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Taliban launch 'operation' against Marines

US Marine Chief Warrant Officer Joel Schwendinger (R) of 2nd Battalion 8 Marines takes position on his way to the site of a blast which damaged a US vechile in Garmsir district of Helmand Province in Afghanistan on July 6, 2009. US Marines have launched a major offensive into the Taliban heartlands of southern Afghanistan as President Barack Obama's new war plan swung into action. Operation Khanjar - Strike of the Sword - involving nearly 4,000 US forces as well as 650 Afghan police and soldiers, would bring security to the Helmand River valley ahead of presidential elections on August 20, commanders said. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) July 6, 2009
Afghanistan's insurgent Taliban movement said Monday they had launched a guerrilla operation to counter a major assault by US Marines on their stronghold in Helmand province.

Operation Foladi Jal, or "iron net" in Pashtu, would teach the Marines "a lesson," Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP by telephone from an unknown location.

About 4,000 Marines poured into the southern province on the border with Pakistan in an operation called Khanjar (dagger) that has faced little resistance since it was launched five days ago.

"In response to Operation Khanjar by the invading forces, we have launched Operation Foladi Jal," Ahmadi said.

"Their Khanjar will get stuck in our Foladi Jal," the rebel spokesman said.

"In this operation we'll teach them a lesson so they will never again dare to come into our areas," he said, referring to the militants' long-time stronghold.

The operation would include improvised bomb explosions and "hit-and-run guerrilla attacks.

"We will not engage them in front battles. We would rather hit them by mines and guerrilla attacks," he said.

The assault by Marines, along with about 600 Afghan forces, has pushed into several key towns in southern Helmand and aims to hold the areas to allow Afghans to vote in August 20 presidential elections.

One Marine has been killed but officials have not released casualty figures for the insurgents, adding that many seem to have gone to ground.

Officials have said the Taliban are unlikely to oppose directly such a massive insertion of Marines, but would instead resort to bombings, the main feature of their campaign against the government and its international allies.

The Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001, until they were ousted by a US-led invasion for sheltering Al-Qaeda.

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US troops in Afghanistan 'enough': top US officer
Washington (AFP) July 5, 2009
The number of US troops sent to southern Afghanistan to launch a major offensive is sufficient to seize and hold areas currently under Taliban control, the top US military officer said Sunday. "We have enough forces there now not just to clear an area but to hold it. So we can build after. That's really the strategy," Admiral Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told ... read more







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