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THE STANS
US drone strike kills five in NW Pakistan: security officials

US weighs more troops for north Afghanistan: official
Washington (AFP) March 19, 2010 - US commanders may send an additional 2,500 troops to fend off the Taliban in northern Afghanistan, a region that had been relatively peaceful until recently, a defense official said Friday. US officers were conferring with German commanders leading Regional Command North about shifting some the forces in a US troop buildup to the north instead of the south, the official told AFP. The "tentative" plan was for roughly 2,500 American troops, including trainers for Afghan security forces, to deploy to the north, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

President Barack Obama approved the deployment of 30,000 additional troops in December to turn the war around, and most of the 10,000 that have arrived so far have been sent to the volatile south, the spiritual heartland of the Taliban insurgency. Plans for a possible shift of forces emerged after a senior German general said the NATO-led force was planning an offensive in the northern Kunduz province. General Bruno Kasdorf, chief of staff of the NATO-led International Security and Assistance Force, told German ARD public radio Thursday the operation would be "similar" to the offensive currently underway in the southern province of Helmand involving 15,000 US, NATO and Afghan troops.

Compared to the south, violence is still relatively low in the north, but Taliban forces have stepped up attacks in the area in recent months and tried to disrupt vital NATO supply routes from neighboring Uzbekistan that run through Kunduz, officials said. Another defense official said the Taliban, which has its roots in the Pashtun community, is seeking to expand its reach across the country and tended "to focus on the Pashtun pockets in the north." But he said the center of gravity in the war, for the insurgents and for NATO-led forces, remained in the south, where US reinforcements have poured in since Obama ordered the surge of American forces.

Germany has around 4,300 troops in Afghanistan, the third-largest contingent after the United States and Britain. General Stanley McChrystal, the top commander of US and NATO troops in Afghanistan, told reporters this week that German forces in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif were concentrating their efforts on Baghlan and Kunduz "as well as a number of other areas across the north." He said security was better than in the south but that "effective and focused operations" were still required in the area.

Belgium extends Afghan troop mandate by a year
Brussels (AFP) March 19, 2010 - Belgium's foreign ministry said on Friday it will extend its military presence in Afghanistan by a year, keeping the same number of soldiers but switching the accent onto Afghan troop training. The extension, from the end of this year to the close of 2011, will keep the Belgian military in Afghanistan through national elections due by June, and contrasts with the fall of the neighbouring Dutch government over the issue. Belgium, which has more than 600 military personnel in Afghanistan, has not suffered any casualties there, and neither has there been controversy as in the Netherlands. However, Dutch-speaking Belgian Green and Socialist opponents respectively said the decision was "incomprehensible" and "stupid and wrong." Belgian troops are present in Kabul, securing the international airport, and in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, but the ministry said it would be pulling troops out of airport duties to reinforce existing training commitments in Kunduz.
by Staff Writers
Miranshah, Pakistan (AFP) March 22, 2010
Missiles fired from US drones Sunday killed at least five militants in a restive Pakistani tribal area bordering Afghanistan, security officials said.

"A US drone fired two missiles on a militant compound near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. At least five militants were killed," a senior security official told AFP.

"It is not immediately clear if there was any important target," he added.

Two other security officials and an intelligence official confirmed the drone strike and death toll in Inzar village in North Waziristan tribal district.

"The targeted compound belongs to a relative of a militant commander," the official said.

US drone attacks target Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked commanders in the nuclear-armed country's northwest tribal belt, where militant networks have carved out havens in lawless mountains outside direct government control.

North Waziristan, which is infested with multiple militant factions, is increasingly the focus of the US drone war against Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters active in nearby Afghanistan.

Washington calls Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and the most dangerous region on Earth, where Islamist militants are fuelling the war in Afghanistan, now into its ninth year.

North Waziristan's prominence in the covert US drone war has grown since a Jordanian Al-Qaeda double agent blew himself up killing seven CIA employees in a neighbouring Afghan province in December.

Under US pressure, Pakistan's military claims to have made big gains against Taliban and Al-Qaeda strongholds over the past year, following major offensives in the northwestern district of Swat and in South Waziristan.

More than 830 people have been killed in more than 90 US strikes in Pakistan since August 2008, with a surge in the past year as President Barack Obama puts Pakistan at the heart of his fight against Al-Qaeda.

earlier related report
Air strikes kill 15 Taliban in Pakistan: officials
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) March 21, 2010 - Air strikes killed 15 Taliban in restive Pakistani northwestern tribal areas on Sunday as militants beheaded three tribesmen accusing them of spying for the United States.

Five militants were killed in a strike on a village in Orakzai tribal district, where militants fleeing a military operation in South Waziristan tribal district have taken refuge.

"Two jet fighters carried out air strikes at a militant hideout at Ghiljo. Five militants were killed," a senior paramilitary official told AFP.

In a second air strike in Kurram, another tribal district, 10 militants were killed, the official and local administration chief Fazal Qadir said.

The death toll could not be verified by independent sources as the area is under military operations.

In North Waziristan, another tribal district and known as a Taliban hotbed, militants Sunday beheaded three tribesmen they accused of spying for US forces stationed across the border in Afghanistan.

"Notes found with the bodies said the men were killed for spying for the US," tribal police official Nisar Khan told AFP.

Khan said the Taliban accused the three dead men of killing "several Taliban and ordinary people."

A local security official confirmed the incident.

Islamist militants frequently kidnap and kill local tribesmen, accusing them of spying for the Pakistani government or US forces, who are battling a Taliban-led insurgency in war-torn Afghanistan.

Late on Sunday missiles fired from US drones killed at least five militants in North Waziristan, security officials said.

"A US drone fired two missiles on a militant compound near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. At least five militants were killed," a senior security official told AFP.

"It is not immediately clear if there was any important target," he added.

Two other security officials and an intelligence official confirmed the drone strike and death toll.

"The targeted compound belongs to a relative of a militant commander," the official said.

Elsewhere, a remote-controlled bomb attached to a bicycle killed three people and wounded 14 others in Quetta city, capital of the southwestern province of Baluchistan.

The blast, targeting a senior policeman, killed his driver and security guard as they drove past but the officer was not in the car, police official Hamid Shakeel told AFP.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but similar bombings have been blamed on separatist, secular tribal rebels in Baluchistan.

A timed bomb planted on an oil tanker carrying fuel for NATO forces in Afghanistan exploded near the southwestern town of Chaman but there were no casualties, police said.

Pakistan's rugged tribal regions have been wracked by violence since becoming a stronghold for hundreds of Taliban and Al-Qaeda rebels who fled across the border to escape the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001.



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THE STANS
Afghanistan courts powerful China and its cash
Beijing (AFP) March 21, 2010
Afghan President Hamid Karzai travels to China this week eyeing investment from his mighty neighbour, which prefers helping rebuild his war-torn nation to military involvement. More than eight years after the Taliban regime was toppled by US-led forces, Karzai will also seek to strengthen ties with China, increasingly seen as a key player in maintaining stability in Afghanistan after US troo ... read more







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