Monday, June 22, 2015

Taliban fighters converge on key city

Taliban fighters converge on key city

Washington Post - ‎3 hours ago‎
KUNDUZ, Afghanistan - Taliban forces were less than four miles from this strategic northern city Monday after seizing control of two key districts over the weekend, triggering fears that they could capture their first Afghan city since U.S.
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Taliban fighters converge on key city

   
 Taliban forces were less than four miles from this strategic northern city Monday after seizing control of two key districts over the weekend, triggering fears that they could capture their first Afghan city since U.S.-backed forces toppled the hard-line Islamist regime in late 2001.
The government in Kabul has dispatched reinforcements, including Afghan Special Forces and their U.S. advisers and trainers, to try to repel the insurgents and rescue about 75 soldiers and policemen trapped inside their district base. But as of Monday evening, the Taliban remained in control of the districts, including one separated from Kunduz city only by a wide, brown river.
“It is a critical situation,” said Mohammad Omer Safi, the governor of Kunduz province.
Not since the Taliban’s collapse has the population of an Afghan metropolis faced such intimidation from the insurgency. Starting this spring, the Taliban has focused its efforts on gaining territory in Kunduz and other northern provinces, straying from its traditional battlefields in the south and east. Whoever controls Kunduz, a vast, rich agricultural region that was a former Taliban bastion, controls the roads to northeastern Afghanistan as well as smuggling and trade routes into neighboring Tajikistan and the rest of Central Asia.
Two months ago, the Taliban reached the edges of Kunduz city, only to be pushed back by Afghan forces. But in recent days, its fighters have surged again and now control large swaths in four of the six districts in the province.
The Taliban advances coincided with a bold daytime strike mounted by the insurgents Monday on the heavily secured Afghan parliament in Kabul, deploying a suicide car bomber and militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades to target lawmakers. There were no fatalities, other than the seven attackers killed by Afghan forces. But it was a reminder that the Taliban, even as it presses into provincial areas, is also waging a bloody campaign against the national authorities and symbols of governance.
In Kunduz, a city of 300,000 people, the bloodshed is expected to intensify. With most U.S. and international forces departed, and Afghan security forces stretched thin fighting on several fronts, the prospect of a Taliban takeover of the city has prompted the government to call in to service many pro-government militias, raising concerns of more violence and abuses.
“The city is under pressure from all sides,” said Haji Amanullah Othmanzai, a tribal elder, rattling off the names of areas overrun by the insurgents to the north, east, west and south of the city.
Thousands of civilians have been caught in crossfire or displaced by the conflict, spawning a humanitarian crisis that is already worse than any seen in the north since 2001. Tens of thousands more remain trapped in battle zones, especially in the two overrun districts — Chardara and Dashti Archi. Over the weekend, wounded civilians, including women and children, streamed into the city to the Doctors Without Borders hospital, the only major medical facility in the region.
They included 13-year-old Ziauddin who was shot in the chest by a stray bullet in his village in Chardara as he was lifting watermelons into a car.
“For ten minutes, I didn’t feel anything,” Ziauddin recalled Monday, as he lay in a hospital bed. “But when I touched my chest, I saw the blood.”
He nearly died. With no car of their own, his father placed him in a wooden pushcart and wheeled him to the river. They crossed in a boat into the city, where a relative drove them to the hospital. The journey took more than an hour.
“It was raining bullets,” said Ghulabdeen, who like many Afghans uses only one name. “I barely managed to get my son out.”
In the course of its northern-focused campaign this year, the Taliban forces have advanced steadily from the province of Badakhshan, along the border with Pakistan, to Kunduz, a distance of more than 120 miles. Foreign fighters, mostly from Central Asia and flushed into Afghanistan from an ongoing operation in neighboring Pakistan’s border areas, have bolstered its ranks.
The goal is to forge a safe haven in Kunduz and other northern areas from which to destabilize the Afghan government as well as secular regimes in former Soviet Central Asian republics, say Afghan officials and military commanders. Ahmed Rashid, a prominent regional expert on Islamic militancy, has argued that militants aligned with the Islamic State are joining forces with Afghan and Pakistani Taliban factions along the Tajikistan-Afghanistan border.
“The nature of the fighting has changed,” said Lt. Gen. Murad Ali Murad, the deputy chief of staff of the Afghan National Army. “The fighting in Badakhshan, in Kunduz, is taking place under the leadership of the foreign fighters. They want to be linked to the Central Asian terrorists and mafia groups. And so Kunduz and the north are strategically important for them.”
Others see a more symbolic reason for the Taliban’s concentration on the north. Kunduz was the last major city held by the group before its fall to the American-backed mujahideen forces two months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks sparked the U.S.-led intervention. The Taliban, some say, are also seeking to bolster their bargaining position before possible peace talks with the government.
Mawlavi Salam, the Taliban commander for the north, is from Kunduz, noted the provincial police chief, Gen. Abdul Sabur Nasrati. “They know the territory, and the local people,” he said.
On Sunday, the insurgents seized control of Chardara district, just to the south of Kunduz city, forcing Afghan security forces personnel to flee. Taliban snipers were ensconced in trenches expertly firing at targets, killing at least three Afghan soldiers, according to pro-government militia fighters involved in the battle and military and police officials. The insurgents also bombed a strategic bridge across the river, preventing Afghan forces from resupplying their comrades.
And when U.S.-trained Afghan Special Forces arrived at the scene, they mistook the pro-government militias for Taliban fighters and fired at them, killing two, said local officials and militia fighters. Nasrati called the incident “a mistake.”
As of Monday night, the 75 Afghan soldiers and police remain trapped inside their base in Chardara district with enough ammunition for three days, said Safi, the provincial governor.
The government and military, he said, has asked the U.S. military to provide air support to push the Taliban back. So far that hasn’t materialized, save for a U.S. fighter jet screeching over the city on Sunday.
If the 75 men don’t get help soon, “they will all be killed,” Safi said.
By Monday morning, the Taliban had overrun the district of Dashti Archi, east of Kunduz city, said provincial officials and tribal elders. But even with the Taliban close to the city gates, there was little sign of panic in Kunduz. Shops were open, markets were bustling.
“In the past 35 years of war in Afghanistan, the city has changed hands so many times,” explained Othmanzai, the village elder. “The people are used to this now.”
As he stood by his son’s bed, Ghulabdeen declared he needed neither side. His farm is under fire from both the Taliban and government forces. He can’t grow his tomatoes, and he’s running out of money, he said. “I pray to God to demolish both sides.”
Mohammad Sharif contributed to this report.
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Taliban fighters converge on key city



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