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US, NATO set to launch massive assault against Taliban-led militants

M.Bison

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Slain militants praised


May 25, 2010
Slain militants praised

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This still image received courtesy of the SITE Intelligence Group shows Ayman al-Zawahiri in a video produced by al-Qaeda?s media arm, as-Sahab, and released on jihadist forums on May 24, 2010. -- PHOTO: AFP


WASHINGTON - AL-QAEDA'S second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, praised two Al-Qaeda leaders killed in a shootout last month and offered condolences for their deaths, in video clip released on Monday by the US-based Site Intelligence Group. In a 27-minute message titled, 'Eulogy for the Two Commanders,' Ayman al-Zawahiri praised the two Al-Qaeda In Iraq (AQI) leaders 'for their character and their actions in jihad (holy war),' Site said, and vilified those who they fought against.

The message closed with images of attacks carried out by AQI, the Al-Qaeda front in Iraq which Zawahiri in his message calls the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI). Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayub al-Masri, who had direct links with Osama bin Laden, were killed in a shootout when a joint Iraqi-US force raided their safehouse north of Baghdad on April 18. Baghdadi was the political leader of AQI while Masri, an Egyptian militant, was the insurgent group's self-styled 'minister of war.' AQI had confirmed their deaths on April 24. -- AFP


 

lauhumku

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Denmark loses woman soldier


Jun 2, 2010
Denmark loses woman soldier

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> COPENHAGEN - DENMARK has lost its first woman soldier in Afghanistan after 22-year-old Private Sophia Bruun was killed by a roadside bomb in the southern Helmand province, the Danish military said on Wednesday. The military had said late on Tuesday one of its soldiers had died and five had been injured in two separate roadside bomb attacks, but did not reveal their identities or gender.

Bruun was killed on the spot and two other soldiers were slightly injured when one of the bombs exploded just after noon (7.30am GMT or 3.30pm, Singapore time), striking their vehicle near a patrol base in Bridzar, about six kilometres (four miles) north-east of the town of Gereshk, the military said in a statement. Four hours later, another three Danish soldiers were wounded by another roadside bomb, also near Bridzar, the Danish military said, adding that one of them was seriously injured.

There are 750 Danish troops in Nato's International Security Assistance Force. Most are in Helmand province under British command. Thirty Danish soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since the deployment began. The Scandinavian country of 5.5 million people has suffered more deaths than any other country as a proportion of the number of troops it has in the ISAF. Two other Danish soldiers have died in Afghanistan outside of combat, one of a heart attack. The other committed suicide. -- AFP



 

SwineHunter

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34 top leaders held or killed


Jun 5, 2010
34 top leaders held or killed

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> WASHINGTON - US AND Iraqi security forces in the past three months have 'detained or killed' 34 of the top 42 Al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders, the US commander in Iraq said on Friday. 'Over the last 90 days or so, we have either picked up or killed 34 out of the top 42 Al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders,' General Ray Odierno told reporters in Washington as he highlighted steadily improving security ahead of a major US force reduction in the country this year.

The terror network, he said, 'will attempt to regenerate themselves (but) they are finding it more difficult' in the face of persistent joint US-Iraqi security operations and a broad rejection of Al-Qaeda by the Iraqi population. -- AFP




 

lauhumku

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Gunmen torch NATO supply trucks in Pakistan


Gunmen torch NATO supply trucks in Pakistan
Posted: 09 June 2010 0914 hrs

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A Pakistani fireman extinguishes burning trucks carrying supplies for Afghanistan-based NATO troops after militants opened fire on the trucks on the outskirts of Islamabad
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ISLAMABAD : Gunmen in Pakistan attacked trucks carrying supplies to NATO forces in Afghanistan, gutting several dozen vehicles in an inferno and killing seven people in a brazen assault near Islamabad, police said Wednesday. The attack took place overnight at Tarnol on the outskirts of the Pakistani capital on the road to the northwestern city of Peshawar and in turn towards the main NATO supply route into neighbouring Afghanistan.

Although militants have carried out a series of strikes against supplies for US and NATO-led foreign forces fighting the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, Wednesday's assault attack was unprecedented and underlines insecurity on the doorstep of the heavily-guarded capital. Rows of tankers and trucks were reduced to a twisted mass of metal after the towering inferno at the Tarnol depot was brought under control, including a dozen loaded with military vehicles, television footage showed.

"Seven deaths have been confirmed. Four are injured. There is no information about any arrests," said police official Gustasab Khan. The casualties were the drivers of the trucks, their helpers or local people, Khan said. Police could not give a breakdown on the number of tankers and containers destroyed at the sprawling Tarnol depot, which is also used by local vehicles.

Although there was no immediate claim of responsibility, similar assaults in the past have been blamed on Taliban fighters. "Unknown attackers opened fire on vehicles parked at Tarnol. Fire erupted in the tankers and trucks, and over a dozen were set ablaze. They were trucks carrying NATO supplies," said police official Tahir Riaz.

"The vehicles gutted were carrying supplies for NATO forces in Afghanistan," Naeemullah Khan, an officer at Tarnol police station, told AFP.
In unconfirmed reports, private television channels said dozens of tankers and containers were destroyed in a series of explosions and a towering inferno, although not all necessarily carrying NATO supplies.

Local television stations reported that fire brigades had been mobilised to the scene in order to bring heavy fire under control and said there had been a series of explosions caused by the bursting of tyres and fuel tankers. Kalim Iman, inspector general of Islamabad police, told reporters that the attack was carried out by 10 to 12 assailants, who stormed the terminal outside the capital, but declined to put a precise figure on the losses.

"Fire has destroyed a number of oil tankers and trailers. We are collecting
details. The attackers have been identified. They came on motorbikes and
pick-up trucks. They were armed," he said. "We have launched an investigation. Police are trying to arrest them." The bulk of supplies and equipment required by the 130,000 US-led foreign troops across the border are shipped through northwest Pakistan, which has been hard hit by shootings and bomb attacks blamed on radical Islamist militants.

But the heavily protected capital has been largely shielded from attacks
blamed on Al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked militant attacks, which have killed more than 3,370 people since July 2007. The attacks began as retaliation over a government siege on a radical mosque in Islamabad and flared last year as the military fought major campaigns against Taliban in the northwest regions of Swat and South Waziristan.

Washington says Pakistan's northwest tribal belt, which lies outside direct government control, is an Al-Qaeda headquarters and a stronghold for militants plotting attacks on US-led troops fighting against the Taliban in Afghanistan. Faced with the increasingly deadly and costly conflict between Taliban insurgents and the Kabul government, the United States and NATO allies are boosting their troop numbers to a record 150,000 in Afghanistan by August. -AFP/jy




 

yellow people

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Former NY student gets 15-years for aiding al Qaeda


Former NY student gets 15-years for aiding al Qaeda

Basil Katz
NEW YORK
Wed Jun 9, 2010 7:25pm EDT

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Syed Hashmi (L), father of Syed Fahad Hashmi, a former Brooklyn College student charged with providing material support to Al Qaeda, leaves Manhattan Federal Court in New York, April 27, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A former New York resident was sentenced to 15 years in prison by a Manhattan federal judge on Wednesday for helping a friend send waterproof socks, ponchos and sleeping bags to al Qaeda militants in Pakistan.

U.S.
Syed Fahad Hashmi, 30, a Pakistani-born U.S. citizen, pleaded guilty in April to one count of material support to a foreign terrorist organization, Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda. As part of a deal with U.S. prosecutors, Hashmi admitted that between January 2004 and May 2006, he helped Mohammed Junaid Babar, a friend from the New York City borough of Queens, transport the equipment to militants in Pakistan to use while fighting U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

Hashmi lent Babar $300 and stored the materials in his London apartment, prosecutors said. U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska said on Wednesday that Hashmi had been a knowing and willing al Qaeda supporter and because of his U.S. citizenship represented a unique threat.

"He joined the organization's global support network and did everything that was asked of him ... he knew exactly what he was doing," Preska said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Brendan McGuire told the court that while Hashmi never had direct ties with al Qaeda, his "extreme jihad ideology" and the level of trust al Qaeda supporters in London placed in him proved his willingness to harm Americans.

Hashmi was arrested at Heathrow Airport in Britain in June 2006 under an extradition request by U.S. authorities. He was brought to the United States in May 2007. At times defiant and choked with tears, Hashmi addressed the court on Wednesday for 20 minutes, reading from hand- scribbled notes. He attributed his "many, many mistakes" to a misunderstanding of Islam and being manipulated by others.

"I did it when I was ignorant of Allah and his message," said Hashmi, dressed in a white tunic, gray cardigan and prayer cap. "Muslims cannot wage war against non-Muslims in their host country." He concluded, "Yes I was wrong in helping my brothers the noble mujahideen, but they will always be in my prayers." He also berated the United States for its treatment of Muslims in prisons, saying they were "held in captivity" like animals.

Rights activists have criticized Hashmi's jail conditions, holding candlelight vigils outside his Manhattan detention facility. For almost three years, he has been in solitary confinement with 23-hour-a-day lockdowns, constant video surveillance and almost no visitors. The years he already spent in detention will likely go toward his sentence, leaving eight or nine years of prison time, said Hashmi's attorney, David Ruhnke.

(Editing by Michelle Nichols and Peter Cooney)


 

yellow people

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Taleban down Nato helicopter


Jun 10, 2010
Taleban down Nato helicopter

KABUL - TALEBAN militants shot down a Nato helicopter in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday killing four US servicemen and bringing to 23 the number of foreign soldiers killed in escalating violence this week. The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) helicopter came down in Helmand province, a stronghold of Taleban fighters trying to topple the Western-backed government and eject the 130,000 US-led foreign troops in Afghanistan.

'The helicopter was brought down by hostile fire,' a military spokesman said, announcing the toll. Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Breasseale confirmed that the dead soldiers were American. Yousuf Ahmadi, a Taleban spokesman, telephoned AFP from an undisclosed location to claim responsibility, saying: 'We brought it down with a rocket. It crashed in the Sangin district bazaar.'

In a separate incident, at least 39 people were killed and 73 wounded by an explosion at a wedding in the southern province of Kandahar, a senior official in the province told AFP. The cause of the blast, which wounded the bridegroom, was unclear as the Taliban normally attack military or police targets.

Twenty-three Nato soldiers have died since Sunday, including 10 on Monday, the deadliest day in combat for US-led forces in Afghanistan in two years, with seven Americans, two Australians and a French soldier killed. According to an AFP tally, 253 foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan this year. Last year was the deadliest yet, with 520 killed. -- AFP


 

lauhumku

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Suicide bomber kills dozens at Afghan wedding party


Thursday June 10, 2010

Suicide bomber kills dozens at Afghan wedding party

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (Reuters) - At least 40 people were killed and 77 injured by a suicide bomb attack on a wedding party in insurgency-plagued southern Afghanistan, a police official said on Thursday. "A suicide bomber went inside the party where hundreds of people were sitting and blew himself up," the official said of Wednesday night's blast in Arghandab district, north of Kandahar, where foreign troops are focusing on a push in coming months to whittle out the Taliban.

A Kandahar policeman said many of the guests had links to local police officials or a local militia, which was why it was likely targeted by the Taliban. In the immediate aftermath, he said, some panicked guests mistakenly thought the party had been struck by an air raid. A spokeswoman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for Afghanistan said it was aware of the blast and had helped local security forces in follow up operations.

"This is an Afghan matter," the spokeswoman said. While the Taliban are responsible for most civilian deaths in the country, foreign forces have killed hundreds of civilians -- either mistaking them for insurgents or as a result of misdirected air strikes. Rural wedding parties in Afghanistan can often be raucous affairs with large gatherings of people and frequently accompanied by celebratory gunfire. Several have mistakenly been attacked in the past by foreign forces.

The Taliban have regrouped since their U.S.-led overthrow in 2001 and now engage a foreign force that is expected to grow to 150,000 in coming months as part of an offensive against insurgent strongholds in the south. A favoured tactic is improvised explosive devices (IEDs) or suicide attacks on foreign or Afghan forces, but pro-government sympathisers are also targeted and the insurgency used as a cover to settle old scores.

(Writing by David Fox; Editing by Ron Popeski)
Copyright © 2010 Reuters



 
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Canadian soldiers with the 1st Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment, walk on top of their armored personal carrier, which they call 'the boat',
as they get ready for a late night patrol in the Panjwayi district, south-west of Kandahar, Afghanistan. -- PHOTO: AP


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A Canadian soldiers with 1st RCR Battle Group, The Royal Canadian Regiment, jumps over a water ditch during a patrol with his unit to find IED's in the Panjwayi district, south-west of Kandahar, Afghanistan. -- AP


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An Afghan boy carries water cans for sale in Kabul. NATO, US and Afghan troops are preparing their biggest offensive yet against the Taleban in Kandahar province, with total foreign troop numbers in the country set to peak at 150,000 by August. -- PHOTO: AFP


 

yellow people

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NATO reveals new command structure in Southern Afghanistan


NATO reveals new command structure in Southern Afghanistan

Jonathon Burch
KABUL
Mon Jun 14, 2010 9:04am EDT

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A U.S. Army soldier with the 2nd Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment, and part of the 82nd Airborne Division, takes cover as a Black Hawk chopper takes off from a U.S. military base in Arghandab valley in this May 14, 2010 file photo. Credit: Reuters/Yannis Behrakis

KABUL (Reuters) - In a radical restructuring of its military command in southern Afghanistan, NATO said on Monday it had split the country's most violent region in half in a bid to improve security by focusing on smaller geographical areas.

Although the shake-up had been planned for many months, Monday's announcement marked the official start of a new Regional Command Southwest (RC-SW), reflecting the influx of thousands of new U.S. troops into the region. The move comes as more than 20,000 foreign and Afghan troops prepare to push the Taliban out of their spiritual heartland in southern Kandahar province in a series of operations expected to last several months.

The bulk of President Barack Obama's 30,000 U.S. reinforcements pledged in December will be stationed in the violent south as part of U.S. and NATO commander General Stanley McChrystal's strategy to focus on the insurgents' strongholds. In a statement on Monday, NATO said the new structure allowed commanders to deliver improved security in the region by focusing on smaller geographical areas and ensuring greater partnering with Afghan forces.

"For military command and control, the sheer amount of forces in the south was more than one command could be in charge of," said Chief Public Affairs Officer for NATO-led forces, Colonel Wayne Shanks. Previously, all international forces in the south came under one command -- Regional Command South (RC-S) -- responsible for six provinces. That command will now control around 30,000 troops in four provinces.

The new southwestern command will be in charge of some 27,000 troops in Helmand, where thousands of U.S. Marines and British forces conducted a major offensive this year, and Nimroz, a largely desert province that shares a long border with Iran. The shake-up also means the majority of the 9,500 British troops who are based in Helmand, will come under the command of a U.S. Marine general, which had caused some controversy in Britain that they would effectively be ceding control of the province.

British forces moved into Helmand in 2006 where they have been involved in very heavy fighting and almost 300 British troops have been killed since the U.S.-led invasion in late 2001. Last month, however, the British military denied the change meant handing control of Helmand to the United States, adding that senior British officers would still be based at Helmand headquarters. With Canada's 2,800-strong force in Kandahar due to withdraw at the end of 2011, there has also been media reports that some senior military figures favored redeploying British troops there.

But Britain's Defense Secretary Liam Fox last week said it was highly unlikely British troops would replace Canadians in Kandahar when they pull out. The amount of troops in Afghanistan is set to peak by the year's end at 150,000, including around 100,000 Americans. Britain is the second highest troop contributor with just under 10,000 troops in the country. On his first visit to Afghanistan as the new British Prime Minister, David Cameron said he supported Obama's strategy of sending more troops but ruled out deploying more British forces.

(Editing by David Fox)


 

chobolan

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Gates: Afghanistan Progress a 'Tough Pull'

Published June 20, 2010
| FOXNews.com

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Thursday: Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen testify at the Senate Armed Services Committee (AP).

<!-- /hmedia --> The Afghan army will be ready to assume primary responsibility for security only in parts of Afghanistan so a big drawdown of U.S. troops may not take place in July 2011, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Sunday. Gates said progress in Afghanistan is being made, but not as rapidly as defense officials planned. The secretary attributed that to the U.S. military taking longer on "shaping of the environment" before engaging troops.

He added that the U.S. military is facing "significant casualties, but not more than expected." "It is a tough pull," Gates told "Fox News Sunday." "We warned everybody that would be the case last winter, that as we went into areas that the Taliban had controlled for two or three years, that our casualties would grow, especially this summer." So far, only two-thirds of the 30,000 additional troops that President Obama last year ordered deployed to Afghanistan have arrived in the country, he said.

The defense secretary said all the chatter in Washington that the war in Afghanistan is not going well is part of a "sense of frustration" that mirrored sentiment toward the war in Iraq before the 2007 surge. "The narrative is perhaps overly negative, in part, because it's incomplete," Gates said, noting that the surge in Afghanistan is only four or five months old. "People are losing context. ... I think there's a rush to judgment, frankly, that -- that loses sight of the fact we are still in the middle of getting all of the right components in -- into place and giving us a little time to have this -- have this work," Gates said.

Like in Iraq, the Afghan national army is "meeting expectations" in terms of recruitment and retention as well as attrition, he said. Though there is some corruption -- including leaders stealing the salaries of soldiers and Afghan nationals not returning to duty after their first leave -- the percentage of operations using both Afghan and U.S. forces has increased to about 75 or 80 percent now. Gates disputed a statement that he would not attribute to Vice President Joe Biden, who was quoted as saying in a new book that in July 2011, "you're going to see a whole lot of people moving out. Bet on it."

"That absolutely has not been decided," Gates said. "I don't recall ever hearing the vice president say that. And whether he said it or not, we -- we clearly understand that in July of 2011, we begin to draw down our forces. The pace with which we draw down and how many we draw down is going to be conditions based. And there is general agreement that those conditions will be determined by General McChrystal, the NATO senior civilian representative, Ambassador Sedwill, and the Afghan government together."

In a separate appearance, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said the scale and scope of the U.S. military's reduction was envisioned when the administration developed the strategy last year for a July 2011 reduction in troops. Emanuel said all parties agreed that establishing a July 2011 deadline "was creating a window of opportunity for Afghanistan." "The July 11th (sic) date as stated by the president is not moving, that's not changing. ... The goal is to take this opportunity to focus to begin the reduction of our troops," he told ABC's "This Week," adding that when the date arrives, "that's when we'll evaluate based on conditions on the ground."

Gates would not say whether he will be the defense secretary when that July 2011 date arrives. He had previously indicated that he planned on staying until December 2010. But now he is taking on a new fight over the budget, which Gates has said he wants to trim to make the Pentagon leaner and meaner. Asked whether he would depart by year's end, Gates said, "Well, we'll just see." But the budget fight has already taken on a challenging tone. Gates has requested that Congress pass an emergency supplemental by July 4, a delay of his original Memorial Day goal. Fighting over additional unpaid spending attached to the emergency bill has delayed a vote in the House.

"We will have to start doing stupid things after the Fourth of July recess in terms of planning for major disruptions if we don't have the supplemental by the Fourth of July recess," Gates warned. "We actually begin to have to take really serious negative actions that impact our troops, as well as our civilians, in mid to -- in early to mid-August." As for the longer term, Gates said he believes the president would veto a bill passed by Congress that includes continued funding for the C17 cargo plane or an alternative engine for the Joint Strike Fighter even if that legislation also included repeal of "don't ask, don't tell."

Those two non-combat spending items are on the defense secretary's chopping block but could survive cuts if attached to a repeal of the military's policy on gays serving in the military, a priority for President Obama. "Well, as I told the Senate Appropriations Committee and the defense subcommittee this week, it would be a very serious mistake to believe that the president would not veto a bill that has the C17 or the alternative engine in it just because it had other provisions that the president and the administration want," Gates said.



 

chobolan

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US troop pull-out remains set


Jun 21, 2010
US troop pull-out remains set

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> WASHINGTON - THE Obama administration reaffirmed on Sunday that it will begin pulling US troops out of Afghanistan next summer, despite reservations among top generals that absolute deadlines are a mistake. President Barack Obama's chief of staff said an announced plan to begin bringing forces home in July 2011 still holds.

'That's not changing. Everybody agreed on that date,' Rahm Emanuel said, adding by name the top three officials overseeing the policy girding the war: Gen. David Petraeus, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen. Petraeus, the war's top military boss, said last week that he would recommend delaying the pull-out if conditions in Afghanistan warranted it.

Days after the date was announced in December, Gates pointedly said it was not a deadline.
Emanuel's remarks reflect the White House view that Obama must offer a war-weary American public and Congress a promise that the nearly nine-year war is not open-ended. The problem, congressional Republicans and some military leaders say, is that a fixed date encourages the Taleban-led insurgency and undermines US leverage with Afghan leaders.

Gates pledged on Sunday that some troops would begin to leave in 13 months, but he was more cautious. 'We clearly understand that in July of 2011, we begin to draw down our forces,' Gates said. 'The pace with which we draw down and how many we draw down is going to be conditions-based.' -- AP



 

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U.S. indirectly funding Afghan warlords: House report


U.S. indirectly funding Afghan warlords: House report

JoAnne Allen
WASHINGTON
Tue Jun 22, 2010 2:11am EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is indirectly paying tens of millions of dollars in protection money to Afghan warlords, and potentially to the Taliban, to secure convoys carrying supplies to U.S. troops in Afghanistan, congressional investigators said in a report.

The Pentagon's system of outsourcing to private companies the task of moving supplies in Afghanistan, and leaving it up to them to provide their own security, frees U.S. troops to focus on counterinsurgency. But its unintended consequences undermine U.S. efforts to curtail corruption and build an effective Afghan government, according to the report to be reviewed at a congressional hearing on Tuesday.

"This arrangement has fueled a vast protection racket run by a shadowy network of warlords, strongmen, commanders, corrupt Afghan officials, and perhaps others," Representative John Tierney, chairman of a House of Representatives national security subcommittee, said in a statement. Tierney, a Democrat, said the system "runs afoul" of the Defense Department's own rules and may be undermining the U.S. strategic effort in Afghanistan.

The report by the subcommittee's Democratic staff called protection payments "a significant potential source of funding for the Taliban," citing numerous documents, incidents reports and emails that refer to attempts at Taliban extortion along the road. Congressional investigators began looking into the Defense Department's $2.16 billion Host Nation Trucking (HNT) contract in November 2009.

The contract covers 70 percent of the food, fuel, ammunition and other supply distributions to U.S. troops in Afghanistan. "HNT contractors and trucking subcontractors in Afghanistan pay tens of millions of dollars annually to local warlords across Afghanistan in exchange for 'protection' for HNT supply convoys to support U.S. troops," the report said. "The HNT contractors frequently referred to such payments as 'extortion,' 'bribes,' 'special security,' and/or 'protection payments,'" the document said.

Many contractors have told U.S. military officials that warlords were demanding protection payments in exchange for safe passage and that these payments were funding the insurgency, the report said. But the contractors concerns were never appropriately addressed, it said.
It faults the Pentagon for a lack of effective oversight of its supply chain and private security contractors.

"The Department of Defense has little to no visibility into what happens to the trucks carrying U.S. supplies between the time they leave the gate to the time they arrive at their destination," the report said. The congressional investigators said the Defense Department must take direct responsibility for the contractors to ensure robust oversight. They also recommended a top-to-bottom evaluation of the secondary effects of the HNT contract, including an analysis of corruption and the impact on Afghan politics.

(Reporting by JoAnne Allen; Editing by Vicki Allen)


 

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A member of the Afghan National Police (ANP) watches as US soldiers of the 97th MP Battalion (not pictured) search the site of a Taliban weapons cache in Kandahar City discovered after an informant contacted NATO forces in the area. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has appealed to tribal and religious leaders to support a major operation in their southern province, the heartland of a Taliban insurgency. -- PHOTO: AFP


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A female member of the Afghan National Police (ANP) aims a 9mm pistol during a training session. In the heart of the violent city of Kandahar, birthplace of the Taliban movement, some women have resorted to taking up arms - against the advice of their families and society - to join the risky ranks of the ANP. -- PHOTO: AFP


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A Pakistani fire fighter tries to extinguish burning NATO supply trucks carrying military vehicles and oil following militants attack on the outskirts of Islamabad. Armed militants attacked a terminal near the Pakistan's capital of Islamabad, torching dozens of trucks carrying military vehicles and oil used to supply fuel to NATO forces in Afghanistan. -- PHOTO: AFP


 

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Obama fires McChrystal, names Petraeus


Obama fires McChrystal, names Petraeus

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Gen McChrystal, who derided the Obama administration and its handling of the war in Afghanistan in a lengthy profile in the Rolling Stone magazine, was summoned to the White House yesterday to explain his remarks. -- PHOTO: REUTERS


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General David Petraeus will bring political savvy and a vaunted reputation to the job, but he inherits a mission full of risks for the United States and his own legacy. -- PHOTO: AFP


(Reuters) - President Barack Obama fired his top Afghanistan commander on Wednesday over inflammatory comments that enraged the White House, and vowed not to let the military shake-up undermine the U.S. war effort.

Politics

In an extraordinary turn of events, Obama called General Stanley McChrystal on the carpet at the White House, relieved him of command and replaced him with his boss, General David Petraeus, architect of the Iraq war turnaround. Obama had summoned McChrystal from Afghanistan to answer for remarks he and his aides made in an explosive Rolling Stone magazine article that disparaged the president and other civilian leaders.

"The conduct represented in the recently published article does not meet the standard that should be set by a commanding general," Obama said bluntly in the White House Rose Garden as he announced McChrystal's dismissal. "It undermines the civilian control of the military that is at the core of our democratic system. And it erodes the trust that's necessary for our team to work together to achieve our objectives in Afghanistan," he said.

The situation posed a dilemma for Obama. If McChrystal had kept his job, the president could have been seen as tolerating insubordination. By firing him, Obama opted instead for the risk involved in shaking up the chain of command at a perilous moment in the unpopular nine-year-old war. Obama said McChrystal's dismissal was needed to safeguard the unity of the war effort but insisted the switch in generals was a "change in personnel but it is not a change in policy."

There have been increasing doubts among U.S. lawmakers about Obama's six-month-old troop buildup strategy against a resurgent Taliban, and some critics are skeptical of Obama's pledge to start bringing U.S. forces home by July 2011. Seeking to underscore the continuity of command and counter any concerns about a disruption in war leadership, Obama had Petraeus by his side for the announcement.

Petraeus, as commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, was widely credited with turning the tide when sectarian violence there verged on civil war. He has a strong following on Capitol Hill and swift Senate confirmation is expected.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who has a close bond with McChrystal and had hoped he would stay on, respected Obama's decision to dismiss him, a spokesman said.

Obama spoke to Karzai and British Prime Minister David Cameron, a key ally in Afghanistan, about the change. The episode evoked memories of military-civilian tensions when President Harry Truman summoned General Douglas MacArthur for a dressing-down and stripped him of his Far East command in 1951 for flouting U.S. policy and openly advocating expansion of the Korean conflict to China.

PERSONAL INSULT?

McChrystal, the U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan and an architect of Obama's war strategy, entered the White House through a side door for his encounter with Obama, who accepted his letter of resignation during a 30-minute meeting. Underscoring Obama's displeasure over the McChrystal incident, he then delivered a "stern" lecture to his national security team, ordering them to stop petty bickering and forge unity, a senior administration official.

Aides had described Obama as furious about McChrystal's contemptuous remarks in the article, but he said in his Rose Garden appearance he was not acting out of a feeling of personal insult. With his career on the line, the 55-year-old general had apologized on Tuesday, calling it a "mistake reflecting poor judgment." As Obama was speaking, McChrystal released a terse statement saying he had resigned out of "a desire to see the mission succeed."

Lieutenant-General David Rodriguez, McChrystal's No. 2, was named acting commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, and British Lieutenant-General Nick Parker will serve as acting head of NATO forces in Afghanistan until Petraeus takes over, U.S. officials said. In the article entitled "The Runaway General" -- here -- McChrystal himself makes belittling remarks about Vice President Joe Biden and the U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke.

His aides are quoted as calling Obama national security adviser Jim Jones a "clown" and saying the president appeared intimidated and disengaged at an early meeting with McChrystal. Afghanistan had slipped down Obama's policy agenda recently as he focused on domestic challenges like high unemployment and the devastating BP Plc oil spill, seen as critical to avoiding big losses for his Democratic Party in November's congressional elections.

But the furor surrounding McChrystal comes amid growing skepticism in Congress and declining support among the public for the war in Afghanistan, where Taliban violence has risen despite a troop increase ordered by Obama six months ago to bring U.S. forces up to 100,000. Petraeus' confirmation hearing could be as early as Monday in the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the panel's chairman, Democrat Carl Levin. He said he expected the full Senate to act on the nomination by July 4.

(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart, Jeff Mason, Patricia Zengerle, David Alexander, Susan Cornwell, Tabassum Zakaria; Editing by Patricia Wilson and Mohammad Zargham)


 

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President Barack Obama is followed by General David Petraeus, the head of the U.S. Central Command, as they arrive in the Rose Garden of the White House, in Washington, June 23, 2010. Obama has chosen Petraeus to replace Stanley McChrystal as the top


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General Stanley McChrystal arrives at the White House in Washington June 23, 2010.


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President Barack Obama announces that Gen. David Petraeus will replace Gen. Stanley McChrystal as his top commander in Afghanistan while in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, June 23, 2010.


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Vice President Joe Biden arrives at the White House in Washington June 23, 2010.


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U.S. President Barack Obama walks from the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, June 23, 2010, where he announced that General Stanley McChrystal has been relieved of duty as top war commander in Afghanistan and replaced with General David


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President Barack Obama (C) announces that Gen. David Petraus (R) will replace Gen. Stanley McChrystal as his top commander in Afghanistan while in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, June 23, 2010.


 

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Obama Says Afghan Policy Won’t Change After Dismissal


Obama Says Afghan Policy Won’t Change After Dismissal

<nyt_byline> By HELENE COOPER and DAVID E. SANGER

</nyt_byline>
Published: June 23, 2010

<script type="text/javascript"> var articleToolsShareData = {"url":"http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2010\/06\/24\/us\/politics\/24mcchrystal.html","headline":"Obama Says Afghan Policy Won\u2019t Change After Dismissal","description":"President Obama removed Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal as commander of American forces in Afghanistan and tapped as his replacement Gen. David H. Petraeus. ","keywords":"Afghanistan War (2001- ),Suspensions Dismissals and Resignations,United States Defense and Military Forces,McChrystal Stanley A,Obama Barack","section":"us","sub_section":"politics","section_display":"U.S.","sub_section_display":"Politics","byline":"By <a href=\"http:\/\/topics.nytimes.com\/top\/reference\/timestopics\/people\/c\/helene_cooper\/index.html?inline=nyt-per\" title=\"More Articles by Helene Cooper\" class=\"meta-per\">HELENE COOPER<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/topics.nytimes.com\/top\/reference\/timestopics\/people\/s\/david_e_sanger\/index.html?inline=nyt-per\" title=\"More Articles by David E. Sanger\" class=\"meta-per\">DAVID E. SANGER<\/a>","pubdate":"June 23, 2010","passkey":null}; function getShareURL() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.url); } function getShareHeadline() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.headline); } function getShareDescription() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.description); } function getShareKeywords() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.keywords); } function getShareSection() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.section); } function getShareSubSection() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.sub_section); } function getShareSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.section_display); } function getShareSubSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.sub_section_display); } function getShareByline() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.byline); } function getSharePubdate() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.pubdate); } function getSharePasskey() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.passkey); }</script><nyt_text>WASHINGTON — President Obama on Wednesday fired his top Afghanistan war commander after only a brief meeting in the Oval Office, replacing Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal with his boss and mentor, Gen. David H. Petraeus, and sending a clear signal that the current war strategy will continue despite setbacks and growing public doubts.
</nyt_text>
<!--forceinline--> <!--at war promo --> Two hours later, an angry Mr. Obama privately reprimanded members of his bickering national security team, adopting a “stern” tone during a meeting in the Situation Room and ordering them to put aside “pettiness,” and not to put “personalities or reputation” ahead of American troops who have been put in harm’s way, administration officials said. Speaking in the Rose Garden to reporters, Mr. Obama said he did not fire General McChrystal for critical comments about him and his staff in Rolling Stone magazine, nor “out of any sense of personal insult.”

Rather, the president cited the need for his team to unite in pressing the war effort. “I don’t think we can sustain that unity of effort and achieve our objectives in Afghanistan without making this change,” he said. Even by the standards of a capital that has seen impeachment and scandals in recent years, the drama surrounding the firing of a wartime commander was palpable. Generals have come and gone in disputes over policy and execution — indeed, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates fired General McChrystal’s predecessor, Gen. David D. McKiernan, just a year ago.

But the removal of General McChrystal culminated a remarkable public waiting game, with White House and top military officials trying to guess what the president would do, and Mr. Obama keeping his cards close to his vest until the very end. While publicly rebuking him Tuesday, Mr. Obama had said he would not decide the general’s fate until they met face to face.
But as early as Monday night, officials said, when Mr. Obama first learned of the Rolling Stone article in which General McChrystal and his staff criticized administration officials, the president and his advisers were discussing the likelihood that the general would have to go.

“A lot of us were arguing that the message of letting McChrystal’s comments roll off our backs would be enormously harmful,” one administration official said. By Tuesday, when the president met with the general’s biggest supporter and a powerful one, Secretary Gates, White House and Pentagon officials were already discussing General Petraeus as the most likely replacement. It has been nearly 60 years since President Harry S. Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur in the midst of the Korean War, the last time a president directly stepped in to remove the senior commander in a war zone for disrespect toward the White House.

For Mr. Obama, this was a MacArthur moment, a reassertion of civilian control. The president also used the moment to emphasize that the policy in Afghanistan would not change, even as his own party and international allies display strong doubts about the way forward, including whether the United States can ever navigate a troubled relationship with Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai. General Petraeus is taking a step down. As head of United States Central Command, he has oversight for Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran and the entire region.

He has supported General McChrystal’s point of view during internal administration strategy debates. His appointment is meant in part to calm the nerves of NATO allies and Mr. Karzai. Mr. Obama called Mr. Karzai Wednesday to try to get the Afghan president on board — Mr. Karzai made a personal appeal to Mr. Obama on Tuesday night to keep General McChrystal — and Mr. Obama received at least an initial public statement that “President Karzai respects President Obama’s decision.” Gen. James L. Jones, the national security adviser, whom one of General McChrystal’s aides had dismissed in the article as a “clown,” called his counterparts in Europe to assure them that Mr. Obama was not abandoning his approach.

He repeated Mr. Obama’s line that this was a change in personnel, not in policy. The president chose General Petraeus, a media-savvy, ambitious officer, instead of lesser-known figures who might have had more trouble stepping in to such a volatile situation. “The one person you could have inserted in there to calm those nerves was Dave Petraeus,” said one senior administration official. General Petraeus will have to relinquish the top job at Central Command to assume command in Afghanistan. White House officials said no decision had been made on who would succeed him.

General Petraeus, while intimately familiar with Afghanistan and its myriad problems, is inheriting direct command at a particularly fraught moment. Seven months into President Obama’s surge of forces, there is little evidence that the addition of tens of thousands of troops has beaten back the Taliban, or that Mr. Karzai’s government will soon be able to hold and administer territory the United States helps it retake. Mr. Obama admitted as much indirectly on Wednesday in the Rose Garden when he said: “We have a clear goal. We are going to break the Taliban’s momentum.”

They were the same words he used seven months ago at West Point in announcing the surge, and as one senior official said, “The president was acknowledging that a third of the way into the surge, the momentum has not been broken.” One senior administration official noted that General McChrystal and Mr. Karzai “just came off the most constructive week we’ve had in a while with Karzai” when the two men traveled through Kandahar, the site of the next big counterinsurgency push. General McChrystal reported back that Mr. Karzai finally seemed deeply engaged in the details of the effort to regain control over the sprawling city, one of the Taliban’s home bases, administration officials said.

General Petraeus will now be responsible for executing the Kandahar offensive into the spiritual heart of the Taliban. White House and Congressional officials say they expect he will be confirmed quickly — probably by the end of next week.
<!--forceinline--> <!--at war promo -->
General McChrystal had already prepared his brief resignation letter when he walked into the meeting with Mr. Obama; he left quickly afterward, saying nothing to the reporters who converged near him. Relieved of his post, he did not attend a regularly scheduled National Security Council meeting that included all the same administration officials whom he or his staff disparaged in the article.

“I welcome debate, but I won’t tolerate division,” the president said afterward. He said that it was crucial for American troops and military officers to observe a “strict adherence to the military chain of command and respect for civilian control over that chain of command.” In the Rolling Stone article, General McChrystal and his aides belittled many of their civilian counterparts on the Afghanistan strategy team.

In a typical response from other military officials, one Army officer with multiple tours in Afghanistan expressed anger at the lack of discipline displayed by General McChrystal and his inner circle. But he warned that it was symptomatic of wider problems with Mr. Obama’s strategy and among his national security advisers. “They brought this upon themselves and embarrassed the entire military as an institution,” said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid any punishment for criticizing his chain of command.

“Hopefully, the president uses this as an opportunity to refine his policy and objectives, and also to shuffle the rest of his Af-Pak team, as well,” he said, using the abbreviation for the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. “McChrystal isn’t the only one who probably needs to move elsewhere.”
The major criticism of the United States strategy is that its success relies on support from an Afghan government that so far has been unwilling or unable to exert control and eliminate widespread corruption.

Lawmakers from both parties as well as senior military officers in Afghanistan and in Washington expressed regret at General McChrystal’s departure, but strongly supported Mr. Obama’s decision. And while the change in four-star commanders is unlikely to cause any change in strategy, they said General Petraeus might subtly alter the ways it is carried out.

“The overall strategy is not going to change, but like anyone, Petraeus will go back and check the assumptions, the vantage from Kabul, the personal dynamics and interpersonal relationships,” Senator Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, said in a telephone interview. “There will be shifts in emphasis and tone. Petraeus’s leadership style is reaching out, going down to the troop level, reaching out to allies and to the civilian leadership.”

In Kabul, Afghanistan, senior officers spent most of Wednesday anxiously waiting for news out of Washington, watching the BBC for leaked reports about their boss’s fate. One military official in Kabul described the mood at General McChrystal’s headquarters as a “mix of despondency and anger.”
“People are shocked,” he said. “People are upset.”

<nyt_author_id> Eric Schmitt, Thom Shanker and Mark Mazzetti contributed reporting.


</nyt_author_id>
 

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Gen. David H. Petraeus with the defense secretary and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.


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President Obama removed Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal as the top commander in Afghanistan.


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Mr. Obama with General Petraeus at the White House on Wednesday.


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General McChrystal arrived for a meeting with Mr. Obama earlier on Wednesday.


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General Petraeus, shown in 2008, will lead the war effort in Afghanistan.


 

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British PM wants Afghan troop withdrawal in five years


British PM wants Afghan troop withdrawal in five years
Posted: 26 June 2010 0126 hrs

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British soldiers in Afghanistan
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HUNTSVILLE, Canada: British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Friday he wants troops home from Afghanistan within five years, conceding the war-torn country would not be "perfect" before that happened.

While he would not outline a "strict timetable" for a withdrawal, Cameron said he wanted to see British troops leave before the next British general elections due by 2015.

"We can't be there for another five years, having been there for nine years already," Cameron, who took office last month, told Sky News television, on the sidelines of a Group of Eight summit in Canada.

Asked whether he wanted troops home by the time of the next election, Cameron said: "I want that to happen, make no mistake about it."

Britain is the second largest contributor to the international force in Afghanistan after the United States and his comments came during a particularly bloody month for the roughly 10,000 British forces there.

Some 307 British troops have died since the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan and June has been the deadliest single month for US-led foreign forces in the nearly nine-year conflict, according to an AFP tally.

His comments came towards the end of a turbulent week for international forces after the commander of NATO and US troops there, General Stanley McChrystal, was fired.

McChrystal and his aides had made critical comments about the Obama administration in an interview with Rolling Stone magazine. He has been replaced by General David Petraeus, a key figure in the war in Iraq.

A Downing Street spokesman, speaking from the G8 summit in Huntsville, Canada, insisted Cameron's comments did not represent a change in tack in Britain's approach to the war.

"There's no change in strategy or policy. This shows the prime minister's determination to make the existing strategy work," he said. Talking about a withdrawal of British troops, he added: "I prefer not to see it in strict timetables.

"I want us to roll up our sleeves and get on with delivering what will bring the success we want, which is not a perfect Afghanistan, but some stability in Afghanistan and the ability for the Afghans themselves to run their country so (troops) can come home."

Four British soldiers died in a road crash in Afghanistan Wednesday in what Cameron described as a "completely tragic case." He has also warned of a tough period ahead for troops battling Taliban Islamic militants.

"It will be a difficult summer, but we are getting to a period where parts of Afghanistan can now be run by the Afghans themselves. That is a very exciting prospect for bringing our troops home," he told ITV television.

Cameron, of the centre-right Conservatives, took power last month as head of a coalition government with the centrist Liberal Democrats.

- AFP/de



 
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US drone strike kills two militants in Pakistan


US drone strike kills two militants in Pakistan
Posted: 26 June 2010 1027 hrs

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A US 'Predator' drone passes overhead at a forward operating base near Kandahar
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MIRANSHAH, Pakistan: A US drone strike in Pakistan's lawless northwest tribal belt, on the border with Afghanistan, killed two militants and wounded two others early on Saturday, security officials said.

The drone targeted a house in Mir Ali area, 30 kilometres (around 20 miles) east of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, a security official and two intelligence officials told AFP. North Waziristan is known as a hub of Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants.

"It was a US drone strike. The drone fired one missile on a house and the house was completely destroyed," an intelligence official in Miranshah said. A second official in the same area confirmed the strike and the death of two militants.

Two other militants were injured, the officials said, but it was not immediately clear if any of the militants were high-value targets. US forces have been waging a covert drone war against Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked commanders in Pakistan's northwest tribal belt, where militants have carved out havens in mountains outside direct government control.

The US military does not, as a rule, confirm drone attacks, but its armed forces and the Central Intelligence Agency operating in Afghanistan are the only forces that deploy pilotless drones in the region. More than 900 people have been killed in over 100 drone strikes in Pakistan since August 2008.

On June 1, Al-Qaeda said its number three leader and Osama bin Laden's one-time treasurer Mustafa Abu al-Yazid had been killed, in what security officials said was an apparent drone strike in North Waziristan. Washington has branded Pakistan's northwestern tribal area a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and officials say it is home to Islamist extremists who plan attacks on US-led troops in Afghanistan and on cities abroad.

Waziristan came under renewed scrutiny when Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American charged over an attempted bombing in New York on May 1, allegedly told US interrogators he went there for bomb training. The United States has been increasing pressure on Pakistan to crack down on Islamist havens along the Afghan border.

Pakistani commanders have not ruled out an offensive in North Waziristan, but argue that gains in South Waziristan and the northwestern district of Swat need to be consolidated to prevent troops from being stretched too thinly.

- AFP/jy



 

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Five ISAF troops killed in Afghanistan: NATO


Five ISAF troops killed in Afghanistan: NATO

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Five troops, including four Norwegians, serving with the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan have been killed, ISAF said Monday.
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The Norwegian defense ministry confirmed the nationalities of the four killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan's north on Sunday. A fifth ISAF service member was killed during an attack by insurgents in the south Sunday.

The Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan is growing stronger despite the presence of more than 150,000 foreign troops, with violence at its worst levels since the Islamists were ousted by U.S.-backed forces in late 2001.

More than 90 foreign troops have been killed so far in June, the deadliest month for international forces since the war began. More than 310 have been killed so far this year, compared with about 520 deaths in all of 2009. Another six ISAF troops were killed in separate incidents at the weekend.

(Reporting by Paul Tait; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)



 
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