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Afghanistan/South Asia
Top Taleban Elusive as Offensive Winds Down
2005-06-25
A group of top Taleban commanders appeared to have slipped the net yesterday as Afghan and US forces wrapped up one of the bloodiest offensives since the fall of the regime, officials said. Defense officials in Kabul said earlier that soldiers had surrounded four Taleban chiefs holed up in southern Afghanistan’s mountains, including the brother-in-law of fugitive militant leader Mulla Mohammad Omar. The US military said it was now engaged in a hearts-and-minds drive to bring medical care to a district devastated in the battles and rebuild a mosque, which was destroyed by enemy fighters. “It looks like the fighting has certainly died off and whatever enemy forces that were in the area that we didn’t kill or capture might have fled,” US military spokesman Lt. Col. Jerry O’Hara told AFP. “We still don’t have visibility on exactly how many fighters were involved.”

The Taleban had always denied that Mulla Dadullah, a key member of the Taleban leadership council, Mulla Brader, said to be Mulla Omar’s relative by marriage, or any other of its commanders were under siege. “I don’t know about the Taleban commanders who were said to be surrounded,” Kandahar province security commander Gen. Mohammed Salem told AFP. Troops were still on the ground searching for remnants of a rebel force which last week captured the district headquarters of Mian Nishin, which lies at the violent juncture of Zabul, Uruzgan and Kandahar provinces, he added. The four-day mission to take out Taleban “safe havens” was one of the bloodiest since the fundamentalist regime was ousted by a US-led air campaign after failing to surrender Al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden.

Afghan officials placed the death toll of militants at 132 while the US military estimate of enemy deaths stood at 54, with 22 captured. Many were killed when US warplanes and helicopters supported by British jets launched an 11-hour bombardment on Tuesday. Three policemen were killed and three others wounded. Taleban militants kidnapped 31 people when they took over Mian Nishin. They killed eight of the hostages for allegedly collaborating with US forces and later released the rest. Afghan officials are trying to curb a strong resurgence by the fundamentalist militia before the country’s first post-Taleban elections in less than three months’ time.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Mullah Dadullah.
Best. Name. Ever.
Posted by: Scott R   2005-06-25 09:41  

#2  They get away because they're getting tips from Jack Bauer's daughter. Usually they call Mullah Omar on aq cell phone and he creates a diversion.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-06-25 08:05  

#1  Well Goooolly. {throws hands in air} looks like they got away again. Jeesh.

Somebody needs to sit down and figure out HOW these guys are getting away in these situations and figure out a way to prevent it. How about you get some guys with common sense instead of credentials - apparently the latter don't have the former.

If it's bribes - then find a way to have them bribe the wrong fellow, or find a way to kill those who accept the bribes, even after the fact, and make it public, and make sure their families don't get the money. Money is no good to a dead man. Maybe we have a mole inside the highest levels, giving the info away. Maybe they can penetrate our communications. Whatever it is, there certainly should be enough of a pattern available by now to have a pretty damn good idea.

Instead of walking away empty handed next time, how about putting someone with some can-do on this and make sure it doesn't happen again. And whoever you get, make sure it's not from the same pool you are already working from.

sad.
Posted by: 2b   2005-06-25 06:36  

00:00