[Peace-discuss] Light at the end of the tunnel
C. G. Estabrook
galliher at illinois.edu
Sun Jul 25 18:54:11 CDT 2010
Top U.S. officer warns Afghan war will get worse
By Jonathon Burch and Sayed Salahuddin
KABUL | Sun Jul 25, 2010 5:51pm EDT
KABUL (Reuters) - More NATO troops will die in Afghanistan as violence mounts
over the summer, but Washington's goal of turning the tide against the
insurgency by year's end is within reach, the top U.S. military officer said on
Sunday.
The remarks by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, on a
visit to the country, came as the Taliban said they were holding captive one of
two U.S. servicemen who strayed into insurgent territory, and that the other had
been killed.
It also comes less than a week since a major international conference in Kabul
agreed that the Afghan government should aim to take responsibility for security
in all parts of the country by 2014.
Mullen, who called the troops' disappearance an "unusual circumstance," said
there would be more violent incidents to come, but the U.S. military was doing
everything possible to find the missing men, who were both from the Navy.
A spokesman for the NATO-led force declined to comment on the Taliban's
announcement it was holding one of the men.
The Navy described both men as still missing.
"Forces on the ground in Afghanistan are doing everything they can to locate and
safely return our missing shipmates," Admiral Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval
Operations, said in a statement.
The Afghan government said on Sunday it was checking reports from villagers that
civilians had been killed in a raid by foreign forces in Sangin, in southern
Helmand province, on Friday.
The NATO-led force said it was aware of reports of the incident and was
investigating, but would not comment further until further details were
available. Such incidents have triggered outrage in the past among the
population against the international troops whose mission is to protect them.
Elsewhere, Taliban guerrillas captured a remote district from the Afghan
government after days of clashes in eastern Nuristan province, officials said on
Sunday.
A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said police were working to recapture
Barg-i-Matal, a district that has changed hands several times in recent months.
U.S. troops pulled out of the remote and mountainous region in line with
Washington's strategy of giving priority to protecting population centers.
Violence in Afghanistan is at its highest of the 9-year war as thousands of
extra U.S. troops, dispatched by President Barack Obama in December, step up
their campaign to drive insurgents out of their traditional heartland in the south.
Last month was the deadliest for foreign troops since 2001, with more than 100
killed, and civilian deaths have also risen as ordinary Afghans are increasingly
caught in the crossfire.
"As we continue our force levels and our operations over the summer ... we will
likely see further tough casualties and levels of violence," Mullen told a news
conference in Kabul.
Despite the rise in casualties, Mullen said "slow but steady" progress was being
made and that Washington's strategy of reversing the insurgency's momentum was
still obtainable by the end of the year. The next months would be crucial, he added.
"No one is declaring victory but there is progress," said Mullen. "I believe
that goal is still achievable and certainly the proof of that will be what
happens over these next many months in what is a very challenging period."
TALIBAN SAY HOLDING AMERICAN
The two U.S. servicemen were reported missing on Friday after failing to return
in a vehicle they had taken from their compound in Kabul, the NATO-led force said.
Rumors circulated in local and international media about the fate of the missing
men and how they had managed to stray into an insurgent-controlled area in Logar
province, a short but dangerous 100 km (60 miles) drive south of the capital.
One provincial official said alcohol was found in their vehicle.
A spokesman for the Taliban said the militant group's leadership would decide
the fate of the surviving captive.
"We have the body of the dead soldier and the other one who is alive. We have
taken them to a safe place," said Zabihullah Mujahid by telephone from an
undisclosed location.
The Taliban frequently play down their losses and hype their successes, and
independent verification of their reports is usually impossible.
Apart from confirming two servicemen had gone missing, the military has provided
very little information to media. Leaflets depicting photos of the pair were
distributed in Logar on Sunday and announcements on local radio stations offered
a $20,000 reward for information leading to a rescue.
The only other foreign soldier believed held by the Taliban is Idaho National
Guardsman Bowe Bergdahl, whose capture in June last year triggered a massive
manhunt. His captors have issued videos of him denouncing the war, in what the
U.S. military has called illegal propaganda.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66O1G220100725
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