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At least 50
Taliban killed in unabated Afghan fighting
KANDAHAR—U.S. artillery and airstrikes killed between 50 and 60
suspected Taliban militants Tuesday, the fourth day of a NATO-led
offensive in southern Afghanistan, an alliance spokesman said.
NATO already has reported more than 200 Taliban killed in the operation.
The U.S. troops, operating under NATO command, clashed with the
militants in Panjwayi district of Kandahar province, where an offensive
began over the weekend to flush out hundreds of Taliban fighters.
Maj. Quentin Innis, a NATO spokesman, said the troops had identified
Taliban positions and the two sides had exchanged fire. He said the
estimate of 50 to 60 killed was based on reports from troops looking
through "weapons sights and other observation devices."
He said there had been no NATO or Afghan troop casualties.
It wasn't possible for reporters to reach the site of the battle to
independently confirm the death toll.
The Afghan Defense Ministry also said 200 militants had died since
Saturday — increasing its previously reported toll of 89. The dead
included four Taliban commanders and 12 of their bodyguards, a ministry
statement said, citing intelligence reports.
Five Canadian soldiers have also been killed, one in a friendly fire
incident Monday involving a U.S. warplane.
Mullah Dadullah, the Taliban military commander for south and
southeastern Afghanistan, has rejected NATO's claims of more than 200
dead.
Qari Yousaf Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, said if NATO
had killed so many Taliban fighters, they should show them to the media.
He also denied that hundreds of Taliban militants were trapped in
Panjwayi, and said its fighters were battling NATO and Afghan forces
there. He spoke to an Associated Press reporter by phone from an
undisclosed location.
Another NATO spokesman Maj. Scott Lundy said earlier Tuesday that an
estimated 700 militants were "trapped" in an area spanning several
hundred square miles in Panjwayi and Zhari districts, some in fortified
compounds, others moving in the open.
NATO has also reported 80 Taliban have been arrested and that another
180 have fled the fighting — some of the most intense since the fall of
the Taliban regime nearly five years ago.
"It's a complex battle space. Some (Taliban) elements are fixed, others
are moving," Lundy said.
During Monday's clashes, a U.S. A-10 Thunderbolt warplane supporting
NATO mistakenly strafed Canadian troops fighting Taliban forces in
Panjwayi, killing one soldier and seriously wounding five.
A top U.S. general expressed sadness over the incident, which was being
investigated by a board of military officers.
"The death or injury of each and every coalition member is a tragedy
that saddens us, our families and the military and civilian members of
the coalition," Lt. Gen. Gary North, commander of U.S. Central Command
Air Forces said in a statement.
A 12-year old girl was killed and nine other civilians were treated for
wounds from the fighting in Panjwayi at a Kandahar hospital, said Dr.
Qayyum Pohya, the hospital's chief.
Fighting between resurgent Taliban militants and U.S. and NATO forces
has left hundreds dead in the past four months — the deadliest violence
since the pro-al-Qaida Taliban regime's 2001 ouster.
The latest clashes came as NATO leaders, including Secretary General
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer and top commander U.S. Gen. James L. Jones, were
in Afghanistan for talks with Afghan officials on a security and
development accord and to assess progress in the alliance's mission to
stabilize the volatile south.
The NATO chiefs, who arrived in Afghanistan late Monday, are due to
travel around the country and on Wednesday meet beleaguered President
Hamid Karzai. Their three-day visit will coincide with a trip to Kabul
by neighboring Pakistan's President Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
Pakistan, a key Western ally in the war on terrorism, is under
increasing pressure to crackdown on Taliban on its soil. Afghanistan
claims militia leaders stay in Pakistan and that militants launch
cross-border attacks. Pakistan denies the presence of Taliban leaders
and says it has 80,000 troops at the border to stop infiltration. |