Taliban with RPG |
KABUL, #Afghanistan — On the first day of their “spring offensive,” the Taliban
mounted attacks in three provinces that killed at least 11 people on
Monday. In a fourth province, the families of two would-be suicide
bombers turned them in to the police, helping to forestall what would
have likely been another attack.
The
attacks were a reminder that as the last of the Western troops withdraw
in the coming months, the Afghan forces will be in an unrelenting fight
just to hold ground.
In a report on the #Taliban insurgency
released Monday, the International Crisis Group forecast “escalating
violence and insurgent attacks” after American and allied troops
complete their withdrawal this year.
The
report noted that the Taliban had been able to muster larger forces,
and that in some areas the insurgents and the Afghan security forces
were inflicting nearly equal casualties on each other, in another
suggestion of increased insurgent strength.
One
attack on Monday hit just as people were settling in to work at the
Justice Ministry’s provincial offices in Jalalabad, according to people
in the area. Three men wearing suicide vests and armed with assault
rifles and rocket-propelled grenades killed the two police guards at the
building’s entrance and stormed in.
In
the course of the battle with the Afghan security forces, which lasted
four to five hours, three civil servants were killed, along with a
student and a third member of the security forces. The lasting effect of
the attack will be felt for months, because a part of the building
caught fire and the ministry’s paper records were reduced to ashes, said
Col. Abdul Rafi Oruzgani, the head of Nangahar Province’s police
criminal division.
The
Taliban, in a statement they emailed to journalists announcing their
spring offensive, said that only two fighters were involved in the
Jalalabad attack, but the Afghan police said there were three.
In an attack in Helmand Province, the Taliban appear to have infiltrated a team of police in Sangin District, an area where the Afghan forces have been struggling to keep the insurgency at bay.
The
attack began at a security checkpoint with the shooting of a guard in a
guardtower, said a spokesman for the governor, who said he believed
that the battle left three policemen dead and four wounded. However,
local people said all seven officers were killed.
“The report we have is that there are internal links between the police and the Taliban and that paved the way for Taliban to kill seven policemen,” said Hajji Mira Jan, a member of the district council in Sangin. “They were all shot, and two of my cousins were among those killed. It is a tragic incident.”
In
Uruzgan Province, two imams in two separate districts were shot by men
on motorcycles. Both imams had refused to preach Taliban-ordered
sermons, and local people said they believed that was the reason they
had been targeted. Dost Mohammed Nayab, a spokesman for the governor,
said that neither man was connected with the government.
One
planned attack in Paktika Province appeared to have been foiled when
two Afghan men who had been trained as suicide bombers in Pakistan
stopped by in Sharana, th
e provincial capital, to bid their families
farewell before conducting their attacks.Source: LA Times
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