http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/story/0,,1869466,00.html
 
Nato claims to have killed 420 Taliban in nine days 

. Estimate of rebel numbers raised to thousands
. Provincial governor killed in suicide bomb blast 


Nato's battle to subdue the Taliban in southern Afghanistan intensified at
the weekend when the international force said it had killed 94 Taliban
fighters in air strikes and ground attacks in the Kandahar region, bringing
the toll from nine days of combat to more than 420 deaths. 
Further east, in Paktia province, a suicide bomber with explosives strapped
to his chest killed the provincial governor, Abdul Hakim Taniwal, his nephew
and a bodyguard. A Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the
assassination and warned of more. "We have prepared a group of
self-sacrificing attackers," Muhammad Hanif, one of several individuals who
claim to speak for the Taliban, told Associated Press. 
Mr Taniwal, a former minister of mines, is the first governor to be killed
since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001. Paktia borders Pakistan, whose
president, General Pervez Musharraf, pledged last week to stop Taliban
infiltration from bases in the country's tribal belt. 
In Kabul, a US military spokesman warned that "at least one" cell of suicide
bombers was seeking targets in the city. "Their primary mission is to seek
coalition or international troops and hit them with suicide bombs," said
Colonel Tom Collins. He said the squad remained "very much a threat". On
Friday, a massive suicide bomb killed 16 people, including two American
soldiers, outside the US embassy, underscoring the insurgents' ability to
strike in the capital. 
The fighting in southern Afghanistan has been sparked by Operation Medusa, a
Nato-led sweep of the region that has triggered Afghanistan's most intense
fighting since 2001. Western officers and analysts say combat in Helmand and
Kandahar, where British and Canadian troops are stationed, is more intense
than in Iraq. 
Nato's estimate of Taliban deaths - 420 in nine days - accounts for almost
half of some earlier estimates of the insurgents' entire force. The toll
cannot be verified as the battle zone is closed to reporters and the Taliban
often bury their dead within hours. Five Canadians and one American have
been killed. 
If true, the Taliban casualty figures could suggest that either the
insurgent ranks have swelled enormously or heavy civilian casualties have
been inflicted. 
Major Scott Lundy, a Nato spokesman in Kandahar, offered a third
explanation. The term Taliban now refers to several layers of fighters
composed of an ideologically driven hard core surrounded by a mix of hired
local guns, drug smugglers and ordinary criminals, he said. Intelligence
estimates put the size of the force at "several thousand". 
He admitted there had been "some civilian casualties" but said Nato had gone
to considerable lengths to warn of the operation, including dropping
leaflets over Panjwayi, one of the worst affected districts, and sending
messages through local leaders. Nato members meet on Wednesday to consider
an urgent request for between 2,000 and 2,500 extra troops to bolster the
embattled mission. 
Meanwhile, a British officer who quit the army after returning from Helmand
last month has gone public with a dismal portrayal of the British mission.
Captain Leo Docherty, the former aide-de-camp to the British commander
Colonel Charlie Knaggs, told the Sunday Times the Afghan campaign was "a
textbook example of how to screw up".


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