commanders’ visits to Islamabad for meetings with Pakistani leaders and Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
“It is going to be a number of years before Afghan forces can truly handle the security tasks in Afghanistan on their own. The commitment to Afghanistan is necessarily, therefore, an enduring one and neither the Taliban nor our Afghan and Pakistani partners should doubt that,” he stated.
On the possibility of an agreement between the Afghan government and militants, who wish to join reconciliation process, Petraeus explained, “It will depend on a number of factors this summer.”
Petraeus, who Tuesday morning had a conversation with President Hamid Karzai on his way to the hearing, also said the Afghan leader “assured me that he has not met a Haqqani network group leader in recent days or I think at any time.”
“With respect to Pakistani involvement in some form of reconciliation agreement, I think, that is essential,” Petraeus, who heads the US central command, said.
He was responding to a question by Chairman of the Committee Senator Carl Levin on PakistanÂ’s potential to broker a reconciliation deal between the Taliban leadership and Afghan government at this time.
Petraeus said the relationship between the Afghan and Pakistani governments and their militaries is critical. “They are always going to be neighbours. They have had at various times differing objectives and what we need to do is to help them realise that there are mutual objectives that could help each country more if they seek them, rather than by seeking objectives that are in conflict.”
Asked by a lawmaker how the US “will work with the Afghan government to manage Pakistan’s strategic interests” in Afghanistan, Petraeus replied, “We can facilitate the dialogue, participate in the dialogue, be an honest
broker, we are friends to both. We are enormously enabling both. Pakistan is in a tough fight. One of its fights, by the way, is to keep our lines of communication open.”
For its part, he said, the United States provide substantial coalition support funding, foreign military financing and economic aid as under the Kerry-Lugar Act, passed last year.
Over the weekend, President Obama characterised the increasing contacts between Pakistan and Afghanistan as “useful” but suggested caution at the early stage of the negotiations process.
Petraeus offered a mixed assessment of the progress of the war, predicting that violence would get worse in coming months but asserting that the US and its allies have made progress in Helmand province and other areas.
“My sense is that the tough fighting will continue; indeed, it may get more intense in the next few months,” Petraeus said. “As we take away the enemy’s safe havens and reduce the enemy’s freedom of action, the insurgents will fight back.”
Petraeus, who was directly involved in formulating the current strategy as head of US Central Command, did not signal any immediate change of direction in his statement. But he noted that some US soldiers have complained about rules of engagement and tactical rules set by McChrystal aimed at preventing civilian casualties.
“Those on the ground must have all the support they need when they are in a tough situation,” Petraeus said, noting that since he was nominated for the command position he has spoken about the issues with President Karzai and other Afghan officials, who long have complained about civilian casualties.
“I am keenly aware of concerns by some of our troopers on the ground about the application of our rules of engagement and the tactical directive. They should know that I will look very hard at this issue,” Petraeus said.
He added, however, that he would continue McChrystalÂ’s emphasis on reducing civilian casualties.
In an opening statement, Senator Levin, the chairman, strongly supported the July 2011 date for the beginning of withdrawals of United States troops from Afghanistan but also said that progress there was “spotty” and that he remained “deeply concerned” by reports that relatively few Afghan Army troops were in the lead in operations in the south.
Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, declared in his opening statement that Afghanistan was “not a lost cause,” and that “the Afghans do not want the Taliban back.”
The hearing comes at a time of rising violence in Afghanistan, as an expanded troop contingent wages a wider, more aggressive fight. It also comes at a time of growing doubts – in Congress, among ordinary Americans and even among some in the military – that the war can be won.

Strikes inside Pakistan to make US safe: CIA


WASHINGTON – While admitting that the war in Afghanistan had “serious problems”, CIA Director Leon Panetta gave little chance to a political reconciliation process succeeding in that war-torn country.
In an interview with the ABC programme “This Week”, he said the Taliban and their allies would only take part in the process if they believed they faced certain defeat.
“We have seen no evidence that they are truly interested in reconciliation, where they would surrender their arms, where they would denounce al-Qaeda, where they would really try to become part of that society,” Panetta said amid reports that Pakistan was trying to promote a political settlement that would incorporate the Taliban into a power-sharing arrangement with President Hamid Karzai.
The CIA chief, who rarely gives interviews to news media, also defended the widely criticized CIA drone strikes in the Pak-Afghan region, insisting that claims they violate international law are “dead wrong.”
“We have a duty, we have a responsibility, to defend this country so that al-Qaeda never conducts that kind of attack again,” he said while justifying drone attacks, which have also been condemned by a United Nations human rights expert.
On the Afghan war, Panetta said the US was making progress, but “This is going to be tough. This is not going to be easy.”
“We’re dealing with tribal societies. We’re dealing with a country that has problems with governance, problems with corruption, problems with narcotics trafficking, problems with a Taliban insurgency.
“It’s harder, it’s slower than I think anyone anticipated,” he added.
The CIA chief said the problems in Afghanistan he had cited were the major challenges to the goal of “making sure al Qaeda never finds another safe haven from which to attack this country.”
“Is the strategy the right strategy? We think so,” he said. “I think…the key to success or failure is whether the Afghans accept responsibility, are able to deploy an effective army and police force to maintain stability. If they can do that, then I think weÂ’re going to be able to achieve the kind of progress and the kind of stability that the President is after,” Panetta said.
Panetta also said that al-Qaeda is probably at its weakest since the Sept 11 attacks because of US-led strikes, with only 50 to 100 militants — mainly in Kandahar — operating inside Afghanistan and the rest hiding along Pakistan’s mountainous border region.
The CIA director said the US hasnÂ’t had good intelligence on Osama bin LadenÂ’s whereabouts for years and that the terrorist network is finding smarter ways to try to attack the United States.
“He obviously has tremendous security around him,” Panetta said of the al-Qaeda leader sought by the United States in connection with the September 11, 2001 attacks.
With further efforts to disrupt al-Qaeda operations and kill al-Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan, “we think ultimately we can flush out” Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the group’s second-in-command, Panetta said.
However, he acknowledged it had been years since the US had any good intelligence on the precise location of bin Laden.
Of greatest concern, he said, is al-QaedaÂ’s reliance on operatives without previous records or those living in the US.
“We are engaged in the most aggressive operations in the history of the CIA in that part of the world, and the result is that we are disrupting their leadership.”
“Noting increased violence against US and NATO forces in Kandahar and Helmand provinces, Panetta said the “key to success or failure is whether the Afghans accept responsibility” for securing and governing their country.
With further efforts to disrupt al Qaeda operations and kill al Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan, “we think ultimately we can flush out” Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the group’s second-in-command, Panetta said. However, he acknowledged it had been years since the US had any good intelligence on the precise location of bin Laden.
Panetta also made clear that the threat from al-Qaeda remains the nation’s main concern, noting the group’s use of people who lack any terrorism record — such as the suspect in the botched bombing attempt of a US airliner on Christmas day — as a way to infiltrate US safeguards. He also mentioned sleeper agents already in the country, and people who “self-radicalize” such as Maj Nidal Hasan, the suspect in the Ft Hood, Texas, shootings.
“Those kinds of threats represent I think the most serious threat to the United States right now,” Panetta said.
“Winning in Afghanistan is having a country that is stable enough to ensure that there is no safe haven for al Qaeda or for a militant Taliban that welcomes al Qaeda,” Panetta said.
On Iran, Panetta said the Tehran government continues to develop the capability to build a nuclear weapon, but that debate exists within the country on whether to actually do so.
“We think they have enough low-enriched uranium right now for two weapons,” Panetta said. “They do have to enrich it, fully, in order to get there. And we would estimate that if they made that decision, it would probably take a year to get there, probably another year to develop the kind of weapon delivery system in order to make that viable.”
Regarding North Korea, Panetta said the question of who will succeed leader Kim Jong Il is likely behind recent military acts such as the alleged sinking of a South Korean navy ship.
“I think that could have been part of it, in order to establish credibility for his son,” Panetta said of a likely successor, adding: “His son is very young. His son is very untested. His son is loyal to his father and to North Korea, but his son does not have the kind of credibility with the military, because nobody really knows what he’s going to be like.”
However, Panetta said he doubted there would be further escalation, noting that “in the end, they always back away from the brink and I think they’ll do that now.”
Monitoring Desk adds: When asked as to how can a company allegedly responsible for killing 17 unarmed civilians in Baghdad in 2007 continue to get State Department and CIA contracts, Panetta said there is ‘not much choice’ because few companies have the capabilities of Blackwater.
“Since I have become director, I have asked our agency to review every contract we have had with Blackwater and whatever their new name is now – Xe – to ensure first and foremost that we have no contract in which they are engaged in any CIA operations. WeÂ’re doing our own operations. ThatÂ’s important that we do not contract that out to anybody,” Panetta told ABC.
“But at the same time I have to tell you that in the war zone, we continue to have needs for security. You’ve got a lot of forward bases. You’ve got a lot of attacks on some of those bases. We’ve got to have security. Unfortunately, there are few companies that provide that kind of security,” Panetta continued.
“State Department relies on them. We rely on them to a certain extent. So, we’ve bid out some of those contracts. They provided a bid that underbid everyone else by about $26 million and a panel that we had said that they can do the job, that they’ve shaped up their act,” he said.
“There was really not much choice but to accept that contract,” said Panetta. “But having said that, I will tell you that I continue to be very cautious about any of those contracts and we’re reviewing all of the bids that we have with that company,” he concluded.

NATO troops kill four Afghan civilians

NATO said on Tuesday that its forces killed four civilians, including two women and a child, in an airstrike in southern Afghanistan. Four suspected insurgents were also killed in the airstrike on Monday in Nahr-e-Saraj district of the southern province of Helmand, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

Two Afghan blasts kill 12

Afghan officials say a suicide bomber has killed ten people and wounded seven in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. Local authorities say the bomber may have been targeting an army vehicle, but set off his explosives in an area where civilians were attending Nowruz gatherings to celebrate the new year.

Blast kills 7 in southern Afghan town

Afghan police say an explosion killed seven people and wounded 14 others in Helmand province. Afghan and NATO forces are conducting a major offensive against Taliban militants.

All together now

A military offensive against the Taliban in Afghanistan shows some early success

OPERATION Mushtarak, which was launched on Saturday February 13th as a joint effort between Afghan and NATO forces, has so far proven to be a moderately successful affair. The goal was to clear Marja, a big opium-producing town and the main Taliban stronghold in the southern province of Helmand. The territory was well suited to defenders, who could have taken advantage of an intricate web of irrigation ditches, small alleys winding between mudbrick houses and mounds of earth between the canals. One American commander described it as the worst terrain on earth, ideal for slowing down the advance of even the most powerful army. Yet the fighting has, reportedly, been limited.

The biggest allied offensive in Afghanistan since 2001 is a part of the recent Western push to turn the war against the Taliban. Operation Mushtarak—“Together” in Dari Persian—makes use of some 15,000 allied troops, roughly half of them Afghans, most of the rest American Marines and British soldiers. By Tuesday the offensive had succeeded in putting NATO and Afghan forces in control of most of the target area, according to coalition officials. But occasional fighting continues between militants and coalition troops who are moving from house to house. The danger of explosives is particularly severe. Clearing the town entirely could take weeks. …

Opening a new front

The capture of Mullah Baradar, a senior Taliban leader, may mark a shift in strategy

THE deputy leader of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, has been captured in neighbouring Pakistan, confirmed Pakistani, American and Taliban officials to The Economist on Tuesday February 16th. The development suggests a serious blow has been struck against the Afghan insurgents. It may also indicate a shift in co-operation between American and Pakistani intelligence services, perhaps reflecting a change in policy by the government in Islamabad.

American and Pakistan forces reportedly snatched Mullah Baradar last week in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi. Mullah Baradar is the most senior Taliban figure detained in many years and the news of his capture came just as a massive coalition and Afghan military offensive is pressing the insurgents on the battlefield in the southern Afghan province of Helmand. …

NATO hails major Afghan operation

NATO forces in Afghanistan have hailed as a success the first phase of a major operation to oust the Taliban from two key districts of Helmand in the south. More than 15,000 US, UK and Afghan troops swept into Marjah and Nad Ali before dawn on Saturday. Officials said key day one objectives had been met.

Afghan villagers flee to escape assault

As military helicopters thundered through the sky over the Afghan township of Marjah yesterday morning, villagers cowered down below in their mud-brick huts.  About 60 helicopters took part in the assault, Helmand Governor Mohammad Gulab Mangal said, dropping soldiers into what officials say isAs military helicopters thundered through the sky over the Afghan township of Marjah yesterday morning, villagers cowered down below in their mud-brick huts. About 60 helicopters took part in the assault, Helmand Governor Mohammad Gulab Mangal said, dropping soldiers into what officials say is

Afghanistan offensive on Taliban in Helmand

NATO-led forces say they are making good progress hours after launching the biggest offensive in Afghanistan since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001. There were clashes as more than 15,000 US, UK and Afghan troops swept into the Helmand areas of Marjah and Nad Ali in a bid to secure government control.

US Marines under fire in Taliban bastion assault

US Marines came under attack from insurgents armed with sniper guns and rocket-propelled grenades as they geared up yesterday to overwhelm a Taliban bastion in Afghanistan.  Thousands of Marines, along with foreign and Afghan soldiers, are massing around the town of Marjah in Helmand, which,US Marines came under attack from insurgents armed with sniper guns and rocket-propelled grenades as they geared up yesterday to overwhelm a Taliban bastion in Afghanistan. Thousands of Marines, along with foreign and Afghan soldiers, are massing around the town of Marjah in Helmand, which,

Refugees fleeing ahead of anti-Taliban offensive

Hundreds of Afghan families have been fleeing Taliban-controlled territory in the southern Afghan province of Helmand, RFE/RL reports. This comes ahead of an expected offensive by NATO and Afghan government troops.

Blast in Afghanistan kills 2, including journalist

British officials say a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan has killed a veteran British war correspondent and a U.S. Marine. Britain’s Defense Ministry says Rupert Hamer, the defense correspondent for the Sunday Mirror newspaper, was killed while accompanying Marines on patrol in Helmand province Saturday.