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Afghanistan/South Asia
U.S. Forces to Launch Winter Offensive Against Afghan Insurgents
2004-11-30
Here comes the Brutal Afghan Winter™. Our guys just can't take it. They'll be... Oh. Wait. That was three years ago.
Thousands of U.S. soldiers are preparing an operation against Pakistani Taliban insurgents to preempt an expected spring offensive which could upset plans for Afghan parliamentary elections, a senior American general said in an interview Tuesday. The operation will begin within days of the Dec. 7 inauguration of Hamid Karzai as Afghanistan's first directly elected president - an event that itself is a potential target, Maj. Gen. Eric Olson told The Associated Press. "There could be an unhappy coincidence between the enemy's spring offensive and the parliamentary elections," Olson said at the main U.S. base at Bagram, north of Kabul.

He said the aim is to tighten the Afghan-Pakistan border by sending special forces on raids against rebel leaders. Olson said the offensive - which will cover the entire U.S.-led force of about 18,000 - would attempt to disturb militants in their "winter sanctuaries" so that they will be in no shape to move against the parliamentary vote slated for April. The military will be "attempting to attack him in those sanctuaries while he's resting and refitting, staging and planning," said Olson, the operational commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
I'm afraid there going to hit nothing, because Mahmoud's going to be home strutting for the folks back in Peshawar and Quetta.
The new operation, dubbed Lightning Freedom, follows Lightning Resolve, a security push begun in July to protect the October presidential election, the first vote since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Forty people were reported killed on election day, Oct. 9, but Taliban holdouts failed to make good on threats to assault polling stations across the country. More than 8 million Afghans voted, handing Karzai a majority that foreign donors bankrolling the country's democratic rebirth hope will bring stability after more than 20 years of fighting.

Still, violence continues to plague the area close to Pakistan south and east, where militants are strongest. A roadside bomb killed two U.S. soldiers in Uruzgan province last week, and American officials say Pakistanis militants continue to cross to and from neighboring Pakistan. To reinforce the frontier, Olson said the U.S. military would establish several new camps close to the border. He said Afghan forces would also reposition "along and astride" routes used by militants. And he promised to strengthen cooperation with Pakistani forces across the border. U.S. special forces already have been moved to near the main Torkham border crossing in Nangarhar province, where the U.S. military recently conducted raids on suspected al-Qaida targets, Olson said. He said there was concern militants could attempt a "spectacular act" during Karzai's inauguration. The event is expected to attract officials from around the world, though it is unclear who will represent the U.S. government. Still, the general said the military had no information on any specific plans to attack the ceremony.
Afghanistan in winter is a close approximation of Hell. Godspeed to those brave men.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#4  One major advantage the United States forces have is mobility. We've developed insertion/extraction missions to the point where we can put people just about anywhere, let them fight, then bring them home quickly. The Taliban and Al Qaida have to depend on donkeys and shank's mares. We can hit them twenty times in ten days, and sleep quietly and warm in bed at night - or during the day, while operating at night. We'll have to wait and see, but I believe the "insurgents" are about to run into some very nasty surprises.
Posted by: Snoluck Thrusing8432   2004-11-30 9:37:50 PM  

#3  While General Winter will complicate operations for us, the General is neutral and will also complicate operations for the otherside too. Logistics is not our opponent's strength. It already has become harder with political developments for them to sustain local supply and remain mobile, it will become even more difficult in the winter. Time to leverage our relative strength against their weakness. Regardless of great stories about native resistance to local environments, the basic human body still requires a certain level of food consumption for strength and to ward off cold. If the enemy has learned anything, they should have learned that the US military is not the Soviet military. Our forces will not withdraw into towns and cities to hunker down for the winter.
Posted by: Don   2004-11-30 9:20:19 PM  

#2  Mrs. D - you beat me to it. :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2004-11-30 8:33:05 PM  

#1  Is this the same Brutal Afghan Winter that has stymied us so little in the past?

I sure hope our guys keep their GPS tuned so they don't accidentally wander into the parts of Waziristan the Pak Army is no longer patrolling. Somebody might think it was a free fire zone.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2004-11-30 6:49:59 PM  

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