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Afghanistan/South Asia
Top Taleban Elusive as Offensive Winds Down
2005-06-25
A group of top Taleban commanders appeared to have slipped the net yesterday as Afghan and US forces wrapped up one of the bloodiest offensives since the fall of the regime, officials said. Defense officials in Kabul said earlier that soldiers had surrounded four Taleban chiefs holed up in southern Afghanistan’s mountains, including the brother-in-law of fugitive militant leader Mulla Mohammad Omar. The US military said it was now engaged in a hearts-and-minds drive to bring medical care to a district devastated in the battles and rebuild a mosque, which was destroyed by enemy fighters. “It looks like the fighting has certainly died off and whatever enemy forces that were in the area that we didn’t kill or capture might have fled,” US military spokesman Lt. Col. Jerry O’Hara told AFP. “We still don’t have visibility on exactly how many fighters were involved.”

The Taleban had always denied that Mulla Dadullah, a key member of the Taleban leadership council, Mulla Brader, said to be Mulla Omar’s relative by marriage, or any other of its commanders were under siege. “I don’t know about the Taleban commanders who were said to be surrounded,” Kandahar province security commander Gen. Mohammed Salem told AFP. Troops were still on the ground searching for remnants of a rebel force which last week captured the district headquarters of Mian Nishin, which lies at the violent juncture of Zabul, Uruzgan and Kandahar provinces, he added. The four-day mission to take out Taleban “safe havens” was one of the bloodiest since the fundamentalist regime was ousted by a US-led air campaign after failing to surrender Al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden.

Afghan officials placed the death toll of militants at 132 while the US military estimate of enemy deaths stood at 54, with 22 captured. Many were killed when US warplanes and helicopters supported by British jets launched an 11-hour bombardment on Tuesday. Three policemen were killed and three others wounded. Taleban militants kidnapped 31 people when they took over Mian Nishin. They killed eight of the hostages for allegedly collaborating with US forces and later released the rest. Afghan officials are trying to curb a strong resurgence by the fundamentalist militia before the country’s first post-Taleban elections in less than three months’ time.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Taliban leadership may be surrounded
2005-06-23
Afghan and U.S. forces surrounded an area in Afghanistan on Thursday where senior commanders of elusive Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar were thought to be hiding, Afghan security officials said.
I don't think I'd get my hopes up. Mullah Omar's pretty good at hopping his motorcycle and leaving his loyal minions in the lurch — if it's him they have surrounded in the first place.
The operation, backed by U.S. helicopter gunships, followed a big U.S.-backed offensive that killed more than 100 militants in the same region of the border between Kandahar, Uruzgan and Zabul provinces in the past three days, the officials said. Those holed up in the Dai Chopan area included Mullah Dadullah, a member of the Taliban's 10-man leadership council headed by Omar, and Mullah Brother, another commander thought close to the Taliban leader, the Defence Ministry said.
Oh. So it's not Mullah Omar. I don't know anything about the motorcycling skills of the other guys...
Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ishaq Paiman identified the others as Mullah Abdul Hakim, Mullah Abdul Hanan and Mullah Abdul Basir. Mullah is a title for a Muslim cleric used by many top Taliban members. General Mohammad Muslim Hamid, army commander for the southern region, said the area had been surrounded and the Taliban commanders were believed to be hiding there.
Yeah, but I still don't expect great results from surrounding them...
General Fateh Khan, another commander taking part in the operation, said it involved Afghan security forces, as well as U.S. helicopter gunships and U.S. ground troops. A U.S. military spokeswoman said she had no information about the operation. Fateh Khan said the Taliban commanders were with more than 150 of their fighters.
Is that before or after subtracting the 100 deaders?
Fateh Khan said troops were closing in from three sides to try to capture them, which would be a major coup for the government of President Hamid Karzai. Reza Khan, a man sentenced to death last year for killing four journalists in 2001, including two from Reuters, said at his trial Mullah Brother, one of the Taliban commanders believed hiding in the Dai Chopan area, had ordered the killings. The journalists were Australian television cameraman Harry Burton and Afghan photographer Azizullah Haidari of Reuters, Spaniard Julio Fuentes of El Mundo and Italian Maria Grazia Cutuli of Corriere della Sera. Interior Ministry spokesman Lutfullah Mashal said 103 guerrillas had been killed in three days of fighting and the offensive had been a major blow to the Taliban's bid to disrupt Sept. 18 parliamentary elections, the next big step in Afghanistan's difficult path to stability.
Being dead does tend to disrupt your plans, doesn't it?
He said most were killed by U.S. helicopter gunships as they fled Mian Nishin, a district the rebels seized last week, and included three commanders -- Mullah Jamil, Mullah Ghani and Mullah Easa. Sixteen fighters had been captured, he said. Mashal's figure would bring the guerrilla death toll reported by the government and U.S. forces in clashes in the southwest in the past week to more than 153. Hundreds more guerrillas have been reported killed in a surge of clashes this year.
Boy, they're gonna depopulate all of Pakistan in a mere 17,576 years at this rate...
Three Afghan troops were killed and six U.S. soldiers wounded, while two U.S. helicopters were damaged by ground fire. A U.S. air force pilot was killed when his U-2 spyplane crashed on Wednesday after a mission over Afghanistan. Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi said on Wednesday seven guerrillas had been killed including Easa. He said no Taliban fighters had been captured.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Afghan and U.S. forces kill 32 Taliban, retake town
2005-06-21
Hundreds of Afghan police backed by U.S. air strikes retook control on Tuesday of a district capital in southwestern Afghanistan that was overrun by the Taliban, killing 32 guerrillas, police said. The guerrillas seized Mian Nishin, capital of the district of the same name in Kandahar province last week, capturing 30 police officers and a district chief. They executed eight policemen before announcing the release of the other 23 people. About 400 police took part in the operation to force the guerrillas out of Mian Nishin, said deputy provincial police chief Salim Khan.

"We chased the Taliban to an area 10 km (6 miles) north," Khan told Reuters. "We found them in a village called Murghai and as a result of the clashes there, 11 Taliban were killed and 15 suspects were arrested." Khan said another 21 guerrillas were killed by U.S. air strikes in support of the operation. He gave no details on whether there were any government casualties. Lieutenant Cindy Moore, a spokeswoman for the U.S. military, confirmed an operation involving U.S. forces was under way but said she could not give details while it was in progress.

Hundreds of people have been killed in a surge in guerrilla violence in Afghanistan in the past few months, raising security concerns for parliamentary elections to be held on Sept. 18.

TOP U.S. GENERAL VISITS

General John Abizaid, head of the U.S. military's Central Command, met Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Tuesday as part of a visit to the country. State television said security forces had captured Mullah Naqibullah Akhundzada, a Taliban commander active in Ghazni province south of Kabul. It said he was caught with six other Taliban members but did not say when. U.S. air strikes killed 15 to 20 guerrillas on Sunday in neighboring Helmand province and Afghan officials reported 21 more militant deaths in clashes later in the day.

Mian Nishin is in the north of Kandahar province, about 400 km (250 miles) southwest of the Afghan capital Kabul, and was the scene of operations by Afghan and U.S.-led forces last week in which government officials said nine guerrillas were killed.

In another incident in Kandahar province on Tuesday, a driver employed by the Afghan-U.N. election body was wounded and another man was killed when their vehicle came under attack, U.N. officials said. Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi telephoned Reuters to claim responsibility for the attack. But Terrence White, the Joint Electoral Management Body's regional spokesman, said it was unclear whether the Taliban were involved.
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