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Increasing attacks on US and allies in Afghanistan
By Peter Symonds
23 June 2005
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Despite a lack of media coverage, there are growing signs that
armed resistance to the US-led occupation of Afghanistan is on
the rise.
Over the past three months, a surge of fighting, particularly
in the south and east of the country, has claimed the lives of
more than 30 Afghan police and soldiers, about 260 suspected rebels
and at least 100 civilians. Since March, 29 US soldiers have been
killedabout 20 percent of the US death toll in Afghanistan
since late 2001.
US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who is to take over as top
US diplomat in Iraq this week, played down the continuing conflict
in his farewell speech. Afghanistan, he declared, had taken enormous
strides against terrorism, extremism and warlordism. Now
is the time for friendship and reconciliation. Dont allow
fighting between the brothers of Afghanistan once again,
he said.
Even as Khalilzad was preparing to depart, however, the National
Security Directorate in Kabul announced that it had thwarted an
attempt to assassinate the ambassador. Afghan authorities paraded
three Pakistani nationals on local TV, saying they had been caught
with rockets and assault rifles in Laghman Province. According
to security officials, the three were arrested on Sunday near
a ceremony attended by Khalilzad and admitted they intended to
kill him.
The incident inflamed tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Khalilzad has on several occasions accused Pakistan of failing
to do enough to prevent insurgents from infiltrating across the
border into Afghanistanclaims that were repeated after Sundays
incident. Pakistani Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed reacted
angrily, describing hints that Islamabad was involved in the assassination
plot as a baseless allegation. The friction highlights
the frustration of Afghan and US officials over the failure of
the US-led military to stamp out armed resistance.
Far from enormous strides being taken, Washingtons
puppetPresident Hamid Karzaiconfronts a determined
opposition that is being fuelled by the continued foreign military
presence, heavy-handed repression and the failure to address pressing
social and economic needs. Despite the presence of around 18,000
US and allied troops backed by helicopter gunships and warplanes,
groups of armed rebels continue to carry out many hit-and-run
attacks on government security forces, officials and supporters.
One of the largest recent clashes occurred late last week in
the district of Mian Nishin in the southern Kandahar province.
Rebels attacked a police convoy, then overran the district capital,
also called Mian Nishin, capturing 31 police and taking over the
main government building. A Taliban spokesman announced on Sunday
that the police had been put on trial and eight, including the
police chief, had been executed. The remaining 23 officers were
released after pledging not to fight against the Taliban.
Some 400 Afghan police backed by US gunships mounted a major
operation to retake the town on Tuesday. Deputy provincial police
chief Salim Khan told Reuters on Tuesday that the police drove
the rebels to an area north of the town and killed 11 in fighting
at the village of Murghai. He said another 21 guerrillas had been
killed in US air strikes.
Fighting continued into Wednesday as US soldiers and Afghan
police pursued fleeing rebels and blasted their positions with
AC-130 gunships, Apache helicopters and A-10 warplanes. Salim
Khan told the media yesterday: This is the heaviest bombing
and fighting I have seen since the fall of the Taliban.
He claimed that at least 64 Taliban had been killed and another
30 captured. Twelve Afghan soldiers and police died in the operation
and five US soldiers were wounded.
Other attacks over the past week include:
* Sunday June 19: Intense fighting also took place in Helmand
province. The US military claimed to have killed 15 to 20
enemies in air strikes on fighters who had attacked a US
coalition ground patrol in a remote mountainous area. When
these criminals engage coalition forces, they do so at considerable
risk. We are not going to let up on them. There is not going to
be a safe haven in Afghanistan, US spokesman Lieutenant
Colonel Jerry OHara declared.
On the same day, three rockets were fired into the city of
Kandahar. The target appears to have been the former home of Taliban
leader Mullah Omar, which now houses US Special Forces. In a separate
incident, police in Zabul province claimed to have killed seven
rebels late Sunday night and early Monday morning after they attacked
a police checkpoint on the Kabul-Kandahar highway, killing one
officer.
* Saturday June 18: A two-hour gun battle raged in the Daychopan
district of Zabul province after insurgents attacked a government
office. According to a provincial spokesman, four rebels were
killed after US helicopter gunships were sent to support Afghan
troops. On Saturday night, armed gunmen shot dead a judge, an
intelligence official and a provincial education department employee
in Helmand province.
* Friday June 17: A roadside bomb in Helmand province killed
a soldier in a passing vehicle. Elsewhere, fighting between Afghan
troops and insurgents in Shah Wali Kot district of Kandahar province
left two rebels dead.
* Tuesday June 14: Some 90 fighters attacked a joint Afghan-US
coalition patrol on the border between Kandahar and Uruzgan provinces.
According to a government official, seven rebels were shot dead.
In a second attack in Kandahar province, gunmen shot dead a tribal
elder, whose family had openly backed President Karzai.
* Monday June 13: At least four US soldiers were killed when
a bomb blast hit a military convoy outside the city of Kandahar.
Initial reports indicated that five US troops had been killed
in a suicide bomb attack but were later discounted by US spokesmen.
One of the US troops was seriously injured and had to be evacuated.
The Kandahar attack came just days after an American soldier was
killed and three others injured when their patrol was ambushed
in Paktika province.
Until recently, suicide bombings have been relatively rare
in Afghanistan. The newly appointed Kabul police chief, General
Muhammad Akram Khakrezwal, was killed along with at least 19 others
in what was thought to have been a suicide bomb attack in a mosque
in Kandahar on June 1. The blast occurred during mourning for
a well-known anti-Taliban cleric Maulavi Abdullah Fayaz, who had
been assassinated by gunmen just days before. At least 50 people
were injured in the bombing.
US and Afghan officials have pointed to the end of winter and
preparations underway to hold parliamentary elections in September
to explain the upsurge of attacks. It looks like there has
been a regrouping of Al Qaeda and they may have changed their
tactics not only to concentrate on Iraq, but also on Afghanistan,
the countrys defence minister Rahim Wardak told the media
on Saturday. We do believe that we will have three months
of very tough times. The enemies of this nation will do everything
they can do to disrupt the election.
Wardak offered no evidence to support his assertions. Karzai
and his ministers have reasons for linking the attacks to the
election process. Despite its limited constitutional powers, an
elected parliament would complicate the operations of the Kabul
administration, which currently has no such restraint. The parliamentary
elections, which were initially scheduled for June 2004, have
been postponed repeatedly for security reasons.
Moreover, it is not simply Al Qaeda or the Taliban that are
carrying out attacks on US and government targets. In recent comments
in the Christian Science Monitor, Interior Ministry spokesman
Latfullah Mashal declared: Most people dont realise
how many layers of terrorists and criminals the government of
Afghanistan is trying to fight. What goes out in the press is
mostly about Al Qaeda and the Taliban, but there is much more.
Mashal blamed 70 percent of clashes on the Taliban, Al Qaeda
and fighters associated with former Afghanistan Prime Minister
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. As well as attacks directed against the US-led
occupation, there is ongoing violence in many areas of the countrythe
product of rivalries, criminal activity and personal feuds involving
local warlords, military commanders and tribal leaders, many of
whom the US supported as the means for ousting the Taliban regime.
Moreover, the US military and its allies routinely dismiss
the casualties caused by their operations as enemy,
Taliban or Al Qaeda. But in a country
where many people are armed, there is no means of distinguishing
between enemy and ordinary tribesmen. Searches of
villages and arbitrary arrests, as well as civilian deaths and
injuries, are significant sources of anger and frustration among
ordinary Afghans.
Feeding popular discontent and resentment is the countrys
economic and social catastrophe. Outside of Kabul, unemployment
and poverty are rampant. The main economic activity is the cultivation
of opium poppiesAfghanistan currently accounts for most
of the worlds supply of heroin. The World Food Program estimates
that at least 6.5 million of the countrys population of
21-26 million are dependent on food aid for survival.
Afghanistans social indices remain among the worst in
the world. Life expectancy is just 44.5 years and one fifth of
children die before reaching the age of five. Around 72,000 new
cases of tuberculosis are reported every year. Epidemics are frequent,
including measles, malaria, meningitis and haemorrhagic fever.
The World Health Organisation recently announced that an unknown
water-borne disease, possibly cholera, had broken out in Kabul
with more than 3,000 cases reported.
It is little wonder that, more than three years after the US-led
intervention, Afghans blame Washington for creating this disastrous
state of affairs and some are prepared to take up arms against
the occupation.
See Also:
Afghan president feigns outrage
over latest US torture revelations
[24 May 2005]
Report documents poverty and
social misery in Afghanistan
[2 March 2005]
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