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Afghanistan
Two suspected Taliban killed in Helmand clash
2007-03-13
NATO and Afghan troops clashed with suspected Taliban insurgents on Monday in southern Afghanistan, shortly before calling in an airstrike on a compound that left two militants dead, a spokesman said. The clash started when militants opened fired and lobbed mortars toward NATO and Afghan troops in the Gereshk district of Helmand province, said Squadron Leader Dave Marsh, a spokesman for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force. Two Afghans and one NATO soldier were lightly wounded in the clash, Marsh said.

A tribal leader said that western forces killed five Afghan civilians in the airstrike in Helmand. The elder, Meera Jan, said civilian houses were hit in the attack. As well as the five people killed, four were wounded, he said. A spokeswoman for NATO troops in Afghanistan said an airstrike had been carried out in the Gereshk district of Helmand province late on Sunday but NATO forces were not involved. A spokesman for a separate US-led force said he had no information about any air strike.
Must have been the Swedish air force on a marketing run for the Grippen.
Meanwhile, during a search operation in neighbouring Kandahar province, Afghan troops arrested a “high-ranking suicide attack coordinator” in Panjwayi district, the ISAF said on Monday. An ISAF statement said that Mullah Mohammad Wali organised suicide attacks in Kandahar and worked for the Taliban.

Separately, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said on Monday New Zealand would extend its military commitment in Afghanistan to September 2008. New Zealand has had 120 soldiers serving in a provincial reconstruction team in Bamiyan province for 3-1/2 years and their term would be extended for another year, Clark said. “The objective is to ensure that Afghanistan does not revert to being a failed state and again become a haven for terrorists,” Clark said in a statement.

Defence Minister Phil Goff told a press conference the security situation in Bamiyan province was less dangerous than other areas in the country. Under the commitment, New Zealand will also supply a small number of soldiers to help train the Afghan National Army, work at the International Security Assistance Force headquarters and work in a medical unit at Kandahar. A New Zealand frigate will be deployed to the Arabian Gulf in the middle of next year as part of a multi-national maritime security force and four police will also help train local police in Afghanistan.

German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Monday that Germany would not bow to terrorist threats demanding the withdrawal of its troops from Afghanistan. “We will not be blackmailed,” Schaeuble told RBB radio. He added, however, that the government took seriously threats made at the weekend by two Islamist groups to attack Germany and to execute two German hostages being held in Iraq unless Berlin ended its Afghanistan mission. “We are part of a global target. We should have no illusions that we are as much under threat as Spain, England or other nations,” Schaeuble told RBB.

He said German soldiers were also contributing “to our own security” by helping to stabilise Afghanistan. Germany has almost 3,000 troops in northern Afghanistan, where it commands the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.
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Afghanistan
Taliban commander seized in Afghanistan
2007-01-17
A prominent Taliban commander has been captured by NATO-led troops in southern Afghanistan. The militant leader, who has not yet been identified, was detained during a raid by NATO and Afghan troops on a compound in Helmand province, the alliance said on Wednesday. According to a NATO spokesman, the commander led insurgents in the volatile Panjwaii district of Kandahar province, said NATO spokesman Squadron Leader Dave Marsh. "This seizure of a Taliban commander once again shows that there is nowhere to hide for insurgent leaders," Marsh said.

Most of Canada's roughly 2,500 troops serving in Afghanistan are stationed in Kandahar province. Last summer, NATO forces staged Operation Medusa, the largest ground offensive in the alliance's history, in the region. The capture appears to be a victory for NATO forces, said CTV's Paul Workman, reporting from Kandahar. "NATO hasn't given us a name yet and details are really quite vague, but they seem to believe they've arrested a regional commander, somebody who may have been involved in directing attacks against Canadian forces, we don't know, but they believe certainly against NATO forces," Workman told CTV Newsnet.

The alliance said the commander was fleeing another NATO campaign in the region when he was captured in the Gereshk district of Helmand province.
"Curly-toed slippers don't fail me... ummm... now..."
"Stick 'em up, hoser!"
"Whut?... Say! Are those mukluks?"
"Goin' somewhere, eh?"
Marsh said alliance authorities are convinced the man is a regional commander that NATO forces have been watching for a long time. The raid came a day after Afghan agents arrested Mohammad Hanif, a purported Taliban spokesman, near the border with Pakistan. Hanif is one of two spokesmen who often contacts journalists on behalf of the militia. He was arrested at the border town of Torkham on Monday after crossing from Pakistan, said Sayed Ansari, the spokesman for Afghanistan's intelligence service. Two people traveling with Hanif also were detained, Ansari said.

Earlier accounts by Noor Agha Zooak, a spokesman for the governor of the Nangarhar province where the arrest took place, claimed that Hanif and his two companions were detained in a raid at a house further from the border crossing. It was not immediately clear what caused the discrepancy in the accounts. Zooak said Hanif was being questioned by intelligence agents in Nangarhar's capital, Jalalabad.
"Aaaaaiiiieee! I know nothing! Nothing!"
"Nothing, eh? Give him a dose of the plumber's helper, Mahmoud!"
"No, no!"
[PLUNGE!]
Weapons, cell phones and other documents, which were shown to journalists in Jalalabad on Wednesday, were also recovered.
"Really, sahib! They are not mine! Somebody left them here!"
[PLUNGE!]
"Aaaaaiiiiieeee!"
Hanif used to convey statements purportedly from Taliban leader Mullah Omar and comment on fighting in the north, center and east of the country.
"Mahmoud! My knuckle dusters!"
Another purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, confirmed Hanif's arrest in a phone call from Peshawar an undisclosed location, but said that the Taliban's governing body already has appointed Zadiullah Mujahid as his replacement.
"Okay, Zadiullah! Into the barrel wit' yez!"
Western and Afghan officials have claimed a number of recent successes against top Taliban officials, including a U.S.-led coalition airstrike that killed Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Osmani, a key associate of Omar and the highest-ranking Taliban leader killed by the U.S.-led coalition since the late 2001 invasion of Afghanistan. The Taliban has stepped up its attacks in the past year, and roughly 4,000 people have been killed in violence related to the insurgeny, according to a count by The Associated Press.
Most of them, of course, were Talibs. And the majority seem to have been bumped off by Canucks.
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