Taliban deploy 10,000 fighters for attack

m_levesque

Electoral Member
Dec 18, 2006
524
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Montreal, Quebec
By Saeed Ali Achakzai

SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan (Reuters) - The Taliban have deployed 10,000 fighters for a spring offensive of "bloody attacks" against foreign troops in Afghanistan, a rebel commander said on Friday.

More than 4,000 people, a quarter of them civilians, were killed in fighting last year, the most violent year since the Taliban were ousted in 2001. NATO commanders and analysts warn this year could be just as bad or worse.

As the harsh winter snows melt, the insurgents have resumed their attacks, mostly in the south, where they have captured a major town and have threatened a key hydroelectric dam.

Mullah Abdul Rahim, the Taliban's operational commander for southern Helmand province -- the opium center of the world's major producer -- said militants would step up attacks in spring.

"As the weather becomes warm and leaves turn green, we will unleash bloody attacks on the U.S.-led foreign troops," Rahim told Reuters by satellite phone from a secret location.

"Our war preparations, especially in southern Afghanistan and in Helmand province, are complete and for this our 10,000 fighters are ready to take up arms the moment they are ordered."

Ater attempts at conventional pitched battles failed last year, the Taliban are expected to return to more conventional guerrilla tactics against government forces and the roughly 45,000 foreign soldiers in the country.

A key tactic is expected to be suicide bombings, which rose dramatically last year, killing more than 200 people, but which still remain much rarer than in Iraq. The Taliban say they have 2,000 suicide bombers ready and another 3,000 in training.

Rahim said the focus of attacks will be southern areas, where the Taliban was born.

Afghanistan's government says the militants are still sponsored by Pakistan, their main backer until September 11 attacks on the United States.

Islamabad concedes there is some border infiltration by the militants along the porous and largely lawless frontier, but denies supporting the rebels, who have ethnic roots on both sides of the British-drawn border. Pakistan says the insurgency is Afghanistan's problem.

Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited.
 

mabudon

Metal King
Mar 15, 2006
1,339
30
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Golden Horseshoe, Ontario
Hunh- well either we attack Pakistan, ask our US buddies to nuke the area til it glows, or just get used to the fact that the "war" in afghanistan is going to ironically bring our country to it's knees rather than save us all from the boogeyman

Maybe Harper will impose a draft or somethin, cos we're gonna need LOTS of cannon fodder for this round


And one serious question- how come, every time a "turning point" is reached, where progress is actually supposedly made.. HOW COMW we are always to expect things to get WORSE????

I swear that's the line every time and I couldn't even swallow it the first time. Progress is meaningless if after every time it occurs we are worse off than we were before, no?
 

dude1981

New Member
Feb 9, 2007
45
3
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LONDON, ON.
Hunh- well either we attack Pakistan, ask our US buddies to nuke the area til it glows, or just get used to the fact that the "war" in afghanistan is going to ironically bring our country to it's knees rather than save us all from the boogeyman

Maybe Harper will impose a draft or somethin, cos we're gonna need LOTS of cannon fodder for this round


And one serious question- how come, every time a "turning point" is reached, where progress is actually supposedly made.. HOW COMW we are always to expect things to get WORSE????

I swear that's the line every time and I couldn't even swallow it the first time. Progress is meaningless if after every time it occurs we are worse off than we were before, no?

That's the gig, man. They don't want to end the war, too much money being made by somebody to stop it now.
 
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Doryman

Electoral Member
Nov 30, 2005
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St. John's
Yeeah... I think we should all remember that this claim was made by a Taliban commander. A guy like the one lately who claimed that the Islamic fighters have thus far killed 75000 Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan....
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
18,326
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How did we get the ten thousand men figure? Did the Taliban let us count them or is this just another threat.

No doubt we will lose more people in this dumb war. I wish I was sure there was a chance that some good would come out of it. The Taliban is a nebulous enemy that Pakistan has more to do with than they will admit. If by some miracle we got all the NATO countries to join the effort, we could likely kill forty or fifty thousand Taliban but would it make any difference? If the rest of NATO don't start pulling their weight, we should bring our soldiers home.