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Snuffysmith
5 "insurgents" killed in east Afghanistan :

Five "insurgents" were killed by the U.S.-led coalition forces in the eastern Afghan province of Kunar Monday night, the coalition said Tuesday.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-04/...ent_4443581.htm

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Infant among Afghans wounded by US patrols:

U.S.-led troops in southeastern Afghanistan wounded a new born baby girl, her mother, a five-year-old boy and three other Afghans, when they opened fire on cars that had ignored instructions to stop, police and residents said on Tuesday.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12775.htm

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Karzai calls for restraint as Afghans killed by coalition fire :

Hamid Karzai, Afghan president, yesterday demanded restraint from coalition forces after more than a dozen Afghan civilians and police were killed in two possible friendly fire incidents.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12772.htm

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Taliban regroup in Afghanistan:

Several thousand have entered country
http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Canada/200...pf-1537330.html
Snuffysmith
16 Afghan civilians killed or wounded by U.S. troops :

More than 16 Afghan civilians have been reported killed or wounded this week by U.S. soldiers as troops battled an outbreak of insurgent activity in warmer spring weather, according to Afghan officials.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/19/news/afghan.php#

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Infant Reportedly Among Afghans Injured By U.S. Military :

Reports from Afghanistan say a number of civilians, including a newborn baby, were injured after a U.S. military patrol opened fire on their vehicle in the southeastern Afghan province of Khost.
http://tinyurl.com/lnz6u

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US, Afghan Forces Kill 5 "Militants" In Kunar Province : -

U.S. and Afghan soldiers have killed five militants during a large-scale operation targeting Taliban and al-Qaida fighters in a volatile eastern region of the country near Pakistan, the U.S. military said Tuesday.
http://tinyurl.com/pxwx9

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French sapper killed in mine accident on Tajik-Afghan border :

The French mine-clearing instructor was badly wounded when an anti-personnel mine exploded. He died in the hospital.
http://en.rian.ru/world/20060419/46621189.html

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Real bad news in Afghanistan:

Taliban regains control of much of country
http://wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49807

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David Michael Smith : The U.S. War in Afghanistan:

As hundreds of millions of people in Central Asia and the Middle East watch their oil and natural gas being extracted and transported for the profit of Western companies, the prospects for a massive, violent backlash against the U.S. and its client regimes are likely to grow. As horrific as the September 11 attacks were, they may only be the beginning.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12789.htm
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/HD25Df01.html
Fighting talk from Osama and the Taliban
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

KARACHI - The latest Osama bin Laden message on Sunday coincides with the deadliest phase of the spring offensive in Afghanistan, which began on Friday when the Taliban-led insurgency launched fighters in various provinces under a unified strategy.

In an audio tape allegedly of bin Laden broadcast on Sunday by Al-Jazeera, the pan-Arab satellite television network based in Qatar, the al-Qaeda leader accused average Westerners "of supporting a war on Islam" and urged his followers to go to Sudan - his former base - to fight a proposed United Nations peacekeeping force. Some 300,000 African villagers have been killed in Darfur in attacks by Arab fighters backed by Khartoum.

The Taliban offensive involved a number of groups ranging from 100-200 fighters each launched simultaneously in about two dozen places along the porous border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, with the main focus on the Nooristan, Ghazni, Khost, Paktia and Paktika regions.

Contacts of Asia Times Online claim that the attacks will continue on a daily basis involving many hundreds of Taliban entering Afghanistan. The fighters are primed to carry out not only hit-and-run operations, as in the past, but also to engage in sustained battles from bases they will establish with the consent of the local population.

In their most successful attack, a roadside bomb on Saturday killed four Canadian soldiers traveling in an armored vehicle in a convoy in Gomboth, a village about 40 kilometers north of Kandahar, a former Taliban stronghold. US firms as well as pro-government clerics were also targeted. On Monday, three Taliban fighters and one policeman died in a gun battle between Taliban fighters and security forces in the province of Ghazni.

Over the past year, the Taliban have steadily cemented their support among the general population, capitalizing on inflammatory issues such as the alleged desecration of the Holy Koran by US interrogators, brothels in Kabul, the burning of a Taliban body, and cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. This has brought unanimity among different tribes to support the anti-US movement and paved the way for the Taliban to pitch sustained battles in open areas against US-led forces.

The overall objective of the Taliban is that by winter they will have taken control of most of rural Afghanistan.

The strategy
The latest Taliban strategy could be defined as a "netwar", as in the operations of networks, but the leadership sitting in the mountains would outline the strategy as being identical to that of the mujahideen against the Soviets in 1988, when, for the first time, the mujahideen gained complete control over the areas along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and over villages around the major cities.

At this point, almost 10 years after the Soviet invasion, the mujahideen were able to wage pitched and sustained battles from their bunkers, and crucially they had a stream of fresh recruits to tap, as well as money and arms.

In terms of personnel, it is estimated that in the North and South Waziristan tribal areas of Pakistan the Taliban have enough supporters to draw on to fight for a year - about 40,000 men. In North Waziristan alone there are about 27,000.

There are indications of an equally strong presence of Taliban fighters in the other five tribal agencies, beside various other districts in Pakistan.

In a figure often quoted by Pakistani intelligence, as many as 500,000 men visited Afghanistan during the Taliban rule from 1996-2001. Most of them received military training, while all of them had ideological inspiration. About 50,000 of these people are believed to be still active as members of jihadi organizations. Obviously, this is a large pool from which the Taliban could draw.

In the early to mid-1990s, Pakistan's madrassas (seminaries) were the major source of foot soldiers in the Taliban-led movement, which triumphed over bickering mujahideen factions and seized power. This was done with the tacit approval of the Pakistani establishment.

Under US pressure, as Pakistan sides with the United States in the "war on terror", a number of checks and balances have been placed on the madrassas. However, there remains a zeal among religiously motivated youths, especially from Punjab's rural areas, to join hands with the Taliban-led resistance. They know very well where to go and whom to contact to get into Afghanistan.

The five years of Taliban rule was a major inspirational force for these youths, and now there is no need, as in the past, for the Pakistani establishment to encourage them to strengthen the Taliban - the Taliban's ideology itself is a strong motivating force.

At the same time, al-Qaeda and the Taliban have focused on sharpening the divide between the West and Islam - as in bin Laden's latest tape, where he reminds the Muslim world that by withdrawing funds from the Hamas-led government in Palestine, the West is showing its grudge against Islam in general. In this way, al-Qaeda attracts both human and material resources for its war against the West.

In terms of the Taliban-led insurgency, its financial sources remain highly secretive. It is believed to be supported by various dubious sources, including the opium trade, yet observers point out that to finance an operation of the present scale for several months could only be done by states.

This is a universal law of resistance movements: once they gain a certain critical mass, they generate more support from regional players. The Taliban are fast approaching that position.

Syed Saleem Shahzad is Bureau Chief, Pakistan, Asia Times Online. He can be reached at saleem_shahzad2002@yahoo.com.

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing .)
Snuffysmith
'A VIRGIN MARKET' - ANN MARLOWE (WALL STREET JOURNAL, APRIL 26): After decades of conflict and the crippling legacies of communism and fundamentalism, Afghanistan is finally open for business. The signs are everywhere, from Kabul's traffic jams to Mazar-i-Sharif's building boom; from the opening of a Coca-Cola bottling plant to the country's first private university, the American University of Afghanistan, offering programs in business administration and information technology.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1146017913...in_commentaries
PAID SUBSCRIPTION
Snuffysmith
Corruption eroding Afghan security
Violence is spreading beyond the restive south, fueled in large part by
poor governance, say analysts. By David Montero
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0428/p07s02-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Suspected U.S. Spies Targeted

KABUL, Afghanistan - Taliban militants and their allies are waging
a dirty war in Pakistan's unruly tribal areas, kidnapping and
executing people suspected of spying for U.S. forces across the
border in Afghanistan. By Paul Watson and Zulfiqar Ali.
http://email.latimes.com/cgi-bin1/DM/y/e2D...Io30G2B0HUcI0EU
Snuffysmith
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/lib...60427-cfr01.htm
Background Q&A: The Taliban Resurgence in Afghanistan
Council on Foreign Relations

Author: Eben Kaplan, Research Associate

Introduction

The Taliban, a Muslim fundamentalist group, took control of Afghanistan's government in 1996 and ruled until the 2001 U.S.-led invasion drove it from power. The group is known for having provided safe haven to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda as well as for its rigid interpretation of Islamic law, under which it outlawed the education of women and girls and publicly executed criminals. Though the group has been out of power for several years, it remains a cultural force in the region while working to undermine President Hamid Karzai's U.S.-backed government.

Are the Taliban terrorists?

It's unclear. The Taliban has never appeared on the U.S. State Department's list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations, nor does it appear on similar lists maintained by Britain, the European Union, Canada, and Australia. Yet since the Taliban was driven from power in Afghanistan, the group is believed to be behind numerous attacks that have killed workers for nongovernmental organizations, civilians, government officials, policemen, and Pakistani and Afghan soldiers. Christopher Langton, a defense expert at the Institute for International Strategic Studies, says the Taliban "is an insurgent organization that will periodically use terrorism to carry out its operations."

Where are the Taliban now?

The whereabouts of Afghanistan's exiled Taliban leaders are not fully known. Some have been captured and detained by U.S. forces as enemy combatants in the "war on terror." Experts say many of the Taliban were able to melt back into predominantly Pashtun areas of Afghanistan in the south and east. They have occasionally linked up with others to mount attacks, and some are working to overthrow the current government. Many others have reassembled in neighboring Pakistan, where the Taliban movement was born, and launch attacks from there.


Read the rest of this article on the cfr.org website.

Copyright 2006 by the Council on Foreign Relations. This material is republished on GlobalSecurity.org with specific permission from the cfr.org. Reprint and republication queries for this article should be directed to cfr.org.
Snuffysmith
Afghan Corruption Breeding Violence:

Nearly five years after the fall of the Taliban, Afghanistan's security situation continues to be dragged down by endemic corruption, roving militias, and a growing nexus between narco-warlords and remnants of the Taliban, officials and analysts say.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/04/28/...in1557293.shtml

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Canada’s real role in Afghanistan :

Canadians are spilling their blood to prop up a corrupt, vicious, and undemocratic puppet government, to facilitate the murderous Pax Americana, and to bring the world a little closer to catastrophe.
http://www.republic-news.org/archive/137-r...ael_nenonen.htm

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Snuffysmith
http://www.dawn.com/2006/04/30/top11.htm
Taliban tell Indians to leave Afghanistan

By Jawed Naqvi

NEW DELHI, April 29: India on Saturday condemned the kidnapping of its worker by the Taliban militants in the Afghan province of Zabul on Friday and indicated that New Delhi would not yield to their demand that all Indians leave Afghanistan immediately.

The Indian foreign ministry said it had dispatched a team of officials led by a joint secretary to negotiate the release of K. Suryanarayan.

A Taliban spokesman was quoted as saying Mr Suryanarayan was an American agent.

“The team includes officials with experience in dealing with similar situations in the past. The team has been authorized to establish contact with all concerned parties through appropriate channels in order to secure the safe and early release of Shri Suryanarayan,” the foreign ministry said.

It said India had received a report from its Embassy in Kabul that some international news agencies in the Afghan capital have been contacted telephonically by an individual claiming to be a spokesman for the Taliban.

“The message he has given is that Indian government should announce by 6pm tomorrow that all Indians in Afghanistan must leave the country failing which the hostage would be killed,” the statement said.

Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran in a separate statement said Indians working in Afghanistan were doing to contribute to the much needed economic recovery and reconstruction of a friendly country.

Mr Suryanarayan, working for a Bahrain-based engineering and IT company, Al Moayed, was kidnapped, along with his Afghan driver, while travelling towards Qalat, capital of Zabul province.

Indians have been picked up as hostages in Afghanistan in the past too.

AFP adds: Interior ministry spokesman Yousuf Stanizai said in Kabul that Afghan security forces were engaged in a large-scale search operation in suspected areas to secure the release of the hostage.

“Police are trying their best. We are hopeful to secure his release soon,” he told AFP.
Snuffysmith
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article361047.ece
The Independent & The Independent on Sunday
30 April 2006 00:32 Home > News > World > Asia

Afghanistan: Opium wars
British troops have begun deploying in a Taliban-dominated area riddled with corruption and tribal rivalries, where the only industry is growing poppies. Tom Coghlan reports from Grishk and Lashkargar, Helmand Province
Published: 30 April 2006
"Would the British let us send soldiers to take over their country?" The mood among the group of men on the banks of the Helmand River was menacing. All claimed to be Taliban fighters.

"If one Talib is in a village, the infidels bomb the whole village and kill innocent people," their leader went on. "The British should come and fight us face to face and stop using their planes. They have been here three times and been nicely beaten three times," he added, referring to ill-fated British imperial adventures of the 19th and early 20th centuries. "If there were two million foreign soldiers, we would defeat them if they fought us face to face."

There are already frequent clashes: yesterday Afghan security forces said they had attacked Taliban militants in a cave complex north of Lashkargar, capital of the anarchic southern province of Helmand, where the deployment of 3,500 British soldiers is gathering pace. Two Taliban fighters were said to have been killed and weapons seized.

Tomorrow comes a less-heralded but no less significant British military commitment to the country. With the beginning of May, the British-led Nato command structure known as the ARRC (Allied Rapid Reaction Corps) starts operating from Kabul. It is the first phase in a gradual integration of the entire foreign military presence in Afghanistan under Nato leadership.

By early next year, 14,000 American troops will have been incorporated into the Nato force. A British lieutenant-general, David Richards, will command, the first time US forces have served under the theatre-wide leadership of a foreign general since 1945.

With a resurgent Taliban making inroads in the south, and growing disillusionment with the Western-backed government of Hamid Karzai, Nato's Supreme Commander in Europe, US General James Jones, has called Afghanistan "the most important mission that Nato has undertaken" in its 58-year history.

What that might mean for ordinary British troops was evident in the lawless badlands of Helmand last week. In the bazaar at Grishk, an area of noted Taliban sympathy in the north of the province, British Paras were patrolling the streets on Thursday. In early February, close to the town, 200 Taliban fought Afghan forces who were backed by British Harrier jets.

Violence against British forces has so far been limited to two suicide bomb attacks on successive Fridays this month, targeting the British base in Lashkargar. On Friday, the British squaddies guarding the gate at the base did not appear unduly worried, although a lance-corporal who declined to be named admitted: "Everyone's parents are pretty worried."

But a greater concern appeared to be the extreme sunburn afflicting various pale British soldiers and the possibility that the England football team might acquire a Brazilian manager.

Many suicide bombings in Afghanistan have so far proved ineffective, usually killing only the bomber. But the Taliban have shown an increasing aptitude for another tactic imported from Iraq, the roadside bomb. The only such attack on British forces injured three soldiers, two of them seriously. A massive bomb in neighbouring Kandahar last week obliterated a Canadian armoured vehicle, killing all four occupants.

In the Grishk bazaar, the mood was a mixture of frustration and hostility. "I am an enemy of the government and a friend of the Taliban," said Mohammed Zahir, 48, a storekeeper. His views were widely echoed. "This Karzai government is a disaster. Under the Taliban we had good law and order; under this government all the police are corrupt. Why should we trust foreigners when they are working side by side with a corrupt government?"

The "good law and order" of the Taliban included chopping off the limbs of robbers and bulldozing walls on to homosexuals. But, four years on, many people in Afghanistan's deep south have fond memories of the Taliban's tough stance and relative lack of corruption. Helmand has had little development, and the provincial government is riddled with corruption and tribal nepotism and is heavily involved in the drugs trade.

British and American pressure produced the removal of Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, the old governor, last December. A powerful tribal leader, he was "promoted" by President Karzai to a seat in the upper house of the new Afghan parliament. No Western official will deny Mr Akhundzada was deeply embroiled in the drug trade, and although his replacement is seen as honest, nobody is prepared to say the same of the old governor's brother, who remains deputy governor, or the provincial police chief.

Helmand remains an area of grinding poverty where the only source of wealth is opium production. The British deployment is an effort to alleviate the poverty and rampant corruption of the province using a huge civilian component from the Foreign Office and the Department for International Development.

The opium harvest is now in full swing across Helmand, where swaying poppy fields press right up to the main roads. One US official said that with good weather and a minimum 50 per cent rise in the area under cultivation, a record crop was expected. Eradication efforts by the central government were, Western officials say, hampered by bribery of the government eradication teams.

But General Richards has said: "Nato will not be involved in poppy eradication, because we are deeply cautious that if we get it wrong and create the wrong environment, we will tip otherwise perfectly law-abiding and co-operative people into the opposition camp." Whether such a clear distinction can be drawn between the war on drugs and the war on the Taliban is debatable.

Poppy farmers across Helmand say the Taliban have cut a deal with the drugs lords to reduce their operations until after the poppy harvest ends, several weeks from now, so as not to disrupt opium collection and transport by attracting government and foreign troops to the area.

The Taliban also have a financial interest: they tax all farmers one kilogram of opium, and 4.5kg from those producing 45kg or more.

As the sun set over the 1,000-year-old ruins that dot the country round Lashkargar, the Taliban broke off to pray, warning: "When the opium harvest is finished, the jihad begins."

"Would the British let us send soldiers to take over their country?" The mood among the group of men on the banks of the Helmand River was menacing. All claimed to be Taliban fighters.

"If one Talib is in a village, the infidels bomb the whole village and kill innocent people," their leader went on. "The British should come and fight us face to face and stop using their planes. They have been here three times and been nicely beaten three times," he added, referring to ill-fated British imperial adventures of the 19th and early 20th centuries. "If there were two million foreign soldiers, we would defeat them if they fought us face to face."

There are already frequent clashes: yesterday Afghan security forces said they had attacked Taliban militants in a cave complex north of Lashkargar, capital of the anarchic southern province of Helmand, where the deployment of 3,500 British soldiers is gathering pace. Two Taliban fighters were said to have been killed and weapons seized.

Tomorrow comes a less-heralded but no less significant British military commitment to the country. With the beginning of May, the British-led Nato command structure known as the ARRC (Allied Rapid Reaction Corps) starts operating from Kabul. It is the first phase in a gradual integration of the entire foreign military presence in Afghanistan under Nato leadership.

By early next year, 14,000 American troops will have been incorporated into the Nato force. A British lieutenant-general, David Richards, will command, the first time US forces have served under the theatre-wide leadership of a foreign general since 1945.

With a resurgent Taliban making inroads in the south, and growing disillusionment with the Western-backed government of Hamid Karzai, Nato's Supreme Commander in Europe, US General James Jones, has called Afghanistan "the most important mission that Nato has undertaken" in its 58-year history.

What that might mean for ordinary British troops was evident in the lawless badlands of Helmand last week. In the bazaar at Grishk, an area of noted Taliban sympathy in the north of the province, British Paras were patrolling the streets on Thursday. In early February, close to the town, 200 Taliban fought Afghan forces who were backed by British Harrier jets.

Violence against British forces has so far been limited to two suicide bomb attacks on successive Fridays this month, targeting the British base in Lashkargar. On Friday, the British squaddies guarding the gate at the base did not appear unduly worried, although a lance-corporal who declined to be named admitted: "Everyone's parents are pretty worried."

But a greater concern appeared to be the extreme sunburn afflicting various pale British soldiers and the possibility that the England football team might acquire a Brazilian manager.

Many suicide bombings in Afghanistan have so far proved ineffective, usually killing only the bomber. But the Taliban have shown an increasing aptitude for another tactic imported from Iraq, the roadside bomb. The only such attack on British forces injured three soldiers, two of them seriously. A massive bomb in neighbouring Kandahar last week obliterated a Canadian armoured vehicle, killing all four occupants.
In the Grishk bazaar, the mood was a mixture of frustration and hostility. "I am an enemy of the government and a friend of the Taliban," said Mohammed Zahir, 48, a storekeeper. His views were widely echoed. "This Karzai government is a disaster. Under the Taliban we had good law and order; under this government all the police are corrupt. Why should we trust foreigners when they are working side by side with a corrupt government?"

The "good law and order" of the Taliban included chopping off the limbs of robbers and bulldozing walls on to homosexuals. But, four years on, many people in Afghanistan's deep south have fond memories of the Taliban's tough stance and relative lack of corruption. Helmand has had little development, and the provincial government is riddled with corruption and tribal nepotism and is heavily involved in the drugs trade.

British and American pressure produced the removal of Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, the old governor, last December. A powerful tribal leader, he was "promoted" by President Karzai to a seat in the upper house of the new Afghan parliament. No Western official will deny Mr Akhundzada was deeply embroiled in the drug trade, and although his replacement is seen as honest, nobody is prepared to say the same of the old governor's brother, who remains deputy governor, or the provincial police chief.

Helmand remains an area of grinding poverty where the only source of wealth is opium production. The British deployment is an effort to alleviate the poverty and rampant corruption of the province using a huge civilian component from the Foreign Office and the Department for International Development.

The opium harvest is now in full swing across Helmand, where swaying poppy fields press right up to the main roads. One US official said that with good weather and a minimum 50 per cent rise in the area under cultivation, a record crop was expected. Eradication efforts by the central government were, Western officials say, hampered by bribery of the government eradication teams.

But General Richards has said: "Nato will not be involved in poppy eradication, because we are deeply cautious that if we get it wrong and create the wrong environment, we will tip otherwise perfectly law-abiding and co-operative people into the opposition camp." Whether such a clear distinction can be drawn between the war on drugs and the war on the Taliban is debatable.

Poppy farmers across Helmand say the Taliban have cut a deal with the drugs lords to reduce their operations until after the poppy harvest ends, several weeks from now, so as not to disrupt opium collection and transport by attracting government and foreign troops to the area.

The Taliban also have a financial interest: they tax all farmers one kilogram of opium, and 4.5kg from those producing 45kg or more.

As the sun set over the 1,000-year-old ruins that dot the country round Lashkargar, the Taliban broke off to pray, warning: "When the opium harvest is finished, the jihad begins."
theglobalchinese
Indian hostage killed in Afghanistan CNN International
A body found in Afghanistan has been identified as that of an Indian telecommunications engineer who was kidnapped earlier in the week by Taliban members, the province's police chief said. Police Chief Mohammed Nabeel Malahkili said the body discovered in Zabol province on Sunday had been beheaded. Shri K. Suryanarayan, who worked for the Roshan mobile telephone company, was abducted along with his Afghan driver Friday afternoon as he traveled from Kandahar to Kabul. A statement from the Taliban demanded that all Indian workers leave Afghanistan within 24 hours or the hostage would be killed. After the body was found, a Taliban spokesman said the group had not planned to kill the hostage but when he tried to escape, they shot him. Malakhili said the body was handed over to Roshan officials in neighboring Ghazni province. The Roshan company is based in Bahrain. India has close relations with Afghanistan and is involved in several aid and reconstruction projects. In India, Foreign Minister Shyam Saran held a news conference condemning the killing, and he vowed that Indian workers would continue to help rebuild Afghanistan's infrastructure. "The government and people of India, I can assure you, will never bow to such acts of terrorism and will continue their fraternal assistance to the people of Afghanistan in their endeavors to bring peace, stability and economic recovery to their country, ravaged by years of conflict," the minister said. Saran also called on the international community to join together to defeat the Taliban, which he called a "scourge to humanity." Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the killing and ordered security forces to hunt down those responsible. "The enemies of Afghanistan .... want to stop Afghanistan from developing and standing on its own feet," Karzai said in a statement, according to Reuters. Violence in the Afghan south has hampered development, and the job of thousands of NATO troops due soon to arrive into the region will be to ensure sufficient security for reconstruction. Militants have frequently kidnapped aid agency staff and foreign company workers, who the Taliban say are supporting the Western-backed government.
Indian engineer killed by Taliban: PMO NDTV.com
Indian PM condemns killing of abducted engineer Xinhua
Navhind Times - Outlook (subscription) - CNN-IBN - Ha'aretz - all 402 related »
Snuffysmith
- Indians At Risk In Afghanistan
http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Indians_...fghanistan.html

New Delhi (UPI) May 02, 2006 - Analysts suggest India needs to strengthen its intelligence mechanism in Afghanistan to protect its workers and engineers engaged in reconstruction work in the war-ravaged nation.
Snuffysmith
Even as the Taliban attacks US, Canadian, and British forces, organization is left off terrorist list in 'political' decision.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0502/dailyUpdate.html
Snuffysmith
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/print.cf...jectid=10379986

This article is owned by, or has been licensed to, the New Zealand Herald. You may not reproduce, publish, electronically archive or transmit this article in any manner without the prior written consent of the New Zealand Herald. To make a copyright clearance inquiry, please click here.

'After the opium harvest, it's jihad'

03.05.06
By Tom Coghlan


"Would the British let us send soldiers to take over their country?" The mood among the group of men on the banks of the Helmand River was menacing. All claimed to be Taleban fighters.

"If one Talib is in a village, the infidels bomb the whole village and kill innocent people," their leader went on.

"The British should come and fight us face to face and stop using their planes. They have been here three times and been nicely beaten three times," he added, referring to ill-fated British imperial adventures of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

"If there were two million foreign soldiers, we would defeat them if they fought us face to face."

British forces officially took over the volatile Taleban stronghold of Helmand yesterday for what the commander in charge admitted would be a "challenging mission".

The American Stars and Stripes was lowered at the main base in Lashkar Gar and the Union flag raised alongside the Afghan flag on another day of violence in south Afghanistan.

There are already frequent clashes: this week Afghan security forces said they had attacked Taleban militants in a cave complex north of Lashkar Gar, capital of the anarchic province of Helmand, where the deployment of 3500 British soldiers is gathering pace. Two Taleban fighters were said to have been killed and weapons seized.

The British-led Nato command structure known as the ARRC (Allied Rapid Reaction Corps) also started operating from Kabul on Monday. It is the first phase in a gradual integration of the entire foreign military presence in Afghanistan under Nato leadership.

By early next year, 14,000 United States soldiers will have been incorporated into the Nato force. A British lieutenant-general, David Richards, will command, the first time American forces have served under the theatre-wide leadership of a foreign general since World War II.

With a resurgent Taleban making inroads in the south, and growing disillusionment with the Western-backed Government of Hamid Karzai, Nato's Supreme Commander in Europe, US General James Jones, has called Afghanistan "the most important mission that Nato has undertaken" in its 58-year history.

What that might mean for ordinary British troops was evident in the lawless badlands of Helmand last week.

In the bazaar at Grishk, an area of noted Taleban sympathy in the north of the province, British Paras were patrolling the streets last week. In early February, close to the town, 200 Taleban fought Afghan forces backed by British Harrier jets.

Violence against British deployment has so far been limited to two suicide bomb attacks on successive Fridays this month, targeting the British base in Lashkar Gar.

On Friday, British squaddies guarding the gates of the headquarters did not appear unduly worried by their mission, although a lance-corporal who declined to be named admitted: "Everyone's parents are pretty worried."

But a greater concern appeared to be the extreme sunburn afflicting various pale British soldiers and the possibility that the England football team might acquire a Brazilian manager, or not as the case may be.

Many Afghan suicide bombings have so far proved ineffective, usually killing only the bomber. But the Taleban have shown an increasing aptitude for another tactic imported from Iraq, the roadside bomb. The only such attack on British forces injured three soldiers, two of them seriously.

A massive bomb in neighbouring Kandahar last week obliterated a Canadian armoured vehicle, killing four occupants.

In the Grishk bazaar, the mood was a mixture of frustration and hostility.

"I am an enemy of the Government and a friend of the Taleban," said Mohammed Zahir, 48, a storekeeper. His views were widely echoed. "This Karzai Government is a disaster. Under the Taleban we had good law and order; under this Government all the police are corrupt.

"Why should we trust foreigners when they are working side by side with a corrupt Government?"

The "good law and order" of the Taleban included chopping off the limbs of robbers in front of packed stadiums and bulldozing walls on to homosexuals for acts of "sodomy".

But, four years on, many people in Afghanistan's deep south have fond memories of the Taleban's tough stance and relative lack of corruption. Helmand has had little development, and the provincial government is riddled with corruption and tribal nepotism and is heavily involved in the drugs trade.

British and US pressure produced the removal of Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, the old governor, last December. A powerful tribal leader, he was "promoted" by President Karzai to a seat in the upper house of the new Afghan Parliament.

No Western official will deny Akhundzada was deeply embroiled in the drug trade, and although his replacement is seen as honest, nobody is prepared to say the same of the old governor's brother, who remains deputy governor, or the provincial police chief.

Helmand remains an area of grinding poverty where the only source of wealth is opium production. The British deployment is an effort to alleviate the poverty and rampant corruption of the province using a huge civilian component from the Foreign Office and the Department for International Development.

The opium harvest is in full swing in Helmand, where swaying poppy fields press right up to the main roads.

One US official said that with good weather and a minimum 50 per cent rise in the area under cultivation, a record crop was expected. Eradication efforts by the Government were, Western officials say, hampered by bribery of the eradication teams.

But General Richards has said: "Nato will not be involved in poppy eradication, because we are deeply cautious that if we get it wrong and create the wrong environment, we will tip otherwise perfectly law-abiding and co-operative people into the opposition camp." Whether such a clear distinction can be drawn between the war on drugs and the war on the Taleban is debatable.

Poppy farmers across Helmand say the Taleban have cut a deal with the drugs lords to reduce their operations until after the poppy harvest ends, several weeks from now, so as not to disrupt opium collection and transport by attracting Government and foreign troops to the area.

The Taleban also have a financial interest: they tax all farmers one kilogram of opium, and 4.5kg from those producing 45kg or more.

As the sun set over the 1000-year-old ruins that dot the country round Lashkar Gar, the Taleban broke off to pray, warning: "When the opium harvest is finished, the jihad begins."

The Nato mission

* Two thousand British troops are in Afghanistan, with the number due to rise to 5700 over the coming months.

* The British Army's 3500 deployment to Helmand, will be completed by July and based in the capital of Lashkar Gah.

* 14,000 American soldiers will come under command of a British lieutenant-general, the first time US forces have fallen under theatre-wide foreign command since 1945.

* Soldiers from Canada will also form a bulk of the force.

* United States General James Jones said Afghanistan was "the most important mission that Nato has undertaken" in its 58-year history.

Copyright © 2006, APN Holdings NZ Ltd Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/03/world/as...artner=homepage
Taliban Threat Is Said to Grow in Afghan South


By CARLOTTA GALL
Published: May 3, 2006

TIRIN KOT, Afghanistan, April 27 — Building on a winter campaign of suicide bombings and assassinations and the knowledge that American troops are leaving, the Taliban appear to be moving their insurgency into a new phase, flooding the rural areas of southern Afghanistan with weapons and men.

Each spring with the arrival of warmer weather, the fighting season here starts up, but the scale of the militants' presence and their sheer brazenness have alarmed Afghans and foreign officials far more than in previous years.

"The Taliban and Al Qaeda are everywhere," a shopkeeper, Haji Saifullah, told the commander of American forces in Afghanistan, Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, as the general strolled through the bazaar of this town to talk to people. "It is all right in the city, but if you go outside the city, they are everywhere, and the people have to support them. They have no choice."

The fact that American troops are pulling out of southern Afghanistan in the coming months, and handing matters over to NATO peacekeepers, who have repeatedly stated that they are not going to fight terrorists, has given a lift to the insurgents, and increased the fears of Afghans.

General Eikenberry appealed for patience and support. "There has not been enough attention paid to Uruzgan," he said in a speech to the elders of Uruzgan Province gathered at the governor's house in Tirin Kot, the provincial capital. "I think the leaders, the Afghan government and the international community recognize this. There is reform coming and this year you will see it."

The arrival of large numbers of Taliban in the villages, flush with money and weapons, has dealt a blow to public confidence in the Afghan government, already undermined by lack of tangible progress and frustration with corrupt and ineffective leaders.

This small one-street town is in the Taliban heartland, and the message from the townspeople was bleak.

Uruzgan, the province where President Hamid Karzai first rallied support against the Taliban in the months after the Sept. 11 attacks, is now, four years later, in the thrall of the Islamic militants once more, and the provincial capital is increasingly surrounded by areas in Taliban control, local and American officials acknowledge. A recent report by a member of the United Nations mission in Afghanistan shown to The New York Times detailed similar fears.

The new governor, Maulavi Abdul Hakim Munib, 35, who took up his position just a month ago, controls only a "bubble" around Tirin Kot, an American military officer said. The rest of the province is so thick with insurgents that all the districts are colored amber or red to indicate that on military maps in the nearby American base. Uruzgan has always been troublesome, yet the map marks a deterioration since last year, when at least one central district had been colored green, the officer said.

"The security situation is not good," Governor Munib told General Eikenberry and a group of cabinet ministers at a meeting with tribal elders. "The number of Taliban and enemy is several times more than that of the police and Afghan National Army in this province," he said.

Uruzgan is not the only province teetering out of control. Helmand and Kandahar to the south have been increasingly overrun by militants this year, as large groups of Taliban are reportedly moving through the countryside, intimidating villagers, ambushing vehicles, and spoiling for a fight with coalition or Afghan forces.

Insurgents also have the run of parts of Zabul, Ghazni and Paktika Provinces to the southeast, and have increased ambushes on the main Kabul-Kandahar highway.

The Bush administration is alarmed, according to a Western intelligence official close to the administration. He said that while senior members of the administration consider the situation in Iraq to be not as bad as portrayed in the press, in Afghanistan the situation is worse than it has been generally portrayed.

Asked about the surge in Taliban activity in southern Afghanistan, a Pentagon spokesman, Bryan Whitman, said: "We have seen Taliban activity fluctuate from time to time." The British-led NATO force taking over from the American troops in the south "has well-equipped, well-led and fully prepared forces to operate in this challenging environment and deal with any threats," he added.

He noted that the United States would continue to be the largest contributor of troops to Afghanistan, and would continue to have primary responsibility for counterterrorism operations and for training Afghan Army units, even with NATO taking over in the south.

In one of the most serious developments, some 200 Taliban have moved into the district of Panjwai, only a 20-minute drive from the capital of the south, Kandahar, Mr. Karzai's home city. The police and coalition forces clashed with them two weeks ago, yet the Taliban returned, walking in the villages openly with their weapons, and sitting under the trees eating mulberries, according to a resident of the district.

The resident, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals, said the Taliban had been demanding food, lodging and the Muslim tithing, zakat, from villagers. Their brazenness and the failure of the United States-led coalition to deter them is turning public opinion about the effectiveness of the government.

For the first time the Afghan government has sent 500 men of the newly trained Afghan National Army to the neglected province. The official police force of Uruzgan is 347 strong, with 45 men deployed in each of the five districts, but far fewer actually turn up for work. American officials estimated armed Taliban in the province numbered from 300 to 1,000 men. The governor estimated there were 300 armed insurgents in each district.

The Taliban are warning the people to expect more attacks, the shopkeeper, Mr. Saifullah, told General Eikenberry. "During the day the people, the police, and the army are with the government, but during the night, the people, the police, and the army are all with the Taliban and Al Qaeda," he said.

Another man, Rahmatullah, told the general that his brother had been arrested by American forces and the raids and house searches had made the young men take to the hills to join the militants. "Release my brother and the tribal elders will persuade the young men to come back home and stop fighting," he said.

"The unemployment rate is very high and the people of Uruzgan are very poor," said Mullah Hamdullah, the elected head of the provincial council.

Unsure of the strength and commitment to fight of the incoming NATO forces — with British, Canadian, Dutch and Australian contingents — Afghan provincial officials, who stand first in the Taliban's firing line, have demanded that Mr. Karzai provide them with hundreds more police officers and weapons.

The governors of Uruzgan and Kandahar both said in interviews that they have lobbied the president for a force of 200 police officers for every district — four times current numbers — and to provide more resources to equip and supply them properly.

In a recent strategy review, Mr. Karzai agreed to increase the government presence in the frontline provinces, his chief of staff, Jawed Ludin, said. "We are increasingly hearing this, that there only 40 officers per district, and half of them are protecting the district chief as bodyguards, and the other half are on leave," he said.

A deputy minister of the interior, Abdul Malik Siddiqi, told the gathering that the government had a plan to send 200 to 250 police officers to each district of Uruzgan, and to find resources to equip them and pay their salaries.

General Eikenberry expressed caution about the idea, warning that there were not enough trained officers to send to the area, and more important, a lack of good leaders to control those police forces.

Uruzgan has suffered from a lingering Taliban presence and its forbidding terrain, which has made security and governing extremely difficult, resulting in neglect from the central government, he said. There has been no police reform or training here, no presence of the Afghan National Army and virtually no development, he said.

General Eikenberry is hoping to turn things around this year with new and better local leaders. "Now we see a lot of those conditions changing," he said, in an interview in the cockpit of the C130 military plane on the way to Uruzgan. Replacing the governor, and police and intelligence chiefs, should allow for reform and better governance, he said. Some 500 men of the national army have been deployed in the province and the police should receive better resources.

Hopes are pinned on Maulavi Munib, an educated, religious man from eastern Afghanistan, who was deputy minister of tribal affairs of the Taliban government. He is starting from scratch since the former governor sold all his vehicles, including police vehicles, and all the arms and ammunition owned by the province.

Governor Munib's past brings an added complication, since he remains listed by the United Nations Security Council sanctions committee as a wanted member of the Taliban leadership, which technically bars any government from providing financial, technical or military assistance to his province.

The Afghan government has formally requested that he, and three other former Taliban officials, including two members of Afghanistan's new Parliament, be removed from the list, a process that demands the agreement of all Security Council members, but Afghan officials said Russia remained opposed to the proposal.
Snuffysmith
Four militants, and one solider killed in Afghan gun battle :

Four suspected Taliban militants and an Afghan soldier were killed in a gun battle in southern Afghanistan, the Defence Ministry said today.
http://www.zeenews.com/znnew/articles.asp?aid=292498&sid=SAS

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Senior judge killed in W. Afghanistan :

An Afghan senior judge was killed Tuesday night in the western province of Farah, an official confirmed Wednesday.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-05/...ent_4505219.htm

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US does not consider Taliban terrorists:

Even as the Taliban attacks US, Canadian, and British forces, organization is left off terrorist list in 'political' decision.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0502/dailyUpdate.html

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Taliban threat is said to grow in Afghan south :

Each spring with the arrival of warmer weather, the fighting season here starts up, but the scale of the militants' presence and their sheer brazenness have alarmed Afghans and foreign officials far more than in previous years.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/03/asia/taliban.php#
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-A...itant-Tape.html
Afghan Militant Wants to Join Bin Laden

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: May 4, 2006
Filed at 11:57 a.m. ET

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- An Afghan warlord wanted by the United States declared support for Osama bin Laden in a videotape broadcast Thursday, indicating his Islamic militant faction would be willing to shelter al-Qaida leaders.

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister, controls a wide network in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistani border and assistance from his Hezb-e-Islami group would be invaluable to leaders of the terror network, who are foreigners and do not speak the local languages.

''We hope to participate with them in a battle that they lead. They hold the banner and we stand alongside them as supporters,'' Hekmatyar said in the tape, which was broadcast on Al-Jazeera.

The tape appeared less than two weeks after bin Laden, al-Zawahri and al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi issued messages in quick succession, accusing the United States of waging a war on Islam and criticizing the political and security situation in Iraq.

Wearing a black turban, glasses and sporting a long white and gray beard, Hekmatyar said: ''If it weren't for the Pakistani and Iranian support, the Americans wouldn't have been able to occupy Afghanistan and Iraq as quickly and as easily.''

Hekmatyar, whose Islamic militant group fought invading Soviet forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s, was prime minister from June 1993 to June 1994 and one of Afghanistan's most prominent warlords during the 1992-96 civil war.

But after the emergence of the Taliban and its subsequent rise to power, the new hard-line regime chased Hekmatyar out of Kabul in 1996.

The warlord laid low for some time before moving to Iran for several years, returning after the 2001 toppling of Taliban and aligned himself with extremist remnants of the hard-line militia in a marriage of convenience to fight U.S.-led forces.

His group has been blamed for several recent attacks against U.S.-led coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Some 2,500 U.S. and Afghan soldiers have been waging a campaign for the past four weeks in rugged eastern Afghan terrain bordering Pakistan.

The Pakistani Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said last month he believed bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, may be hiding in eastern Afghanistan -- parts of which are controlled by Hekmatyar.

Al-Jazeera did not say how it received the tape and it was not clear when it was made.

Hekmatyar, who has not issued a videotape since 2004, spoke against a plain gray backdrop with an automatic rifle leaning against the wall beside him.
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-A..._r=1&oref=login

Afghan Warlord Supports Bin Laden on Tape
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: May 4, 2006
Filed at 12:56 p.m. ET

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- An Afghan warlord wanted by the United States declared support for Osama bin Laden in a videotape broadcast Thursday, indicating his Islamic militant faction would be willing to shelter al-Qaida leaders.

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister, controls a wide network in eastern Afghanistan and assistance from his Hezb-e-Islami group would be valuable to al-Qaida's leaders who are Arabs and don't speak the myriad of Afghan languages, particularly the Pashtu dialect used by Taliban militants and allied extremists.

''We hope to participate with them in a battle that they lead. They hold the banner and we stand alongside them as supporters,'' Hekmatyar said in the tape, which was broadcast on Al-Jazeera.

The tape appeared less than two weeks after bin Laden, al-Zawahri and al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi issued messages in quick succession, accusing the United States of waging a war on Islam and criticizing the political and security situation in Iraq.

Wearing a black turban, glasses and sporting a long white and gray beard, Hekmatyar said: ''If it weren't for the Pakistani and Iranian support, the Americans wouldn't have been able to occupy Afghanistan and Iraq as quickly and as easily. They wouldn't have been able to stay until now if (Pakistan and Iran) hadn't helped the occupying American forces control Kabul and Baghdad,'' he said.

While Pakistani support for the U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan is well-known, Iranian support was much more limited. Iran is believed to have agreed to cooperate with the U.S. government if any American pilots bailed out over Iranian territory. However, Iran strongly opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq and has been repeatedly accused by Washington of aiding Iraqi insurgents.

Hekmatyar, whose Islamic militant group fought invading Soviet forces in Afghanistan in the 1980s, was prime minister from June 1993 to June 1994 and one of Afghanistan's most prominent warlords during the 1992-96 civil war.

But after the emergence of the Taliban and its subsequent rise to power, the new hard-line regime chased Hekmatyar out of Kabul in 1996.

The warlord laid low for some time before moving to Iran for several years, returning after the 2001 toppling of Taliban and aligned himself with extremist remnants of the hard-line militia in a marriage of convenience to fight U.S.-led forces.

His group has been blamed for several recent attacks against U.S.-led coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Some 2,500 U.S. and Afghan soldiers have been waging a campaign for the past four weeks in rugged eastern Afghan terrain bordering Pakistan.

The Pakistani Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said last month he believed bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, may be hiding in eastern Afghanistan -- parts of which are controlled by Hekmatyar.

A senior editor at Al-Jazeera said the channel received the tape on Thursday and believed it was recorded in late April. The editor, who spoke on condition of anonymity as his statement was not authorized, declined to say how and where the station received the tape.

Hekmatyar, who has not issued a videotape since 2004, spoke against a plain gray backdrop with an automatic rifle leaning against the wall beside him.
Snuffysmith
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4DB...82F406D1DCE.htm

Aljazeera airs Hikmatyar video
Thursday 04 May 2006, 19:39 Makka Time, 16:39 GMT

Aljazeera has aired a video in which a former member of the Afghan government has accused Iran of backing the US in the Afghan conflict.


Qalb al-Din Hikmatyar, the leader and founder of the Hizbi Islami political party, also said he was ready to fight alongside Sheikh Osama bin Laden and blamed the ongoing conflicts in Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan on US interference.

The dissident said the US had started the battles in the three countries by invading Muslim lands and imposing direct rule on them, or by imposing their agents.

It is the first time Aljazeera has aired a video from Hikmatyar who has been politically dormant for the past few years.

In his speech, Hikmatyar expressed his gratitude to those who fought to expel the Soviet forces which invaded Afghanistan in 1980.

"We thank all Arab mujahidin, particularly Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri and other leaders, who backed us in our holy fight against the Russians and offered great sacrifices."

In a reference to Iran and Pakistan, Hikmatyar also said: "As you are aware, our malicious neighbours have assisted the Americans against us, while Moscow had also backed them.

"Four years and six months have passed since crusader forces occupied our country Afghanistan. Our neighbours helped the Americans and Moscow stood by their side."

Reactions

Aljazeera interviewed Mohmamed Shariati, an adviser to Mohamed Khatami, the former Iranian president, for comment on the video.

Shariati said: "In fact, Iran has dealt with the invasion of Afghanistan as a reality, while Pakistan has assisted [the US] on transporting US weapons through its territories.

"I believe Hikmatyar was linked to Pakistan at the time and had, through jihad, sparked an internal war in Afghanistan.

"In my view, the Khatami government dealt with the realities and even held talks with the Islamic conference organisation in Jiddah on this matter.

"It was also obvious that Khatami and Bin Laden were on different lines.

"One of them sees violence as a means to define Islam, while the other rejects violence, particularly with respect to the dialogue between civilisations, as pursued by Khatami.

"Iran assisted Afghanistan against Russian colonialism and against the US domination and has assisted in road-building.

Hikmatyar fought to remove the former Soviet Union from the country in the late 1980s. He was made prime minister before he had to leave Kabul when the Taliban swept into power in 1996. He is now allied to his former foes, theTaliban, and is wanted by the US.

He is believed to be in hiding along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

He was given refuge in Iran, but returned to his homeland as an insurgent after Tehran threw its weight behind Hamid Karzai, the present president of Afghanistan, following the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban.

The US presently leads about 20,000 foreign soldiers in Afghanistan.


Aljazeera
Snuffysmith
http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=5065

Deployment in Afghanistan 'most challenging' says Nato's senior civilian representative in Afghanistan.
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2165731,00.html

Taleban tell British to expect a river of blood
Snuffysmith
10 die in US helicopter crash in Afghanistan: -

A U.S. military helicopter crashed while on combat operations in eastern Afghanistan, killing all 10 U.S. service members on board, the U.S. military said on Saturday.
http://tinyurl.com/jhtx9

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Taliban claim helicopter kill:

The Taliban claim to have shot down a US helicopter in Afghanistan, killing all those on board.
http://tinyurl.com/emd5k

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Clash leaves 4 militants dead in S. Afghanistan :

Four suspected Taliban militias were killed as they encountered with government troops in the restive Zabul province on Friday morning, a military official said Saturday
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-05/...ent_4514459.htm

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2 Italian soldiers killed, 4 wounded in Afghanistan:

A roadside bomb killed two Italian soldiers and wounded four yesterday as they were travelling to help Afghan police hurt in another attack near the capital, officials said.
http://tinyurl.com/ebf2w
theglobalchinese
10 Soldiers in Afghan Crash From Fort Drum Ask News
Tim Martin was driving onto Fort Drum when he heard the sobering news about a helicopter crash. He breathed a sigh of relief once he knew his wife was safe. "I heard a helicopter went down, then they said where it went down," said Martin, whose wife is an Army military intelligence officer serving in Iraq. Ten Fort Drum soldiers died in Afghanistan Friday evening when their CH-47 Chinook transport helicopter crashed during combat operations as part of a hunt for al-Qaida and Taliban militants believed to be hiding in the mountainous terrain of rugged and remote Kunar province. The helicopter fell into a ravine while conducting operations on a mountaintop landing zone, according to a statement from the U.S. military base in Afghanistan. The U.S. military said the helicopter was not downed by hostile fire and an investigation was under way. The names and units of the soldiers, members of the 10th Mountain Division, will not be released for several days, Fort Drum spokesman Benjamin Abel said Sunday. The crash was the deadliest for U.S. forces in Afghanistan in a year, and was the deadliest for Fort Drum since March 11, 2003, when a chopper crash on post killed 11 soldiers. "We pray for our soldiers in harm's way because everybody in our congregation has someone or knows someone that's across the water. That's the only thing we can do," Derek Parker, a 20-year Army veteran who has served twice in Iraq, said Sunday after a worship service at Sweet Haven Holy Church of God. Of the roughly 18,000 Americans serving in Afghanistan, about half are from the 10th Mountain Division, which is based at Fort Drum. "Our hearts and prayers go out to the families and comrades of the soldiers who were involved in this crash," Maj. Gen. Benjamin Freakley, the division commander, said in a statement.
By JOHN KEKIS
Snuffysmith
AFGHAN WOMEN START BUSINESSES, HELP RECONSTRUCT A TORN NATION: SOME 10,000 WOMEN HAVE BEEN TRAINED AS ENTREPRENEURS, SOME OF WHOM ARE NOW ECONOMICALLY SELF-SUFFICIENT - DAVID MONTERO (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, MAY 8)
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0508/p04s01-wosc.html
Snuffysmith
3 killed in Afghanistan:

Taliban militia fighters ambushed a police patrol in southern Afghanistan, sparking an hour-long gunbattle that left two policemen and one attacker dead.
http://tinyurl.com/onvzq

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Southern Afghanistan is swarming with Taliban ahead of U.S. pullout :

The Taliban appear to be moving their insurgency into a new phase, flooding the rural areas of southern Afghanistan with men and weapons.
http://paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=143022
Snuffysmith
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Five policemen killed in southern Afghanistan:

Ousted Taliban members on Wednesday claimed to have killed five Afghan policemen and injured four others, while the Afghan police were reported to have killed three insurgents in Afghanistan's southern province of Helmand.
http://tinyurl.com/pobm8

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Afghan police battle Taliban, kill three :

Afghan police killed three Taliban insurgents who ambushed a patrol in a southern province where British troops are overseeing security, a provincial official said
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3663801a12,00.html
Snuffysmith
Mogadishu ceasefire collapses, nearly 100 dead:

Heavy militia battles erupted in Mogadishu on Wednesday after a brief truce collapsed, bringing the death toll to almost 100 after four days of fighting in the Somali capital.
http://tinyurl.com/rs63q

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Blasts hit Pakistan police school :

At least six policemen have been killed in a series of explosions at a police training academy in Quetta, the capital of Pakistan's Balochistan province.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4760463.stm

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Taliban Regrouping In Southern Afghanistan:

The Taliban is regrouping in the mountains of southern Afghanistan, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan said Wednesday.
http://www.postchronicle.com/news/security..._21218236.shtml

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Sept. 11 widows support Afghan women who lost husbands to war :

The two American women walk down a fly-infested alley where sewage from mud huts drains onto the dirt walkway. In a tiny backyard, they find two dozen chickens, five children and one Afghan war widow.
http://tinyurl.com/osnd2
Snuffysmith
Innocents Butchered In Somalia:

Islamic militia and gunmen loyal to US-backed warlords swarmed the streets of Mogadishu in a battle which left at least 130 dead – mostly passers-by.
http://tinyurl.com/qos39

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Two killed, one hurt in attack on Afghan UN car:

Two people were killed and one seriously wounded in a rocket attack on a U.N. vehicle in northwestern Afghanistan on Friday, a U.N. spokesman said.
http://tinyurl.com/r6ehq

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Snuffysmith
Four police, 10 Taliban killed in southern Afghanistan:

Four Afghan police and more than 10 people loyal to the ousted Taliban regime were killed in a firefight in Afghanistan's southern province of Kandahar, police said Monday.
http://tinyurl.com/k6dal

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French soldier killed, Canadians injured in Afghanistan ? :

A French soldier was killed and two Canadians ??sustained injuries in two separate mine explosions in Afghanistan on Monday. ?
http://www.kuna.net.kw/English/Story.asp?DSNO=866204
Snuffysmith
Afghanistan Attacks Leave 8 Dead, 13 Hurt:

Militants attacked a police post and a government office, and a gunbattle later broke out in Afghanistan's rugged eastern border with Pakistan on Tuesday, killing four people and injuring 13, officials said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060516/ap_on_...afghan_violence
Snuffysmith
http://www.cdi.org/program/document.cfm?Do...ge=../index.cfm

May 15, 2006

Afghanistan Stage III: NATO’s most ambitious operation?

In the months ahead, NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) will deploy thousands more troops to Afghanistan as part of its ongoing mission to “support the Government of Afghanistan in providing and maintaining a secure environment in order to facilitate the re-building of Afghanistan.” Troop levels are expected to rise from about 8,000 in January to 17,000 by the end of October. The expansion, known as Stage III, will be responsible for maintaining security in the troubled southern provinces, where most violent attacks against foreign and domestic forces have taken place. NATO’s commander, U.S. Gen. James L. Jones said ISAF could total as many as 25,000 troops eventually. British, Dutch and Canadian forces will be leading the effort to bring peace to Afghanistan through both civilian and military methods. Troops will be engaged in peacekeeping, reconstruction and, in all likelihood, open conflict – an effort Jones called “NATO’s most ambitious operation.” Despite a lack of popular support for the missions in all three of the main troop-contributing countries, international leaders have pledged to safeguard Afghanistan from both internal and external forces that would otherwise lead the country into chaos.

The expansion of NATO into the volatile southern regions of Afghanistan comes at a time when the United States is struggling to maintain its overseas campaigns. Increasing costs, both financially and in terms of human lives, have jelled popular discontent with the war in Iraq and cast doubt on Washington’s ability to balance the “war on terror” with other pressing security needs. The U.S. force in Afghanistan will be drawn down from 19,000 to 16,500 this year, although both military and civilian leaders have promised an American presence in the country for years to come.

What ISAF faces in Afghanistan is unclear. Hard-core remnants from the Taliban regime, as well as from al-Qaida, have stepped up attacks against military and civilian targets, such as schoolchildren, foreign travelers, police posts and military convoys. As in Iraq, improvised explosive devices and suicide attacks have been particularly effective, and have been on the rise. Suicide attacks, formerly rare in Afghanistan, have risen from five in 2002-2004 to 17 in 2005 and 14 in 2006. In addition, a bumper poppy crop has bolstered the illicit economy, based on opium exports to Europe and America, and damaged legitimate reconstruction efforts. The poppy-growing season also coincides with the stepped-up propaganda campaign of rebel leaders. In March, for example, Mullah Mohammed Omar, the former head of the Taliban, promised “unimaginable” violence for Afghanistan if the foreign troops were not expelled. A senior U.S. military commander said he expected a “fairly violent” summer.

The ISAF expansion is being drawn mostly from Canada, the Netherlands, the UK and Australia. Troop levels are expected to double in the period from July to October, and the soldiers deployed will accordingly enforce Afghanistan’s security against rebels in the southern regions – in what is known as “Stage III” (see "ISAF Deployment" map).

The first two stages covered the northern and western parts of the country, which have not experienced the same levels of violence as the regions bordering Pakistan. Stage III – which covers the provinces of Kandahar, Helmand, Uruzgan, Nimroz, Day Kundi and Zabul – has been designed to prevent an increasingly dynamic insurgent movement from disrupting the development of Afghanistan’s nascent political and economic structure.

Although ISAF has been less willing to engage in combat missions and counterterrorism than the U.S.-led Operation Enduring Freedom, it is unlikely that troops will be deployed to the southern provinces without the authority to search for and engage insurgents. The focus on providing security for the Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) is unlikely to endure without a significant offensive capability.

Established to help promote public and private sector reconstruction, PRTs have been a cornerstone of U.S. and NATO policy in Afghanistan. The teams, numbering between 100 and 200 civilian and military specialists, initiate reconstruction projects around the country – such as building roads, schools, sanitation systems, and so on. The civilians involved are typically engineers, mechanics and other specialists, while military members are responsible for guaranteeing immediate and long-term security requirements. The PRTs promote a dynamic decision-making process, as representatives from relevant countries are encouraged to monitor and contribute to reconstruction efforts. PRTs are directed on a country-by-country basis.

The burden of expanding ISAF rests on Canada, Australia, the Netherlands and the UK. Canada already has about 2,300 troops in Afghanistan, most of them in Kandahar province. Multi National Brigade (MNB) forces, originally stationed in Kabul as part of Stage I, have been almost entirely transferred to Kandahar as peacekeepers and as support for incoming ISAF troops (only several dozen Canadian troops remain in the capital). Kabul has, for the most part, been brought under the control of Afghan forces. Canada’s troops in Kandahar and the surrounding region are currently in command of the MNB in Kandahar.

According to the Canadian Ministry of Defense, Canada’s force includes 125 Canadian Force (CF) members with the Multi-National Brigade Headquarters (MNBHQ) in Kandahar. In total, there are 250 personnel from Australia, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Romania, Netherlands, the UK, and the United States stationed with the MNBHQ. The force also includes a battle group of about 1,000 members in Kandahar, primarily from the 1st Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry. A small cadre of CF instructors is involved in the training of the Afghan National Army Staff at the Canadian Afghan National Training Centre Detachment in Kabul.

The Dutch force in Afghanistan will number 1,800 by October. Despite a rancorous parliamentary debate over the commitment, the government of the Netherlands overwhelmingly approved the deployment, which will begin sometime in July.

Meanwhile, on May 4, the UK formally assumed control of ISAF in a ceremony transferring command from Italy’s Lt. Gen. Mauro del Vecchio to Lt. Gen. David Richards. The UK’s 3,300-troop contribution to ISAF – in addition to troops already stationed in the north – is expected to have “full combat potential” by the end of July, bringing the total British force to 5,700.

Some U.S. military leaders have admitted that Stage III of ISAF’s mission in Afghanistan will likely involve some of the fiercest fighting yet witnessed in Afghanistan, in part because insurgent forces have been allowed to grow in strength as well as numbers in the south. The security situation has generally deteriorated and there has been an upsurge in suicide bombings, attacks on schools, roadside bombings and other violent assaults on high-level figures and military targets (see CDI’s “Afghan Updates” for specific cases and trends). In a traditional sense, the MNB is winning: it has control over the major cities, it has overwhelming air and ground superiority, and it has suffered few casualties. Yet the country’s tribal structure arguably affects identities, allegiances and interests in a way that impedes effective control over the entire territory. The central government, though strong in some parts, suffers from a serious lack of credibility in remote provinces. And although the economy has begun to grow in some sectors, living standards remain abysmal, the illicit economy is thriving and reforms have been slow to take hold in anything but the major cities. The expanding presence of rebels in the south indicates major security threats are still far from contained.

The arrival of more ISAF troops is expected to ease the burden on U.S. soldiers. So far, Canada has not suffered nearly as many losses as the United States, and its troops are more often patrolling the streets and offering “assistance” to local authorities than engaging in open conflict with an identifiable enemy. Yet any foreign soldiers remain targets, as fighters from other parts of the Arab world are reportedly traveling to Afghanistan to expel what they consider to be hostile foreign powers occupying Islamic lands. One provincial governor said his forces detained an insurgent traveling from Iraq who claimed thousands more were en route.

The pullout of about 2,500 American troops from the southern region would seem to run contrary to the worsening security situation there. Operation Enduring Freedom has primary responsibility for counterinsurgency and counterterrorism operations. ISAF, on the other hand, is a peacekeeping force that, according to NATO spokeswoman Sue Eagles, “will not carry out counterterrorism operations.” In a fighting season expected to be particularly harsh, the replacement of combat troops with peacekeeping troops might appear an odd choice of timing. The missions of ISAF and OEF may contain overlaps in terms of overall goals, but their core operations have major differences. OEF consists of soldiers trained in offensive counterterrorism tactics, and is primarily responsible for rooting out the “enemies of Afghanistan” – Taliban loyalists and what is left of al Qaida. The role of ISAF is to “support the government of Afghanistan, to extend security and stability and the rule of good governance and the rule of law,” according to Eagles. It is possible that the effort to achieve parliamentary support for the new ISAF deployments required the promise of an easy and bloodless mission. However, the transition back and forth between high-combat peace enforcement and lower-combat peacekeeping is seldom as smooth or easy as Eagle’s comments imply.

It is difficult to say that ISAF troops are not in a combat role, yet it is also inaccurate that they only engage in open conflict. On one hand, they patrol streets, help distribute aid, advise the central government and try to suppress the booming drug trade. On the other, they man checkpoints, operate tanks and other heavy machinery, and train Afghan soldiers. Canada’s secretive Joint Task Force Two, a counterterrorism unit, participates in the fighting, which indicates Canada’s military policy includes an offensive posture towards insurgents. Indeed, Lt. Gen. Richards said he “will not hesitate to use appropriate measures against those disruptive elements opposed to democracy and the rule of law in Afghanistan.” Any forces engaged in “security enhancing” must be prepared for open conflict, whereas “peacekeeping” represents something between combat and police-type work. The U.S. military, meanwhile, has been reluctant to engage in an all-out counter-insurgency in the southern region because of strategic and tactical disadvantages such as unfamiliarity with the terrain, limited intelligence capabilities, the insurgent practice of blending with the population and, most importantly, the difficulty of engaging the enemy across the border with Pakistan. If ISAF forces decide to “protect” the PRTs without the willingness to act pre-emptively against militants, both military and civilian efforts to bring real, broad-based stability to the southern regions will be severely hampered.

Recent reports in The New York Times indicated that the Taliban is growing in strength in the southern provinces of Afghanistan – particularly Helmand, Kandahar, Uruzgan, Zabul, Ghazni and Paktika. “Large groups of Taliban” are said to be moving freely throughout the countryside, the first sign that the summer fighting season has begun. This trend comes just as more ISAF forces are arriving in the country. An American general claimed recently that he anticipates more fighting in the months ahead. Whether the fighting will actually lead to increased security – or the rooting out of terrorists – is anyone’s guess. In any case, militants roaming throughout the provinces and a booming illicit economy threaten to undermine Afghanistan’s delicate peace – such as it is. Only the most committed military force will be able to keep Afghanistan on track towards military and economic independence. In this sense, NATO is indeed facing one of its most challenging and ambitious missions to date.

# # #
Snuffysmith
- Operation Mountain Lion Continues In Eastern Afghanistan
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Operation_...fghanistan.html

---------
Snuffysmith
===
Four Taliban killed in southern Afghanistan :

US led coalition forces killed at least four Taliban fighters in an air strike in Afghanistan's southern province of Urguzgan, according to a coalition statement issued late Tuesday.
http://english.bna.bh/?ID=44973

===
'Bomber' killed in Afghan attack :

A suspected suicide bomber has been killed in an attempted attack on a UN convoy in southern Afghanistan, officials say.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4989156.stm

===
Canadian female soldier killed in Afghanistan :

A female Canadian soldier was killed in Afghanistan on Wednesday, as the country's parliament debated whether to extend Canada's military mission in the war-torn nation.
http://tinyurl.com/efytb
theglobalchinese
Taliban raid on Afghan town kills 53 Yahoo! News
Hundreds of Taliban insurgents launched an attack on a town in the southern Afghan province of Helmand, and 13 policemen and 40 Taliban were killed in hours of fighting, government officials said on Thursday. Helmand's deputy governor, Amir Mohammad Akhundzada, said it was the biggest strike in the province by the hardline Islamists since they were driven from power in late 2001. The Taliban have stepped up attacks on foreign and Afghan government forces in recent months as thousands more NATO peacekeepers arrive. Violence in parts of the country is the worst it has been since the end of their rule. The attack on the town of Mosa Qala, 470 km (300 miles) southwest of Kabul, was launched on Wednesday evening and the fighting went on until early on Thursday. "Thirteen policemen were killed and six were injured," Interior Ministry spokesman Yousuf Stanizai said in a statement. "Forty people on the enemy side were killed." In a separate incident, a suicide car bomber attacked a convoy in the generally peaceful western city of Herat, killing himself and an American civilian. A U.S. embassy spokesman said he was a State Department contractor training Afghan police. Another suicide bomber attacked a U.S. military convoy near Ghazni town, 125 km (75 miles) southwest of the capital, Kabul, killing himself and a man on a motorcycle but causing no casualties among U.S. troops, an Afghan army officer said. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the Herat attack but there was no immediate claim for the second suicide blast. A Canadian woman soldier was killed in fighting in neighbouring Kandahar province on Wednesday, hours before Canada's parliament narrowly backed a two-year extension of Canada's Afghan mission to 2009. The U.S. military said 18 Taliban were killed and 26 captured in the fighting in Panjwai district, 25 km (16 miles) west of Kandahar town.

CIVILIAN CASUALTIES
In Helmand, Afghan forces were battling the insurgents after they withdrew from Mosa Qala, Akhundzada said. There had been civilian casualties but he said he did not know how many. British troops are in charge of security in Helmand but no foreign soldiers were involved in the battle, Afghan officials said. The Taliban focused their attack on government offices and police stations, and many shops in the town's market caught fire during the battle, Akhundzada said. The town is 40 km (25 miles) north of the province's Sangin district, the scene of frequent clashes between Taliban and foreign and government forces. A Taliban commander, speaking by telephone, said 30 policemen had been killed. Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousuf told the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press news agency Taliban had captured the town but later withdrew. NATO member nations are sending reinforcements to boost their peacekeeping force from 9,000 to 16,000. The force will soon take over in the perilous south in what is set to be the alliance's toughest ground mission in its 57-year history. With about 23,000 troops, the United States now has its largest force in Afghanistan since the Taliban were ousted in 2001 after refusing to hand over Osama bin Laden, architect of the September 11 attacks.
By Mirwais Afghan
theglobalchinese
Over 100 Killed in Afghan Violence FOX News
Some of the fiercest violence since the Taliban's 2001 ouster erupted across Afghanistan, with coalition forces engaging in multiple firefights, two suicide car bombs and a massive rebel assault on a small village. Up to 105 people were killed. The estimates of Taliban fighters and suicide bombers killed ranged up to 87, with 14 Afghan police, an American civilian, an Afghan civilian and a Canadian soldier also killed in the multiple attacks late Wednesday and Thursday, officials said. The battles between Afghan or coalition forces and Taliban militants -- which were concentrated in the south -- follow months of stepped-up attacks in the region.

CountryWatch: Afghanistan
An assault by hundreds of enemy fighters on a small southern town was one of the largest attacks by militants since 2001 and marked another escalation in the campaign by supporters of the former Taliban regime to challenge the U.S.-backed government of President Hamid Karzai. The attack late Wednesday and early Thursday on a police and government headquarters in the town of Musa Qala in Helmand province sparked eight hours of clashes with security forces. The Interior Ministry said about 40 militants were killed, though police said they had retrieved only 14 bodies. About a dozen police were killed and five wounded in the attack some 95 miles northwest of Kandahar, said deputy governor Amir Mohammed Akhunzaba.
Taliban attacks Afghan town, 53 killed The Age
More Than 50 Die in Afghan Battles ABC News
Forbes - Bloomberg - Zaman Online - Asia Times Online - all272 related »
theglobalchinese
Canada's Afghan mission extended BBC News
Canadian legislators have narrowly voted to extend the country's combat mission in Afghanistan by two years, until February 2009. Prime Minister Stephen Harper's motion passed by 149 votes to 145, despite opposition complaints of being rushed. Canada currently has 2,300 soldiers in Afghanistan, mainly in the south where the Taleban-led resistance is strong. The vote came after news that a female Canadian soldier had been killed in combat in the war-torn country. Public opinion polls suggest that popular backing for the deployment, which had been due to expire in February 2007, is slipping.
QUOTE("Opposition Liberal leader Bill Graham")
We find it difficult in the course of a debate of a few hours in the House to make up our minds on an issue of this importance to Canada
Mr Harper told legislators before the vote: "Our men and women need to know that we share their goals, support their efforts and are willing - regardless of polls that sometimes go up or down - to back them for the next few years." Afterwards, the prime minister expressed relief that the vote had been approved. The Conservative government had underlined its commitment to the mission by threatening to extend it unilaterally by one year if it had been defeated in parliament.

Opposition complaints
One by one the MPs took their turn to stand and be counted as either for or against the motion and the result was nail-bitingly close. Two opposition parties, the Bloc Quebecois and the New Democrats voted against the motion, but it drew enough support from the former ruling Liberal Party to pass. Many Liberal lawmakers complained that they were being rushed into a decision. They said the vote was hurried to shield the government from taking sole criticism for the mission if it goes wrong. Growing dissent led to a decision by the Liberal leader, Bill Graham, to let his individual MPs vote freely - despite the fact that a Liberal government was originally responsible for sending the Canadian troops to Afghanistan. "We find this process abusive," said Mr Graham. "We find it difficult in the course of a debate of a few hours in the House to make up our minds on an issue of this importance to Canada and Canadians and to our troops."

Death sharpens focus
The extension means Canada could take over command of the entire Nato operation in Afghanistan in 2008, which Mr Harper has offered to do. Canadian ministers will be attending a series of Nato meetings next week. The intense parliamentary debate was magnified by the news that a woman soldier, Capt Nichola Goddard, a female captain, had been killed in a gun battle with Taleban fighters - Canada's first woman soldier to die in combat since World War II. She was killed in clashes some 25km (15 miles) west of the southern city of Kandahar, a centre for Taleban insurgents. A roadside bomb killed four Canadian soldiers in April.
Snuffysmith
BACK TO KABUL WITH DIPLOMAS: A US-BASED SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM FOR AFGHAN WOMEN GRADUATES ITS FIRST STUDENTS - STACY A. TEICHER (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, MAY 18): Launched in 2002 by Paula Nirschel, wife of Roger Williams University?s President Roy Nirschel, the scholarship program has grown to include 10 American colleges that will sponsor 30 scholars next year.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0518/p14s01-legn.html
Snuffysmith
AFGHAN REPORTERS FOCUS ON ROOTS OF INSURGENTS' UNREST - DAVID MONTERO (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, MAY 18): Tolo TV, Afghanistan's top television channel, finds Afghanistan's hot buttons -- and pushes them. The station is angering the government with dogged reporting on the Taliban.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0518/p04s02-wosc.html
Snuffysmith
105 Killed In Afghanistan, Including Canadian Soldier, American Civilian:

Some of the fiercest violence since the Taliban's ouster in 2001 erupted across southern Afghanistan, with militants battling coalition forces, detonating car bombs and attacking a small village. Up to 105 people were killed, officials said Thursday
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13093.htm
Snuffysmith
- Afghan War Problems
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Afghan_War_Problems.html

Washington (UPI) May 19, 2006 - As rising U.S. and NATO casualty counts attest, the war in Afghanistan is heating up. It is doing so on Afghan time, which is to say slowly. When you have all the time in the world, why hurry?

- Militants Upgrade Rocket Attacks
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Militants_...et_Attacks.html
theglobalchinese
Top Taleban commander 'arrested' BBC News
One of the most important Taleban leaders, Mullah Dadullah, has been captured in Afghanistan, Afghan officials have told the BBC. The senior military commander was said to have been detained by international troops in southern Kandahar province. Mullah Dadullah was a member of the Taleban's 10-man leadership council before the US-led invasion in 2001. The US-led coalition in Afghanistan has been pursuing Mullah Dadullah for more than four years. The Taleban have not confirmed the arrest and there has been no official confirmation from the Afghan government or US military.

'Brutal'
Mullah Dadullah has been blamed for much of the recent violence in the southern province of Helmand where thousands of British troops are being deployed. Officials in Helmand say scores of militants and 13 policemen have been killed in fighting this week. Our correspondent says Mullah Dadullah is very close to the Taleban leader, Mullah Omar. Mullah Dadullah has survived a number of attacks and lost one leg in battle. He has a reputation for being one of the Taleban's most brutal commanders. High-ranking Afghan officials have told the BBC that he was captured in Kandahar and is being held by the coalition forces. There are no details as to how he was caught.

Fierce fighting
Three years ago, Mullah Dadullah told the BBC that the Taleban, deposed in 2001, hoped to regain power in Afghanistan. He said the Taleban would fight until "Jews and Christians, all foreign crusaders" were expelled from Afghanistan. In December 2005 a court in Pakistan sentenced Mullah Dadullah to life in prison for trying to kill conservative Islamic politician Maulana Mohammad Khan Sherani in 2004. Mr Sherani escaped unhurt. Up to 100 people have died this week in some of Afghanistan's fiercest fighting since US-led forces ousted the Taleban. In addition to the Helmand fighting, at least 25 militants died in two separate clashes in Kandahar. A US national was killed by a suicide bomber in Herat. Another bomber blew himself up at an Afghan army base in the city of Ghazni as a US military convoy was passing. The bomber and a civilian were killed. Our correspondent, Alastair Leithead, says there is no doubt the strength of the insurgents has been increasing and the thousands of British and international troops moving into the south will have their hands full.
Snuffysmith
CHAOS IN AFGHANISTAN - BRADFORD PLUMER (MOTHER JONES, MAY 18): In the World Policy Journal, Carl Robichaud warns that the United States -- and, for that matter, the rest of the world -- is letting Afghanistan slowly slip into chaos.
http://www.motherjones.com/mojoblog/archiv...html#trackbacks
theglobalchinese
Doubts over Taleban chief seizure BBC News
Fresh doubts have been raised over claims by Afghan officials that they have captured one of the Taleban's top commanders, Mullah Dadullah. The officials told the BBC on Friday that he had been seized in the southern province of Kandahar. But a man claiming to be Mullah Dadullah later told the BBC he was still free, and not far from Kandahar. Separately, a number of soldiers have been killed in renewed fighting with insurgents in the south of the country. Insurgents ambushed a convoy of Afghan government forces in Helmand province, resulting in an unconfirmed number of casualties on both sides, including at least four Afghan soldiers. In separate fighting in the Kandahar region, two French special forces soldiers were killed and another injured. One American soldier died and six others were injured in a gun battle in Uruzgan province.

One-legged commander
Meanwhile, a man identifying himself as Mullah Dadullah has contacted a number of news agencies by satellite phone to say he was free. During his two calls to a BBC Pashto service correspondent in Pakistan, he said he was the one-legged Islamic commander who had been leading Taleban insurgents in Kandahar and Helmand provinces. The man said he would continue to attack Afghan and foreign troops in the area. The man said it was possible the authorities had mistakenly arrested one of the several thousand innocent people who had lost their limbs by stepping on a landmine during the ongoing Afghan conflict.

Evidence demands
Mullah Dadullah was a member of the Taleban's 10-man leadership council before the US-led invasion in 2001. The news of Mullah Dadullah's arrest earlier had sent a wave of excitement in Kabul, the BBC's Zaffar Abbas says. It was being treated as a huge success of the coalition forces since they launched the latest offensive against the anti-government insurgents in the south, our correspondent says. But now, he says, the Afghan authorities may have to come up with some solid evidence to convince the world that Mullah Dadullah was in their custody. There has been no official confirmation of the arrest from the Afghan government or US military.
theglobalchinese
Dozens die in Afghan air strike BBC News
At least 16 civilians and up to 60 Taleban fighters have been killed after US-led coalition forces launched a raid in southern Afghanistan, officials say. Kandahar governor Asadullah Khalid told reporters that 15 civilians were wounded in the air strikes, which took place in Panjwayi district. Other reports say 30 civilians were killed and 50 injured. The US-led coalition in Afghanistan said it was looking into the reports of civilian deaths. The attack was launched in a village in Kandahar's Panjwayi district where Taleban clashed with Afghan security forces last week.
QUOTE("Attah Mohammad @ eyewitness")
They started to bomb our village at midnight
Coalition warplanes are said to have dropped bombs on an Islamic religious school or madrassa and homes in which Taleban fighters had taken up position. Eyewitnesses and local doctors say children were among those injured. A BBC reporter who visited a local hospital spoke to villagers who had been injured in the attack. One said Taleban fighters had taken control of his house to launch missile attacks from the roof, and that many of his family members had died in the bombing raid. "They started to bomb our village at midnight and continued up to this morning," another eyewitness, Attah Mohammad, told AFP. "Helicopters bombed the madrassa and some of the Taleban ran from there and into people's homes," another man, Haji Ikhlaf, told the Associated Press. "Then those homes were bombed." US-led forces have sealed off the area and are carrying out an investigation. The BBC's Alastair Leithead says Panjwayi is a known stronghold of the Taleban and a number of high-ranking Taleban commanders had recently been captured there. The US-led coalition in Afghanistan said the purpose of the operation was "to detain individuals suspected of terrorist and anti-Afghanistan activities". "These individuals were active members of the Taleban network and have conducted attacks against coalition and Afghan forces as well as civilians," it said in a statement.

Violence escalates
There has been a dramatic upsurge in fighting in southern Afghanistan over the past week. Officials estimate up to 200 rebels have been killed in the region since last Wednesday, in some of the fiercest fighting since the fall of the Taleban in late 2001. On Sunday, a suicide car bomb attack apparently targeting a US military convoy killed three people in Kabul - the driver and two civilians. Our correspondent said it was the first suicide attack in the capital this year.
theglobalchinese
More die in fresh Afghan attacks BBC News
At least three Afghan policemen have been killed after Taleban fighters ambushed their convoy in the southern Helmand province, officials say. British troops have also fired their first shots against Taleban fighters in Helmand, since their deployment there. In a separate incident, three Afghan health workers and a driver have been killed in a bomb attack in Wardak. The attacks come a day after nearly 80 people were reported killed in a US-led coalition bombing raid in Kandahar.

'Martyred'
Officials say that Taleban fighters ambushed a government convoy in the north of Helmand when it came under attack. "Three policemen were martyred and six were wounded," interior ministry spokesman Yousuf Stanizai is quoted as saying by Reuters. There are unconfirmed reports that the attackers also suffered casualties. In the second attack, a female health worker, her two colleagues and a driver were killed when their vehicle was hit by a bomb in Wardak, west of the capital Kabul. The team worked for the Afghan Health Development Service, a local aid group.

British action
In Helmand, British troops used Apache attack helicopters for the first time since their deployment. More than 2,000 British troops have been deployed in the province, which is also one of the main centres of the country's drug trade. On Monday, at least 60 Taleban fighters and 16 civilians died when US-led forces bombed a village in the neighbouring province of Kandahar, Afghan officials said. US-led forces blamed the Taleban for the deaths, accusing guerrillas of deliberately hiding behind civilians. Eyewitnesses said an Islamic religious school and homes, in which Taleban fighters had taken refuge, were bombed. The US military put the number of confirmed Taleban deaths at 20, with possibly another 60 killed. It said it was aware of reports of civilian casualties and was investigating. "Once you start fighting from buildings where civilians are involved, then you are putting those civilians in danger," a US military spokesman, Maj James Yonts, told the BBC. He added that rebel commanders were "responsible for the deaths of those women and children". Officials estimate up to 200 rebels have been killed in the region since last Wednesday, in some of the fiercest fighting since the fall of the Taleban in late 2001.
theglobalchinese
Afghan clash 'kills 60 Taleban' BBC News
Sixty suspected Taleban militants and five Afghan security personnel have died in a major clash in the south, a top Afghan military commander says. The fighting took place in Uruzgan province late on Tuesday, Gen Rahmatullah Raufi told reporters. The US military in Afghanistan has confirmed the incident, but says only 24 militants have been killed. Separately, a UK spokesman says a British aircraft has been involved in an incident in Helmand province. No details are available but reports say an aircraft is on fire in the airstrip at the provincial capital, Lashkargah. A BBC correspondent says he can see a huge plume of black smoke from the site. US-led coalition forces and Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers were involved in the fighting in Uruzgan which took place near the provincial capital Tirin Kot. Officials say the clash began when a joint ANA and coalition patrol came under attack. Four Afghan soldiers and an Afghan policemen were killed in the fighting, which also left three soldiers and three policemen injured. "We launched a massive search and clean-up operation after the attack in which our troops spotted and killed 60 Taleban," Gen Raufi, who commands Afghan forces in the south, is quoted as saying by AFP news agency.

Civilians deaths
There has been a dramatic upsurge in fighting in southern Afghanistan over the past week.
QUOTE("Col Tom Collins - US military spokesman")
There's no doubt that the Taleban have grown in strength and influence
Officials estimate more than 200 rebels have been killed in the region since last Wednesday, in some of the fiercest fighting since the fall of the Taleban in late 2001. "There's no doubt that the Taleban have grown in strength and influence in certain areas in Kandahar, Helmand and in southern Uruzgan," US military spokesman Col Tom Collins said on Wednesday. On Monday, the US military said it may have killed up to 80 Taleban in a bombing raid. But the air strikes in Helmand province also killed 16 civilians, local officials said. US-led coalition forces targeted Taleban fighters in a village in Kandahar province many of whom were said to have taken up positions in an Islamic religious school and people's homes. Afghan President Hamid Karzai is to summon the head of US-led coalition forces for a "full explanation" of the raid. The US military spokesman in Kabul has defended the military strike saying they did not want "this to happen". "The ultimate cause of why civilians were injured and killed is because the Taleban knowingly, wilfully chose to occupy homes of these people," Col Tom Collins told journalists. "We do everything we can to prevent killing civilians."
theglobalchinese
Karzai visits US bombing victims BBC News
Afghan President Hamid Karzai made a rare visit to the southern province of Kandahar to visit victims of a US-led coalition bombing raid. The US military has said it may have killed up to 80 Taleban fighters during the assault on a village in Kandahar. But local officials said 16 civilians were also killed in Monday's attack and women and children injured. The US military has defended its action saying it did not know that civilians were present. It also blamed the Taleban for using the civilians as human shields.
QUOTE("President Hamid Karzai")
It must be ensured that civilians are not affected during the operations
President Karzai addressed a gathering of tribal elders in Kandahar saying he had come to visit children and women wounded in the coalition strike. "I swear to God I'll bring security to you," the AFP news agency quoted him as saying.

Concern
On Wednesday, President Karzai summoned the commander of the coalition forces, Lt Gen Karl Eikenberry, for a meeting over the incident. He said every effort must be made to ensure the safety of civilians during coalition action against militants. "While the people of Afghanistan stand firmly with the international community in their effort to defeat terrorism... it must be ensured that civilians are not affected during the operations," he said. There has been a dramatic upsurge in fighting in southern Afghanistan over the past week. Officials estimate more than 200 rebels have been killed in the region since last Wednesday, in some of the fiercest fighting since the fall of the Taleban in late 2001. In another clash in Uruzgan on Wednesday, US officials said 24 militants and five Afghan security personnel had been killed. The Afghan commander in the south however said up to 60 Taleban militants had been killed.
Snuffysmith
LET'S NOT LOSE AFGHANISTAN AGAIN - TOM LANTOS (BOSTON GLOBE, MAY 25): If the United States doesn't want to lose Afghanistan again, its long-term political, economic, and military commitments must be beyond question. (Tom Lantos, a US representative from California, is the ranking Democrat on the House International Relations Committee.)
http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/arti...hanistan_again/

20 DEAD TALIBAN, 80 DEAD VILLAGERS: BOMBING WITHOUT REGRETS - DAVE LINDORFF (COUNTERPUNCH, MAY 25): And people keep asking this stupid question: Why do they hate us?"
http://www.counterpunch.org/lindorff05252006.html
Snuffysmith
Human Rights Group Says U.S. Killed 34 Afghan Civilians :

A human rights group estimated that 34 civilians died earlier this week in a U.S. airstrike on a southern village _ double the official toll.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13194.htm

===
Afghan Civilian Casualties. A Case Study of the U.S. Assault upon Hajiyan”:

A growing disconnect exists between the daily reality of war experienced by the common Afghan and how this war is represented to the American general public by the corporate media. Pdf document
http://www.traprockpeace.org/marc_herold_hajiyan_24may06.pdf

===
At least 18 dead in fresh fighting in Afghanistan:

At least 12 suspected Taliban rebels and two Afghan policemen were killed in fighting in the southern Afghan province of Helmand, reports said Friday.
http://tinyurl.com/j9duf

===
Taliban ambush Afghan police, five killed:

Three Taliban militants and two policemen were killed in a clash in southwestern Afghanistan on Friday, a provincial official said.
http://tinyurl.com/jkcx3
Snuffysmith
Afghan forces, militants clash:

7 die A gunbattle pitting dozens of Taliban fighters against Afghan security forces left four militants dead on Sunday as authorities found the beheaded bodies of three police missing for days dumped in a field, the police and officials said.
http://tinyurl.com/kje6r

===
Civilian deaths could fuel Taliban support:

Afghan officials and human rights activists say a U.S. airstrike that killed