WAR ON TERRORISM - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
19 Die As Taliban Launch Afghan Attacks |
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by Noor Khan AP News Entered into the database on Saturday, February 26th, 2005 @ 15:03:45 MST |
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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - Taliban insurgents launched three attacks in southeastern
Afghanistan in heavy combat that left 19 dead — including 10 rebels killed
by U.S. troops, officials said Friday. An American soldier was wounded. At least nine Afghan soldiers were killed when rebels ambushed their vehicle
in Helmand province on Thursday, said Haji Wali Mohammed, a spokesman for the
governor.
"We lost contact with the Afghan soldiers late Thursday, and their bodies
were found today," he said, adding that authorities would hunt down and
arrest the "terrorists" who carried out the attack.
Taliban rebels claimed responsibility for the ambush in the district of Chakul.
"Yes, the Taliban did this and we will launch more attacks against government
and coalition forces," Mullah Latif Hakimi, who often speaks for the Taliban,
told The Associated Press by telephone.
In neighboring Kandahar, an American soldiers was shot and wounded when he and
his unit came under small-arms fire while investigating a roadside bomb Thursday,
the U.S. military said in a statement.
Meanwhile, rebels ambushed an Afghan patrol in Khost province, near the border
with Pakistan, injuring five soldiers. Afghan and U.S. forces fired back, killing
three Taliban suspects.
Two U.S. helicopters sent to survey the area hours later were attacked from
the ground with small-arms fire. One helicopter fired back, killing seven more
suspected insurgents, the U.S. military said.
The series of attacks follows a period of relative calm in Afghanistan amid
rising hopes the insurgency was faltering. Taliban spokesmen have said attacks
were down only because of the harsh winter and that they would resume once the
weather improved. The three attacks — all carried out Thursday —
appeared to make good on that claim. Taliban rebels have mounted a stubborn insurgency across southern and eastern
Afghanistan since U.S. forces ousted the Taliban government in late 2001 for
harboring Osama bin Laden and his supporters. U.S. Maj. Gen. Eric Olson said Friday that Taliban and al-Qaida insurgents
remain a grave threat to Afghanistan, and warned against cutting the strength
of the U.S.-led coalition so long as neither Afghan nor NATO forces are ready
to fill the breach.
"The U.S. presence at the core of the coalition has been critical to success
of the overall coalition effort," Olson, the No. 2 U.S. commander in Afghanistan,
told The Associated Press.
Only about 1,000 of the 18,000 coalition troops are non-Americans, including
a contingent of Egyptian medics, teams of French and Norwegian special forces,
and a Romanian battalion in the southern city of Kandahar.
Olson, who spoke to the AP after visiting troops at three remote bases near
the mountainous Pakistani border, said the operation is very taxing and there
will be pressure to draw down forces while handing over more responsibility
to what is now a 9,000-strong NATO security force.
"My fear is that will happen too fast, that the draw down will outrun the
expansion or the compensation of NATO expansion," said Olson.
Olson reiterated that the trail of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden had "gone
cold," but he said U.S. forces were keeping up their search and he did
not anticipate any letup in that part of their mission.
"There are no specific leads to bin Laden right now, but we collectively
are just as determined to continue to hunt him," he said. |