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Ten dead on Sunday
US/NATO casualties climb in Afghanistan
By James Cogan
15 July 2008
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The US/NATO occupation force in Afghanistan on Sunday suffered
the largest number of casualties in a 24-hour period in more than
three years. Nine American troops lost their lives and as many
as 15 were wounded in a day-long battle with insurgents who attacked
a US base in the eastern province of Kunar. Another soldier, also
believed to be an American, was killed in a roadside bombing in
the volatile Sangin district of Helmand province.
Sundays attack was one of the most effective insurgent
operations in the six-and-a-half year war. The US military and
Afghan government forces had only established a base in Wanat,
a village near the Pakistani border, three days earlier. A sizeable
force of guerillas converged on the base in the middle of the
night. According to an Associated Press report, they evacuated
the civilian community and took up firing positions in buildings
surrounding the facility. At approximately 4.30 a.m., the insurgents
launched an assault.
Fighting lasted throughout the day, with the anti-occupation
fighters repeatedly engaging the base with mortars, machine-guns
and rocket-propelled grenades. According to some reports, militants
managed to get inside the US compound. Multiple US air strikes
had to be called in to drive off the attackers.
A spokesman for NATOs International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) told journalists: We defended the base. There
are still some operations on-going. The insurgents were repulsed
and there is no fighting now, but they might pop up again.
NATO sources claim that dozens of insurgents were killed.
Wanat is near the district of Deh Bala, in the adjacent province
of Nangahar, where US fighters bombed a wedding party on July
7. As many as 27 men, women and children were slaughtered. The
assault on the American base may well have been a revenge attack.
The attack, however, is part of a trend over recent weeks of
set piece battles against the occupation forces. In late June,
a large force of guerillas seized a number of villages in the
Arghandab Valley to the northwest of Kandahar. Scores were killed
during the US/Afghan government operation to take back control
of the district.
Anti-occupation fighters also attempted several offensive operations
in Sangin last week, crossing the Helmand River to attack NATO
and Afghan Army personnel. US retaliatory air strikes on Sunday
reportedly resulted in the deaths of at least 40 guerillas, as
well as the destruction of several improvised bridges and dozens
of small boats.
Also on Sunday, a suicide bomber detonated an explosion at
a crowded bazaar in the town of Deh Rawood in Uruzgan province,
killing five Afghan police and as many as 19 civilians, including
a number of young children. The suicide attack came in the wake
of a massive blast that struck the Indian embassy in Kabul, killing
41 people and injuring over 140.
Most US and NATO casualties continue to be the result of remotely-detonated
roadside bombs. A total of 20 occupation personnel have already
lost their lives in July, including a 42-year-old American junior
officer who appears to have committed suicide on July 4.
Among the recent casualties was a Hungarian explosives expert
who was killed by a bomb on Saturday in the northern province
of Baghlan. The 32-year-old had only arrived in Afghanistan several
weeks agoto replace a Hungarian explosives expert who was
killed trying to defuse a bomb on June 10.
A roadside bomb in Paktika province took the lives of two US
National Guardsmen from Guam last Thursday. More than 15 percent
of all American troops serving in Afghanistan are part-time civilian
soldiers.
Nine UK troops were wounded near Sangin on Wednesday when a
British helicopter gunship, which had been called in to rescue
them from an ambush, mistakenly fired on their position. Three
of the men suffered serious injuries. One had to be flown back
to Britain for specialised medical treatment. He is said to be
in a stable condition.
An Australian special forces soldier was killed and three others
wounded by a roadside bomb in Uruzgan province on Tuesday. This
was the fifth Australian fatality in the past nine months. The
same day, an American soldier was killed in a bombing near Bagram
airport.
The insurgency is based among the fiercely independent Pashtun
tribes on both sides of the Afghanistan and Pakistan border. Some
guerilla groups are loyal to the fundamentalist Taliban movement
that was overthrown by the US invasion in 2001. Others follow
Pashtun Islamist warlords such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Jalaluddin
Huqqaniboth of whom received huge amounts of money and arms
from the CIA to conduct a guerilla war against the Soviet force
occupying Afghanistan in the 1980s.
Fighting has been taking place inside Pakistan over the past
several weeks. The Pakistani government, responding to pressure
from Washington to curb the movement of guerillas into Afghanistan,
has ordered its security forces to crack down on various militant
groups operating in the tribal provinces along the Afghan border.
The focus of the operations has been the area surrounding Peshawarthe
largest city on the road through to the Khyber Pass in Afghanistan.
Insurgents retaliated over the weekend, ambushing a convoy
of Pakistani Frontier Corpsthe paramilitary force responsible
for security in the tribal regionson Saturday near the border
city of Hangu, to the south west of Peshawar. According to Pakistani
media sources, eight troops were killed and eight others who were
captured were executed by firing squad. Local Taliban groups claimed
they had captured and were still holding a further 29 soldiers
and police.
The attack coincided with an unannounced visit to Pakistan
by US chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen.
He met with President Pervez Musharraf, Prime Minister Yousaf
Raza Gilani and the head of the armed forces, General Ashfaq Kiyani.
The purpose of Mullens trip was to deliver a blunt message
to the Pakistani establishment to step up operations in the border
regions against Pashtun militants. The Bush administration and
NATO countries have repeatedly accused Islamabad of not doing
enough to stop insurgent activity and thereby facilitating the
rise in attacks on their troops in Afghanistan. Mullen repeated
the claim on Saturday, telling a press conference that the border
is more porous than it was a year ago. Its very important
that action be taken to respond to that.
The Afghan government of President Hamid Karzai has gone further
and accused the Pakistani intelligence agency, the Inter Services
Intelligence (ISI), and sections of its military of assisting
the Taliban insurgency. An Afghan government spokesman blamed
the ISI for last weeks bombing of the Indian embassy. Other
Afghan figures have implied it was involved in the assassination
attempt on Karzai in June.
Yesterday, Karzai repeated the accusations, declaring: The
murder, killing, destruction, dishonouring and insecurity in Afghanistan
is carried out by the intelligence administration of Pakistan,
its military intelligence institutions.... We have told the government
of Pakistan and the world and from now on it will be pronounced
by every member of the Afghan nation.
The implicit threat facing Musharraf and Gilani is that the
US military will step up its own operations inside Pakistans
tribal regions unless the situation is brought under control.
Just days before Mullens visit, nine Pakistani troops and
several civilians were wounded when a border outpost was bombed
in South Waziristan on Thursday. Local tribesmen told the Associated
Press that the bombing was a US air strike. The Pakistani government,
anxious not to further inflame the mass resentment and hostility
over its collaboration with the US, stated that casualties were
inflicted by mortars fired from Afghanistan and that the attacker
had yet to be determined.
The escalating war in Afghanistan is fuelling calls for the
deployment of additional US troops to the war zone. Significantly,
Barack Obama, the Democratic Party presidential candidate, who
has supported US military action against insurgent bases inside
Pakistan, was among them. He called in an op-ed in yesterdays
New York Times for the dispatch of an additional two combat
brigades, or more than 10,000 troops. We need more troops,
more helicopters, better intelligence gathering and more non-military
assistance to accomplish the mission there, he wrote.
See Also:
Bomb blast in Kabul points to rising
Indian-Pakistani tensions
[10 July 2008]
US/NATO crisis in Afghanistan
generates greater pressure on Pakistan
[26 June 2008]
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