Afghan Police Kill Would-Be Suicide Bombers
May 5, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
KABUL (AP) — Militants attacked the provincial governor's compound in western Afghanistan on Wednesday, sparking street battles that killed at least five would-be suicide bombers, authorities said.
The Afghan Interior Ministry said police killed the bombers before they were able to carry out their attacks in Zaranj in Nimroz province, in extreme southwestern Afghanistan along the Iranian border.
At least five police officers were killed or wounded in the fighting, said the provincial governor, Gulam Dastagar Ezad.
"The fighting was very serious and they tried to enter (the compound)," Ezad told The Associated Press.
He said one surviving attacker was holed up in a house, but that the fighting had died down.
The deputy police chief in Nimroz, Musa Rasooli, said militants were targeting the provincial governor's compound.
Nimroz province is a major trafficking route for Afghanistan's huge opium trade. Some insurgents fled into Nimroz province earlier this year when thousands of U.S., NATO and Afghan troops conducted an offensive to rout the Taliban from neighboring Helmand province.
Airstrikes Kill 10 Militants in Pakistan
April 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
PARACHINAR, Pakistan (AP) — Fighter jets pounded militant hide-outs in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, killing 10 suspected insurgents as part of a military operation that has eliminated more than 300 fighters in the last three weeks, an official said.
The strikes came as the Pakistani military is holding its largest military exercise in two decades in southeastern Pakistan. The monthlong operation, which started Saturday, will involve some 20,000 troops backed by tanks, artillery and air power, the army said in a statement. It is likely intended as a show of muscle as the military battles a violent Taliban-led insurgency.
The military launched its latest offensive in March to rout members of the Pakistani Taliban from the Orakzai tribal region. Many militants fled there after the army staged a large ground offensive last year against the group's main stronghold in South Waziristan, also close to the Afghan border.
Sunday's airstrikes destroyed three hide-outs in the Sangram area of Orakzai, said Samiullah Khan, a local administrator. They came a day after similar strikes killed nearly 100 suspected militants in the Orakzai and Khyber tribal areas, according to officials.
The army has described its operations in Orakzai, Khyber and neighboring Kurram as part of a final push against the Pakistani Taliban, characterizing the group as on its heels.
But Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq denied that Sunday, saying the military has exaggerated its success against the group.
"Our leadership and all key commanders are alive and active," Tariq told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location. "Our losses are very small compared to what is claimed by the army."
Tariq said the Taliban plans to increase its attacks in the coming months now that winter has ended.
Fighting has historically dropped off in both Pakistan and Afghanistan during the winter, when heavy snowfall makes movement in the rugged, mountainous border area difficult.
Tariq said the Taliban have already resumed attacks against the army in South Waziristan in recent days, inflicting "massive damage." Army officials could not be reached for comment.
Claims by the Taliban and the government in the tribal areas are almost impossible to independently verify because journalists are prohibited from traveling there.
Elsewhere in the northwest, gunmen ambushed a police patrol on Sunday as it was crossing a bridge in the town of Mardan, killing one officer and wounding two others, police official Jawed Khan said.
Authorities also found the body of a second police officer at a checkpoint several miles (kilometers) from the ambush site. His throat had been cut, Khan said.
Mardan is in North West Frontier Province, an area where the military has battled a persistent Taliban insurgency.
___
Associated Press writers Riaz Khan in Peshawar and Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan contributed to this report.
Third Bomb Hits Pakistan’s Lahore City
March 12, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
LAHORE, Pakistan DEVELOPING: Pakistani news reports say another bomb has exploded in the eastern city of Lahore, hours after twin homicide bombings killed at least 43 people and wounded about 100.
The reports Friday said rescue workers have been dispatched to the scene and that casualties were feared.
It would be the third time this week that Lahore has been hit by a bomb attack.
The attacks have shattered a period of relative calm in Pakistan, which has been battling Al Qaeda and Taliban militants.
50 Killed as Taliban, Rival Militants Battle in Afghanistan
March 7, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
KABUL Gunbattles between the Taliban and another Islamist faction have killed at least 50 people in northeastern Afghanistan, officials said Sunday. The militants are apparently fighting for control of several villages where the central government has almost no presence.
The fighting was continuing Sunday, with militants using heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, the governor of Baghlan province said.
Local police official Zalmai Mangal said the fighting in the northeastern province appears to be a power struggle between local Taliban forces and the Hezb-e-Islami militia loyal to warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
Violent clashes between anti-government Islamist factions are rare, although various militias have their own agendas and power struggles are relatively common.
Mangal, the province's deputy police chief, said reports from the area indicate that at least 50 militant fighters were dead, 35 from Hezb-e-Islami and 15 from the Taliban. He spoke by telephone from a district near the fighting where government forces have rushed to observe and try to help any wounded civilians.
It was unclear what touched off the fighting, which erupted Saturday morning and continued late into the night, resuming Sunday, Mangal said. However, he said that Taliban fighters reportedly had moved into villages that traditionally were controlled by Hezb-e-Islami.
Provincial Gov. Mohammad Akbar Barakzai also said that 50 militants were reported killed, though he did not have a breakdown of the casualties.
The fighting centered around five to six villages west of Baghlan-e-Jadid district in the central part of the province, Barakzai said.
"We don't know yet about casualties among civilians or damage to civilian houses," he said.
Pakistan Army Takes Control of Al Qaeda Cave Network
March 3, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
Pakistani forces have taken control of a warren of caves that served until recently as the nerve center of the Taliban and Al Qaeda and sheltered Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second-in-command to Usama bin Laden.
“It was the main hub of militancy where Al Qaeda operatives had moved freely,” Major-General Tariq Khan, the Pakistan regional commander, said as he gave journalists a tour of Damadola yesterday.
The village, nestling among snow-capped peaks in the Bajaur region along the Afghan border, has been fought over for 16 months. It is the first time that the Pakistani Army has set foot in the village, which had long been dominated by the insurgents operating on the both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
“Al Qaeda was there. They had occupied the ridges. There were 156 caves designed as a defensive complex,” said General Khan, head of the Frontier Corps responsible for Pakistan’s counter-insurgency campaign in the region. He said that his forces had killed 75 foreign and local militants and cleared a zone up to the Afghan border, and that the campaign against the insurgents was in its final stage.
The army began operations in Bajaur in August 2008 and claimed victory in February last year, only for the insurgents to seep back when the Government’s focus switched to Pakistani Taliban fighters in the Swat Valley and South Waziristan.
Afghan Officials Try to Win Over Region Before Offensive
February 12, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
Top Afghan officials made a final effort to win over the people of the Taliban-dominated Marjah region ahead of an expected U.S.-led assault. The result: Some tribal elders pledged to cooperate with coalition forces once the shooting starts, but some remained skeptical of the government and its Western backers.
Afghan and allied commanders plan to use the Marjah offensive as a showcase for their shift in focus away from simply killing Taliban and toward protecting civilians and improving local governance, where entrenched corruption has bolstered support for the militants.
"If Marjah is out of government control that is the government's fault because the central government abandoned us," said Abdul Ahad Helmandal, one of the 150 tribal elders who attended the talks, in a telephone interview after the meeting. "Widespread corruption in the government caused people to stopped trusting the central government."
Michael Yon reports from Afghanistan
As the talks took place, Taliban fighters skirmished with troops from the Afghan-U.S.-British task force arrayed on the edge of Marjah, a once sleepy collection of poor villages in southern Afghanistan that is now the focal point in the first phase of the latest U.S. surge.
Marines, who engaged small bands of Taliban, said they thought the militants were trying to draw them into the larger fight before the allied forces were ready, according to the Associated Press. No casualties were reported.
U.S., Afghan Forces Poised to Seize Taliban Stronghold
February 10, 2010 by admin
Filed under World News
NEAR MARJAH, Afghanistan U.S. and Afghan forces pushed Tuesday to the edge of the southern Afghan town of Marjah, poised to seize the major Taliban supply and drug-smuggling stronghold in hopes of building public support by providing aid and services once the insurgents are gone.
Instead of keeping the offensive secret, Americans have been talking about it for weeks, expecting the Taliban would flee. But the militants appear to be digging in, apparently believing that even a losing fight would rally supporters and sabotage U.S. plans if the battle proves destructive.
No date for the main attack has been announced but all signs indicate it will come soon. It will be the first major offensive since President Barack Obama announced last December that he was sending 30,000 reinforcements to Afghanistan, and will serve as a significant test of the new U.S. strategy for turning back the Taliban.
About 400 U.S. troops from the Army's 5th Stryker Brigade and about 250 Afghan soldiers moved into positions northeast of Marjah before dawn Tuesday as U.S. Marines pushed to the outskirts of the town.
Automatic rifle fire rattled in the distance as the Marines dug in for the night with temperatures below freezing. The occasional thud of mortar shells and the sharp blast of rocket-propelled grenades fired by the Taliban pierced the air.
"They're trying to bait us, don't get sucked in," yelled a Marine sergeant, warning his troops not to venture closer to the town. In the distance, Marines could see farmers and nomads gathering their livestock at sunset, seemingly indifferent to the firing.
The U.S. goal is to take control quickly of the farming community, located in a vast, irrigated swath of land in Helmand province 380 miles southwest of Kabul. That would enable the Afghan government to re-establish a presence, bringing security, electricity, clean water and other public services to the estimated 80,000 inhabitants.
Over time, American commanders believe such services will undermine the appeal of the Taliban among their fellow Pashtuns, the largest ethnic group in the country and the base of the insurgents' support.
"The military operation is phase one," Helmand Gov. Gulab Mangal told reporters Tuesday in Kabul. "In addition to that, we will have development in place, justice, good governance, bringing job opportunities to the people."
Marjah will serve as the first trial for the new strategy implemented last year by the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal. He maintains that success in the eight-year conflict cannot be achieved by killing Taliban fighters, but rather by protecting civilians and winning over their support.
Many Afghan Pashtuns are believed to have turned to the Taliban, who were driven from power in the U.S.-led invasion of 2001, because of disgust over the ineffectual and corrupt government of President Hamid Karzai.
"The success of the operation will not be in the military phase," NATO's civilian chief in Afghanistan, Mark Sedwill, told reporters Tuesday. "It will be over the next weeks and months as the people ... feel the benefits of better governance, of economic opportunities and of operating under the legitimate authorities of Afghanistan."
To accomplish that, NATO needs to take the town without causing significant damage or civilian casualties. That would risk a public backlash among residents, many of whose sons and brothers are probably among the estimated 400 to 1,000 Taliban defenders. U.S. aircraft have been dropping leaflets over the town, urging militants not to resist and warning civilians to remain indoors.
Provincial officials believe about 164 families — or about 980 people — have left the town in recent weeks, although the real figure could be higher because many of them moved in with relatives and never registered with authorities.
Residents contacted by telephone in Marjah said the Taliban were preventing civilians from leaving, warning them they have placed bombs along the roads to stop the American attack. The militants may believe the Americans will restrain their fire if they know civilians are at risk.
Mohammad Hakim said he waited until the last minute to leave Marjah with his wife, nine sons, four daughters and grandchildren because he was worried about abandoning his cotton fields in a village on the edge of town. He decided to leave Tuesday, but Taliban fighters turned him back because they said the road was mined.
"All of the people are very scared," Hakim said by telephone. "Our village is like a ghost town. The people are staying in their homes."
Sedwill said NATO hopes that when Marjah has fallen, many Taliban militants could be persuaded to join a government-promoted reintegration process.
"The message to them is accept it," he said. "The message to the people of the area is, of course, keep your heads down, stay inside when the operation is going ahead."
Mangal, the governor, said authorities believe some local Taliban are ready to renounce Al Qaeda and give the government a chance.
"I'm confident that there are a number of Taliban members who will reconcile with us and who will be under the sovereignty of the Afghan government," he said.
Ali Ahmad Jalali, a former Afghan interior minister who lectures at the National Defense University in Washington, said the U.S. had little choice but to publicize the offensive so civilians could leave and minimize casualties. He said it would have been impossible to achieve complete surprise because "an operation of this scale cannot be kept secret."
But Jalali added that publicizing the operation may have encouraged hard-core Taliban to stand and fight to show their supporters and the international community that they will not be easily swayed by promises of amnesty and reintegration.
"Normally the Taliban would leave. They would not normally decisively engage in this kind of pitched battle. They would leave and come back because they have the time to come back," Jalali told The Associated Press.
"If there's stiff resistance in Marjah, this could increase the recruiting power of the Taliban or at least retain what they have in that area," he said. "It's become the symbol of Taliban resistance. So I would suspect it's possible there would be stiff rearguard resistance. If it becomes bloody, it would affect opinion in Europe and the U.S."
Jalali also said that success would depend on whether the Afghan government can make good on its promise of services once the battle is over.
"If the coalition can stabilize Marjah, rebuild it and install good governance, that can be an example for other places," he said. "If not, it would be another problem."
Echoing this theory, McChrystal told reporters at a defense conference in Turkey last weekend that it was necessary to tell Afghans that the attack on Marjah was coming so they would know "that when the government re-establishes security, they'll have choices."




