http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110529/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan_taliban_sprin
g_tactics

 


Taliban's new tactic: High-profile inside jobs


By PATRICK QUINN and RAHIM FAIEZ, Associated Press Patrick Quinn And Rahim
Faiez, Associated Press - 1 hr 38 mins ago

KABUL, Afghanistan - A car with the license plate of a high-ranking Afghan
general approached the gates of the Defense Ministry in Kabul last month. A
special "A" pass also was on its windshield, so guards quickly waved it
through.

Once inside, a man in an army uniform jumped from the car and stormed the
ministry's main office building, an Afghan government official said. He
gunned down two Afghan soldiers before being killed. The gunman also wounded
an Afghan army officer, who died later at a hospital.

The April 18 attack - brazen and cleverly orchestrated by insurgents - is
indicative of the high-profile yet small-scale attacks that are trademarks
of the Taliban's spring campaign. Unable to match the firepower of the
U.S.-led coalition and Afghan forces, insurgents conduct suicide bombings
and assaults on government buildings, figuring these types of attacks will
prove their resilience.

On Saturday, a suicide bomber wearing a police uniform detonated a vest
laden with explosives at a provincial governor's compound in northern
Afghanistan, killing two top Afghan police commanders and wounding the
German general who commands NATO forces in the north. Two Germans and two
other Afghans died.

It's unclear how deep of a dent the U.S.-led military campaign made in the
insurgency over the winter or if these attacks are preludes to more
widespread fighting by the Taliban this summer. Insurgents need to take back
part of the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, their traditional
strongholds, if they hope to retain their power base and the opium fields
that fund their movement.

"Certainly the types of attacks they are now doing is an indicator they
don't want to send a large number of fighters against coalition or Afghan
National Security Forces because they know they will get the worse of that,"
said Lt. Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman for the coalition. "The types of
attacks they are doing are intended to create a propaganda flash and try to
discredit the Afghan government."

Military and NATO officials, including the top commander in Afghanistan,
Gen. David Petraeus, have predicted heavy fighting this summer. They have
also predicted the Taliban will continue its campaign of terror and
assassination. That campaign targets anyone who backs the Afghan security
forces, peace talks with insurgents, or the Afghan government's
reintegration program designed to lure Taliban foot soldiers back into their
communities with offers of economic development for their villages.

"This is going to be a tough fighting season. The Talibs are not going to
take these security gains laying down, and we have already seen them trying
to come back. There are no certainties here," said British Maj. Gen. Phil
Jones, a veteran of four tours in Afghanistan and NATO's point man on
efforts to reintegrate Taliban fighters back into society.

Nearly all the Taliban's recent attacks have been on a small scale, with one
or two notable exceptions in the mountainous northern province of Nuristan -
a remote area where no permanent NATO or Afghan forces are deployed.
Insurgents, however, have increased the tempo of assaults with attacks
conducted by disgruntled Afghan soldiers and police or militants
impersonating soldiers.

"The enemy is making huge efforts to infiltrate Afghan security
organizations," Gen. Abdul Rahim Wardak, the Afghan defense minister,
recently told parliament.

The Taliban claim that indirect tactics, such as suicide attacks,
assassinations and infiltration, are part of their new strategy against the
government.

"The mujahedeen are able to infiltrate into the ranks of the enemy and are
using these opportunities to attack," Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid
said after the attack.

Since September 2007, the coalition has recorded 21 incidents in which a
member of the Afghan security forces - or someone in a uniform used by them
- have killed coalition forces. Forty-nine coalition troops, including at
least 35 Americans, have been killed. At least six members of the Afghan
security forces also died in the incidents.

Of the 21 incidents, eight were attributed to combat stress or personal
disagreements; seven were due to unknown motives; four involved members of
the Afghan security forces who were co-opted by insurgents or sympathetic to
the insurgency, and two involved attackers who were impersonating Afghan
police or soldiers.

The sale of Afghan security force uniforms is banned in Afghanistan, but
they are still easily obtained.

While insurgents have claimed credit for nearly all the attacks, no evidence
has been found suggesting they have successfully embedded individuals in the
Afghan security forces with the intent to attack coalition forces, training
mission officials said.

In the two most recent attacks in Kabul, however, militants had inside help.

In the attack on the Defense Ministry, the man who drove the car with
heavily tinted windows into the facility was the nephew of the general, the
government official told The Associated Press. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to disclose the
information. 

The Afghan army would never stop or search a vehicle driving into the
ministry with a special pass on its windshield, the official said, adding
that the general had not yet been told about the car or the involvement of
his nephew, who is believed to have fled to Pakistan where many insurgent
groups have safe havens. 

The official said the investigation was still under way, and he would not
elaborate as to why the general had not been questioned, or whether he even
knew that a vehicle assigned to him by the ministry was used in the attack. 

A month later, on May 21, the Afghan intelligence service said a soldier
serving with the security unit at the main military hospital in Kabul picked
up a Pakistani national and drove him to a mosque in the capital. There,
inside a restroom, the man slipped an Afghan army uniform over a suicide
explosives vest and got back into the soldier's official vehicle. 

He was then easily driven through the gates. The attacker blew himself up in
a tent being used as a cafeteria. The explosion killed six Afghan students
and wounded 23 others. No foreigners were injured. 

Police later arrested the driver - a soldier who had been in the army for
eight months. NATO said the Taliban-affiliated Haqqani network was
responsible.

 



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