South Asia News

Soldier captured, Taliban says, as US offensive begins (3rd Lead)

Jul 2, 2009, 12:53 GMT

A night vision handout picture released by the United States Marines, shows Marines from 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, Marine Expeditionary Brigade-Afghanistan, boarding a UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter during the launching of Operation Khanjar, at Camp Bastion in Helmand province Afghanistan, in the early hours of 02 July 2009. EPA/US MARINES

A night vision handout picture released by the United States Marines, shows Marines from 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 3, Marine Expeditionary Brigade-Afghanistan, boarding a UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter during the launching of Operation Khanjar, at Camp Bastion in Helmand province Afghanistan, in the early hours of 02 July 2009. EPA/US MARINES

Kabul - The US military on Thursday began a large-scale offensive against the Taliban in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan as a local militant commander said the Taliban had captured a US soldier.

The US military said the Taliban was believed to have captured the soldier, who has been missing since Tuesday, in the south-eastern Afghan province of Paktika.

Mullah Sangon, a local Taliban commander, said that besides the US soldier, the militants had also captured three Afghan troops.

Meanwhile, the offensive in Helmand marked the beginning of the implementation of US President Barack Obama's new strategy in Afghanistan, which aims to step up the fight against the militants.

About 4,000 US marines and 650 Afghan soldiers were taking part in Operation Khanjar, a US military spokesman said.

Helmand is a stronghold of the Taliban, which has large swaths of the province under its control.

The US and Afghan militaries had made no comment about casualties in the offensive, but Taliban spokesman Kari Jussif Ahmadi said the militants had killed 'more than a dozen' foreign troops and suffered no casualties themselves. The Taliban's casualty reports, however, are widely considered to be exaggerated.

Ahmadi also claimed that 'the foreign troops bombed civilian sites instead of hideouts of the Taliban.' The Islamist fighters had taken cover in secure sites, he said.

Daud Ahmadi, a spokesman for Helmand's governor, said 1,000 Afghan security personnel were fighting alongside the 4,000 Americans. He added that civilian reconstruction would follow on the heels of the military operations.

The aim of the Helmand offensive is to drive the Taliban out of Helmand, media reports said, citing US military spokesmen.

The US soldiers are attempting to set up a series of bases and to stay in Helmand. The aim is to improve the security situation in the province long term and create stability, Brigadier General Larry Nicholson said.

Meanwhile, Pakistan's military said it had deployed troops on its side of the border to stop any Taliban fighters fleeing the Helmand offensive.

'It's a reorganization of our troops deployed along the Afghan border,' said an army spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas. 'Our soldiers will guard the mountain treks the Taliban can use to infiltrate Balochistan province' in south-western Pakistan.

The United States has reportedly deployed about 8,500 marines to Helmand in the past two months. As part of Obama's new strategy, the US contingent in Afghanistan would be strengthened by an extra 21,000 soldiers and there would be a new emphasis on civil and economic aid.

Obama is prioritizing the war against the Taliban in Afghanistan and in neighbouring Pakistan over the war in Iraq, where US troops withdrew from cities and towns Tuesday.

General Stanley McChrystal, a specialist in covert operations, replaced David McKiernan as the US commander in Afghanistan in mid-June after the security situation there noticeably deteriorated.

Militants carried out more than 400 attacks in the first week of June, according to the US commander in the Middle East and Central Asia, General David Petraeus. That was the highest figure since the US-led military overthrow of the Taliban regime in 2001.

In June last year, there were fewer than 250 Taliban attacks per week, and in January 2004, there were fewer than 50 per week, a spokesman for the four-star general said.



COMMENT

blog comments powered by Disqus

Latest Headlines in South Asia

Older Talkback

page: 1 

SP4:InterestingJul 2nd, 2009 - 17:37:16

..how the press is painting this war as the war of rightousness. The Taliban, on the other hand, is pretty impressive, sliding out while troops roll in, then just waiting for them to leave and go back to business as usual, ignoring the Al Qaeda push to harrass them. You know, I do not think we'll find any WMD's here...what do you think?

Report this comment

TruebritJul 2nd, 2009 - 23:39:15

I think they've had about two and a half millennia of practice, SP.

As usual, Kipling wrote about it all, over a century ago!

'No proposition Euclid wrote
No formulae the text-books know,
Will turn the bullet from your coat,
Or ward the tulwar's downward blow.
Strike hard who cares -shoot straight who can-
The odds are on the cheaper man...

...With home-bred hoards the hillsides teem.
The troopships bring us one by one,
At vast expense of time and steam,
To slay Afridis where they run,
The 'captives of our bow and spear'
Are cheap, alas! as we are dear.'

Report this comment

sp'sassJul 3rd, 2009 - 14:23:17

Wait a moment. What the hell is going on now? Since 9/11, and even before that, osama bin laden and the al qaeda terrorists have been in residence in their safe havens in Iraq. Afghanistan has nothing to do with all this war on terror. I never understood why the past commander in chief had the boots go to Afghanistan 8 years ago, only to find nothing, and then leave to go off and fight the real wat on terror. But I will stand by my man because he was in charge, and is so much smarter than everyone about all this stuff.
But sorry to say, this new guy is on the dark side, and even pals with the very terrorists who seek to destroy the US. We all know that if Palin was president right now everything would be so much better. We would have found osama bin laden in Iraq, continued collecting more of the tonnes of WMD stockpiled there, and of course be still winning the war on terror. No thanks to the defeatist cowards controlling the demonrats and biassed MSM who just love to side with the terrorists. And, with the true patriot, and rising star Palin in power, our own country would not have been taken over by the bunch of socialst, communist terrorists who control it now.

Report this comment

page: 1 

Follow Us

Follow M&C on Pinterest

Search

Custom Search

Also Check Out

Chris Brown selling house

Chris Brown selling house
Chris Brown is selling his West Hollywood bachelor pad for £1.8 million, just 15 months after he bought it, following a number of disputes with his neighbours. ... more

Rihanna wants to swap breasts

Rihanna wants to swap breasts
Rihanna wants to 'borrow' her 'Battleship' co-star Brooklyn Decker's boobs. ... more

Justin Bieber loved up with Selena

Justin Bieber loved up with Selena
Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez looked 'more in love than ever' on a recent lunch date. ... more

Simon Cowell blasts The Voice

Simon Cowell blasts The Voice
Simon Cowell has taken a swipe at 'The Voice' telling an unsuccessful 'X Factor' contestant to try auditioning for that show instead. ... more

Delta Goodrem opens up about Brian split

Delta Goodrem opens up about Brian split
Delta Goodrem said she 'didn't know how to get out' of her six and a half year relationship with Brian McFadden. ... more

Cynthia Nixon weds longtime partner

Cynthia Nixon weds longtime partner
Happy news for Cynthia Nixon and her longtime partner Christine Marinoni, parents of Max Ellington Nixon-Marinoni. The couple wed this weekend. ... more

David Beckham likes to bite Harper

David Beckham likes to bite Harper
David Beckham likes to bite his 10-month-old baby daughter, Harper, because she's so adorable. ... more

Jessica Biel is 'one of the guys'

Jessica Biel is one of the guys
Justin Timberlake's friends like his fiancee Jessica Biel because she's 'one of the guys', says his former *NSYNC bandmate Lance Bass. ... more

Lindsay Lohan pursued for 41k owed to tanning company

Lindsay Lohan pursued for 41k owed to tanning company
Lindsay Lohan still hasn't paid the $41,031 she owes to fake tan company Tanning Vegas and they are attempting to move the case from Nevada to California to force her to settle the bill. ... more

Robert De Niro glad he didn't finish school

Robert De Niro glad he didnt finish school
Robert De Niro jokingly claimed not graduating from high school was an 'advantage' as he picked up an honorary doctorate yesterday (27.05.12). ... more