Thursday, November 1, 2007

Canadian Troops halt Taliban Offensive

The fact that the Taliban would even attempt to takeover an area just outside Kandahar is significant. They must feel that they are quite strong. It is not sensible policy to actually confront superior power of the sort that is ranged against them in Afghanistan. They will simply retreat and return to hit and run tactics. The question is whether the Canadians or someone can actually stay in the area and prevent the Taliban return after the forces withdraw.

Canadian troops halt Taliban Afghan offensive
Thu Nov 1, 2007 10:09 AM EDT



By Jon Hemming

KABUL (Reuters) - Canadian forces have halted a Taliban offensive to take a key district guarding the approaches to Afghanistan's main southern city of Kandahar, a spokesman said on Thursday.

Insurgents have massed in unusually large numbers to attack three district centers in the west and south in the last week and a Taliban leader threatened to extend the offensive northward and maintain its intensity through the harsh Afghan winter.

Taliban fighters attacked in the district of Arghandab, only 12 km from Kandahar, earlier this week in what Canadian forces said was one of the most organized Taliban offensives they had seen and appeared to be a move towards the city.

But Afghan and mostly Canadian troops from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) struck back, killing at least 50 rebels, according to Afghan police, and pinned down another 200 to 250 rebel fighters.

"We're in control of the situation and feel confident we can keep the area secure," said Canadian military spokesman Lieutenant-Commander Pierre Babinsky.

Afghan and Canadian forces had repelled every Taliban attack and the area was quiet overnight with only sporadic clashes since then, he said. The Taliban were operating in small groups and were unable to concentrate their forces.

But as Afghan and ISAF troops battled to regain another district centre, Gulistan in the western province of Farah, the Taliban overran the neighboring centre of Bakwa on Wednesday and more than 400 families fled.

"Bakwa district centre fell into the hands of the Taliban in an attack yesterday afternoon," said Maolavi Yahya, the district chief of neighboring Delaram. "The Taliban wanted to keep Afghan and foreign troops busy (in Gulistan) as another group of Taliban tactically overran the district centre."



"During the confrontation 14 Taliban insurgents and two Afghan police were killed and the Taliban set the district centre building on fire," said Yahya. More than 400 families have fled the fighting and have set up camp by a river, he said.

Prominent Taliban leader Mullah Mansour Dadullah vowed to keep up the fight and extend it north.

"Our operations are blazing across the southern provinces, and we shall reach the northern provinces in the same manner," he said in a video posted on the Internet on Wednesday.

The Taliban campaign of hit-and-run attacks, suicide and roadside bombs, and larger offensives where possible is aimed at convincing Afghans their government and the 50,000 foreign troops in the country cannot provide them with security.

As the fighting drags on, security analysts say, almost inevitable mistakes by the security forces will only help to drive a wedge between the government and the people.

Afghan forces backed by U.S.-led coalition troops killed two children as they battled with a militant holed up in a compound in the east of the country, the U.S. military said on Thursday.

Afghan security forces backed by a small team of coalition troops raided the compound in the Bati Kot district of Nangarhar province after intelligence that a militant was present.

"While resisting multiple requests to surrender, the militant barricaded himself in a room. Unbeknownst to Afghan forces, his family was barricaded in the room with him," the U.S. military said in a statement.

"The team began receiving small arms fire after they entered the compound and they returned fire," it said. "It wasn't until after the hostilities had stopped and the team had performed a search of the room that they found two children dead."

The militant was also killed and a woman and child wounded and treated at a coalition medical facility.

Afghan and Western officials accuse the Taliban of deliberately courting civilian casualties by fighting from homes and built-up areas in order to undermine support for the government and its foreign backers.

"It is regrettable when innocent lives are put at risk by militant forces," U.S. military spokesman Major Chris Belcher said in the statement

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