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THE STANS
Taliban warns of more American deaths

NATO air strike kills four Afghan civilians
Kabul (AFP) April 6, 2010 - A NATO air strike in southern Afghanistan targeting suspected militants mistakenly killed four civilians, including two women and a child, the military alliance said Tuesday. The incident on Monday in the Nahr-e Saraj area of Helmand province came after ISAF admitted killing three women in a bungled raid in the east of the country in February, having initially denied involvement. "Insurgents were using the compound as a firing position when combined forces, unaware of the possible presence of civilians, directed air assets against it," the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said. "Later, once they were able to enter the compound, combined forces found four dead civilians -- two women, an elderly man and a child -- inside," a statement read. "Four males, suspected insurgents, were also found dead inside the compound."

Asked by AFP if the civilians were killed by the coalition air strike an ISAF spokesman said: "yes sir". Daud Ahmadi, spokesman for the governor of Helmand province, said the deaths occurred after Taliban fighters attacked Afghan and NATO soldiers on patrol in Gerishk district. "We have sent a delegation to the area to determine who killed the civilians," he added. ISAF said a joint investigation with Afghan security forces had been launched into Monday's incident "to review the factors leading up to this unfortunate loss of civilian life". Civilian casualties are often used by Afghan politicians and the Taliban to whip up public opposition to the 126,000 foreign troops currently based in Afghanistan. Coalition forces are alert to the issue as they implement a new counter-insurgency strategy designed to reverse the momentum of a nearly nine-year insurgency and begin withdrawing troops next year.

ISAF's admission Monday that foreign forces shot dead three women in eastern Paktya province in February came after an initial denial and claims that the victims were found bound and gagged. Two newspapers -- the New York Times and Britain's The Times -- reported that US special forces tried to cover up the deaths by removing bullets from the bodies. An ISAF spokesman said he could not comment on the cover-up claims. The head of US and NATO troops, General Stanley McChrystal, has introduced tactical changes to reduce the risks to civilians, like paring back air strikes and raids on residences. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, widely criticised for blaming massive fraud during his re-election last year on the international community, on Sunday welcomed the change of approach. "When there's an incident, he (McChrystal) comes and apologises," he told tribal leaders in Kandahar, the spiritual home of the Taliban which is expected to be the focus of a major anti-insurgency push in the coming months. "There've been changes in behaviour with the arrival of this new general but we are still not convinced. I want more changes," Karzai said, calling for an end to house searches. The United Nations has said that the overwhelming majority of civilian deaths -- put last year at 2,412 -- are caused by Taliban assaults, usually through crude bombings and suicide attacks.
by Staff Writers
Lahore, Pakistan (UPI) Apr 6, 2010
Pakistan's main Taliban faction has claimed responsibility for the attack on the U.S. consulate in Peshawar and threatened to carry out more attacks on Americans.

Among the seven people killed in the suicide attack were two guards working for the consulate in the garrison city of 2.5 million people and the capital of the country's North-West Frontier province.

"We accept the attacks on the American consulate. This is revenge for drone attacks," Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman Azam Tariq told media by telephone from an undisclosed location. "We have already told you that we have 2,800 to 3,000 fidayeen (suicide bombers). We will carry out more such attacks. We will target any place where there are Americans."

Police have closed off the area around the consulate in the urban business and residential setting along Khyber Road. "They came in two vehicles," said Bashir Ahmed Bilour, a minister in the North-West Frontier province government. "The militants were well-equipped. It was a well-organized attack."

Local media noted that the police and military would not say if any attackers got away during the ensuing fighting.

Dramatic footage on Pakistani television showed a loud explosion and a billowing white cloud rising high above trees. There followed rapid gunfire and soldiers rushing across a street to the scene with several soldiers helping a wounded man away from the area.

Later footage in the day showed a bombed-out building and several rows of destroyed motorcycles and bicycles. All U.S. citizens were accounted for and there was little damage to the consulate building, a State Department spokesman said.

The BBC reported that several men in cars tried to smash their way into the consulate but were blocked and then the explosions happened. Police told media that one of the men blew himself up close to the gate and then police opened fire after the blast.

Police also said they recovered "some unexploded material" around the site but gave no further details.

A witness told BBC that two armored vehicles parked outside the consulate caught fire.

"I saw attackers in two vehicles. Some of them carried rocket-propelled grenades," said the man.

The Pakistani Taliban were apparently aiming for a feat to match the one last December in Khost, Afghanistan, in which several CIA officials were killed, the BBC said.

Another reason for the attack could be to ease military pressure on Taliban militants in the Orakzai tribal district near Peshawar. Last month Pakistani security forces launched a major operation against the Taliban in the district whose Orakzai tribal elders vowed in 2008 to fight the Taliban.

Only hours before the consulate attack, suicide bombers killed 41 people and wounded more than 80 more attending a rally in the northwest district of Lower Dir next to the Afghanistan border where Pakistan has waged a major offensive against local Taliban insurgents.

The rally was organized by the secular Awami National Party to celebrate plans to rename North-West Frontier province as Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. The new name honors the Pashtun majority population in the province and will replace the British colonial-rule name.

Dozens of Taliban fighters also set fire to eight NATO road tankers returning empty from supplying vehicle fuel to troops in Afghanistan. The attack happened before dawn in the Zakha Khel tribal district of the Khyber Pass, a local administration chief told a private TV station.

"They hurled petrol bombs then lobbed rockets and destroyed eight oil tankers," he said. There were no injuries during the attack that happened while the trucks were parked at a terminal.



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THE STANS
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