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100 Pushtun Guerrillas Killed at Spera from Air; ISI under Civilian Control?

by juan cole (reposted)
From a Sunday, July 27, 2008 entry on Informed Comment, Juan Cole's blog

100 Pushtun Guerrillas Killed at Spera from Air;
ISI under Civilian Control?

One hundred Pushtun guerrillas launched a major offensive in an attempt to take Spera District center. They drew down on themselves the full fury of US and NATO air forces that gave support to Afghan National Police, which killed up to 70 of them.

Jang reports in Urdu that Khost governor Arsala Jamal said that the guerrillas had begun by attacking police checkpoints. In the aftermath, local police asked for help from the Afghan army.

Kabul Pajhwok Afghan News says that Afghan National Police and ISAF (NATO) units surrounded the guerrillas, calling in air strikes and helicopter gunships. When guerrillas ran into a building to take cover, helicopters destroyed it with missiles. The fighting went on into the early hours of Sunday. A "small number" of ANP officers were killed.

There is a discrepancy here with Jang, which said that it was the Afghan army, not ANP, that riposted, and said that Afghan aircraft were flown in the counter-attack.

This incident was a sign of bad guerrilla tactics on the part of the Pushtun guerrillas. You can't launch conventional attacks and try to take and hold territory when your enemy is extremely powerful and controls the air. On the other hand, it is not a good sign that the Afghan police in the area could not fight off 100 guys by themselves.

The attack on Spera comes just a week after guerrillas took Arjistan, 150 mi. south of the capital of Kabul, from which US & NATO & Afghan forces dislodged them on Wednesday.

There was also a suicide bombing at Khost.

This news underlines Barack Obama's comments on Sunday, in AP's words: "In his first public appearance since returning to the United States, Barack Obama says Afghanistan's weak government and rampant drug trafficking are hampering efforts to fight al-Qaida terrorists who often take refuge in neighboring Pakistan."

Barnett Rubin is blogging up a storm on Afghanistan, and the prickly issues of narco-terrorism and how to fight it. He is skeptical of the meme that the tactics used in Colombia were a complete success. I hope everyone in the blogosphere is aware of how extraordinarily fortune we are to have direct access to the thinking of perhaps the foremost Afghanistan expert.

KhostBasicMap.jpg

pakistan.afghanistan.bomb.jpg

The problems in far southern Afghanistan are related to the increased organizational capacity of Baitullah Mahsud's Tehrik-i Taliban, which is a misnomer because a lot of his fighters appear just to be tribesmen, not seminarians (which is what "Taliban" means).

Some of the restiveness of the Pushtun tribes of the Pakistani Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) derives from a growing wheat shortage.

On Saturday, Edak tribesmen blocked the Bannu-Miranshah road in FATA, protesting the lack of flour. The American public should be alarmed to hear that like 15 percent of Pakistanis blame the US for their wheat shortage.

Meanwhile, The Pakistani government took back on Sunday an announcement made Saturday that Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistani military intelligence, had been put under the control of the civilian ministry of the interior. A clarification today said that the feared ISI, which is accused of using the neo-Taliban against Afghanistan, remains under the authority of the prime minister. That restatement might imply in turn that it remains under the control of the military, who supposedly report to the PM but actually dictate military policy to him.

posted by Juan Cole @ 7/27/2008 01:43:00 PM

§Battle kills 'dozens' of Taliban
by Al Jazeera (reposted)
Sunday, July 27, 2008 : Helicopter gunships and Afghan forces repel attack on district centre in Khost.

Up to 70 Taliban fighters were killed in fierce fighting supported by air raids by helicopter gunships in southeastern Afghanistan.

The battle in Khost province began when more than 100 Taliban fighters launched an attack in Spera district on Sunday, said Arsala Jamal, the provincial governor.

"The Taliban attacked the headquarters of Spera district, killed two police and also damaged the building early this morning," he told reporters.

"We had little force there and asked Nato for air support ... Nato air strikes killed 50 to 70 insurgents."

If confirmed, it would be one of the highest casualties suffered by the Taliban in recent weeks.

Casualties

A statement from Nato-led forces in Afghanistan was, however, less clear about the numbers of casulaties.

"Initial reports indicate that a small number of ANP [Afghan National Police] officers have been killed and wounded and the number of insurgents killed is in double-digit figures," the statement said.

The Taliban fighters had reportedly tried to capture the Spera district centre, 15km from the border with Pakistan, opening fire on police with guns and rocket-propelled grenades early on Sunday morning, Nato said.

Police and soldiers from the International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) then surrounded the attackers and called air raids consisting of heavy machine-gun fire from helicopters, an Isaf statement said.

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§Nato 'prevents Taleban advance'
by BBC (reposted)
Sunday, July 27, 2008 : Taleban fighters have been stopped from taking over an area close to the Pakistan border, Afghan and Nato officials say.

Nato forces said they were called in to help Afghan national police in Spera in the south-eastern province of Khost.

This was after they were attacked by gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades.

Khost's governor said 50 to 70 fighters had been killed - Nato said the number was in double figures. There is no independent verification.

Border tension

Both Nato's International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) and the Afghan government said about 100 insurgents had amassed in the district close to the border with Pakistan in the early hours of the morning and appeared to be trying to take over the town centre.

map

An Isaf statement said helicopter gunships were brought in and the militants surrounded.

It described how some fighters took cover in a nearby building which was then struck by missiles. The fighting from the air and on the ground went on for some hours.

The governor added that many fighters had fled into local villages and air strikes were then stopped to prevent civilian casualties.

There has been a dramatic increase in the number of clashes and bombings in eastern Afghanistan this year.

It is thought many of the fighters openly cross over the border from Pakistan.

There has been increasing tension between the two countries over the issue, and international military commanders express frustration that they are trying to fight an insurgency that is constantly fuelled by fighters who cannot be targeted on the other side of the border.

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baby red
Sat, Sep 20, 2008 11:56AM
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