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Afghanistan
Qahraman Warns Against Underestimating Helmand Conflict
2016-08-08
Abdul Jabbar Qahraman, former head of the military operation for Helmand, on Sunday warned the Afghan government and security institutions against underestimating the ongoing insurgency in the volatile province.

Looking skeptical about government's counter-insurgency policy, Qahraman blasted government over what he called a lack of commitment to end the Helmand turmoil and restore peace.

New reports from the warfront in Helmand illustrates that currently up to five districts in the area are under the complete control of the Taliban. This comes as the group's efforts to extend their operations continues to threaten a further seven districts.

"To be true, the enemy has increased its operations and they launched some coordinated attacks on some districts in Helmand; the enemy had a demonic plan to take control of the majority of districts in Helmand," a defense ministry spokesman Dawlat Waziri said.

Currently insurgents control Musa Qala, Nawzad, Disho, Baghran and Nawmesh districts.

Government controls only two districts - Garmsir and Khanashin - while insurgents have also tightened their grip on seven other districts including Khanashin, Kajaki, Sangeen, Nad Ali, Washir, Greshk and Marjah.

"If the government - despite having a large number of forces and alongside the presence of foreign forces - cannot curb the war, this indicates government's weakness," said Qahraman.

The number of Afghan security forces currently deployed and serving in Helmand is estimated to be between 35,000 and 40,000 soldiers; however there are rumors that a number of these soldiers are 'ghost soldiers'.

"Opponents and the Taliban exist there, they have a well-equipped force," said Abdul Rahman Sarjang, former police chief of Helmand.

Video report at the link
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Afghanistan
Helmand's Ex-Police Chief To Be Investigated Over Ghost Soldiers
2016-06-10
Ministry of Interior (MoI) on Thursday announced that Helmand's former police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang will be introduced to the attorney general for legal investigations within two days.

The ministry said he is being investigated on charges of exploiting his official powers, establishing ghost police and underestimating his responsibilities in the war with insurgents.

Meanwhile, Kintoz, the new police chief of Helmand said that statistics show almost 50 percent of police personnel reported in the structure of the police in Helmand are ghost officers, calling it an act of treason.

Helmand has been embroiled in heavy fighting for months.

"There are around 10,000 police personnel in the structure of police force in Helmand plus 16,000 army soldiers along with public protection forces and border security forces. According to my information, 40 to 50 percent of the force did not exist physically when we asked for help during operations. Salaries of ghost soldiers had been received during the past eight months and the money has gone to personal accounts," said Kintoz.

"‎Main issues related to the problems facing Helmand including institutional problems facing Helmand police. However it is a bit early to comment about the rest of the cases. The case is in the final stage in line with the orders of the president, and the former commander of Helmand police will be investigated," said Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman to ministry of interior.


"Huge numbers of ghost police are reported in Helmand province. Their equipment and weaponries were distributed to mafia and local lawbreakers while our people in Helmand and military forces are burning in war flames," senator Akhundzada Alokozai said.

"There are 40,000 people on the list, but the reports which have been received show that seven to eight thousand insurgents exist in Helmand. With forty thousand people who are backed by tanks, artilleries and aircrafts, we should have eliminated each one of the enemy, it is clear that we have not everyone there," Kintoz added.

This comes at a time that the Taliban currently control several districts in Helmand and are plotting to expand their existence in several regions.

The existence of ghost police is thought to be one of the reasons that has expanded the war in the province.

Video report at the link
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Afghanistan
Security Forces Launch Helmand Operation
2016-05-13
Helmand Police Chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang said on Thursday an operation codenamed Khanjar was launched in Lashkargah city and four other districts of the province two days ago to clear the areas of militants.

Sarjang said the operation will continue until all militants have been eliminated.

According to Sarjang, as a result of the operation, so far several villages have been cleared of Taliban and troops are making steady progress.

"The military council of the province decided to start the operation and we started the operation under the name of Khanjar on Tuesday and as a result we have cleared many villages and killed and wounded more than 20 Taliban," Sarjang said.

Video report at the link
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Afghanistan
Order To Eliminate Insurgents Not Being Applied
2016-05-09
A number of military experts believe President Ashraf Ghani's order to suppress militants is not being properly implemented.

They said that the president is "messing with people's minds" by giving the order but not implementing it on the battlefields.

"Unfortunately, what the president has announced is not put into practice. Currently security forces in Deh Rawud district are under siege and the president is playing with the public's minds," said Jawed Kohestani, a military expert.

It has been 13 days since the president has ordered the security forces to suppress militants, but any tangible change on the battlefields is not being seen.

Security forces in Helmand, Uruzgan and Zabul provinces are on the defensive, while in Baghlan province more forces are needed to eliminate militants.

The Ministry of Interior (MoI) meanwhile assured the public of an increase in operations against insurgents.

"The fighting is very serious, a strong resolve has taken shape and we have a 15 percent rise in operations and we will launch a large-scale operation in 30 districts in the next six months," said Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for the MoI.

A number of experts however are optimistic about the implementation of the order.

"I think that the president has defined a new prospective about the war and we will soon see the results on the battleground," said Mirza Mohammad Yarmand, former deputy minister of interior.

A number of security officials believe that war is the only solution for Afghanistan's dilemma.

"War is the only solution. They (militants) don't even care about their mothers and fathers," said Abdul Rahman Sarjang.

The experts believe that the president's order has heralded new hopes that militants will be eliminated. They stressed that if the order is not implemented, public trust in the president will dwindle.
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Afghanistan
Police suspected of aiding Taliban killed, detained by army in Helmand
2016-02-29
[Khaama (Afghanistan)] A policeman was killed and another 30 were detained during a joint operation between Afghan troops and U.S. forces last week against police suspected of supporting Taliban Death Eaters in embattled Helmand
...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan...
province, officials told Rooters on Sunday.

Reports of fighting between police and soldiers add to the upheaval in the southern province, long a stronghold of the insurgency, where the military has abandoned several outposts. The NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
-led coalition and the Afghan government are trying to overhaul security forces and reverse krazed killer gains there.

The incident on Friday was in Sangin district, the scene of some of the heaviest fighting in Afghanistan’s long war, Helmand police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang told Rooters.

"Army forces detained the police and took them to the military corps in Helmand," Sarjang said. "An investigation is ongoing at the moment."

The acting Sangin district police chief was among the detainees, Sarjang said.

Sarjang refused to confirm the reason for the operation but a senior Afghan army official in Helmand told Rooters the army and U.S. advisers suspected the police of providing weapons and ammunition to the Taliban and that they had planned to eventually surrender to the krazed killers.

"During our investigation we found some evidence they were helping the Taliban and we were afraid they may submit the district to the Taliban," said the officer, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to discuss the operation. "We launched a joint operation with Americans and detained all of them."

The full extent of American involvement was not clear and a front man for the U.S. military in Kabul
...the capital of Afghanistan. Home to continuous fighting from 1992 to 1996 between the forces of would-be strongman and Pak ISI/Jamaat-e-Islami sock puppet Gulbuddin Hekmayar and the Northern Alliance, a period which won Hek the title Most Evil Man in the World and didn't do much for the reputations of the Northern Alliance guys either....
did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The coalition recently deployed several hundred more troops to Helmand in a bid to increase security for the advisers helping Afghan forces. U.S. air strikes have also played an important role in trying to blunt Taliban offensives.

Almost 100 Afghan army officers were removed or reassigned in Helmand in recent months, and the army abandoned its outposts in several of the most hotly contested districts to redeploy elsewhere.
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Afghanistan
Afghan government troops call for reinforcements in Helmand
2016-02-05
Embattled Afghan troops have appealed for reinforcements in Sangin district amid reports that government forces have lost control of the key strategic town.

Soldiers who are apparently under Taliban siege have said that they are running out of food and ammunition and are unable to break the siege and clear the area of militants.

Dozens of troops are reportedly still under siege and no one is addressing the problem, a number of troops fighting Taliban in Sangin district said on Thursday.

Meanwhile, members of Helmand provincial council have confirmed the reports - which have however been dismissed by senior Afghan security officials including the Ministry of Defense and provincial police chief.

Sangin, once a Taliban stronghold - has witnessed fierce fighting over the past two months with several areas of the district in the north still under control of the insurgents.

There are reports that the militants have cordoned off all overland routes to the area, leaving air transport as the only way to reach troops.

"Two months have past since the war erupted, several troops were wounded and martyred," an Afghan National Army ANA soldier said in Sangin adding that despite numerous pleas, no reinforcements have been sent in.
"They (officials) promised that they will do it today or tomorrow, but promises weren't kept. The entire bazaar is under Taliban siege. They (officials) tell us lies. It is now four days that we did not eat,"‎ said the soldier.

Insurgents however have planted landmines on the routes leading to Sangin district in an effort to inflict more casualties and curb the advance of troops.

"There are problems and pressures, Taliban alongside foreigners and opponents mounted their pressure. They (insurgents) had decided to seize control of the entire area in northern Helmand in a bid to establish strong command centers. However, insurgents failed to reach their objectives," Dawlat Waziri, a defense ministry spokesman said.

Waziri said they have been supporting Helmand fully, but promised to discuss certain issues facing troops in Helmand with the chief of army staff in order to address the problems.

While Waziri dismissed claims made by the embattled forces in Sangin, members of the provincial council said that troops fighting Taliban in Sangin are under serious threat and are facing a food shortage.

"The national army and border police forces live inside a fort, supply routes are closed and they face food shortages. According to our information, it is four or five days that they have not eaten food," a member of Helmand provincial council, Abdul Majid said.

"A limited area is under control of government forces which is also under the siege of the armed opponents. Government cannot supply them. Because the main road is also under siege of the armed opponents," another member Bashir Ahmad Badalshakir said.

Criticism has mounted against the central government in recent months after reports surfaced that government in Kabul has ignored calls from embattled troops for reinforcements.

"It is a laughable report to claim that there is no food, water and bullets, it means that the district is protected by ghosts. It is a totally baseless claim. How members of the provincial council know this, I can assure you that everything exists there and all necessary things are dispatched there," Helmand police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang said.

This comes at a time that the Afghan security forces are still battling the Taliban in various regions of the volatile province and Taliban insurgency shows no sign of ending.

Video report at the link
Link


Afghanistan
Villages In Helmand's Gereshk Fall To Taliban
2016-01-17
[Tolo News] The Talibs have captured several villages in Gereshk district of southern Helmand
...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan...
province.

Muhammad Karim Atal, the chairman of Helmand Provincial Council, said: "We witnessed the collapse of a village in Gereshk two days ago. Unfortunately, Adam Khan village also fell to the Taliban last night."

He said at least 14 Afghan troops have been killed and nine others maimed.

Local residents voiced their concerns that prolonging the war in Gereshk will lead to civilian casualties.

"We are concerned about prolonging the war and the Taliban have captured several villages during the fighting," said Muhammad Khan, a resident of Gereshk district.

The Provincial Police Chief, Abdul Rahman Sarjang, however, said Afghan forces have the upper hand in the fighting. He added that 20 hard boyz have been killed and 15 others injured.

"Our forces at a checkpoint in Adam Khan village fought for five days, after that their equipment was finished, they tactically retreated 1.5 kilometers back and now we are on the defensive," he said, adding the Taliban have sustained heavy casualties in the fighting.

The fighting between Afghan cops and the Talibs started around six days ago, when a large group of Taliban hard boyz attacked several areas of the province and captured several villages.
Link


Afghanistan
Marjah Cleared Of Insurgents, But Helmand Difficult To Control
2016-01-09
[Tolo News] Officials said Friday they are making steady progress in clearing Marjah district in Helmand
...an Afghan province populated mostly by Pashtuns, adjacent to Injun country in Pak Balochistan...
of Death Eaters but because of its sheer size it is difficult to control.

Helmand province is one of the biggest in the country and is strategically key for the Taliban who have tried to take control of it in the past few months.

Security forces have however battled to clear it as criminal groups, narcos and the Taliban have made a point of trying to hold on to this opium-rich region.

But Helmand police said they have eliminated hundreds of Death Eaters in the province, particularly in Marjah.

Helmand 215 Maiwand Military Corps commander Moen Faqir has also confirmed that in addition to the Taliban, criminal groups and narcos are trying to keep Helmand insecure in order to secure a source of income through drugs for themselves.

But Faqir promised to bring changes to the situation.

"We have defeated the enemy and they do not have the ability to confront us," said Faqir.

Meanwhile Helmand Police Chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang said that the Taliban has been defeated in most part of the Marjah district and operations by Afghan forces have incurred heavy casualties on the Death Eater group.

"Marjah district is completely under Afghan forces control and all the routes to Marjah are open and we have created 10 security check posts," said Helmand Police Chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang.

But not everyone agrees. A local police commander said that after Afghan troops carried out a ground clearance operation and NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A single organization with differing goals, equipment, language, doctrine, and organization....
forces assisted with air strikes, the Taliban simply resumed activities in the district.
Link


Afghanistan
US apology fails to appease angry Afghans
2012-02-26
Of course it doesn't.
KABUL: A gunman killed two American military advisers with shots to the back of the head Saturday inside a heavily guarded ministry building, and NATO ordered military workers out of Afghan ministries as protests raged for a fifth day over the burning of copies of the Qur’an at a US army base.

The Taleban claimed responsibility for the Interior Ministry attack, saying it was retaliation for the Qur’an burnings, after the US servicemen — a lieutenant colonel and a major — were found dead on the floor of an office that only people who know a numerical combination can get into, Afghan and Western officials said.

The top commander of US and NATO forces recalled all international military personnel from the ministries, an unprecedented action in the decade-long war that highlights the growing friction between Afghans and their foreign partners at a critical juncture in the war.

The US-led coalition is trying to mentor and strengthen Afghan security forces so they can lead the fight against the Taleban and foreign troops can go home. That mission, however, requires a measure of trust at a time when anti-Western sentiment is at an all-time high.

Afghan Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Rahim Wardak called US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to apologize for the shooting and offer his condolences, Pentagon press secretary George Little said in a statement released in Washington.
I'm ever so slightly surprised by that. It's like Wardak actually listened to Sarah Palin. I wish Karzai had made the call.
“This act is unacceptable and the United States condemns it in the strongest possible terms,” Little said.

Security is tight in the capital, which is covered in snow, and foreigners working at the US Embassy and at international organizations have been banned from leaving their compounds. US officials said they were searching for the assailant, who has not been identified by name or nationality.

The two American service members were found by another foreigner who went into the room, according to the Afghan official. They were shot in the back of the head, according to Western officials. Authorities were poring over security camera video for clues, the Afghan official said.

Taleban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid identified the shooter as one of their sympathizers, Abdul Rahman. He said an accomplice inside the ministry helped Rahman get inside the compound to kill the Americans in retaliation for the Qur’an burnings.

“After the attack, Rahman informed us by telephone that he was able to kill four high-ranking American advisers,” Mujahid said. The Taleban often inflate death tolls and sometimes claim responsibility for killings they did not conduct.

Little, the Pentagon press secretary, said Wardak indicated that President Hamid Karzai was assembling religious leaders and other senior Afghan officials to take urgent steps to protect coalition forces.

US Gen. John Allen, the top commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan, met with Afghan Interior Minister Bismullah Khan Mohammadi, who offered both his condolences to the families of the victims and his apologies, Little said.

Afghanistan’s interior and defense ministers are expected in Washington next week.

Allen said he recalled all NATO personnel from the ministries “for obvious force protection reasons” but also said the alliance remains committed to its partnership with the Afghan government. NATO forces have advisers embedded in many Afghan ministries. The advisers are helping to develop the ministries so that Afghans can take the lead by the end of 2014, when foreign combat forces are to transfer control of security to Afghan security forces.

At least 28 people have been killed and hundreds wounded since Tuesday, when it first emerged that Qur’ans and other religious materials had been thrown into a fire pit used to burn garbage at Bagram Air Field, a large US base north of Kabul.

President Barack Obama and other US officials have apologized for what they said was a mistake, but their regrets have not quelled the deadly protests.

An Afghan soldier turned his gun on foreign troops, killing two American soldiers, during one riot outside a US base in Nangarhar province on Thursday. It was the latest in a rising number of incidents where Afghan soldiers or policemen, or gunmen wearing their uniforms, have killed NATO forces. Last month, France suspended its training program and threatened to withdraw its forces from Afghanistan a year ahead of schedule after an Afghan soldier shot and killed four French soldiers on a base in the east.

Karzai has said that the Afghan people have a right to protest the Qur’an burnings, but he urged them to demonstrate peacefully and refrain from destroying property. In a statement on Saturday, Karzai urged Afghan security forces to be patient with the protesters.

Hundreds of demonstrators staged peaceful protests in Afghanistan, but ones in Laghman, Kunduz and Logar provinces turned violent.

“The culprits of the burning of the holy Qur’an should be arrested and hanged to death in public,” said Mohammad Karim, one of 1,000 protesters who burned tires and threw stones at Afghan police in Mohammad Agha district of Logar province, south of Kabul. “We don’t accept it when they say ‘We apologize. We apologize.’ We don’t want Americans here at all.”

Laghman provincial police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang said about 1,000 protesters threw stones at Afghan security forces, smashed windows of government buildings and tried to attack the nearby governor’s house in the provincial capital of Mehterlam.

In Kunduz, the capital of Kunduz province in northeastern Afghanistan, more than 1,000 protesters threw rocks at government buildings and a UN office, said Sarwer Hussaini, a spokesman for the provincial police. He said the police fired into the air to try to disperse the crowd. Dr. Saad Mukhtar, health department director in Kunduz, said at least three protesters died and 50 others were injured in the melee.

In a statement, the UN mission in Afghanistan said the UN had deep respect for the Islamic faith and understood why Muslims were upset about the desecration of their holy book, but urged the demonstrators to exercise self-restraint and not let militants use the protests to foment violence.
Link


Afghanistan
Blast kills 3 Afghans
2011-11-23
[Bangla Daily Star] Three non-combatants were killed and three others including a woman and child maimed when their vehicle hit a roadside kaboom in eastern Afghanistan yesterday, police said.

The bomb was planted under a bridge in Alingar district of Laghman province before it destroyed a civilian van, provincial police chief Abdul Rahman Sarjang told AFP.

Roadside bombs are frequently planted by cut-throats but there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

According to the United Nations
...where theory meets practice and practice loses...
, the number of civilians killed in violence in Afghanistan rose by 15 per cent in the first six months of this year to 1,462, with cut-throats responsible for 80 percent of the killings.
Link


Afghanistan
Suicide Boomer Kills 2, Wounds 23 in Zabul
2009-08-30
[Quqnoos] A suicide bomber attacked a convoy of US troops in Zabul province earlier today, killing 2 civilians and wounding dozens, an official said

The bomber detonated the explosives strapped in his body when a convoy of US military was passing by a crowded bazaar in the remote district of Shahjoy, said Zabul Police Chief Gen Abdul Rahman Sarjang.

At least 23 Afghan civilians and three US soldiers were injured in the huge blast occurred in volatile southern Afghan province today morning, the police official further said.

A purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, speaking from an undisclosed location claimed responsibility for the attack.

The bomber named Mirwais, rammed his motorbike into a convoy of foreign troops and blew up the explosives rigged in the motorcycle, the Taliban spokesman told Quqnoos.

Zabul is a volatile province in southern Afghanistan, neighbouring Kandahar, the spiritual birthplace of the Taliban.

Surviving US soldiers have cordoned off the blast scene in the bazaar, where 4 civilians were killed and 17 others injured in a similar suicide attack three weeks ago.

The bomber attacked a vehicle of district intelligence head but he survived the attempt on his life.

A local health official in Shahjoy district, who requested anonymity, said two dead bodies and 26 wounded have been brought in the district hospital.
Link


Afghanistan
30 Taliban dead as district captured
2007-10-31
Taliban rebels overran a western Afghan district, sparking a fierce battle on Tuesday that left six civilians, four policemen and 30 militants dead, officials said. A soldier with the US-led coalition, an Afghan spy chief and 20 militants were killed in other incidents, reported AFP.

Taliban militants captured the Gulistan district during overnight fighting in western Afghanistan, officials confirmed on Tuesday. Located in western Farah province, the district was stormed by more than 400 militants armed with small and heavy weapons on Monday night, police said. The fighting continued for around an hour after which police retreated from the headquarters of the district, said Farah police chief Brigadier General Abdul Rahman Sarjang. Thirty Taliban, six local people who were helping them and four policemen were killed in the fighting, AFP added. However, Taliban spokesman Qari Yousaf Ahmadi told Daily Times that only two Taliban were killed and three were injured in the battle.

US soldier, militants dead: Separately, a soldier of the US-led coalition troops was killed in a clash with militants in the southern province of Kandahar, on Tuesday morning. Another coalition soldier was injured in the combat. Also in Kandahar, coalition troops and Afghan police arrested six people on suspicion of links with the Taliban, said a separate statement. Meanwhile, provincial police chief Sayed Aqa Sahib said NATO, US-led coalition forces and Afghan troopers had launched a “clean-up” operation in Kandahar, which resulted in the deaths of 20 militants.

Spy Chief: In another incident of violence, a district intelligence chief, his driver and two bodyguards were killed when their vehicle was blown up with a powerful remote-controlled bomb in the eastern province of Laghman on Tuesday morning. The incident happened in the Qarghayee district while the intelligence chief was on way to his office, crime branch chief at the Laghman police headquarters told Daily Times by phone. Claiming responsibility for the blast, Taliban spokesman Ahmadi said six security personnel were killed in the attack.
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