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US predicts
increase in Afghan violence
KABUL (Afghanistan)—Insurgent violence in Afghanistan could reach record
levels this year as militants increasingly target police and development
projects, a top U.S. general said Thursday. Maj. Gen. Jeffrey J.
Schloesser, who commands U.S. forces in the country, said violence is
increasing as insurgents pour into Afghanistan from neighboring
Pakistan.
Violence “may well reach a higher level than it did in 2007,” the
bloodiest since the ouster of the Taliban regime in 2001, Schloesser
said. More than 8,000 people, mostly militants, were killed in
insurgency-related violence last year, according to the United Nations.
Militants afraid to attack coalition forces are instead directing
violence against civilians, police and security forces protecting
development projects, he said. “They are going for what is an easier
target,” said Schloesser, who heads the 101st Airborne Division. He took
up his command in Afghanistan on April 10.
More than 900 policemen were killed last year. More vulnerable than the
better-trained and equipped national army, police have made up the
majority of at least 159 security forces killed this year — with at
least 72 police officers killed in April alone, according to an
Associated Press tally.
The high death toll comes despite some $4 billion spent by the United
States to train and equip police in the last three years.
Afghan officials said Thursday that 17 security personnel were arrested
for drug offenses in the past year, including an army officer who tried
to smuggle hundreds of pounds of hashish and opium in a military
vehicle.
Schloesser also echoed warnings by U.S. officials that Pakistan’s tribal
areas are a breeding ground for Taliban, al-Qaida and other militant
groups despite the presence of 100,000 Pakistani troops. U.S. officials
have sought permission to strike insurgent strongholds in the lawless
and mountainous region.
A Pakistani official said the government is seeking a peace deal with
the tribe of a Taliban commander suspected in the assassination of
former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, part of a strategy of attempting
to counter surging Islamic militancy with dialogue and development.
Zahid Khan, a senior official in one of the parties of the ruling
coalition, said government envoys were in talks with elders of the
Mahsud tribe in South Waziristan. The tribe includes Baitullah Mehsud,
Pakistan’s top Taliban leader who is accused of ties to al-Qaida.
Pakistan’s government is seeking a peace deal with the tribe of a
Taliban commander suspected in the assassination of former Prime
Minister Benazir Bhutto, an official said Thursday.
Zahid Khan, a senior official in one of the parties of the ruling
coalition, said government envoys were in talks with elders of the
Mahsud tribe in South Waziristan.—Agencies
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