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Mon, September 4, 2006

4 soldiers killedLocal troops hit in major battle with TalibanBy LES PERREAUX


PANJWAII, AFGHANISTAN -- Canadian troops launched a ground assault on an insurgent position yesterday and met fierce resistance that killed four Canadians, including at least two based at CFB Petawawa, and injured six others in one of the deadliest battles since Canada sent soldiers to Afghanistan in 2002.

Two of the dead were identified as Warrant Officer Frank Robert Mellish and Warrant Officer Richard Francis Nolan, both of 1st Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, based at CFB Petawawa.

The names of the other two Canadians killed had not been released at the request of their families.

The Canadians moved in with light armoured vehicles in the early morning after NATO forces had pounded enemy positions for more than 24 hours with helicopter gunships, artillery and bombs.

Taliban insurgents put up a stiff fight, using small arms and rocket propelled grenades to hit back at the Canadians, who later returned to their own stronghold.


COMMAND SITE

Some soldiers expressed surprise at how stubbornly Taliban fighters had defended their ground, near a river valley that cuts a green ribbon through this desert area west of Kandahar city.

Others noted NATO commanders had given everyone including the enemy a few days of advance notice before starting Operation Medusa in Panjwaii district.

NATO officials maintained the operation was a success, taking out key Taliban command and control facilities. The alliance estimates it has killed 200 Taliban militants and captured 80, and says local residents reported that about 180 insurgents had fled the scene.

However, it did come at a cost to the Canadian Forces.

"I am saddened to announce that four Canadian soldiers were killed during today's operations, and a number of others were wounded," Canadian Brig.-Gen. David Fraser said in a briefing.

"All but one of the wounded is expected to resume their duties within the next few days."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper offered "heartfelt condolences" to the families and friends of those killed. He also wished the wounded soldiers a "speedy recovery."

Earlier yesterday, an official with NATO's International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF, said four NATO soldiers were killed in Panjwaii district and seven wounded. The official did not give their nationalities.

'WILL CONTINUE'

"They were moving into a position," Fraser said, explaining how the Canadians were killed. "They came under insurgent attacks and during these attacks they succumbed to injuries from the insurgents."

"Despite these losses, Operation Medusa will continue," Fraser said, referring to the sweeping operation in Panjwaii, a district that covers an area roughly between 20 and 40 km west of Kandahar city.

"ISAF is determined to remove the Taliban threat from this region," Fraser said.

Fighting was continuing. U.S. jets and helicopters bombed and strafed suspected Taliban positions late last night.

On the frontlines, soldiers felt shock waves from the bombardment as they waited anxiously to learn the identities of the dead Canadians.

"Most likely they're our good buddies too," said Cpl. J.R. Smith from Mount Pearl, N.L.

Several seemed anxious to get back into the battlefield.

"They all know their job, they have a lot of pride in their job, that's why they're here, they know their country is behind them," said Master Cpl. Steve Vukic from Port-au-Choix, N.L.

http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/National/2006/09/04/1800398-sun.html
 
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4 Afghans, 1 NATO soldier killed
By RAHIM FAIEZ

KABUL (AP) - A car bomb targeting a NATO convoy killed four Afghan civilians and at least one NATO soldier in the Afghan capital on Monday, NATO and Afghan officials said. Ten people were wounded.

The explosion happened on the Kabul-Jalalabad road at 10:15 a.m., alliance officials said.

Afghan officials said it was a suicide bombing and the attacker also died.

But NATO spokesman Maj. Toby Jackman said it was unclear if the attack was a suicide bombing or caused by a bomb that was being transported in a car exploding prematurely.

Maj. Luke Knittig, another NATO spokesman, said the NATO soldier who died was initially reported wounded, but later succumbed to his injuries.

He said three NATO troops were wounded, and one was in serious condition. Two sustained light injuries.

The British Broadcasting Corp. website said two British NATO troops were killed.

British soldiers blocked the road leading to the site of the bombing on the road - the main highway running east out of Kabul.

Ali Shah Paktiawal, the criminal director of Kabul police, said it was a suicide attack and had killed four Afghan civilians and wounded seven. He said the bomber was driving a four-wheel drive car and had also died.

Paktiawal said among the civilians killed were two Afghan youths who were riding past on a motorbike at the time of the blast.

Taliban-led militants have stepped up attacks in Afghanistan this year. The relatively secure capital has escaped most of the violence, but has been rattled by periodic bombings and rocket attacks.

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2006/09/04/1800684-ap.html
 
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Canadian killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan
Updated Mon. Sep. 4 2006 11:24 PM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

Two U.S. warplanes accidentally strafed their own NATO forces in southern Afghanistan on Monday, killing one Canadian soldier and wounding more than 30 others.


The soldier has been identified as Pte. Mark Anthony Graham, a member of 1st Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment, based in eastern Ontario's CFB Petawawa.


The friendly fire incident occurred around 5:30 a.m. when soldiers trying to seize a Taliban stronghold along the Arghandab River requested air support.


NATO said in a statement that the International Security Assistance Force provided the support but "regrettably engaged friendly forces during a strafing run, using cannons." It later identified the planes as U.S. A-10 Thunderbolts.


NATO spokesman Maj. Scott Lundy said five of the more than 30 wounded soldiers were seriously injured and evacuated out of Afghanistan for medical treatment.


"It was a scene of absolute chaos this morning at the airport near the hospital. We were there as helicopter after helicopter ferried in the wounded," CTV's Matt McClure reported from Kandahar.


Brig.-Gen. David Fraser, the Canadian in charge of NATO forces in southern Afghanistan, said Operation Medusa will continue despite the casualties.


"This has been a tough hit, but Canadians are continuing the fight," he said in a statement released Monday.


CTV News has learned that the United States will launch its own probe into the incident, in addition to a NATO investigation currently underway.


"There has not been any official reaction from the United States government, but CTV News has learned Ambassador David Wilkins -- the U.S. ambassador in Canada -- phoned Prime Minister Stephen Harper first thing this morning," CTV's David Akin told Newsnet.


Wilkins expressed the regret of the U.S. government over the tragedy, and also indicated the government would launch its own investigation.


In Afghanistan, Fraser told reporters that friendly fire incidents are always a risk that soldiers must face.


"We do have procedures, we do have communications, we do have training and tactics and techniques and procedures to mitigate the risk but we can't reduce those risks to zero,'' he said in a news conference at Kandahar Airfield.


"The Canadian forces and the rest of armed forces of the world and the international community wouldn't be here if it wasn't dangerous.''


Monday's friendly fire incident was the second such incident since Canadians began operations in Afghanistan more than four years ago.


Four soldiers were killed and eight others wounded in April 2002 when an American F-16 fighter mistakenly bombed Canadians on pre-dawn training exercise.


The friendly fire death comes just one day after another four Canadian soldiers were killed and six wounded during Operation Medusa, a mission aimed at purging militants from the Taliban stronghold of the Panjwaii district west of Kandahar.


Two of the dead were identified Sunday as Warrant Officer Frank Mellish and Warrant Officer Richard Nolan, both of 1st Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, based at CFB Petawawa, Ont.


The third was identified Monday as Sgt. Shane Stachnik of 2 Combat Engineer Regiment based in Petawawa.


The name of the fourth was still being withheld at the request of the family.

Mellish was born in the small Nova Scotia town of Truro. The town lost another soldier just last month -- Cpl. Christopher Reid, killed during a battle with insurgents on Aug. 3.


"It's quite a shock," said Truro Mayor Bill Mills. "When I first heard the story this morning ... I had no idea that one of those gentlemen was from our area."

The battle continues

The past two days' deaths occurred as part of Operation Medusa, aimed at purging Taliban insurgents from the dangerous Panjwaii area, the site of intense fighting in recent weeks.

Taliban insurgents put up a stiff fight, using small arms and rocket propelled grenades to defend their positions.

Despite the casualties, NATO officials are maintaining that the offensive has been a success, estimating that 200 Taliban militants had been killed and 80 seized.

But a Taliban leader in south and southeastern Afghanistan rejected those claims as propaganda.

"They are saying that they have killed 200 Taliban but they did not kill even 10," Mullah Dadullah told the Associated Press in a satellite phone call from an undisclosed location.

Dadullah also warned that his fighters would "target" journalists who reported "wrong information."

The latest fatalities came as NDP Leader Jack Layton repeated his call for ending the Afghanistan mission in February 2007.

"Young people have stepped forward to put their lives on the line, fulfilling a mission that they were asked to fulfill," Layton told reporters in Toronto.

"What we as Canadians need to do is consider whether this is indeed the right mission for Canada going forward. Our view is that it is the wrong mission."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not address the possibility of a troop withdrawal in a statement on Sunday, in which he offered his condolences to the friends and families of those killed.

"We are proud of these soldiers' contribution to bring stability and hope to the people of Afghanistan," said Harper.

"These soldiers lost their lives in the service of their country. Canada is grateful for that service, and saddened by this loss."

In total, 32 Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have been killed in Afghanistan since 2002.

With files from The Canadian Press and The Associated Press
 
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Here is an article which was made online on 14th Aug, 2003. But its assessment, after another 3 years, are still valid and accurate.
Kashif



Right Assessment, wrong conclusions.
by Abid Ullah Jan
(Thursday August 14 2003)

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Unlike most of its anchor columnists, doing incorrect assessments to reach wrong conclusions, the New York Times editorial writers usually do correct assessments only to reach the same wrong conclusions.


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Unlike most of its anchor columnists, doing incorrect assessments to reach wrong conclusions, the New York Times editorial writers usually do correct assessments only to reach the same wrong conclusions.

The best example is its August 09, 2003 editorial, titled "Belated Help for Afghanistan." It sets a graceful tone of admitting the reality from the first line. It says, 21 months "after American-backed forces drove the Taliban from Kabul, Afghanistan remains a long way from recovery and stability." Surrendering to the reality it adds, the power of the US installed puppet regime "barely extends beyond Kabul.?

However, saying that Karzai is in control of Kabul is also a bit exaggeration, because Kabul is not a small place. In fact, a Canadian Afghan called this scribe from Kabul the other day and summed up the situation in a few words: "Karazi's government is a government over five kilometers."

Elsewhere, according to the New York Times, "warlords maintain their own security forces, collect their own taxes and otherwise undermine the government's authority." The startling part of the analysis reveals, "the Pentagon spends $10 billion a year on the 9,000 American troops fighting Taliban remnants," whereas "the administration has spent less than $1 billion on reconstruction so far."

Instead of raising some legitimate questions, doing the right comparisons and impartial evaluation, the editorial comes up with some funny concluding suggestions. It asks for "several thousand additional troops," "new mandate from the Security Council," and "additional contributions from Europe and Japan."

Would all this help remove "Taliban remnants"? What kind of remnants the US face that it could not remove despite the overwhelming military force and $10 billion a year? At this rate, the spending will become $20 billion this November. Its not joke.

Let us do a quick comparison. The Afghans were fed up with the Taliban. Right? Still the Taliban controlled 90 per cent of the country and there was no mass killings of the kind we are witnessing since their departure. Why is it so that Afghan people loved to see the Taliban gone, yet they did not allow Karazai government to extend beyond 5 kilometers? It is far less than one percent of the total land. Who controls the rest" Remnants and terrorists"

Continue the comparison. The Taliban's military and economic strength was far below what is at the U.S. disposal in Afghanistan. How could they maintain law and order over 90 percent of the land? Through oppression because they were "murderous thugs"? If so, count the opponents to both the Taliban and Karzai regimes killed in five and two years respectively ? subtract US human right abuses and torture facilities, such as Guantanamo bay, from the Taliban side of the equation. But the US is up against terrorists, the New York Times may argue. So were the Soviets. Think about the results.

The problem is that the so-called reliable mainstream media does not ask the right questions. The New York Times editorial is a typical example of how it analyses 2 and 2 separately, but never tries to put these together. It was supposed to ask, how long would the US need "several thousand additional troops and new mandate from the Security Council" to protect a government over five kilometers?

It is not only the matter of five kilometers. According to a reliable source, the murderous warlords of the Northern Alliance have such a stronghold that Karzai can neither appoint nor remove a person from very insignificant positions in Kabul. Almost everyone in Kabul knows how Director General Din Muhammad Jur'at, a Panjsheri, beat Interior Minister Taj Muhammad Wardak to death. The Minister's crime was to issue transfer orders of the DG. The question for the New York Times to ask is, Will the billions of US dollars and years of protection ever bring legitimacy to Karazai's regime?

Will it end the much-hyped phenomenon of terrorism? The editorial concludes that the US paid a terrible price for not doing more to stabilize Afghanistan after the Soviet withdrawal" in the form of September. It is simply an attempt to blind its readers to the reality that just like Karzai, the Taliban were the creation of the US and its puppets in Pakistan.

The issue was that the Taliban grew too big for the shoes the US was trying to put them into. The US is not paying the price for not interfering in Afghanistan after the Soviet withdrawal, but for not allowing the people all over the Muslim world to live according to their free will.

The price will become heavier, not because the US repeats its mistake. But because: a) the US has chosen to come out of its comfort zone to the battle field, where many were anxious to have them on the ground, b) it continues to impose unpopular regimes with brute force and dollars, c) it is underrating genuine resistance of the people to its occupation " both in Afghanistan and Iraq " as revenge of the remnants and d) its media continues to support the government in blinding its public to the realities on the ground.
 
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8b3415f906428504a86c7e7b2999ed1c.jpg
Coalition forces operating at Kabul's airport on September 2(epa)
September 4, 2006 -- Suspected Taliban rebels attacked a town in Afghanistan's southern Helmand Province overnight, sparking an intense battle in which 16 militants and three police officers were killed.


Provincial police chief Mohammad Nabi Mullahkhail said 10 Taliban were also wounded in the fighting in Garmser district.
In Kabul, NATO says a car bomb exploded near a NATO convoy, killing at least four Afghan civilians and wounding four NATO troops. It was not immediately clear if the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.
In Kandahar Province, NATO warplanes killed one soldier of the alliance and wounded several others in a friendly-fire accident early today.
NATO says the troops were involved in the Medusa Operation under way in Panjwayi district.
Four Canadian soldiers involved in the operation were killed on September 3 . NATO estimates that more than 200 Taliban have been killed since the operation began on September 2.

http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/09/c4190f9d-5017-4eeb-8b3a-6b7c76cd1f80.html
 
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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan:

NATO and Afghan forces have killed up to 60 Taliban rebels in fighting in southern Afghanistan.
http://us.bc.yahoo.com/b?P=q82AOESO...8393.8887862.9671132.1442997/D=LREC/B=2923188
"We have killed 50 to 60 Taliban over the course of 24 hours," NATO spokesman Major Quentin Innis told AFP on Tuesday.

Most of the rebels were killed when they attempted to flee an area in Kandahar province's Pashmol district near Panjwayi, where NATO and Afghan forces have been hunting them since Saturday, the spokesman said.
They attempted to break through the security ring Tuesday afternoon, he said. "It looks like they were trying to flee the area."
Innis said both NATO's ground troops and its air force engaged the militants.
"It was a combination of ground and air force," Innis said, referring to the battle in which the rebels were killed.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060905/ts_afp/afghanistanunresttoll_060905153158
 
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KABUL (AFP) - Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf will venture across the border into Afghanistan for a visit that Afghan officials hope will open a new chapter in relations between the uneasy neighbours.
http://us.bc.yahoo.com/b?P=Zr52cUSO...2926.9089661.9855804.1442997/D=LREC/B=3757523
The president's two-day trip will focus on efforts to stop the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan and comes amid an emerging consensus that the fighting is being fed by extremist elements based in Pakistan.

"The presidents of Afghan and Pakistan are due to conduct friendly and frank discussions on the war on terror and expanding bilateral cooperation on regional issues," Afghan President Hamid Karzai's office said Tuesday.

Musharraf last visited Afghanistan in 2002, months after the Taliban were toppled by a US-led coalition.

On his schedule is a meeting with Karzai in Kabul on Wednesday and an address to legislators from the country's first democratically elected parliament and other policy makers on Thursday.

The two presidents and their officials were drawn into a heated exchange of words this year that centred on Afghan claims that Pakistan is not doing enough against the Taliban which it helped bring to power in 1996.
Musharraf dismissed as "nonsense" Afghan intelligence handed over during a visit by Karzai to Islamabad at the beginning of the year, setting off a spat that took months to die down.

Islamabad emphasises it has 80,000 troops along the border to try to stop madrassa-inspired militants from crossing into Afghanistan to carry out attacks, many of them targeted at the thousands of foreign troops here.

The general comes to a country that relies on Pakistani imports but is wary of its neighbour's motives, in part because Islamabad was so heavily involved in the Taliban government.

"It is a significant visit because during many years of wars and conflict, Afghanistan was often treated by our neighbours as a soft entity, not as an independent sovereign nation," said Ali Muradian, a senior advisor in the foreign ministry.

"We hope that President Musharraf will open a new chapter in relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan," he said.

The visit comes ahead of the United Nations General Assembly in the United States where the "war on terror" allies will together meet President George W. Bush, a key backer of Afghanistan's efforts to rid itself of the Taliban and other Islamist outfits.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060905/wl_sthasia_afp/afghanistanpakistanpolitics_060905135147
 
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Coalition soldier killed in E. Afghanistan

One coalition soldier was killed and another wounded during two separate attacks by militants at a fire base in the eastern Khost province of Afghanistan, a coalition statement said Saturday.

The attacks occurred on Friday in the base, which is near the Afghan-Pakistan border, it said, adding some Afghan soldiers were also injured.

The killed soldier, who was a trainer embedded with Afghan forces, was sharing his knowledge and experience to assist Afghan soldiers in improving their combat skills, said Brig. Gen. Douglas A. Pritt with coalition forces.

The soldier's nationality and name are yet to be announced.

About 20,000 coalition soldiers, most of whom are Americans, are deployed in eastern Afghanistan to hunt down militants and facilitate reconstruction there.

Afghanistan is suffering from a rise of Taliban-linked violence this year, during which more than 2,300 people, mostly Taliban militants, have been killed. Among the fatalities are more than 100 foreign troops.

Source: Xinhua

http://english.people.com.cn/200609/17/eng20060917_303570.html
 
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Better paid, better armed, better connected - Taliban rise again

Kandahar under threat, war raging in two provinces and an isolated president. So what went wrong?

[FONT=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif]Declan Walsh in Ghazni
Saturday September 16, 2006
The Guardian


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[FONT=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif]Taliban fighters in Ghazni province in southern Afghanistan. Photo: Veronique De Viguerie
[/FONT]


Reedi Gul is probably dead now. Two weeks ago masked gunmen abducted the 24-year-old on a lonely mountain road in central Afghanistan. The next day his father, Saleh Gul, received a phone call, and realised he was the real target.
"I am an Afghan Muslim Talib," the voice announced. "If you want to see your son alive, listen carefully."
Three weeks earlier Saleh Gul had been appointed governor of an insurgent-infested district in Ghazni province. The Taliban demanded he quit his job, pay a ransom, attack US forces and assassinate local officials.
Mr Gul paid $2,000 and resigned his position, but refused to kill. "I am not a terrorist," he barked down the phone. So the Taliban added an impossible demand: the freedom of an imprisoned commander.
Last Sunday their deadline passed. "Still no news," the anguished father said four days later. "I think they have killed him by now." Mr Gul's face was lined with worry but his voice rang with anger. "I had warned the government this might happen. I told them Taliban was taking over. Why can't they stop them?"
Brazenness
That question is resounding across Afghanistan following a summer of chaos. In the south war has gripped Kandahar and Helmand provinces, where British and Canadian troops are stationed. In the past fortnight Nato has launched a blistering offensive, killing more than 500 Taliban, to stave off an attack on Kandahar city - a previously unthinkable notion.
Elsewhere, suicide bombers are striking with Baghdad-like brazenness. In the boldest attack yet, last week two American soldiers and 14 Afghans were shredded by a huge blast outside the US embassy in Kabul, one of the country's most tightly guarded areas.
Opium cultivation has soared. This year Afghanistan will produce more heroin than western addicts can consume. The main hub of cultivation is British-controlled Helmand. Since August 1 Britain and Canada have each lost 11 soldiers in combat, a high toll for what was originally presented as a peacekeeping mission.
It was not meant to be like this. When American troops started to flounder in Iraq after 2003 President George Bush lauded Afghanistan as a major victory. When presidential and parliamentary elections passed peacefully, his generals wrote the insurgency off. "The Taliban is a force in decline," declared Major General Eric Olson 18 months ago.
Today, to many observers those words look foolish. While northern and western Afghanistan remain stable, President Hamid Karzai is isolated and unpopular. Comparisons of the southern war with Vietnam are no longer considered outlandish. And dismayed western diplomats - the architects of reconstruction - are watching their plans go up in smoke. "Nobody saw this coming. It's pretty dire," admitted one official in Kabul.
No single factor explains the slide. But some answers can be found in Ghazni, a central province considered secure until earlier this year. Now it is on the frontline of the Taliban advance, just a two-hour drive from Kabul.
In the past two months the Taliban has swept across the southern half of the province with kidnappings, assassinations and gun battles. American officials believe Andar district, a few miles from their base in Ghazni town, is the Taliban hub for four surrounding provinces. This week they launched a drive in Andar, searching houses and raking buildings with helicopter gunship fire into a Taliban compound. At least 35 people died including a mother and two children.
"We've warned people they may see soldiers shooting in their villages. I tell them this is the price of peace and freedom," said US commander Lieutenant Colonel Steven Gilbert.
Travel along the Kabul-Kandahar highway that slices through Ghazni - once a symbol of western reconstruction - has become a high-stakes game of power. The Taliban sporadically mount checkpoints, frisking Afghans for ID cards, phone numbers or any other sign of a link to the government or foreign organisations. Those caught are beaten, kidnapped or killed. Foreigners travel south by plane, passing high over the road they once boasted about.
In the surrounding villages people are frightened and angry. In Qala Bagh district bands of 20 to 30 fighters descend at night. They demand food, shelter or a son to join the fighting, said Maulvi Aladat, the new district chief. A judge, a school principal and the local director of education have been assassinated in the past two months. The two girls' schools are closed.
The government offers scant protection. Ghazni's untrained police are outnumbered and outgunned. Huddled inside poorly protected compounds with few radios or vehicles, they are little match for large Taliban squads armed with machine guns and rocket propelled grenades. The US-trained Afghan army is curiously absent. Ghazni has just 280 soldiers, according to the governor, Sher Alam Ibrahimi. Although on paper the army has 35,000 soldiers, desertion rates are believed to be high.
Murky background
After his cousin was abducted by the Taliban, Yar Muhammad appealed to the provincial and national authorities for help. None came. Days later the body of his cousin - an education department official who offended by teaching girls - was discovered on a stretch of desert. "The government did absolutely nothing. They didn't even help to find the body," he said bitterly.
Local government is plagued by corruption and weak leadership. Ibrahimi, a former warlord, seems an unlikely candidate for governor with his grindingly slow speech and murky background that includes allegations of war crimes. Many believe Mr Karzai appointed him for his links to a more powerful warlord now in parliament.
Disillusionment with the president, who once promised so much, is high. "We are like a herd with no shepherd," said one elder. In desperation, his government has doubled the number of police through the use of arbikays - untrained tribal fighters paid directly by the governor. They are a mixed blessing. On Wednesday Dawlat Khan, one of the arbikay commanders, stormed into the police chief's office in Ghazni, bursting with anger. "The Taliban attacked my house. My wife and children were inside. What sort of government do we have that cannot protect us!" he yelled.
Mr Khan typifies the compromises Mr Karzai has had to make to maintain law and order. A life-long warrior with a fierce and unsmiling face, he has a reputation for ruthlessness and brutality. Lt Col Gilbert said Mr Khan was "covered in blood" the first time they met. But he is a fierce foe of the Taliban, standing to fight when trained policemen scurry away. "In an environment where peace is the norm, he wouldn't have a place," Lt Col Gilbert said. "But after 30 years of war, famine and fighting, you don't have the luxury of saying I don't want these hard core guys."
Poverty also fuels the fighting. Several elders said the Taliban was offering upwards of 20,000 rupees (£180) a month to local unemployed men. Western officials are beginning to scrutinise the source of the funds.
Mr Khan told the Guardian the militants have bigger guns and more fighters. They have powerful friends. Several times he had collared Taliban fighters only to discover days later they had been released following a call from a powerful politician or influential tribal leader. They also have surprising amounts of money.
Last year, he said, he captured two insurgents, "one of them alive". Mr Khan asked him why he was fighting. The man replied: "You are being paid 5,000 Afghanis (£54). I am making 20,000 Pakistani rupees. So now you tell me why you are fighting."
This year the Taliban formed an alliance with drug kingpins, offering to protect poppy farmers and smugglers in exchange for a cut of the $3bn trade. But diplomats believe most funding comes from fundamentalist sympathisers in Pakistan and the Middle East. Some believe governments may be also involved.
"I would be shocked if the Saudi intelligence service and the Kuwaitis were not trying to find ways to get money to the Taliban," said Michael Scheuer, a former CIA agent with 20 years' experience in the region.
Many Afghans are bewildered by the west's failure to bring the fight to the heart of the problem - neighbouring Pakistan. Maulvi Aladat pointed to the glowing horizon. "It is as clear as the sun is setting," he said. "Everyone knows where they are trained and funded, where the suicide bombers come from. Everyone knows."
Military officers and diplomats also say Pakistan's tribal belt is the engine room of the insurgency. From its remote mountain sanctuaries along the border the Taliban has re-emerged from the shadows as a potent force. Two shuras, or tribal councils, coordinate the attacks - one in the western city of Quetta, the other in South Waziristan, a lawless tribal area that is also a crucible of al-Qaida terrorism.
In an interview published yesterday, a senior Dutch officer estimated that 40% of Taliban fighters come "straight from Pakistan". The steady flow meant that Nato operations, despite their successes, were "like trying to mop with the tap still open", said Colonel Arie Vermeij.
Barnett Rubin, an Afghanistan expert at New York University, said that after being driven into Pakistan's tribal areas in late 2001 the Taliban "reconstituted their command structure, recruitment networks, and support bases ... while Afghans waited in vain for the major reconstruction effort they expected to build their state and improve their lives".
Sincerity
Joanna Nathan, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, said closing down the Pakistani staging areas was vital. "This conflict will never be more than contained without stamping on the staging posts and sanctuaries in Pakistan."
Western officials are also divided about the sincerity of Pakistan's military ruler, General Pervez Musharraf, in combating the Taliban. In Kabul last week he offered his help in defeating the Taliban, later describing them as a "bigger threat than al-Qaida". But that was undermined by a deal with tribal militants in Waziristan. In return for Pakistan soldiers withdrawing to base, the pro-Taliban militants undertook to stop harbouring foreign fighters and to halt cross-border infiltration. Within hours of the deal being inked, some tribal leaders claimed there had never been any foreigners in their area.
Last Sunday - two days after Mr Musharraf left Kabul - a man wearing an explosive vest hurled himself at a vehicle containing Abdul Hakim Taniwal, the governor of Pakita province. The killer is believed to have come from Waziristan.
Friends said Mr Taniwal, a university professor who returned from Australia to serve his country on pay of $200 a month, was the sort of man Afghanistan needs. He had argued for reconciliation with the Taliban and a resolution of tensions with Pakistan. He was a good man among rogues. "Many governors are former commanders involved in drug trafficking, land grabbing and corruption. Why did they kill this one? Because he was completely clean and a wise man of peace," said Mr Rubin. "It is a big blow against peace."
Drug boom
Shutting down the Pakistani sanctuaries would not necessarily end the insurgency. This year the Taliban's strength has been nourished by a new source: heroin. After spurning the opium trade as un-Islamic and immoral, this year the Taliban leadership reversed its position and allied with drug smugglers. The 59% surge in opium production to an unprecedented 6,100 tonnes will swell the Taliban war chest. "This is going to put a lot more money into the pockets of the insurgency," said one drug official.
More ominously, the drugs boom feeds cynicism about the Karzai government. "You can't tell poor farmers not to grow drugs and then you have civil servants driving a luxury car and living in a huge house," said Ms Nathan.
Dismay about the drugs epidemic has given way to arguments about how to tackle it. US and European military commanders, particularly the British, insist their troops should not get directly involved in fighting the trade. This week the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, Antonio Maria Costa, called on them to wade in. "Counter-insurgency and counter-narcotics efforts must reinforce each other so as to stop the vicious circle of drugs funding terrorists and terrorists protecting drug traffickers," he said, calling on Nato to destroy heroin labs, disband drug bazaars, attack convoys and arrest smugglers.
The speed and scale of this summer's violence has disoriented both Afghans and foreigners. In the south outlandish theories that the US is covertly supporting the Taliban, or that British troops have come to avenge colonial-era defeats, are common.
The underlying factors - cross-border sanctuaries, corrupt governance and drugs - have been in place for years. But what changed is the aggressive Nato deployment. After a difficult start, Nato has scored some successes. With more than 500 Taliban killed in Panjwayi, the Taliban stronghold west of Kandahar, soon the area will be cleared of insurgents, said the British commander, Lieutenant General David Richards. With luck, Nato hopes it will soon revert to its original goal, facilitating aid projects and strengthening the Karzai government.
But others question whether an insurgency can be defeated by death tolls alone. The only durable solution is to talk to the Taliban, said Wadir Safi of the University of Kabul. "Without negotiation this could go on for decades. The government must accept the Taliban as partners in these areas. You can't simply kill them all."
Afghans have a long history of ejecting foreign armies. The good news for Nato is that most still believe the military visitors are a force for good. "People are tired of fighting. Nobody wants to go back to that," said one official in Ghazni, who requested anonymity. "But if the people are disappointed much more, they could unite against the foreign forces. History could repeat itself."
Chronology: From victory to bloody stalemate in five years
2001
March Taliban blow up giant Buddha statues in Bamiyan
September 11 World Trade Centre attack, New York
October US and the UK start air strikes against Afghanistan after Taliban refuse to hand over Osama bin Laden
November Opposition forces seize Mazar-e Sharif and within days march into Kabul and other key cities
December 5 Afghan groups agree deal for interim government and Taliban give up last stronghold of Kandahar
December 22 Hamid Karzai sworn in as head of an interim government
2002
January First contingent of International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) peacekeepers in place
June Loya Jirga, or grand council, elects Hamid Karzai as interim head of state
December President Karzai signs deal to build gas pipeline through Afghanistan, carrying Turkmen gas to Pakistan
2003
August Nato takes over security in Kabul
March Afghanistan secures $8.2bn (£4.5bn) in aid over three years
September Rocket fired at helicopter carrying President Karzai misses
2004
October and November Hamid Karzai declared the winner of presidential elections, with 55% of the vote. He is sworn in, amid tight security, in December
2005
September First parliamentary and provincial elections
December New parliament holds inaugural session
2006 January 4 UK government announces deployment of 3,400 British troops to Helmand province
January 15 Suicide bomber targets Canadian Nato troops in Kandahar, killing a Canadian diplomat and two Afghans
January 16 Two attacks in Kandahar province kill 24 people
March 28 An American and a Canadian soldier are killed in fighting with militants at a base in Helmand province. More than 220 US troops have died in the conflict so far
April 22 Four Canadian soldiers are killed by a roadside bomb in Kandahar
June 21 Four US soldiers killed fighting Taliban insurgents in Nuristan province
July 1 Two British soldiers with the 3rd Para Battlegroup are killed by a rocket-propelled grenade in Helmand province
July 22 Eight people, including two Canadian soldiers, are killed in a double suicide attack in Kandahar
August 1 Three UK soldiers killed after an ambush in Helmand the day after Nato forces take over from US troops
August 3 Four Nato soldiers, all Canadian, killed in southern Afghanistan and 21 civilians killed in a suicide car bombing in Kandahar province
August 6 Private Andrew Barrie Cutts of the Royal Logistic Corps killed in Musa Qualeh in northern Helmand
August 11 Suicide car bomber kills a Canadian soldier in the south
August 13 Three US soldiers killed in heavy fighting with Taliban guerrillas close to the border with Pakistan
August 20 One UK soldier and four Americans killed in fighting in the south
August 26 Two French special forces soldiers killed in an insurgent ambush
August 28 Suicide bomb in Helmand province kills 17
September 1 Ranger Anare Draiva of 1 Royal Irish Regiment, who was Fijian, dies in Helmand
September 2 Fourteen UK armed personnel die in a Nato aircraft crash near Kandahar
September 3 Nato and Afghan forces kills dozens of Taliban fighters in an air and ground offensive in the south
September 4 One Canadian soldier killed by friendly fire and several wounded during a major Nato offensive. One British soldier and four Afghans killed by a suicide bomb in Kabul
September 6 One British soldier killed and six injured by a landmine in southern Helmand. Second British soldier killed in another clash in the province and a third dies of injuries sustained in a clash the previous week
September 7 Two US soldiers among 16 killed when a suicide bomber targets a convoy near the American embassy in Kabul
September 9 40 suspected Taliban fighters and one Nato soldier are killed during fighting in Kandahar province's Panjwayi district
 
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Published: Sunday, September 17, 2006
New Afghan offensive
U.S. troops aid in effort to root out Taliban
Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan - Thousands of American and Afghan soldiers launched an offensive against resurgent Taliban militants in five eastern provinces Saturday, seeking to expand the Afghan government's reach into the volatile frontier region, the U.S.-led coalition said.

The operation comes as a NATO-led force, including 2,500 U.S. soldiers, is pressing heavy attacks on militants in Afghanistan's south, claiming to have killed hundreds of guerrillas over the past two weeks.
The new push in the east is "part of a series of coordinated operations placing continuous pressure on Taliban extremists ... in order to provide security to the population, extend the government to the people and to increase reconstruction," the U.S.-led coalition said.
Dubbed Operation Mountain Fury, the offensive involves 7,000 U.S. and Afghan soldiers in the central and eastern provinces of Paktika, Khost, Ghazni, Paktya and Logar, the military said.
Insurgents and other Islamic extremist groups, including al-Qaida, are known to operate in the region, especially in areas bordering Pakistan where the reach of the Afghan government is weak.
Underscoring the dangers, two separate insurgent attacks on a military base in Khost province killed a coalition soldier and wounded another Friday, the military said. A number of Afghan troops were also wounded, the statement said.
A suspected suicide bomber also blew himself up in the same province when explosives strapped to his body went off prematurely as he was approaching a police checkpoint Saturday. No one else was injured in the blast, police said.
The U.S. military said troops had been preparing the ground for Operation Mountain Fury for weeks and began the "maneuver phase" early Saturday.
A separate U.S.-led operation called Big Northern Wind has been going on in neighboring Kunar province's Korangal Valley since late August.
"Mountain Fury will continue until the conditions of bringing security, construction and growth are met," Maj. Gen. Benjamin Freakley, the top U.S. operational commander, said in the statement.
"The Afghan people are tired of war. They want what their government is capable of providing: security, employment, education and a better way of life," Freakley said.
In the south, about 60 suspected Taliban militants attacked a police checkpoint Friday, sparking a gunbattle in which four militants died, police said.
There were no casualties among the Afghan security forces or NATO. Police recovered the bodies of four suspected Taliban and their weapons, police said.
Associated Press
A wheel from a destroyed vehicle lies near the site of a bomb blast Saturday near Kabul, Afghanistan. A remote-controlled device went off as a car carrying four Afghans passed by.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
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Battling Taliban in Afghanistan may take 3-5 years: British commander printResizeButton(); javascript:void(0); javascript:void(0);
Britain's Lt. Gen. David Richards, the commander of NATO troops in Afghanistan, said on Saturday that the fight against the Taliban might take three or five years.
Speaking to Channel 4 News, Richards, who took command of the 8,000-strong NATO troops in August, said he was sure the campaign would be successful and that the Taliban would "start dancing to my tune."
He said fighting in the southern province of Helmand was "very tense" two weeks ago and the Taliban had lost many fighters.
"Although in a way we were not able to maneuver as freely as we would have wished perhaps, we have, I think, created an environment in which most people, including many Taliban, have just had enough fighting," he said.
Also on Saturday, about 3,000 U.S.-led coalition troops along with 4,000 Afghan soldiers and policemen launched a massive anti-Taliban operation in eastern and central provinces of Afghanistan.
Operation Mountain Fury began in the morning to beat off Taliban resistance in Paktika, Khost, Ghazni, Paktia and Logar provinces, a statement from the coalition said.
"Mountain Fury is just one part of a series of coordinated operations placing continuous pressure on Taliban extremists across multiple regions of the country," the statement said.
The goal of Mountain Fury is to not only defeat Taliban extremists in the region, but to continue the process of economic growth and development, it added.
Afghanistan has been suffering from a rise in Taliban-linked violence this year, during which more than 2,300 people, mostly Taliban rebels, have been killed. The fatalities included over 100 foreign troops.
Source: Xinhua

http://english.people.com.cn/200609/17/eng20060917_303646.html
 
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What is there to believe. One news said that NATO and AFGHAN forces killed hundreds of Talibans in just two weeks. The commander says that it will take 3-5 years to complete the fight.

Do they mean to say that there are hundred of thousands taliban fighters? Or Talibans are sitting ducks? Or NATO soldiers are over-smart?

Kashif
 
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In search of the Taliban's missing link
By Syed Saleem Shahzad
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/HI16Df01.html

Despite spending many millions of dollars, US intelligence, five years after the ouster of the Taliban from Kabul, remains in the dark over the command structure of the Taliban.

How (and from where) do they manage to relay their instructions into the battlefield? Asia Times Online has learned that this year alone, international intelligence operations in Afghanistan have spent millions of dollars trying to find out, even as fighting in the past month has been the heaviest ever.

What is known is that among the rank and file of the mujahideen there is a strong system of communication, with instructions flowing freely and quickly.

What is worth noting is that what is happening in Afghanistan has happened before, against the British many years ago and against the Soviets more recently. This latest battle against a foreign invader is being fought as a classic Afghan war, although the sequence of events is somewhat different.

Afghan tradition dictates that foreign forces will be resisted to the last. Further, the Taliban believe that by the end of the spring offensive, Mullah Omar will again declare himself head of the Islamic Emirate of Taliban for a final battle against the foreigners.
 
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1. One news said that NATO and AFGHAN forces killed hundreds of Talibans in just two weeks. The commander says that it will take 3-5 years to complete the fight.

2. Do they mean to say that there are hundred of thousands taliban fighters?

3. Or Talibans are sitting ducks? Or NATO soldiers are over-smart?

1. The taliban fight in civilian attire, in Vietnam battlefield kills frequently included civilians. The same is undoubtedly happening in Southern Afgh.

2. The Taliban probably number 5,000 core fighters and another 15,000 who drift in and out of fighting.

3. Remember that fighting cant happen in winter so the Taliban is making a large drive so they will suffer heavy casualities. Also NATO soldiers are much better equiped and when injured are given prompt medical treatment. In iraq around 2,000 are dead and 9,000 disabled. So any number of NATO dead, multiply by four the number who are disabled.
 
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Taliban terror comes on a bike



Ottawa: Four Canadian soldiers were killed in southern Afghanistan on Monday while trying to reassure the locals that it was safe to return to their homes, the head of the Nato coalition in the region said.
“The soldiers were conducting a patrol in the area to provide security in supporting the Afghan security forces, just trying to reassure the people...that there was security out there and to reassure the people that they could come back...,” said the coalition commander, Canadian Brig Gen. David Fraser.
They were killed by a Taliban suicide bomber on a bicycle. Fraser said Afghan civilians, including two children, as well as other Canadian soldiers were injured. None of the Canadian injuries were lifethreatening, he said. He was speaking in Kandahar in a briefing televised in Canada, which has 2,300 troops in the region and is currently heading up the Nato mission.
“The Taliban attacked the people of Afghanistan. They don’t want the people of Afghanistan to have a stable environment,” Fraser said, describing the attack as cowardly. On the details of what the soldiers were doing, he seemed to contradict Nato and the Afghan police.
Nato said they were giving gifts to the population, and the police said they were handing out notebooks and pens.
Asked if this was true, he said: “No, the soldiers were actually doing a security patrol. But there is significant humanitarian assistance going on.”
REUTERS
 
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