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US begins major south Afghanistan assault
GARMSIR – Thousands of US Marines stormed deep into Taliban territory in an Afghan river valley yesterday, launching the biggest military offensive of Barack Obama’s presidency.
The Marines say Operation Khanjar, or Strike of the Sword, will be decisive and is intended to seize virtually the entire lower Helmand River valley, the heartland of the Taliban insurgency and the world’s biggest opium poppy producing region.
In swiftly seizing the valley and holding ground there, commanders hope to accomplish within hours what overstretched Nato troops had failed to achieve over several years, and help secure Afghanistan for an August 20 presidential election after years of stalemate.
“The intent is to go big, go strong and go fast, and by doing so we are going to save lives on both sides,” Brigadier-General Larry Nicholson, commander of the Marines in southern Afghanistan, told his staff before the operation.
Violence in the Taliban-led insurgency is at its highest since the Taliban’s ouster in 2001. The operation marks the first big test of Washington’s new regional strategy to defeat the Taliban and its allies and stabilise Afghanistan.
With new tactics to win over the Afghan population and new commanders in place, the US military is hoping to turn the tide of a war some in Washington have admitted they are not winning.
The US military said later yesterday that a soldier had been kidnapped in southeastern Afghanistan, before the operation in Helmand began. Kidnappings by Islamist militants were common during the Iraq war but are relatively rare in Afghanistan.
A senior Taliban commander, Mullah Sangeen, told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location, said the soldier was taken as a patrol walked out of its base in Paktika province.
The soldier would be held until Taliban fighters held by US forces were released, he said.
The Taliban has vowed that its thousands of fighters in the south would fight back, even though only minor skirmishes were reported in the early stages.
“Thousands of Taliban mujahideen are ready to fight against US troops in the operation in Helmand province,” Mullah Hayat Khan, a senior Afghan Taliban commander, told Reuters in Pakistan by telephone from an undisclosed location.
In Islamabad, the Pakistan military said it was redeploying some of its border forces to block any Taliban fighters trying to flee the new offensive. Helmand shares a 200-km desert border with Pakistan’s southwestern Baluchistan province.
The offensive came as the commander of foreign forces in Afghanistan General Stanley McChrystal held talks in Rawalpindi with Pakistani army chief General Ashfaq Kayani, a Pakistani military official said. He didn’t give any details.
– Nampa-Reuters
