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Afghanistan
Daily Evacuation Brief August 15, 2023
2023-08-15
[AfghanDigest] LAST 24 HOURS
  • BLAST TARGETS HOTEL FREQUENTED BY TTP MEMBERS IN KHOST – Significant confusion is swirling around a blast that took place yesterday in Khost Province. Initial reports suggested that the hotel had been struck by an aerial bomb or rocket but follow-up reporting has claimed that a bomb was detonated inside the hotel. Additional information is required before a determination of what method was employed to cause the destruction. As of publication, 3 people were confirmed to have been killed and 7 others were wounded. There are local eyewitness reports that claim the roof of the hotel collapsed and people are trapped in the rubble but this has yet to be confirmed. The Taliban cordoned off the area almost immediately and only emergency personnel have been allowed past the roadblocks. The Qari Zadran hotel in Khost is located in the downtown section and local sources say it is commonly frequented by people from Northern Waziristan and that TTP members often stay there.

  • POSSIBLE CLASHES REPORTED IN BADAKHSHAN – Reports from early yesterday morning indicated that a military situation was developing in the Shahada District. At the time of the reports, there was no active confrontation and details remain sparse. Footage of helicopters patrolling over the Province spread on social media and there is an unverified report that one of the helicopters had either crashed or been shot down. There was another report that stated people had been killed in the main hospital of Faizabad after some sort of dispute erupted between two unknown groups. Finally, the main roads into Faizabad are reportedly blocked by Taliban security vehicles at this time. The situation remains confused and it is not clear what has transpired in the Province.

  • IRANIAN WATER INSPECTION TEAM’S REPORT RAISES SIGNIFICANT QUESTIONS – The team of hydrologists who visited Afghanistan to check on water levels returned to Tehran with a perplexing report. The team, after many delays, was allowed to visit a single measuring station situated upstream from the Kajaki Dam. The team took the recordings directly from the instruments but were then denied a visit to the Dam itself. Several satellite photos have previously been shown as evidence that Afghanistan was holding reserves in the Dam’s reservoir for domestic use. Obviously, the friction between the two countries over the issue has not been resolved and will continue to cause issues between the neighbors.

  • UN HUMAN RIGHTS EXPERTS SAY THE TALIBAN 2.0 IS FAR FROM ‘REFORMED’ – Richard Bennett, the UN’s Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in Afghanistan co-signed a statement that was released on Monday which casts doubt on the few existing claims that the Taliban have adopted a new ethos. The statement listed numerous human rights abuses that were the mainstays of the Taliban’s rule in the 1990s. The statement concluded with calls for the Taliban to reverse many of the discriminatory policies it had implemented and recommended several strategies the international community could use to change the situation.


NEXT 24 HOURS
KHOST WILL SEE A FLURRY OF SECURITY ACTIVITY AND WHATEVER IS GOING ON IN BADAKHSHAN COULD ESCALATE – Obviously, Khost will continue to see a large number of security forces in and around the Province. Active searches for both ISIS-K and TTP are expected. Until the situation in Badakhshan becomes clearer, we recommend that at-risk Afghans planning travel to/from the city of Faizabad consider delaying their plans.
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Afghanistan
Water under the bridge as Iran, Taliban seek dam deal - analysis
2023-06-19
[Jpost] Iran and Afghanistan are locked in a dispute over the Helmand River. This river flows from an area in the mountains near Kabul some 700 miles until it reaches wetlands in Iran’s southeast.

Iran’s special envoy to Afghanistan Hassan Kazemi Qomi said over the weekend that the Taliban are willing to be more flexible regarding Iran wanting access to the Kajaki Dam. This agreement would allow Iranian experts access to inspect, Iran’s Tehran Times and Fars News reported. Tasnim News said that the Taliban had given “consent to dam supply check.”

The dam was built in the 1950s and is located on the Helmand River in the Kajaki district of the eponymous province. It has a hydroelectric power station. The Helmand province is known for opium cultivation, among other things, but recent reports say that the Taliban’s war on drugs has reduced production.

ADDRESSING WATER TENSIONS BETWEEN IRAN AND AFGHANISTAN
Iran believes that this is a good first step to address the tensions with Afghanistan, as it acknowledges that there is a lack of water coming from there. According to Iranian pro-regime media, Iran and Afghanistan are locked in a dispute over the Helmand River, which flows from an area in the mountains near Kabul some 700 miles until it reaches wetlands in Iran’s southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province.

A picture of the Kajaki Dam and Spillway taken from an MI8 Helicopter coming in to land during the autumn of 2013. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

A picture of the Kajaki Dam and Spillway taken from an MI8 Helicopter coming in to land during the autumn of 2013. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

A treaty that dates back to 1973, when the shah was still in power in Iran, and before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, was signed between the two countries. It guarantees that Iran would receive some 820 million cubic meters of water annually.

By contrast, according to the 1962 agreement about dividing water from the Lower Basin of the Colorado River in the US, Nevada receives 370 million cubic meters (300,000 acre-feet), compared to California and Arizona, which receive much more water from the agreement. The dispute between these states amid water shortages in the last several years is not exactly similar to the Taliban-Iran dispute, but it has similarities in terms of water scarcity.

Iran and the Taliban seek to put their water problems behind them and work on a sustainable future. “We are two neighboring countries with a long common border, and have religious commonalities, an ancient relationship between the governments, the civilization field, from the point of view Afghanistan’s economy and trade is a good trade market in the field of our exports, as a market, we must count on it and pay attention to it, and we must create structures and laws appropriate to the development of commercial and economic relations, among the countries that we export to, among the first countries,” said the Iranian envoy.

Tensions flared with the Taliban in the last months over the dam dispute. According to the Tehran Times report, “Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi issued a warning to the Taliban leaders in May that they would be held accountable if they failed to deliver the province of Sistan-Baluchestan in southeast Iran with its fair share of water from the river.” Iran has demanded that Afghanistan enable Iranian specialists to observe the situation at the Kajakai Dam.

Now, the Taliban officials said this is all water under the bridge, as it were, and they are “committed to Iran’s rights to the Helmand River.” Both now say they are seeking to repair relations.
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Afghanistan
Daily Evacuation Brief May 18 and 19, 2023
2023-05-19
May 19, 2023
[AfghanDigest] LAST 24 HOURS
  • DIPLOMATIC SCUFFLE WITH IRAN OVER WATER ESCALATES, QOSH TEPA CANAL COMPLETION COULD WIDEN RIFT REGIONALLY – ‘Water Wars’ refers to national, regional, and international tensions that arise over access to fresh water. The issue is particularly concerning for developing countries as agriculture is typically a pillar in their national economies. The spat between Afghanistan and Iran over water rights to the Helmand River goes back decades and the two have tossed accusations at each other since the matter was supposedly settled with the agreement in 1973. Iran has lodged official complaints year after year that less than 5% of the agreed-upon amount ever flows into the Hamoun basin. Afghanistan has responded (even before the Taliban came to power) that the water levels in the Kajaki Dam are low and must be replenished. Iran has casted doubt on this assertion and continues to request that a joint delegation visit the reservoir to make an assessment. Yesterday, Iran’s Foreign Minister threatened unspecified action if the Helmand River situation was not corrected. While the Helmand River presents an immediate problem, the Qosh Tepa Canal project has much wider implications for regional instability. The construction of a major canal that would provide water to Afghanistan’s dry northern plains has long been a dream. Planners in the region were taken by surprise in January 2023 when the Taliban sanctioned the release of a video showing significant progress on the project. The Qosh Tepa Canal is expected to divert up to 30% of the water from the Amu Darya River and planning figures suggest it could create 250,000 jobs. However, the river is critical to Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan. The problem is already being taken seriously as evidenced by a decree issued by the president of Uzbekistan on 1 April ordering the establishment of water efficiency standards in anticipation of a deepening crisis.

  • BEWARE OF THESE FAKE AFGHAN RESETTLEMENT ORGANIZATIONS – There are concerns over two organizations that are rumored to be targeting desperate Afghans in Pakistan with resettlement scams to come to the US. The organizations in question are IOMA (acronym undefined) and AARO (Afghanistan-America Relocation Office). The rumors forced the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) to issue a message reminding those working on Afghan refugee cases that no legitimate organization will charge fees for relocation, resettlement, or protection.

  • ISLAMIC CONFERENCE IN RUSSIA BEGAN, TALIBAN SEND DELEGATION – Russia opened the 14th international gathering of Islamic nations in Tatarstan yesterday. The Taliban sent a delegation to attend the conference with the mission of increasing trade and international investment.


NEXT 24 HOURS
PAKISTAN POLICE EXPECTED TO LAUNCH A ‘COUNTER-TERRORISM’ OPERATION TO ARREST ‘TERRORISTS’ HARBORING IN IMRAN KHAN’S HOME IN LAHORE – The raid is reportedly imminent and will focus on arresting between 30 and 40 PTI party followers who are suspected of attacking Army and Police facilities during the chaos of the protests. Khan had been given twenty-four hours to hand the suspects over but the deadline came and went. The acting government for Punjab Province said that it expects the operation to take place ‘soon’. The raid could provoke a new round of protests and if any violence occurs, the protests could easily act as a call to action for the PTI faithful. Khan had dismissed the demand to hand over his followers and told Police that they must use a search warrant if they want access to his home. We do not feel the raid will spark another national outcry similar to what was witnessed on 9 May. However, if casualties result or, the raid is used as a pretext to arrest Khan or members of his household things could deteriorate rapidly.

May 18, 2023
[AfghanDigest] LAST 24 HOURS
  • CABINET PROBE STRIKES FEAR INTO MANY AFGHANS – In a unanimous vote, the Taliban cabinet agreed to launch an investigation into all official contracts that had been signed over the past 20 years. It was not immediately clear if the probe would solely focus on government contracts or would also scrutinize private agreements. Understandably, the announcement has many who remain in Afghanistan nervous. A source who ran a contracting service during the previous regime said that “So many dollars were being flown into Bagram Air Base on American planes that Afghans couldn’t help themselves.” People who had dealings with the US and coalition forces believe they will be targeted and, whether evidence of culpability is found or not, they expect harsh punishments will be meted out by the Taliban. The sheer volume of waste and incompetence by US officials during the Afghanistan War is legendary and the volumes of SIGAR reports that have been filed over the years testify to the corruption that was allowed (some would say - encouraged) to take place. A former construction business owner said that, “No matter what is investigated, or who. The Taliban will use this to settle scores and embarrass those of us who worked for the occupiers.” Such an investigation is a monumental task and it is not clear how well-equipped the Taliban is to conduct forensic accounting on the scale required for this kind of investigation. However, it is likely that whatever results will be made into a public spectacle.

  • THE UNITED KINGDOM HAS CUT AID TO AFGHANISTAN BY OVER 50% DUE TO BUDGET CUTS – The Independent Commission for Aid Impact reported the budget forecasted for Afghanistan in 2023-24 came in at 100 million pounds. The previous year’s budget was 246 million pounds. The watchdog accused the government of turning its back on the Afghans.

  • FACEBOOK SCAMMER ARRESTED IN KHOST – An unidentified man was arrested by Taliban security forces for reputedly impersonating a young girl and conning another man into paying him over 5 million Afghanis. Police did not say if the scam involved immoral promises but the individual who reported the crime was reportedly questioned about his messaging activity and is being forced to visit an Imam.

  • INDIAN ARMY INTERCEPTS DRUG SHIPMENT AT BORDER THAT ORIGINATED IN AFGHANISTAN – A drone carrying 15.5 kgs of unidentified narcotics was shot down by Indian border security forces in the Panjab Armritsar sector. The drone came from Pakistan and a spokeswoman said the narcotics had originated from Afghanistan.



NEXT 24 HOURS
FORMER PM KHAN SAYS HIS HOUSE IS SURROUNDED, ARREST IS IMMINENT – The former PM issued several Tweets about threats of arrest. While a military detachment did cordon off his home, this was reportedly a response to a demand to turn over approximately 30-40 PTI followers who took part in arson and vandalism at military bases. A spokesman for the acting Punjab government said that no arrest warrant had been issued and that police and military forces would honor the High Court’s order that he remain free until 1400hrs local time on Thursday. After the Army roped off Khan’s residence, several PTI supporters began gathering in and around Zaman Park. The situation could rapidly deteriorate after the 1400hrs deadline passes today.
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Afghanistan
Afghan interior minister survives attack: ministry
2008-02-28
Afghanistan's interior minister Wednesday survived an attack on his convoy, while clashes killed several civilians and Taliban militants around the country, the interior ministry said. Interior Minister Zarar Ahmad Moqbel's armoured convoy was shot at about 50 kilometres (30 miles) outside of the relatively secure capital Kabul, his spokesman said, adding they had only learned of the incident afterwards. "We received reports there was some shooting from the mountain on one or two vehicles," spokesman Zemarai Bashary told AFP. Police were investigating if the attack had been aimed at the minister, he said.

Bashary, who was travelling with the convoy, said even the minister did not realise that firing took place and no one was hurt in the attack in which Afghan media reports said rocket- and gun-fire were used to ambush the delegation.

Meanwhile there were new fears for the fate of a US aid worker and her Afghan driver kidnapped in the southern city of Kandahar a month ago as their employer said it had unconfirmed information they had been killed.

In the eastern province of Khost, a bomb blamed on Taliban fighters blew up a civilian pick-up truck, wounding a dozen people -- including women and children, a district police chief said.

One of the wounded died in hospital and six others were in a critical condition, Yaqoobi district chief Lutfullah Babakarkhail told AFP. "This is the work of Taliban," he said.

A similar remote-controlled bomb in the same area killed five policemen -- all from the same family -- and a young boy on Tuesday.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), which is helping Afghan troops confront the Taliban, meanwhile confirmed that two of its soldiers were killed in another bombing in the adjacent province of Paktika Tuesday.

The Polish military announced late Tuesday that two of its soldiers were killed in the blast and a third wounded.

ISAF also said Wednesday that eight Taliban fighters were killed in operations over the past three days in the southern province of Helmand.

The force, which includes soldiers from around 40 countries, rejected claims that it had killed civilians in the operation around the Kajaki Dam -- a vital water and power source.

However rocket fired by insurgents in the area had left five civilians dead on Monday, the separate US-led coalition said.

The Australian military reported separately that its soldiers in the southern province of Uruzgan had in the past days repelled a number of Taliban attacks on a project to build a base for Afghan soldiers.

And the Afghan army said two of its soldiers were killed in a clash with rebels on Tuesday in Kandahar province.

The Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001, when they were removed for not handing over their allies in the Al-Qaeda network after the 9/11 attacks on the United States.

Last year was the deadliest of the insurgency, with around 6,000 people killed, and there are fears this year will shape up to be just as bad.

NATO civilian spokesman Mark Laity told reporters in Kabul however that he was confident of long-term success. "As long as we stay in the right direction we will win," he said.

International commitment "is enduring, it's not today, it's not for tomorrow it's enduring, it's to accomplish the mission which we came here to do in alliance with the government and the people of Afghanistan," he said.
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Iraq
Coalition airpower targets enemy mortar positions
2007-09-19
Coalition airpower supported Coalition ground forces in Iraq and the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan in the following operations Sept. 17, according to Combined Air and Space Operations Center officials here. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles targeted enemies in a tree line near Kajaki Dam with cannon rounds, Guided Bomb Unit-38s and GBU-31s. The JTAC confirmed the weapons hit the target and the desired result was achieved.

Near Garmsir Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt IIs targeted enemies in tree line with cannon rounds. The pilots continued the engagement firing cannon rounds on enemies trying to relocate to a new position. The Joint Terminal Attack Controller confirmed the strikes were successful.

The A-10s also provided overwatch for a convoy awaiting medical evacuation which had been hit by an improvised explosive device

Royal Air Force Harrier GR-9A and GR7A targeted enemy mortar positions near Sangin with rockets and a general purpose 540 pound bomb to cease enemy fire. The JTAC confirmed the weapons hit the target and enemy fire ceased. F-15Es in Sangin provided overwatch for a Coalition ground forces.

An A-10 near Gereshk conducted a show of force with flares to deter further enemy attacks on a Coalition convoy that had been hit by an explosive device. The show of force was considered successful.

Also near Gereshk an Air Force B-1B Lancer provided a show of force with flares to deter enemy attacks on another Coalition convoy. The JTAC confirmed the show of force as successful.

In total, 36 close air support missions were flown in support of the International Security Assistance Force and Afghan security forces, reconstruction activities and route patrols.

Nine Air Force Surveillance and Reconnaissance aircraft flew missions in support of operations in Afghanistan. Additionally, two Royal Air Force aircraft performed tactical reconnaissance.

In Iraq, Navy F/A-18 Hornets targeted an enemy weapons cache in Baghdad with GBU-38s. The JTAC confirmed the strikes were successful.

In Baqubah F-16s targeted a building containing explosive making material with GBU-38s. The JTAC confirmed the target was destroyed.

An F-16 conducted a show of force in Miqdadiyah to deter hostile persons in the vicinity of Coalition forces. The show of force was deemed successful by the JTAC.

An A-10 provided a show of force over a convoy in Al Kut that was investigating a suspected IED. The show of force successfully deterred hostile activity.

In total, Coalition aircraft flew 61 close air support missions for Operation Iraqi Freedom. These missions supported Coalition ground forces, protected key infrastructure, provided over watch for reconstruction activities and helped to deter and disrupt terrorist activities.

Seventeen Air Force, Navy and Royal Australian Air Force ISR aircraft flew missions in support of operations in Iraq. Additionally, seven Navy and Royal Air Force aircraft performed tactical reconnaissance.

U.S. Air Force C-130s and C-17s provided intra-theater heavy airlift support, helping to sustain operations throughout Afghanistan, Iraq and the Horn of Africa.

Approximately 160 airlift sorties were flown; 490 tons of cargo was delivered, and approximately 4,800 passengers were transported. This included approximately 42,300 pounds of troop re-supply air-dropped in Afghanistan.

Coalition C-130 crews from Australia, Canada, Iraq, and Japan flew in support of operations in Afghanistan or Iraq.

On Sept. 16, U.S. Air Force, French Air Force and Royal Air Force aerial refueling crews flew 54 sorties and off-loaded approximately 3 million pounds of fuel to 250 receiving aircraft.
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Afghanistan
20 Afghans killed in violence
2007-08-26
A roadside bomb killed three private security guards on Saturday while two policemen and 15 Taliban died in fighting overnight in fresh violence in Afghanistan, officials said. The bomb, which struck the vehicle on a road in the Zahiri district of Kandahar province, also injured two other guards, provincial police commander Sayed Aqa Saqib told AFP.

Separately, nine Taliban rebels and a policeman were killed in intense fighting Friday night in Ghazni Province, a district administration official said. The clashes in the remote, Taliban-dominated Giru district lasted several hours, official Mahboob-Ullah told AFP. “The bodies of the enemy casualties have been recovered. One of our policemen was martyred,” he said. In another incident Friday night in eastern Paktika province Taliban rebels clashed with police in which six insurgents were killed and a policeman also died, the Interior Ministry said. Two policemen were also injured in the clash in Khushamand district, reported AFP.

On Saturday, a rocket landed inside a hospital compound in Kabul, but caused no casualties or damage, hospital officials said, reported Reuters. “It was 11pm when a rocket hit inside the Wazir Akbar Khan compound,” said Dr Akramzada who works at the Wazir Akbar Khan hospital. “No one was wounded or killed, and the hospital received no damage. It hit a garden inside the hospital.” No rebel group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Meanwhile, investigations were underway into the killing of three British soldiers by a bomb dropped by a US fighter jet and intended for Afghanistan’s Taliban rebels. According to AFP, the “friendly fire” incident in the southern province of Helmand late Thursday was one of the deadliest in a string of such mistakes in the campaign against the Taliban. The British soldiers were struck by a bomb dropped by a US F-15 jet called in to help during a battle near the massive Kajaki Dam, which troops are fighting to secure from the Taliban militia. Three were killed outright and two wounded. The US confirmed the deaths had been caused by a US bomb and said an inquiry would be launched.
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Iraq
Airpower used 5/30/07 in SW Asia
2007-06-03
Coalition airpower supported coalition ground forces in Iraq and International Security Assistance Force troops in Afghanistan during operations May 30, according to Combined Air and Space Operations Center officials here. In Afghanistan, an Air Force B-1B Lancer dropped guided bomb unit-38s (500# JDAM) on insurgents in an area around Asadabad. The B-1 also dropped a GBU-31 (2000# JDAM) on the enemy targets as well. The attack was called successful by the on-scene joint terminal attack controller. The B-1 also performed shows of force with flares to try to determine an enemy location in Kandahar. There were no reports of gunfire reported after the shows of force.

In Garmsir, an Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle dropped a GBU-38 on an enemy compound. Insurgents had fled to the building after firing on ground forces. The JTAC in the area reported the strike was successful in that all of the miscreants died.

Also in Garmsir, a B-1B dropped GBU-38s on an enemy firing position. The aircrew dropped GBU-31s on a building being used to attack coalition forces. The B-1 also provided air support after a helicopter crash in the area.

F-15Es fired GBU-38s and cannon rounds at two insurgent buildings in Sangin. The JTAC reported the buildings were destroyed in the attack. F-15Es also monitored insurgent compounds and firing positions and escorted coalition forces in Sangin.

Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt IIs supported ground forces fighting enemy personnel in Musa Qala by providing escort to a coalition convoy in the area.
A B-1 provided a show of force for a convoy moving near Qaleh-Ye Now. The aircrew also provided a show of presence over a highway in the area.
A Royal Air Force GR-9 Harrier watched over the site of a helicopter crash near Kajaki Dam.

Eleven Air Force intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft flew missions in support of operations in Afghanistan. Additionally, two RAF fighter aircraft performed tactical reconnaissance.

In Iraq, Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons dropped GBU-38s on an illegal bridge WTF?? illegal bridge? and on an insurgent vehicle in Baghdad. The drops hit their targets.

Other F-16s dropped GBU-12s (500# LGB) on insurgent vehicles near Habbiniyah. The bombs directly impacted the vehicles, according to the JTAC killing all the jihadis.
Do Iraqi jihadis do car swarms?
An F-18 fired cannon rounds at insurgents planting IEDs along a road in Karmah. The rounds hit their targets and the IED placement was stopped by death.

In total, coalition aircraft flew 60 close-air-support missions for Operation Iraqi Freedom. These missions supported coalition ground forces, protected key infrastructure, provided overwatch for reconstruction activities and helped to deter and disrupt terrorist activities.

Approximately 128 airlift sorties were flown; more than 535 tons of cargo were delivered, and approximately 2,607 passengers were transported. This included approximately 24,736 pounds of troop re-supply air-dropped in Afghanistan.

Coalition C-130 crews from Australia and Iraq flew in support of operations in Afghanistan or Iraq. On May 29, Air Force, RAF, French and Republic of Singapore tankers flew 48 sorties and off-loaded approximately 2.7 million pounds of fuel to 233 receiving aircraft.
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Afghanistan
Bill Roggio on 'Invasion' of Pakiwakiland
2007-03-09
Deputy Taliban commander in Waziristan captured by Task Force 145; Taliban commander arrested in Kandahar; Tora Bora Front cell broken up; Achilles update

As NATO and Afghan forces are on the offensive in northern Helmand province, U.S. special forces have conducted a cross border raid in Pakistan and nabbed the deputy Taliban commander in Waziristan, according to a report by Al Jazeera Television. The Taliban leader is identified as Mullah Hakimallah Mansub, however the likelihood is the Romanization of the name is mistake. 'Mansub' may well be of the Mehsud tribe, of which Baitullah and Abdullah Mehsud are the two leading Taliban commanders in South Waziristan.

This raid would have been conducted by Task Force 145, the specialized hunter-killer team designed to detain or kill senior al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Task Force 145 was behind the strike in Danda Saidgai against Osama bin Laden's praetorian Black Guard in the spring of 2006, among other operations in western Pakistan.

Today's raid in South Waziristan follows the capture of Mullah Mahmood, a Taliban commander running away like a girlie fleeing the fighting in southern Afghanistan. Mahmood was captured by Afghan soldiers after he tried to pass through a checkpoint while wearing a burka and a totally HOT pair of Manolos.

In Nangarhar province in northen Afghanistan NATO forces captured the leader of an IED cell of the newly formed Tora Bora Front. The Tora Bora Front is an al-Qaeda linked organization and offshoot of Hizb-i-Islami Khalis fighters led by Anwarul Haq Mujahid. Mujahid is the spawn son of Maulvi Yunis Khalis, who hosted Osama bin Laden after he entered Afghanistan in 1996.

Meanwhile, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the leader of the Taliban and al-Qaeda allied Hizb-i-Islami Gulbuddin (HIG), has claimed he has broken with the Taliban and is willing to negotiate with the Afghan government. "Look at Me! ME! MEEE!!! The jihad went into high gear but later it gradually went down as certain elements among the Taliban rejected the idea of a joint struggle against the aggressor," Hekmatyar told AFP "He said his forces were now mounting only restricted operations, partly because of a lack of young boys for the jihadis resources." Hekmatyer has always been an opportunist in Afghan affairs, but this might be a sign that the Taliban and al-Qaeda no longer see any use in Hekmatyer's services as they are now secure in Western Pakistan.
I don't think either the Talibs or Qaeda were particularly fond of Hek from the start. He's out for himself and nobody else. When he could pretend to command the entire Hezb he was of some value, though never as much as he thought. But his end of the Hezb has been tossed by the rest of the party and there's not much room for the politicking he's so much better at than he is at military operations. It's doubtful he's actually got a big-time sponsor like he did way back when. In short, he's an idea whose time has gone.
The raids against Taliban leaders occur as NATO and Afghan forces enter the third day of Operation Achilles in Northern Helmand province. Over 4,500 NATO and 1,000 Afghan troops are battling Taliban forces in the Taliban infested districts. Mullah Abdul Qassim, a "topman Taliban commander in Helmand province," according to The Associated with Terrorists Press, claims to have 4,000 fighters in northern Helmand and up to 9,000 fighters in the entire province.
Oooooo, scary. Better hide the boys, but the men of the Angloshere (and a some Dutch) will be ready to turn these 'fighters' into corpses. Many corpses.
"All of them are well-equipped with turbans and pointy-toed slippers and we have the magic rocks you insert in your anus weapons to target helicopters," Qassim told The Associated Press. "The Taliban are able to fight for 15 or 20 years against NATO and the Americans."
Yeah, right. Unlike Iraq, there aren't 1M tons of munitions scattered about the country. Every round must be hauled from Pakiwakistan via Donkey, Toyota truck or whatever. Typical muzzie wild threats without any ability to back it up.
The fighting over the past 24 hours has focused around the Garmsir district. "[The NATO led International Security Assistance Forces] consisting of the British 45 Commando Royal Marines, supported by Afghan National Army troops, have successfully engaged Taliban extremist strongholds as well as compounds being used by the enemy as arms and ammunition storage facilities in the general area of Garmsir," according to the ISAF press release. Afghan artillery has been firing in support of the operation, and U.S., British and Dutch close air support has been called in as well.
The ANA has arty? And the Dutch F-16s fight? Who knew?
Elements from the Royal Canadian Regiment and the U.S. 1st Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division appear to be conducting blocking operations at the Kandahar and Helmand provincial boundaries.
1000 or so first-class infantry with a wide-range of supporting arms is an excellent block. And with the hammer on it's way, that means a whole lotta dead talibunnies.
The Taliban control the districts of Muckistan, Shitholistan, Musa Qala and Washir, and claimed to have captured Nawzad.
"Today Nawzad, tomorrow the caliphate".
The Sangin, Kajaki and Grishk districts have also been been the scene of heavy Taliban activity this winter. ISAF is attempting to secure the region around the Kajaki Dam in northren Helmand province to push forward with reconstruction projects in the region.
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Afghanistan
Taliban flee battle using children as shields: NATO
2007-02-14
Caution: Brave Jihadi Warriors at work.
KABUL (Reuters) - Taliban fighters used children as human shields to flee heavy fighting this week during an operation by foreign and Afghan forces to clear rebels from around a key hydro-electric dam, NATO said on Wednesday. The Taliban have used human shields before, but never children, local residents say.
Jeez, what's the world's coming to when even the Taliban loses it's principles?
The fighting occurred during Operation Kryptonite on Monday, an offensive to clear insurgents from the Kajaki Dam area in southern Helmand province to allow repairs to its power plants and the installation of extra capacity.

"During this action ... Taliban extremists resorted to the use of human shields. Specifically, using local Afghan children to cover as they escaped out of the area," Colonel Tom Collins, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), told reporters in Kabul.

The Kajaki Dam fighting was in an area where 700 mainly foreign fighters, including Chechens, Pakistanis and Uzbeks, arrived from Pakistan this week to reinforce Taliban guerrillas.

NATO also said it killed a senior local Taliban commander and several comrades in a pre-dawn air-strike on Wednesday between the dam and the rebel-held town of Musa Qala to the west, but denied residents' accounts civilians were also killed.

The leader, identified by police and tribal elders as Mullah Manan, was involved in the capture of Musa Qala 13 days ago and clashes around Kajaki.

NATO said its soldiers saw 11 bodies, all fighting-age males, dragged from the wreckage by Taliban fighters. Provincial police said Manan and at least eight more Taliban were killed and that they had no word of civilian casualties. But local residents and elders said civilians also died.

"It is a well-known enemy tactic to try to blame civilian casualties on ISAF forces," Collins said in a statement. "We continue to conduct specific shaping operations -- to go after specific Taliban extremists, the leadership who are impacting the enemy's operations," he told reporters later.
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Afghanistan
British clear area around Afghan dam
2007-02-07
British military authorities say that 25 insurgent compounds have been cleared from the area around a major dam in Afghanistan.
The dam in northern Helmand Province is capable of providing electric power for 1.8 million people... The dam has been "the site of regular insurgent mortar attacks over the past two months and civilians have been forced from their homes leaving the dam largely unserviceable."
Operation Volcano was aimed at creating a safe zone around the Kajaki Dam so that the structure can be repaired, The Telegraph reported. The dam in northern Helmand Province is capable of providing electric power for 1.8 million people. British officials hope that restarting the dam will improve the lives of people living in Helmand Province, now Afghanistan's major opium-producing area.

The dam has been "the site of regular insurgent mortar attacks over the past two months and civilians have been forced from their homes leaving the dam largely unserviceable," a military statement said. During the six-week campaign, British commandos also came under mortar attack regularly.

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Afghanistan
UK troops 'destroy' Taleban camp
2007-01-08
Moved to Monday for further discussion. AoS.
British troops have destroyed a Taleban training camp in southern Afghanistan, killing dozens of insurgents, according to the military. About 110 Royal Marines carried out the operation in northern Helmand, which it is hoped will pave the way for repairs on a hydroelectric dam in the province. It is hoped nearly two million people will now get access to electricity.

Operation Clay was launched on New Year's Day. Plymouth-based 42 Commando were engaged in four days of fighting. A senior Taleban commander and "tens" of his henchman are said to have been killed during the operation. Only one marine was hurt during the battles. The soldier was shot through the hand.

Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai has thanked Operation Clay's commanders. Mr Karzai, who is championing the scheme to fix the Kajaki Dam, sent a personal message.

Insurgents had been stalling repairs on faulty turbines at the dam, which is situated at the source of the Helmand River. Repair work on the facility, which was built in 1953, will now commence next month. It is estimated it will bring electricity to about 1.8 million people and treble the area of irrigated farmland in the fertile province.

Military spokesman Major Oliver Lee said: "We needed to sort out the insurgency that there has been in the environs of Kajaki.

"And we very successfully did that over this past week or so with some very focused targeted military operations, which included killing the key insurgency commander at that location." He said there had been "running firefights" for up to four days against "fairly coherent sustained attacks of small arms, rockets and indirect fire".

Maj Lee said he believed the operation, which had the support of the Afghan National Police, could also boost their campaign against the Taleban fighters in the province. He said: "I would suggest that we have significantly seized the initiative from the irreconcilables in that area."
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Afghanistan
While Canada talks, troops act
2006-04-12
from an embebbed reporter with the troops.
ROSIE DIMANNO
KANDAHAR—Meanwhile, back at the war ...

Oh yes (cover your eyes), Canadian troops are still soldiering here, doing that thing they do — what so many of their compatriots back home don't really want to grasp; indeed, are ideologically primed to reject on behalf of "our men and women," so fervently attached has much of the public become to this dreamy version of a Boy Scout military that never shoots anybody and never takes casualties.

As politicians in Ottawa prepare to lob rhetoric in the House of Commons today about Canada's mission to Afghanistan — and while alarmists promote the absurd, ill-informed canard that Afghanistan is Iraq in miniature, which provides the opportunity to use that favourite word, "quagmire" — this is what the troops have been up to in recent days:

Alongside coalition and Afghan allies — no specifics available on the nationality of those who actually pulled the trigger — killing one senior and one mid-level Taliban leader during an engagement in Sangin district, where Charlie Company deployed on April 2, following a brazen assault upon Forward Operating Base Wolf.

Helping to thwart, thanks much to A-10 aircraft tank-bombers, the planned sabotage by insurgents of the crucial Kajaki Dam in the Helmand Valley.

Conducting several dismounted patrols and shuras in Sangin villages that have had no previous contact with coalition forces and which have been utilized — whether with their agreement or not — as bolt-holes by suspected Taliban fighters and narco-criminals in what is Afghanistan's richest opium-growing province. Afghans, endlessly hospitable, have served the Canadians gallons of chai, but this is no tea party.

Launching investigations of two roadside explosions in Kandahar city yesterday morning that injured 11 Afghans — three police, three army and five civilians, including two children.

Mostly, though, Canadian combat troops have been making their presence felt — seen and heard — in the area around FOB Wolf, known more latterly as FOB Robinson, in honour of an American serviceman killed there on March 25, four days before a U.S. medic and 22-year-old Canadian machine-gunner were also slain in a fierce, protracted firefight.

"The Canadians have had a very marked effect there in just one week," said Col. Chris Vernon, the British officer who is chief of staff for Task Force Aegis, commanded by Brig.-Gen. David Fraser.

Helmand will be a British responsibility and some 3,000 U.K. troops are scheduled to arrive within the next six weeks. In the interim, Charlie Company was sent 180 kilometres west of Kandahar city last week to reinforce the satellite base, which had been for the previous 40 days or so manned by Afghan National Army troops and a small unit of "mentoring" U.S. Special Forces.

It's a pivotal area because, until very recently, insurgents and drug lieutenants have operated unimpeded in Sangin. The presence of the forward operating base was provocative enough that suspected Taliban threw themselves at it in successive waves, with between 50 and 70 of them killed in the fighting. Not one of them ever got inside the wire.

Politicians will take notes today, in the debate to which Prime Minister Stephen Harper has grudgingly — and, it says here, wrongly — submitted. It's unlikely the troops, beyond senior commanders, will take any note of this episode at all.

It is enough that they scrunch up their faces — as if smelling something even more foul than the odour around Kandahar Airfield's latrines — at the mere mention of an event they instinctively recognize as an exercise in political sophistry.

What annoys them no end, as interview after interview has made clear, is the mistaken impression too many Canadians hold — and hold dearly — of their deployment here, where they are emphatically not Blue Beret peacekeepers but warriors, most assuredly in the battle group component.

They will engage, through their commanders, in discussions with the citizenry because that's part of the strategy in Helmand, as it is in Kandahar province. And the payoff will come. But what Canadians must understand is that a dramatic shift in the very essence of Afghanistan is a long-haul project and no definitive timeline can possibly be drawn up.

Zabul, to the north, was described yesterday by Vernon as "immaculate" — clean of Taliban and free from insurgent violence, but it's taken Americans more than four years to make it so. In neighbouring Uruzgan, Dutch forces — they're here already, contrary to a columnist's assertion in Sunday's Star — are working hard to do the same thing.

Afghans, bewildered by the Western preoccupation with deadlines, put it this way: "The military has all the wristwatches. Afghans have all the time."

Yet, in their short time here, just over two months, Canadian troops conducting forward operations have succeeded, with coalition and Afghan allies, in disrupting Taliban objectives. In lieu of a co-ordinated broad-based insurgency, they've reverted to small bands of fighters devising ambushes, planting roadside explosives and throwing out suicide bombers that rack up civilian casualties.

"Small groups operating without centralized control are more difficult for us to break down," Vernon acknowledged. "But that is not how they generally want to operate. They operate with control coming out of Quetta (Pakistan) and from within another control within Afghanistan."

This disruption to that system has been caused by removing — killing — middle-level Taliban leaders, "removing them from the circuit over the past month," as Vernon put it.

"A very interesting aspect is, when they go asking for volunteers to come into Afghanistan to take over those mid-level positions, there is a distinct lack of volunteers coming forward, particularly out of Pakistan."

Further, Vernon pointed out, Taliban funding from the opium crop in Helmand is being strangled — not because the poppy fields are being eradicated but because Taliban agents are having a bitch of a time hauling the raw product out and delivering the cash in. They are no longer moving about with impunity.

"From our perspective, we (have to) continue to keep the pressure on mid-level command," said Vernon. "The foot soldiers will continue, I'm afraid, and you will still get the odd unco-ordinated IED (improvised explosive devise). With any insurgency, they're let loose without any central co-ordination. But it is the mid-level that's critical."

A diminished mid-level command is a key difference between the insurgency here and that in Iraq.

"The level of sophistication, of IED capability, is far below that seen by our coalition forces in Iraq," said Vernon. "But that does not mean it will not, at times, be successful."

In talking to reporters, Vernon explained that — because of operations such as that being conducted by the battle group from Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry — Taliban elements have been "marginalized into pockets."

"And any organization that splinters is diminished."

Pointing to developments at FOB Robinson, he noted: "Before the Canadians got there, the whole area had pretty much been given over to the Taliban."

Now, that show of force has robbed the enemy of traction and unencumbered movement. Further, from those forward operating bases, cordon-and-search operations can be conducted, intelligence gathered and effective precision strikes launched, as clearly has been occurring over the past week.

"The thing is, we have to get a lot closer to these guys," said Vernon, in reference to securing the trust of villagers and synchronizing operations with Afghan forces. "They don't have the technological capabilities but they know the ground, they know the people, the atmospherics and the history.

"That's what (the Princess Patricia's infantry) brings. It brings 150 soldiers; it brings patrols. It begins to dominate an area to create an environment where the people have a choice between the Taliban and us. In many of these areas, they've never seen us before."

Talk is, very much, an aspect of this military mission.

In the battle of loyalties — between ousted Taliban, warlords and the nascent government in Kabul — the decided are in a minority, said Vernon.

"Maybe 60 per cent are sitting on the fence. And that 60 per cent are swing voters we can influence. But you're not going to influence them totally by chasing around their villages and grabbing Taliban.

"Any counter-insurgency is about the people, the will of the people in the middle."

The will of the people — Canadians might want to remember that. And remember this, too: For all the hand-wringing that is apparently taking place at home about this mission, only one Canadian soldier has been killed in combat — fighting — in Afghanistan, and that may have been from friendly fire.

Welcome to our backbone.
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