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The Sandbox and Areas Reports Thread (July 2006)

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Coalition soldier killed in Afghanistan
17 Jul 2006 Source: ITN
http://www.channel4.com/news/content/news-storypage.jsp?id=596121

A coalition soldier has been killed and 11 others wounded in heavy fighting with the Taliban in southern Afghanistan.

Foreign troops operating in Tarin Kot district of Uruzgan province came under heavy fire after attacking and destroying a truck which insurgents were loading with mortar equipment, the US led coalition said in a statement.

The nationality of the dead soldier and of those wounded have not yet been released.


Daily Violence Is Now Routine in Afghanistan
By Benjamin Sand Islamabad   17 July 2006  VOICE OF AMERICA
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-07-17-voa13.cfm

Coalition forces in southeastern Afghanistan killed four suspected al-Qaida extremists Sunday, and a day later a suicide bomb blast in Helmand province has destroyed a local government office and killed three people. Isolated but continuous acts of violence have become a striking part of daily life in Afghanistan.

Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Yousef Stanezai says the suicide bombing gutted the local justice department office in Lashkar Gah, capital of the southern province of Helmand. "The explosion collapsed the building and caused the killing of three persons and wounded eight," said Stanezai. Witnesses say the dead and wounded had to be dug from beneath the building's rubble.
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Twelve dead in Afghanistan; terrorist suspect seized (2nd Roundup)
Jul 17, 2006, 
http://news.monstersandcritics.com/southasia/article_1181813.php/Twelve_dead_in_Afghanistan_terrorist_suspect_seized__2nd_Roundup_

Kabul - At least 12 people died Monday in clashes in Afghanistan, including a high-ranking justice official, four Afghan and coalition soldiers and four suspected fighters with the al-Qaeda terrorist network.

A suspected local terrorist leader, Amir Gul Hassanyar, was also detained over the weekend in the northern province of Kunduz, where a large weapons cache was also seized.

The Taliban-led insurgency has been rigorously intensifying in the southern provinces, where NATO forces are due to take over the command of the southern region from US-led coalition forces by end of this month. On Sunday, more than three dozen people were killed, including 27 Taliban militants.


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Maintaining order in Afghanistan 
Analysis   By Alastair Leithead, in Helmand   BBC News  17 July 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5188092.stm

The fighting in southern Afghanistan has been fierce and unrelenting, with British soldiers not just repelling fire, but battling for their lives against a determined enemy.

Clashes have consistently raged for hours in the desert heat - the UK forces have used everything from air strikes and artillery shells to hand grenades.

Soldiers only use hand grenades when their enemy is just metres away.
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2 justice officials killed in Afghanistan
By AMIR SHAH Associated Press Writer  The Associated Press - July 17, 2006
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4051746.html

KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide attacker killed two top justice officials and a third employee in their southern provincial office on Monday, while coalition troops killed four al-Qaida suspects in the east, officials said.

A grenade was thrown into a wedding party in southeastern Khost province late Sunday, killing one man and wounding 16, while Taliban militants blew up an empty boys' high school in neighboring Paktika province, police said.
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Taleban 'energised' by UK troops 
Saturday, 8 July 2006 - BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/5160256.stm

Six Britons have died in the Helmand province in the last month
The presence of British troops in Afghanistan has "energised" the Taleban, the defence secretary says.
Des Browne said the "scale and nature" of the opposition became clear when UK troops were first deployed to Helmand.
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Heavy Fighting in Afghanistan; 100 Taliban Members killed
Written by The Media Line Staff Monday, July 17, 2006
http://themedialine.org/news/news_detail.asp?NewsID=14406
 
As fighting continues between the American-led coalition in Afghanistan and the Islamist forces of the Taliban, reports indicate that Taliban has lost some 100 fighters since last Thursday.

During Monday's battles in the southern province of Helmand, 37 Taliban fighters were killed and 22 were wounded.
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Taleban will be broken by year-end: Afghan minister
(Reuters) 17 July 2006 -  Khaleej Times Online
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/subcontinent/2006/July/subcontinent_July589.xml&section=subcontinent

SINGAPORE - NATO and Afghan forces will be able to break the back of Taleban resistance in southern Afghanistan before the end of this year, the country’s defence minister said in an interview published on Monday.

General Rahim Abdul Rahim Wardak told the Financial Times in Kabul Afghan intelligence had learned that the Taleban’s command and control structure was fragmenting due to heavy losses and many mid-ranking commanders were fleeing to safety in Pakistan.

“I think that in the next two or three months there will be some major changes,” Wardak said, predicting that by November Taleban militants would have lost steam
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Afghanistan: Tactics and techniques 
Tuesday, 11 July 2006  BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/5147832.stm

International forces in Afghanistan are facing mounting security problems. The Taleban - ousted from Kabul in the 2001 US-led invasion - have regrouped over the last couple of years, and are now a resurgent force in the south and east of the country.
Although there are no reliable estimates of their current manpower, Taleban tactics are nothing new.

Their fighters follow exactly the same principles of low-level guerrilla warfare as the mujahideen fighters who inflicted heavy losses on the Soviet army which occupied Afghanistan from 1979-89.
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4 al-Qaida suspects killed, 3 captured in southeastern Afghanistan Canadian Press
Published: Monday, July 17, 2006
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=6ee89163-66d8-459e-8842-92eaf5bf7166&k=48538

KABUL (AP) - Coalition forces killed four al-Qaida suspects and captured three others in southeastern Afghanistan on Monday, while a roadside bomb killed three Afghan soldiers in the south, officials said.

Suspected Taliban militants also blew up a boy's high school in the southeast early Monday, but there were no casualties, a provincial official said. Coalition soldiers raided a terrorist hideout near the village of Pelan Kheyl in Khost province, which borders Pakistan, hunting an al-Qaida operational leader, a U.S. military statement said.

Four suspected al-Qaida members were killed in the raid, but it was unclear whether the target was among them. Three other al-Qaida members were arrested and a weapons cache was destroyed, the statement said. The nationalities of the killed and detained suspects were unclear.
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Bomber Kills 4 in Afghanistan; Coalition Forces Clash With Taliban
By REUTERS  Published: July 17, 2006 New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/17/world/asia/17afghan.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, July 16 (Reuters) — A suicide bomber struck outside a government building in Afghanistan on Sunday, killing three civilians and an Afghan soldier, as the American-led coalition pushed on with a big offensive in the volatile south
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U.S. Reaches Deal With Kyrgyzstan for Continued Use of Air Base
By THOM SHANKER - Published: July 15, 2006 -
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/15/world/asia/15military.html

WASHINGTON, July 14 — The United States and Kyrgyzstan signed an agreement on Friday to allow American and coalition military aircraft to continue using a Kyrgyz air base to support operations in Afghanistan, government officials said.

The Kyrgyz government had threatened to evict American and coalition airplanes — mostly refueling and transport craft — from the base, at Manas, if the United States did not sign an agreement to pay higher rent and service fees.

An official statement issued in Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet republic, announcing the resolution of the issue did not say how much the United States would pay for continued use of the base.

“The United States will compensate equitably the Kyrgyz government and Kyrgyz businesses for goods, services and other support of U.S. operations,” Sean McCormack, the State Department spokesman, said on Friday.

He said the United States expected More on link

UK troops attacked in Afghanistan 
16 July 2006, 23:02 GMT 00:02 UK   BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5186000.stm

British troops took fire from Taleban fighters hiding in a hospital
British troops say they have come under fire from Taleban fighters hiding in a hospital in southern Afghanistan.
A military statement said forces in Helmand province defending a government compound were under sustained attack.
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Extra UK troops arrive in Kabul 
BBC News Thursday, 13 July 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5177608.stm

The first of 1,000 additional UK troops to be sent to the lawless Helmand province in Afghanistan have arrived in the country.
More than 3,000 British troops have been deployed to Afghanistan since May. The current deployment will boost numbers to 4,500.

They are there to combat the resurgent Taleban, the drug trade, and help reconstruction efforts.

It comes after six UK soldiers were killed in Helmand in the past month.

The 1,000 troops are primarily made up of infantry and engineers and are part of a strengthened Nato force.
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Mortar attacks becoming routine for troops in Afghanistan
Some use humor to cope with life in combat zone
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes, Monday, July 17, 2006
http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=38678

Leo Shane III / Stars & Stripes
Staff Sgt. James Hilton, left, and Sgt. 1st Class Leslie Zaricor, both of the Army’s 1st Battalion, 210th Aviation Regiment, chat beside bunkers near their barracks the day after two mortar rounds struck Kandahar Airfield. Troops here say the attacks are becoming more annoying than frightening.

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — The first thing Sgt. Ken Moore did when he heard the two mortar rounds slam into camp was sprint for his unit’s bunker.

Once he got there, he wished he had remembered his PlayStation
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Dr. Spanta wants good ties with Pakistan amid war on terror
Monday July 17, 2006 Pak Tribune
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=150037

KABUL: Afghan Foreign Minister Dr. Rangeen Dadfar Spanta has stressed the need of good ties with Pakistan in war on terror and joint stance and common language between the EU, America and other countries.
He expressed these views while talking in a press conference after his arrival from US here on Saturday.

He reported that he had discussed Afghanistan problems; terrorism and the elements involved in terrorism with US officials and EU leaders and that they had a complete harmony of views on these issues.

He underscored that the US officials back Karzai’s government because the actual problem of Afghanistan is the maintenance of corrupt-free government where the human rights especially women rights are valued and law is obeyed.
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Cost of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to top $500 billion in 2007
Thursday June 29, 2006 Pak Tribune
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=148346

KABUL: The costs of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq wil pass the $500 billion mark next year, says a Congressional Research Service report, the National Journal’s CONGRESS DAILY has reported today.
The Congressional Research Service is a non-partisan arm of Congress. Excerpts from the registration restricted article follow:.

The overall cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and other global anti-terror operations since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks will top $500 billion next year, according to congressional estimates and expectations of future funding.

The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service said in a report that through the current fiscal year ending Sept. 30, the government will have spent $437 billion on overseas military and foreign aid funding. That includes the latest supplemental spending bill signed into law this month, which provided $69 billion for the war effort.
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Iranian manufactured tractors to capture Afghanistan's market
Kabul, July 16, IRNA Islamic Republic News Agency - Iran
http://www.irna.ir/en/news/view/menu-234/0607166192193923.htm

Iran-Afghanistan-Tractors
A Iranian economic delegation arrived here Sunday in Kabul to conduct market survey for large-scale sales of Iranian manufactured tractors.

Representative from Iran's Tractor Manufacturing Company Darband Azar told reporters that the Iranian economic delegation is to meet officials from Afghan ministries of commerce, agriculture and finance to pave the way for export of Iranian made tractors to Afghanistan.

In the first phase of such contract, some 2,000 tractors are to be exported to Afghanistan on an installment basis, he said.

Most Afghan farmers use traditional equipment and tools which do not meet the demand of ever increasing population in the country.
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AFGHANISTAN: Drought leaves thousands destitute
17-07-2006 - KALAT, (IRIN) - Muslim News
http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/news/news.php?article=11381

Hundreds of families in southern Afghanistan have been displaced by a drought.

Abdul Ahad, 40, said it had forced him out of his village in the Seyourray district of the southern province of Zabul. He lost his cattle, wheat and grapes when his village well ran dry four months ago.

"Everything I planted there is now dead due to the harsh drought this year," Ahad, a father-of-six, said on Sunday from Kalat city, capital of Zabul province, where he and his destitute family had just arrived.

He said that he desperately needed help to feed his malnourished family and to find somewhere to live.
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Pakistan: US set to notify on F-16 deal
29-06-2006 - Muslim News
http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/news/news.php?article=11278

WASHINGTON, Dawn: The US administration plans to officially notify the Congress within 24 hours of its intention to sell F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan, according to official sources.

They told Dawn once the notification was issued, the Congress would have 30 days to reject the offer but if it failed to do so, the deal would be considered endorsed.

On March 25, 2005, the US announced a dramatic shift in its arms sale policy to South Asia by unveiling plans to sell F-16 aircraft to Pakistan.

Pakistan has been frustrated for years in its desire to buy new F-16s for its air force, which already has 32 aircraft of older models.

The US Congress cancelled a sale of about two dozen F-16s to Pakistan in 1,990 because of differences over Islamabad’s nuclear programme.

But Washington began to reconsider Islamabad’s request for the fighter jets after the Sept 11, 2001 terrorist attack when Pakistan became a key ally in the US-led war against terrorism.
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Afghanistan must never become Britain’s Vietnam
Monday 17th July, 2006 -  Arabic News
http://www.onlinenews.com.pk/details.php?id=100032

LONDON: The two excellent articles by Brian Brady highlight the total failure of the government and the Ministry of Defence to appreciate the real needs of the army in Afghanistan to conduct the campaign against the Taliban (’Cabinet rift as more troops set to fight Taliban’, ’Fighting a losing battle’, July 9).

Yet again senior generals in the MoD have weakly agreed to reduce the number of infantry battalions in the army when the one crucial element so desperately needed in Afghanistan is to have infantry soldiers on the ground. The Army Board must be bitterly regretting cutting four badly needed battalions from the army establishment.

Neither the government nor the generals seem prepared to take any account of the history of warfare in Afghanistan. Britain suffered terrible defeats at the hands of local tribesmen in the past and the recent experiences of Russian forces should surely have given the generals a clear signal that this was going to be a deployment that was going to be taxing in the extreme.
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Coalition Didn't Kill Afghan Non-combatants
American Forces Press Service - Jul. 17, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060716_5662.html

WASHINGTON, July 16, 2006 – Assessments from Helmand Province, Afghanistan, do not conclude that non-combatants were killed as a result of operations against extremists on July 12, according to coalition officials.
Extremists likely fabricated reports of civilian deaths as a propaganda ploy to discredit coalition forces and the government of Afghanistan, officials said today.

"We take great care to prevent and minimize any damage to property or injury to law-abiding citizens," said Col. Tom Collins, a coalition spokesman for Combined Forces Command Afghanistan. "We will continue in our operations to defeat those who attempt to impose their will upon the local population through intimidation and fear.

"We also call on the citizens of Helmand to cooperate with the coalition to defeat extremists who offer nothing for the betterment of the people," Collins continued. "Until such time as a sufficiently safe and secure environment is established in Helmand province, development prospects will remain limited and the population's quality of life will remain low."
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Coalition Forces Kill Terrorists, Strike Taliban Commander
American Forces Press Service - Jul. 17, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060717_5672.html

WASHINGTON, July 17, 2006 – Coalition forces in Afghanistan had a long string of successes against terrorists during the last two days, military officials reported. They killed four suspected terrorists today, attacked the safe house of a known Taliban commander last night, thwarted a terrorist attack from a hospital yesterday, and confiscated a large weapons cache yesterday.
Coalition forces killed four suspected al Qaeda terrorists, detained three suspected al Qaeda terrorists and destroyed a weapons cache during an early morning raid today in Kwost province near the village of Pelan Kheyl. The operation was to capture or kill an al Qaeda operational leader who is a significant threat to Afghan and coalition forces in the Khowst province, officials said.

Elsewhere, Afghan and coalition forces attacked the safe house of a known Taliban commander in the Sangin district of Helmand province last night. A variety of intelligence assets identified the extremist's location before the compound was attacked with joint fire and the building destroyed, officials said. The commander's name will be withheld for security reasons until his death is confirmed, officials said.
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Taliban Extremist Kills Five; 22 Wounded in Suicide Blast
American Forces Press Service   July 17, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060717_5671.html

WASHINGTON, July 17, 2006 – A suicide bomb attack in the Gardez district Afghanistan's of Paktia province killed five people and wounded up to 22 others, mostly innocent civilians, yesterday, military officials reported.
An extremist armed with a suicide vest detonated his explosives as an Afghan National Army patrol approached. One Afghan soldier and four Afghan civilians were killed in the blast. Two Afghan soldiers and up to 20 more innocent Afghan civilians were wounded by the explosion and transported to a local hospital for treatment. Several vehicles and structures also were damaged.

A coalition quick reaction force and explosive ordnance disposal team responded to the scene to help investigate and secure the site.
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http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060716_5662.html

Officials: Coalition Didn't Kill Afghan Non-combatants
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, July 16, 2006 – Assessments from Helmand Province, Afghanistan, do not conclude that non-combatants were killed as a result of operations against extremists on July 12, according to coalition officials.

Extremists likely fabricated reports of civilian deaths as a propaganda ploy to discredit coalition forces and the government of Afghanistan, officials said today.

"We take great care to prevent and minimize any damage to property or injury to law-abiding citizens," said Col. Tom Collins, a coalition spokesman for Combined Forces Command Afghanistan. "We will continue in our operations to defeat those who attempt to impose their will upon the local population through intimidation and fear.

"We also call on the citizens of Helmand to cooperate with the coalition to defeat extremists who offer nothing for the betterment of the people," Collins continued. "Until such time as a sufficiently safe and secure environment is established in Helmand province, development prospects will remain limited and the population's quality of life will remain low."

On July 12, 20 extremists engaged a coalition patrol with rocket-propelled grenades and machine-gun fire in and around the village of Sharageh in Helmand province, needlessly putting innocent civilians in danger, officials said. Close-air support was available but not employed due to the possibility of endangering innocent Afghan civilians.

It is a common extremist tactic to fight without regard for civilian lives, and to mix in with and operate around civilians. Extremists do this knowing coalition forces will use extraordinary restraint to prevent injury to innocent civilians, officials said.

For example, on July 13 in Uruzgan province near the district of Khas Uruzgan, ANA and coalition forces repelled an attack by 20 enemy fighters with small-arms fire, killing one extremist. The joint patrols took precautions to avoid harm to Afghan civilians during the operation, and there were no reports of Afghan civilian injuries.

Coalition forces have had a presence in the Nowzad district since mid-May, working alongside the Afghan National Police to protect the district's center in assisting the provincial government in providing security. The coalition forces have come under repeated attack from extremists.

During engagements in the last 16 days, the coalition has reported 22 attacks, including 13 incidents of small-arms fire, 13 incidents of heavy machine-gun fire, 48 incidents in which rocket-propelled grenades were used, 40 in which mortar rounds were used and five sniper attacks.

In response to the ferocity of these attacks, air support was called in on six occasions, officials said. Ordnance was dropped against identified locations from which extremists were firing at coalition forces and no munitions missed their targets.

In one strike, the coalition did hit a building used as a former school that had been closed by the Taliban. This building was empty for some time and extremists were using it as a position to launch mortar attacks, officials said.

Other areas targeted in the July 12 operation also were clear of civilians after days of fighting between coalition forces and extremists. One ANP member was wounded during the operations.

The coalition expects extremists to continue to level accusations of civilian deaths against the coalition as a propaganda ploy, officials said. Although the coalition takes every allegation seriously, extremist spokespeople fabricate claims on a near-daily basis, they said.

Officials urged media representatives to be skeptical about such reports and to validate claims with the coalition or Afghan government officials before reporting on them.

Coalition forces take extreme precautions to limit the chance of civilian casualties. But officials said that as long as the enemy chooses to fight in or near civilians, the possibility of civilians being endangered will exist.
 
Canadians extend Afghan push
TERRY PEDWELL Canadian Press 18/07/06  Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060718.wafghan0718/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Canadian soldiers, worn and exhausted from five days of continuous battles and sleeping in desert sand, aren't letting up the fight in Afghanistan's Helmand province.

The Canadians — roughly 600 of them — have wrapped up their part in Operation Mountain Thrust, designed to hunt down Taliban insurgents in a wide area west of Kandahar.

But now, with word that Taliban forces have overtaken two towns in Helmand, the Canadians are staying in the field.

The U.S.-led military forces have confirmed the Taliban capture of the two southern towns, and it has vowed "decisive action" to reclaim them.
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Canada will need to keep fighting, ISAF commander says
TERRY PEDWELL Canadian Press  Globe & Mail 18 July 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060713.wcanafgh0713/BNStory

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Canadian soldiers will likely have to endure more bloody battles with Taliban militants, even after next month's takeover of the volatile Kandahar region by NATO forces, the commander of ISAF operations in Afghanistan says.

ISAF, the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, hopes to take control of the country's south by the beginning of August from a U.S.-led coalition that has launched increasingly deadly offensives against insurgents in the area.

It is hoped the expanded NATO-led force will be able to place more of an emphasis on reconstruction efforts than on offensive military operations.
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Taliban seize 2 towns, police flee
Tuesday, July 18, 2006  CNN
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/07/17/afghanistan.taliban.ap/index.html

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Taliban militants have seized two towns in tumultuous southern Afghanistan, forcing police and government officials to flee, officials said Monday.

The Taliban operate freely in large areas of southern Afghanistan and police presence there often is virtually nonexistent, but insurgents only were known to have completely seized one town since their hard-line regime was toppled by U.S. forces in 2001.

They were quickly driven out of that town, Chora, in Uruzgan province.
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Vice and virtue are two words to fear in Afghanistan
Tuesday July 18, 2006  By Tom Coghlan - New Zealand Herald
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=2&ObjectID=10391711

The Afghan Government has alarmed human rights groups by approving a plan to introduce a religious watchdog similarly named to the body the Taleban used to enforce its extremism.

The proposal to revive the Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which came from the country's Ulema council of clerics, has been passed by the Cabinet of President Hamid Karzai and will now go before the Afghan Parliament.

"Our concern is that the department doesn't turn into an instrument for politically oppressing critical voices and vulnerable groups under the guise of protecting virtues," said Human Rights Watch's Sam Zia Zarifi.
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Afghanistan Engineer District links provinces to districts
Tuesday July 18, 2006 (0218 PST) Pak Tribune
http://paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=150147

KABUL: If there’s a road to success in Afghanistan, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Afghanistan Engineer District commander says it’s not only building physical roads, but it’s also connecting the provincial governments to the people through overall infrastructure improvements.
AED is supporting the international community’s effort to rebuild Afghanistan by concentrating at the provincial and district level, said Col. Christopher J. Toomey, AED commander and staff engineer for Combined Forces Command-Afghanistan, or CFC-A.

Established in 2004, AED’s programs and projects have spent more than $1.8 billion on a variety of projects such as roads, bridges, ANA facilities, power and water infrastructure, Toomey told reporters here during a CFC-A sponsored “media roundtable.”
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India, Afghanistan browbeating Pakistan on US behest: Akram Zaki
Tuesday July 18, 2006   Pak Tribune
http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=150138

ISLAMABAD: India and Afghanistan are browbeating Pakistan on behest of the United States, said former foreign secretary Akram Zaki.
"New Delhi is taking advantage of our foreign policy as we ourselves are being subjected to terrorism. All Indian allegations are concocted and groundless," Akram Zaki expressed these views in his chat with a group of journalists here Monday.

"We demonstrated flexibility to India beyond limitations, which the latter took advantage of. We have offered everything demanded by New Delhi but when the matter reach to take decision on Kashmir, then the Indian government used to employ means tactics or started leveling allegations on Pakistan," he said. 
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Burqa fashion - that little number for all occasions
Tuesday July 11, 2006 New Zealand Herald
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/location/story.cfm?l_id=12&ObjectID=10390639

KABUL - Fashion is the new fashion in Afghanistan, it seems, with two designers holding the first catwalk display in the country for decades.

Models glided down the runway in new takes traditional garb - burqas included - to mark the semi-historic event in front of expatriates and well-heeled Afghans at a luxury hotel amid the rubble and poverty of the capital.

All of the models, however, were expatriate women, highlighting that attitudes to Afghan women have a long way to go until Kabul replaces Paris as the capital of de rigueur.

The organisers said they did not want to court controversy in what is a deeply conservative Muslim country by having Afghan models.
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Searing heat new enemy in Helmand
Thursday July 6, 2006 By Tom Coghlan New Zealand Herald
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/location/story.cfm?l_id=12&objectid=10389894

KABUL - British forces in Afghanistan are facing an air supply crisis because nearly half of their helicopter transport fleet is unable to fly during the day due to the searing Helmand heat

The 3300 British troops in the south of Afghanistan rely on a total of six Chinook and four Lynx helicopters for all their transport and supply needs. But military sources have confirmed that the Lynx, an attack and utility helicopter, is adversely affected by the extreme heat and thin, rising air of the Helmand desert, and has been limited to use between dusk and dawn only when the extreme temperatures fall to acceptable levels.

The British military spokesman with the Helmand force, Captain Drew Gibson, declined to comment on Lynx's problems, citing "operational reasons" and Lieutenant Rob Hunt, the British military spokesman in Kabul, defended the limitations.
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U.N.: Afghans at risk from drought
2.5 million people endangered, international organization says
Tuesday, July 18, 2006 -   CNN
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/07/18/afghanistan.drought.ap/index.html

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- The Afghan government will launch an appeal to raise funds for drought-affected areas in north and west Afghanistan, U.N. officials said Monday.

Areas of Afghanistan are regularly gripped by drought, which has hampered various agricultural harvests, particularly wheat, across this impoverished Central Asian nation.

"The north and northwest have been directly affected by drought and poor wheat harvests," Serge Verniau, country representative for the Food and Agriculture Organization, told reporters in the capital, Kabul.
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Afghan troops to deploy in southern town
Tue. Jul. 18 2006  CTV News -Associated Press
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060712/afghan_troops_060718/20060718?hub=World

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Afghan troops on Tuesday prepared to deploy to a town in southern Afghanistan that one official said had been overrun by Pakistani militants.

Between 300 and 400 Afghan soldiers were heading to the southern town of Garmser, near the Pakistani border, said Amir Mohammed Akhunzada, the deputy governor of Helmand province.

"Our soldiers are going to Garmser with the support of the coalition to take it back from the Taliban," he said.

In Kabul, Deputy Interior Minister Abdul Malik Sidiqi accused Pakistan-based Islamic groups Lashkar-e-Tayyaba -- an outlawed militant organization -- and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam -- a pro-Taliban political party -- of taking over Garmser.

Sidiqi said a second Helmand town that had been overrun by militants -- Naway-i-Barakzayi -- was reclaimed by government forces late Monday.
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AFGHANISTAN: INCREASING PRESSURE WITHIN THE UNION
(AGI) - Rome, July 17
http://www.agi.it/english/news.pl?doc=200607172040-1270-RT1-CRO-0-NF82&page=0&id=agionline-eng.italyonline

Prime minister Prodi's approval of the proposal to deploy UN troops to the Middle East was welcomed by several representatives of the ruling majority. Nevertheless, the centre-left is still focusing its attention on the upcoming vote on the re-financing of the Italian mission in Afghanistan. The tension was still high today when the decree was first being discussed in the lower house due to the fierce opposition of some representatives of the radical left. "I don't fear any friction" said Prodi from St. Petersburg, "I hope that decisions will be taken unanimously
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US-led coalition offensive in southern Afghanistan disrupts Taliban network
The Associated Press (apwire) -  2006-07-18 OhmyNews 
http://english.ohmynews.com/ArticleView/article_view.asp?no=305973&rel_no=1

A massive anti-insurgent operation in southern Afghanistan has ''seriously disrupted'' the Taliban network operating in the region, the U.S. military said Tuesday, although militants chased police out of two towns.

Operation Mountain Thrust, which was launched in earnest in June, involves more than 10,000 U.S., British, Canadian and Afghan soldiers trying to crush Taliban militants operating in four southern provinces.

''Afghan and coalition forces have killed numerous low and midlevel commanders that the senior Taliban leadership rely on to intimidate villages, threaten elders and lead small bands of extremists to conduct attacks on Afghan and Coalition forces,'' U.S. spokesman Lt. Col.PaulFitzpatrick said in a statement
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Taliban fighters seize 2 districts, but lose 1 
Agence France-Presse, The Associated Press July 18, 2006
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/07/18/news/afghan.php

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan Taliban militants had control of at least one district in southern Afghanistan on Tuesday, but were beaten back after briefly taking control of another, Afghan officials said.

The U.S.-led coalition in southern Afghanistan said that it was aware of the claims but could not confirm them, and stated that a massive anti-insurgent operation in southern Afghanistan had "seriously disrupted" the Taliban network operating in the region.

"Afghan and coalition forces have killed numerous low- and mid-level commanders that the senior Taliban leadership rely on to intimidate villages, threaten elders and lead small bands of extremists to conduct attacks on Afghan and coalition forces," a U.S. spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Paul Fitzpatrick, said in a statement.

The coalition said the offensive had been most effective in the northern reaches of Helmand Province, including Sangin, Musa Qala and Baghran districts.
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Afghanistan Has Come Far Since 2001 `Liberation,' Rumsfeld Says
July 18 (Bloomberg) --
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=atzzkkkT__8o&refer=us

Afghanistan has made substantial progress since the overthrow of the Taliban regime in 2001, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in a letter addressed to the Afghan people.

``It is sometimes easier to see the progress made from a distance,'' Rumsfeld said in the letter posted today on the Web site of the Combined Forces Command - Afghanistan. ``It is clear to most outside observers that Afghanistan has come far since its liberation in 2001.''

Rumsfeld, who visited Afghanistan last week, said the U.S. remains committed to the country's success. His letter was sent to Afghan newspaper editors, the military command said.

Afghanistan has experienced increasing violence as Taliban forces respond to the U.S.-led coalition and the Afghan army expanding operations in southern and eastern provinces. Taliban fighters took control of two towns in the southern province of Helmand in recent days, the Associated Press reported.
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Germany-Afghanistan-Security
July 18, IRNA
http://www.irna.ir/en/news/view/menu-234/0607182783152629.htm

Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung departed Berlin on Tuesday to visit German troops based in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e Sharif, news reports said.

Jung who has repeatedly expressed concern over the worsening security situation in Afghanistan, plans to tour the unsafe region.
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Taleban threatens major offensive in Afghanistan
(AFP)  18 July 2006
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/subcontinent/2006/July/subcontinent_July641.xml&section=subcontinent

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - Taleban militants vowed on Tuesday to intensify their insurgency with fresh attacks and suicide bombings, saying they would shortly take control of southern Afghanistan.

“During these operations which will begin today or tomorrow, we’ll take most of the districts in southern and south-central Afghanistan,” purported Taleban spokesman Mohammad Hanif told AFP.

The threat came as the Afghan government confirmed that the rebels had forced government forces out of at least one district in the troubled southern province of Helmand late Monday.
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Warrior Mentality Persists in Afghanistan
July 19, 2006  strategypage.com
http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htinf/articles/20060719.aspx

The Afghan Army is having a hard time losing old habits. The average Afghan soldier is tough and enjoys a fight, and has successfully undergone modern infantry training. But too many of them still think like warriors, not soldiers. For example, a recent fire fight, involving 20-30 Taliban and platoon of Afghans, demonstrated this. The Afghans wanted to charge right into the Taliban, despite the fact that they'd received some pretty good training in fire and movement tactics. Fortunately the advisor with them got them to apply their training. The Taliban force was routed, with no casualties of the Afghan soldiers.
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Canadian base in Afghanistan hit by rocket as Taliban threatens more violence
Terry Pedwell, Canadian Press    Wednesday, July 19, 2006
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=a9d89010-a1c1-4f79-92a9-200442fbc1aa&k=77710

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (CP) - The Kandahar Air Field, where Canadian soldiers are based, came under rocket attack again Wednesday as the Taliban threatened escalated attacks against foreign forces in Afghanistan.

It was the second attack in less than four days and the sixth attack since the end of June, when two Canadians were injured.

A coalition soldier was injured in Wednesday's attack when a single rocket slammed into the base.
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Canadian troops occupy Taliban-burned school and hospital
Ethan Baron, CanWest News Service; Vancouver Province -  Wednesday, July 19, 2006
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=f0fb10ec-e18c-4c5b-a0cd-1c06602a3748&k=91172

HELMAND PROVINCE, Afghanistan - Canadian troops braced for rocket attacks Tuesday after occupying a United Nations-built school and hospital that the Taliban had burned and vandalized.

An estimated 30 to 50 Taliban chased off about 40 Afghan national police from the small village of Nawa, located 100 kilometres southwest of Kandahar, on Monday evening.

Villagers told Canadian soldiers the Taliban burned the school in the evening, held a prayer and left.When the Taliban are in the area, they sleep in hidden spots among the orchards, villagers said.

When the Canadian A Company arrived Tuesday afternoon with several platoons of U.S. soldiers, books and chairs were still smouldering in a number of school rooms, and shards of smashed window glass crunched beneath the soldiers' boots.
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Extremists Use Holy Sites For Attacks, Hit Civilian Targets
American Forces Press Service   July 19, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060719_5690.html

WASHINGTON,– Extremists in Afghanistan attacked coalition forces from a religious site yesterday, and targeted several civilian areas this week, including a bridge, a school and a wedding party, military officials in Afghanistan reported.
Extremists began firing on coalition forces in the village of Nowzad in Helmand province yesterday. The sniper fire came from the direction of a religious shrine. There were no reported injuries to coalition forces or damage to equipment.

In a separate incident in Kandahar province, a supply convoy received small-arms fire from a nearby mosque. While there were no casualties in this incident, this act by the extremists is against the Geneva Convention, officials said.

"To use religious buildings as hiding places and to fire from them is a clear message that the extremists use religion only when it is in their best interests," said Army Col. Thomas Collins, coalition spokesman. "The extremists place no value on human life and continue to threaten the safety of the Afghan people. The extremists today, for example, said they were 'holy warriors.' What kind of 'holy warrior' uses a shrine as a firing position? The extremists abuse the word 'mujahedin.' They are, in fact, 'mufsidun,' corrupt people who seek nothing but inflicting harm on the Afghan people."
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Afghan, Coalition Forces Enter Southern Villages
American Forces Press Service  July 19, 2006
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060719_5688.html

Afghan and coalition forces reasserted authority in two villages reported to be under Taliban control in the Helmand province of southern Afghanistan, military officials reported.
The combined forces moved into the village of Narwa in the Nawa Barakzayee district yesterday, meeting no resistance and finding no Taliban extremists. There were no indications of damage or violence as the village was secured.

Although media sources had reported the Taliban was in control of Narwa, village elders said a group of Taliban had been in the village, but had since left the area well before Afghan and coalition forces arrived. The extremists had damaged the police station and a school, and many school books were destroyed. The fleeing Taliban left two caches of mines and rocket-propelled grenades behind.

A separate task force of Afghan and coalition forces occupied the district center of Garmser early this morning. The combined task force defeated enemy resistance overnight outside of Garmser, and waited to occupy after first light to prevent confusion within the village that might jeopardize the safety of civilians. More on link

Two Task Force Warrior soldiers killed in Afghanistan
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes  July 19, 2006
http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=38730

FORWARD OPERATING BASE LAGMAN, Afghanistan — From March until Sunday, members of Task Force Warrior operated in regions with some of the heaviest concentration of Taliban fighters without losing a single servicemember in combat.

In the past two days, they’ve lost two.

On Sunday, a soldier was killed in a firefight as he relieved troops standing guard at an outpost in the Deh Chopan district of Zabul province.

On Monday, a soldier from Company B was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade during an ambush that occurred while his unit cleared a riverbed in Tarin Kot district in nearby Uruzgan province.

Maj. Rafael Paredes, executive officer for the task force, said six other soldiers were wounded in the attack, two severely. U.S. officials reported that five other servicemembers received minor injuries.
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Afghanistan another fine mess
JEFFREY SIMPSON From Wednesday's Globe and Mail  19/07/06
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060719.wxcosimp19/BNStory/National/home

With Israeli bombs blasting Lebanon and dozens of daily killings defining Iraq's civil strife, it's easy to forget Afghanistan, except when a Canadian gets killed and our media blanket the story.

Just now, however, about 600 Canadians are fighting with U.S., British and Afghan soldiers in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan.

Within that province, they have concentrated in the Sangin region; there are as many soldiers and police officers as there are residents.

They aren't having much success, according to news reports, in finding the Taliban and their allies, despite considerable military efforts. While Canada and its allies hunt for the Taliban in this area, the Taliban have captured two other Helmand towns, Garmser and Nawa-i-Barakzayi.
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Troops’ turn to speak:
Most believe conditions in Afghanistan have improved
By Joseph Giordono, Stars and Stripes Mideast edition, Wednesday, July 19, 2006
http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=38714

Just over 60 percent of troops who responded to a Stars and Stripes survey in Afghanistan said current conditions in the country had improved compared to when they first arrived there, while 37 percent said conditions were the same.

Only two percent of those who responded said conditions had grown worse during their deployment
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DoD Identifies Army Casualty
July 18, 2006 
http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/2006/nr-13476.html

The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom

Sgt. Robert P. Kassin, 29, of Las Vegas, Nev., died on July 16 at Larzab Base, Afghanistan, when his platoon encountered enemy forces small arms fire during combat operations.  Kassin was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, Fort Polk, La.

Europe must expect more casualties in Afghanistan-EU
By David Brunnstrom   Wed 19 Jul 2006 The Scotsman
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1051052006

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Europeans must be ready for more losses and a long struggle as NATO takes over the fight against Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan, the EU special representative to the country said on Wednesday.
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Coalition reclaims second town from Taliban
AMIR SHAH Associated Press 19 July 2006 Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060719.w2afghan0718/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

KABUL — Afghan and coalition soldiers reclaimed the second of two southern towns Wednesday that had been overrun in recent days by the Taliban, Afghan and U.S. officials said. A purported Taliban statement threatened "severe" action in coming days.

Hundreds of ground forces battled Taliban fighters before entering the Helmand provincial town of Garmser, which had been captured by insurgents on Sunday, said General Rahmatullah Roufi, the Afghan army commander in the country's south.

“Our troops launched an attack on Garmser and thank God we captured it,” Gen. Roufi told The Associated Press. He declined to provide details.
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One coalition soldier killed, 11 wounded in S. Afghanistan
July 18, 2006 People's Daily Online
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/18/eng20060718_284304.html 

One coalition soldier was killed and 11 others injured during a fierce battle against Taliban militants in the southern Uruzgan province of Afghanistan, coalition forces said in a press release on Tuesday.

During the battle on Monday in Tarin Kowt district, capital of the province, coalition troops attacked and destroyed a truck which extremists were loading with mortar equipment, it said.

The attack was followed by a heavy engagement with Taliban fighters and assessments of their casualties were yet to be reported.

All coalition casualties were medically evacuated to a coalition hospital in Tarin Kowt, while the killed soldier's nationality has not been announced.

Afghanistan has suffered from a rise of Taliban-linked violence this year, during which over 1,100 people, mostly Taliban militants, have been killed.

About 60 foreign troops, most of whom are U.S. soldiers, also lost their lives in this war-weary country in the same period.

Afghanistan: Proposal To Create Morality Department Causes Concern
By Golnaz Esfandiari 19 July 2006 Radio Free Europe
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/07/e945ff89-0fe4-4a15-b524-16fc67682466.html

A proposal to create a Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice has caused worry and fear among Afghans and human rights groups. They warn that the plan reminds them of the Taliban's Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which forcefully imposed religious and moral codes. However, government officials say the new department will not use force to promote Islamic principles in society.


PRAGUE, July 18, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Farid, a student at Kabul University, was once violently beaten and jailed for several days by a Taliban religious patrol because his beard was not long enough.

He tells RFE/RL that the plan to create a Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice reminds him of those "dark days."
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Afghanistan denies Taliban reflection in plan to revive Vice-Virtues Ministry
18 July 2006  -  K P L C TV
http://www.kplctv.com/Global/story.asp?S=5166104&nav=0nqx

KABUL, Afghanistan The Afghan government says it's not harkening back to the brutal Taliban regime but it plans to establish a new Vice and Virtues Ministry.

Human Rights Watch says the plan "raises serious concerns about potential abuse of the rights of women and other vulnerable groups."

But a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai (HAH'-mihd KAHR'-zeye) says Afghan citizens should not be scared because the new ministry won't be like the Taliban's hard-line office.

The spokesman says this new ministry will "take into consideration moral and religious activities to help improve Afghan society."
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Briton indicted on U.S. terror charges
Wednesday, July 19, 2006  CNN
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/LAW/07/19/terror.indictment.ap/index.html

Web sites raised money for al Qaeda, indictment says

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (AP) -- A British man was indicted Wednesday on charges he helped run terrorism fundraising Web sites, set up terrorists with temporary housing in England and possessed a classified U.S. Navy document revealing troop movements.

Syed Talha Ahsan was arrested at his home in London, England, on a federal indictment in Connecticut charging him with conspiracy to support terrorists and conspiracy to kill or injure people abroad.

Ahsan is accused in the same case as Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist who was indicted in Connecticut in October 2004.

Both are accused of running several Web sites including Azzam.com, which investigators say was used to recruit members for the al Qaeda network, Afghanistan's ousted Taliban regime and Chechen rebels.
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Coalition reclaims town from Taliban
AMIR SHAH, The Herald (UK), 19 Jul 06
http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/66171.html

US-led forces yesterday reclaimed the town of Naway-i-Barakzayi in Afghanistan from militants, following its seizure by Taliban operatives the day before. The coalition said yesterday that it would launch operations to reclaim other territory from the Taliban in the south of the country. Militants still hold Garmser, a town of several thousand people.  An official from the International Organisation for Migration said about 4000 Afghans had fled fighting between Taliban and coalition forces in southern Helmand province in recent days . . . .


One of two 'Taliban-held' Afghan districts freed
Agence France Presse, 19 Jul 06
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060718/1/426be.html

Afghan and coalition forces have fought heavy battles to retake two districts in southern Afghanistan captured by Taliban militants, expelling the rebels from one by evening.  The Islamic rebels took over the remote and largely lawless southernmost Garmser and adjoining Naway-i-Barakzayi districts of Helmand province late Monday . . . .

Afghanistan forces prepare to retake Taliban-held district
Agence France Presse, 19 Jul 06
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060718/1/4265x.html

Troops are preparing to retake a district in southern Afghanistan captured by Taliban militants who burnt the national flag, as the rebels warned they would step up their attacks.  The Islamic rebels took over southernmost Garmser district in Helmand province on Monday after days of fighting, the president's office told reporters in the capital, confirming claims by district officials . . . .


Aid agencies retreat from southern Afghan province
Reuters (UK), 18 Jul 06
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/18072006/325/aid-agencies-retreat-southern-afghan-province.html

Some aid agencies said on Tuesday they had reduced activities in the Afghan province of Helmand over safety concerns, less than a fortnight before NATO is due to take over peacekeeping operations in the south.  Militants and their drug gang allies have launched almost daily attacks against U.S.-led coalition troops in the south in the past six weeks . . . .


Taleban drives out aid agencies
Times Online (UK), 19 Jul 06
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2275990,00.html

Aid agencies are preparing to pull out of southern Afghanistan in the face of increased attacks by the Taleban. Abdul Khaliq, of the Bangladeshi aid group BRAC, said the group had evacuated its staff from the province of Helmand while Muhammad Nasir Foshanji, of Mercy Corps, said that the agency had reduced its operations . . . .


Afghan, Coalition Forces Take Control of Town Held by Taliban
Bloomberg wire service (USA), 19 Jul 06
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601102&sid=aE_OhKoHzX1I&refer=uk

Afghan and U.S.-led coalition forces took control of a town briefly held by Taliban fighters in the southern province of Helmand and are advancing on a second controlled by the militia, the U.S. military command said.  Residents of Narwa said a group of Taliban gunmen entered the area three days ago and later left, the Combined Forces Command - Afghanistan said yesterday in a statement. Coalition forces are moving toward the nearby town of Garmser, it said . . . .


NATO set to expand Afghan operations
The Scotsman, 19 Jul 06
http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1046962006

NATO allies have made last-minute offers of more aircraft to ensure the alliance can take over military operations in southern Afghanistan by the end of the month as planned, it was announced yesterday.  The United States' general James Jones, NATO's top commander of operations, had threatened to delay the expansion south if a shortage of helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft and other equipment was not overcome . . . .


Afghan Insurgents Attack Girls' School
UPI Wire, 18 Jul 06
http://www.postchronicle.com/news/breakingnews/article_21229050.shtml

Afghan insurgents attacked a girls' school in the northeast province of Laghman, launching up to five rocket-propelled grenades. . . .


British army helicopter fires on Afghan hospital after attack
Daily Mail, 17 Jul 06
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=396111&in_page_id=1770

A British helicopter launched a precision-guided missile at a hospital in Afghanistan after troops on the ground came under machine-gun fire from the building, the Ministry of Defence announced today.  The attack was authorised only after the ground commander had confirmed that there were no patients or staff present in the hospital, said the MoD . . . .
 
Sweat, blood and tears fall on Afghan soil, but after battle, Canadians push to rebuild
21 July, 2006 Globe and Mail  CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
http://www.theglobeandmail.com//servlet/story/LAC.20060721.BLATCHFORD21/TPStory/National/columnists

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN -- Warrant Officer Hans Kievith yesterday squinted into the blinding white light of the Afghanistan morning and offered a pragmatic assessment as another 45 of his countrymen boarded a Canadian C-130 Hercules en route to Tarin Kot, where the Dutch have their Provincial Reconstruction Office in volatile Uruzgan province.

Asked how public opinion was back home in the Netherlands, he replied serenely, "Oh, at this moment, it's fine. There's no injured and dead people. That's when it changes . . . it's the same in all the countries."

How right he was.

A recent Strategic Counsel poll taken for The Globe and Mail and CTV News after the death in combat of Corporal Tony Boneca reveals a dramatic weakening of support in Canada for the mission here.

As pollster Timothy Woolstencroft said of the results, "We think that we're peacekeepers, not peacemakers. Canadians haven't really come to understand that we have a combat role." According to Mr. Woolstencroft, Canadians' "sense of wellness" about the mission is being eroded.
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Taliban ambush Canadian troops on patrol in southern Afghanistan
Friday, July 21, 2006    Ottawa Citizen   
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=1d99b42b-dc19-4b3a-9e42-a11f7b60202a&k=66872

Ethan Baron, CanWest News Service
Published: Friday, July 21, 2006
DARVISHAN, Afghanistan -- Taliban fighters ambushed a Canadian patrol here with rockets and small arms fire Thursday as the soldiers attempted to extend coalition control over the town.

Military brass had ordered the troops, scheduled to return to the Kandahar Airfield Base earlier this week, to stay in the field and secure two government district centres.

One, in Nawa, was secured Tuesday without a fight. The troops' return to base has now been delayed until Saturday as they wait for British forces to take over the operation in Darvishan.

Following the noon-time ambush on Two Platoon, Canadian armoured vehicles and ground troops were sent in from a nearby patrol base.

They immediately came under fire from two Taliban positions. Soldiers crossed a footbridge over a canal, took cover behind a metre-high mud wall, then fired machine guns and assault rifles and launched grenades in the directions of incoming fire.

Five light-armoured vehicles (LAVs) had pulled up onto a road parallel to the mud wall and blasted rapid-fire explosive cannon rounds and vehicle-mounted machine guns at Taliban positions.
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Dutch Commandos Kill 18 in Afghanistan
MIKE CORDER  The Associated Press  Friday, July 21, 2006  Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/21/AR2006072100475.html

THE HAGUE, Netherlands -- Dutch commandos killed 18 enemy fighters who set up positions in rugged hills overlooking a Dutch camp in southern Afghanistan, the country's military chief said Friday. There were no Dutch casualties during a 10-day mission.

"If we had not done something then our soldiers could have come under fire and the construction of our camp could have been hindered," Gen. Dick Berlijn, commander of the Dutch armed forces, told reporters in The Hague.
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Diggers injured in Afghanistan
20jul06   The Advertiser
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,19855215%5E1702,00.html

AUSTRALIAN soldiers have received minor injuries during military action in southern Afghanistan.

The Defence Department tonight confirmed Australian soldiers had been injured, but refused to give further details.

AAP understands three soldiers had to be evacuated for medical treatment after a firefight on July 17.

Australia has 300 troops in Afghanistan, with another a 200-member Provincial Reconstruction Team to be deployed this month.

Australian Special Air Service Regiment troops already have exchanged fire with anti-government forces in Oruzgan province, and defence force chief Angus Houston warned in February of a rising incidence of suicide bombings
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German troops to stay in Afghanistan until peace restored
Web posted at: 7/20/2006 9:26:50  Source ::: Reuters
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Pakistan+%26+Sub-Continent&month=July2006&file=World_News2006072092650.xml

MAZAR-e-SHARIF • German troops will stay in insurgency-hit Afghanistan until “permanent peace” is established, the German defence minister said yesterday.

Franz Josef Jung met German troops in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif on the second day of a visit to Afghanistan, which thousands of foreign troops have been helping to secure since the Taleban regime fell in 2001.

“We have come here to bring permanent peace and unless that is accomplished, we will not leave Afghanistan,” Jung said in response to a reporter’s question.

Jung also praised the work of the German deployment, which has since last month been commanding the northern region of a Nato-led force that covers the north and the west and is due to move into the south in the coming weeks.

Germany has about 2,200 troops with the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), most of them based in the north.
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Man killed by dumped bomb in Afghanistan
Thu 20 Jul 2006  The Scotsman
http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=1055402006

Afghanistan : An artillery shell dumped in a pile of rubbish exploded in Kabul, killing one Afghan man and wounding two others today, police said.

The explosion happened in the west of the capital early Thursday and police raced to the scene to investigate the cause, local police chief Zulmay Khan said.
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World must step up efforts to develop Afghanistan, says NATO chief
Thursday, July 20, 2006   canada.com
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=844f8454-3171-4d0e-8eb0-d9c357f5a154&k=36608

KABUL (AP) - NATO's secretary-general said Thursday the international community must step up efforts to develop war-ravaged Afghanistan.

"The international community has to lift its game . . . by also showing commitment to the development of Afghanistan," Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said during a press conference with President Hamid Karzai.

Karzai also urged the international community to do more to stop terror financiers and trainers in and outside Afghanistan.

Canadian troops in Kandahar and British forces in Helmand, currently working with U.S. troops as part of an anti-terror campaign, have met stiff resistance in outlying areas from insurgents wanting to disrupt their mission there.
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Soldier from Nevada helped build Afghanistan school
ASSOCIATED PRESS July 20, 2006
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/nevada/2006/jul/20/072010208.html

LAS VEGAS (AP) - A southern Nevada soldier killed in Afghanistan sought a second tour of duty and helped build a school in a devastated region as part of an effort "to make things right," his father said.

Army Sgt. Robert P. Kassin "requested assignment to go back because the primary mission was to rebuild," Robert Joseph Kassin told the Las Vegas Review-Journal Wednesday in a telephone interview from his home in Clovis, N.M.

Kassin, a retired Air Force avionics technician, said his son was born in Flint, Mich., and lived in Clovis before moving to Las Vegas and enlisting in 1996 during his junior year at a private high school.
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AFGHANISTAN: PRC'S AMENDMENT MEANINGLESS
Rome, July 19 -  AGI
http://www.agi.it/english/news.pl?doc=200607191745-1203-RT1-CRO-0-NF82&page=0&id=agionline-eng.italyonline

"We are not participating in the 'Enduring Freedom' mission and, therefore, there is no way we can withdraw from it" said foreign minister Massimo D'Alema, during today's debate in the lower house on the re-financing of Italian missions abroad. Referring to an amendment put forward by some members of the Refounded Communists (prc), the minister explained that Italy is leading "a naval mission called 'Active Behavoir'.
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Young women keen to join Pakistan army
Web posted at: 7/21/2006 11:44:37    Source ::: Internews
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Pakistan+%26+Sub%2DContinent&month=July2006&file=World_News20060721114437.xml

MULTAN • Numerous young women have appeared for interviews before the government headquarters recruitment and selection centres across the country, with the commitment to serve the nation as commissioned officers in the Pakistan Army.

The interviews began in Multan in central Pakistan after the completion of requirements at the recruitment and selection centres at Karachi Rawalpindi and Peshawar. The seven-member GHQ selection board headed by Major General Nazakat Ali Khan will conduct the interviews of the girls at Lahore on July 21.

About 200 girls from under-developed areas across south Punjab, including former civil divisions of Multan, Bahawalpur and Dera Ghazi Khan, appeared in the preliminary online tests at the Multan recruitment and selection centre.

Of the 200 applicants, 29 reached the interview stage after successfully passing the preliminary test and the Inter Services Selection Board (ISSB).
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Hundreds of tribesmen join peace talks
Web posted at: 7/21/2006 11:44:46  Source ::: REUTERS MIRANSHAH, Pakistan
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Pakistan+%26+Sub%2DContinent&month=July2006&file=World_News20060721114446.xml

Hundreds of Pakistani tribesmen held talks yesterday with military and government officials to halt fighting between security forces and Al Qaeda and pro-Taleban militants near the Afghan border.

The meetings of the tribal jirgas or councils are seen as part of government’s latest strategy to use political means to restore peace in the semi-autonomous tribal belt where hundreds of people have been killed in battles over the past three years.

Around 300 tribesmen and clerics met with military and civil officials in the restive North Waziristan tribal region and called for talks to end violence.

“We have been saying all along that this problem cannot be resolved through bullet, but only through negotiations,” Maulana Nek Zaman, a hardline cleric and lawmaker, told the jirga.

Fakhar-e-Alam Irfan, the top government administrator in North Waziristan, appealed to the tribesmen to support the government’s efforts to restore peace.
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NATO to double military strength to Afghanistan
July 21, 2006  People's Daily Online
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/21/eng20060721_285211.html

The visiting secretary general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Jaap De Hoop Scheffer, on Thursday said that the western military alliance would double its troops to Afghanistan.

"Let me stress again that NATO will double the number of its military, the number of its soldiers," he told journalists at a joint press conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

He gave this assurance amid an increasing Taliban-linked insurgency in the southern Afghan provinces, where more than 800 people have been killed over the past two months.

More than 9,000-storng NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) is presently serving in Afghanistan to assist Afghan government in ensuring stability in the post-Taliban nation.

He made these remarks in the backdrop that NATO is going to formally take the command of the U.S.-led coalition forces in the country on July 31 while more than 1,100 people including some 50 foreign soldiers have been killed in the violence in the war-torn country.
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Interview: Helmand governor says coalition fights "coalition" in S. Afghanistan
July 21, 2006 People's Daily Online
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/21/eng20060721_285156.html

One coalition, mainly grouping the Afghan government, its troops and coalition forces, is carrying out a life-and-death war against the other "coalition," made up of the Taliban and international drug smugglers, in Afghanistan's southern provinces, Helmand Governor Mohammad Daoud said.

"Taking Helmand province as an example, Taliban militants there are using their military forces to convoy international narcotics smugglers, and the latter provides money and many weapons for the Taliban," Daoud told Xinhua on Thursday during an exclusive interview by telephone.

The southern Helmand province, where 3,300 British troops are deployed to fight Taliban insurgents, is famous for vibrant Taliban activities and gigantic poppy cultivation, which accounts for 25 percent of the country's total poppy crop in 2005.

There is apparent evidence to show the Taliban is involved in drug trafficking, as Afghan and the U.S.-led coalition forces have occasionally said they found opium and drugs after capturing Taliban hideouts.

In a recent case, coalition soldiers seized 70 kg opium paste, with an estimated value of 3 million U.S. dollars, in a mud-walled Taliban compound in Helmand on July 13.
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Europe must expect more casualties in Afghanistan-EU
By David Brunnstrom  Wed 19 Jul 2006 The Scotsman
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1051052006

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Europeans must be ready for more losses and a long struggle as NATO takes over the fight against Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan, the EU special representative to the country said on Wednesday.
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Most believe conditions in Afghanistan have improved
By Joseph Giordono, Stars and Stripes  Wednesday, July 19, 2006


Just over 60 percent of troops who responded to a Stars and Stripes survey in Afghanistan said current conditions in the country had improved compared to when they first arrived there, while 37 percent said conditions were the same.

Only two percent of those who responded said conditions had grown worse during their deployment.

The results are culled from a readership survey inserted into editions of Stars and Stripes delivered to Afghanistan this past December and February, with responses tallied into March. The survey questions — along with the results — were compiled by Stripes staff and media research experts from MORI Research, a Minneapolis-based firm.
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Aussie soldiers injured in Afghanistan
July 20, 2006  The Sydney Morning Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/aussie-soldiers-injured-in-afghanistan/2006/07/20/1153166515380.html

Australian soldiers have received minor injuries during military action in southern Afghanistan.

The Defence Department tonight confirmed Australian soldiers had been injured, but refused to give further details.

AAP understands three soldiers had to be evacuated for medical treatment after a firefight on July 17.

Australia has 300 troops in Afghanistan, with another a 200-member Provincial Reconstruction Team to be deployed this month.

Australian Special Air Service Regiment troops already have exchanged fire with anti-government forces in Oruzgan province, and defence force chief Angus Houston warned in February of a rising incidence of suicide bombings
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Musharraf: Taliban gaining power
Pakistan's president calls on Afghanistan to take action
From Syed Mohsin Naqvi  CNN  Friday, July 21, 2006
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/07/20/afghanistan.omar/index.html

LAHORE, Pakistan (CNN) -- Fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar remained in control of his Afghan Islamic militia, which was gaining strength in the south of the country, Pakistan's president said Thursday.

General Pervez Musharraf said the growing strength of the Taliban, which ruled most of Afghanistan from 1996 until the U.S.-led invasion that followed al Qaeda's 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, was having negative effects in Pakistan.

He demanded that Afghanistan's government take immediate steps to stop the infiltration of fighters across the border, warning that the spread of violence could threaten Pakistan.

In contrast, he said, the leadership of the al Qaeda terrorist network, which the Taliban allowed to operate from its territory before the invasion, was on the run and weak.

Omar, along with al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, escaped U.S. forces when the Taliban fell in December 2001. But U.S. and allied troops continue to battle Taliban fighters in southern and eastern Afghanistan, and Pakistan's efforts to crack down on Islamic militants along the border has provoked resistance to government troops in the tribal regions of northwest Pakistan.
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Coalition base attacked in Afghanistan
From correspondents in Kabul  July 22, 2006
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,19870471-5006003,00.html

A SOLIDER from the US-led coalition was killed in eastern Afghanistan when a reconstruction team base was hit by mortars and rockets, the coalition said.

The soldier, whose nationality was not released, died before he could be medically evacuated from the base in Paktika province, a coalition spokeswoman said.
"A group of extremists fired several mortars and rockets at the base in Sharan," Lieutenant Tamara Lawrence said. It not immediately clear how much damage the base had suffered, she said.

The provincial governor, Mohammad Akram Khepelwak, said two rockets were fired at the camp, which was not far from the provincial government headquarters.

Nearly 60 foreign soldiers have been killed by hostile action in Afghanistan this year, which has seen a spike in Taliban attacks and a major new coalition and Afghan operation against the insurgents.

Around half of the dead soldiers have been Americans.

There are around 23,000 US troops in Afghanistan serving with a US-led coalition that helped to topple the Taliban from government in late 2001 and has been here since trying to root out Taliban insurgents and their allies.
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Hundreds of rebels surrender
From correspondents in Quetta  July 21, 2006
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,19870462-401,00.html

THREE hundred tribal militants surrendered to authorities Friday in southwest Pakistan, where President Pervez Musharraf says an insurgency is dying down, officials said.

Pakistani troops also seized a huge arms cache belonging to the autonomy-seeking rebels, who launch almost daily attacks on security forces and government installations in gas-rich Baluchistan province.
Four commanders were among the scores of militants who gave themselves up under an amnesty deal at a ceremony in the gas field town of Sui, senior administration official Abdul Samad Lasi said.

Provincial government spokesman Raziq Bugti said more were expected to lay down their weapons in coming days as "people realise they were misled by their Sardars (clan chiefs)."
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Taliban got inside info:  Average Afghans working at Kandahar Airfield accused of aiding in rocket attacks
Canadian Press, via Toronto Sun, 21 Jul 06
http://www.torontosun.com/News/Canada/2006/07/21/1695479-sun.html

Some of the local Afghans who shovel gravel, sweep floors and clean washrooms at Kandahar Airfield were suspected of being Taliban informants following the first in a series of rocket attacks on the base, say heavily censored military combat reports.  Three 107-mm rockets hit the base in southern Afghanistan on the night of March 28, heralding the start of what's become a long string of intermittent assaults . . . .


NATO Leadership To Visit Southern Afghanistan
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 21 Jul 06
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/7/3F043BF3-35B3-4FC6-881C-13889397D1E2.html

NATO's leadership is expected to continue a visit to Afghanistan today with a visit to the insurgency-troubled south of the country.  Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer and NATO's military operations commander, U.S. General James Jones, were scheduled to briefly visit the southern provinces of Kandahar, Oruzgan, and Helmand . . . .


Afghanistan: Helmand Battles Cast Doubt On NATO
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 20 Jul 06
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/07/ac3cdddd-bb60-4830-a4a3-47fc4851aef3.html

The Taliban's seizure of two remote districts in the Afghan province of Helmand on July 16 has raised concerns about how well NATO can maintain security in remote parts of the country. Allegations from Kabul that Pakistani groups were involved in the Taliban attack also have rekindled tensions between Kabul and Islamabad . . . .


Afghanistan close to anarchy, warns general
Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian Unlimited (UK), 21 Jul 06
http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/story/0,,1826303,00.html

The most senior British military commander in Afghanistan today described the situation in the country as "close to anarchy" with feuding foreign agencies and unethical private security companies compounding problems caused by local corruption.  The stark warning came from Lieutenant General David Richards, head of Nato's international security force in Afghanistan, who warned that western forces there were short of equipment and were "running out of time" if they were going to meet the expectations of the Afghan people . . . .


NATO's top soldier confident about Afghan security
Mark John, Reuters (UK), 21 Jul 06
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyid=2006-07-21T144827Z_01_ISL310891_RTRUKOC_0_UK-AFGHAN.xml&src=rss

NATO chiefs toured volatile areas of southern Afghanistan on Friday and vowed they were ready to take on a resurgent Taliban, 10 days ahead of the alliance's landmark mission in the country.  Underlining the renewed militant threat, a U.S.-led coalition spokeswoman said a foreign soldier was killed when rockets and mortar rounds hit a coalition compound in the southeastern province of Paktika . . . .


Afghan Police to Hire Ex-Militia Men?
Wahidullah Amani, Afghan Recovery Report, Institute for War and Peace Reporting, 20 Jul 06
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=arr&s=f&o=322404&apc_state=henparr

Plans to fill the gaps in Afghanistan’s overstretched police force by hiring local men from southern communities may make sense given the insurgent threat, however some commentators believe the move could given members of illegal armed groups a new lease of life.  The government denies any intention to create a new paramilitary force outside the Afghan National Army, ANA, and Afghan National Police, ANP, but says it needs to recruit local men into the police because it lacks the manpower to cope with rising insurgent violence in the south . . . .


Drought leaves thousands destitute
IRINnewsews.org (UN), 17 Jul 06
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54655&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=AFGHANISTAN

Hundreds of families in southern Afghanistan have been displaced by a drought.  Abdul Ahad, 40, said it had forced him out of his village in the Seyourray district of the southern province of Zabul. He lost his cattle, wheat and grapes when his village well ran dry four months ago.  “Everything I planted there is now dead due to the harsh drought this year,” Ahad, a father-of-six, said on Sunday from Kalat city, capital of Zabul province, where he and his destitute family had just arrived . . . .


NATO Gears Up for Afghanistan Expansion
Constant Brand, Associated Press, via Forbes.com, 21 Jul 06
http://www.forbes.com/business/healthcare/feeds/ap/2006/07/21/ap2896020.html

NATO's top commander said Friday the alliance likely will expand its Afghan mission by year's end to include the entire country, including the lawless east where militants killed a coalition soldier in the latest fighting. The Dutch military said its commandos killed 18 militants in an operation to clear rugged hills near a base for its forces deploying in the insurgency-wracked south, where NATO is preparing to take over the security command by the end of this month . . . .


 
News Reports found on July 22, 2006

Afghan blast kills 2 coalition soldiers: report
Updated Sat. Jul. 22 2006 11:32 AM ET   CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060718/afghanistan_template_060722/20060722?hub=TopStories

Two coalition soldiers have reportedly been killed and eight others wounded after a suicide bomber rammed a vehicle packed with explosives into a coalition vehicle in Kandahar City.

Eight Afghan civilians were also wounded in the blast.

Military officials would not confirm the identity of the soldiers.

"I can confirm that two coalition soldiers were killed and eight wounded in the suicide attack," said coalition spokesman Major Scott Lundy, according to Reuters.

Meanwhile, six Afghan civilians were killed and 20 wounded in a second blast that occurred about 30 metres from the original attack, said Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the governor of Kandahar, according to The Associated Press.
More on link

And this is the report from the Globe & Mail on the same incident

Two Canadians wounded in Afghanistan
Associated Press  POSTED AT 10:59 AM EDT ON 22/07/06 Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060722.wafghansolde0722/BNStory/International/home

Kandahar, Afghanistan — Two Canadian soldiers were wounded when a suicide attacker rammed an explosive laden car into a coalition vehicle in Kandahar City, a local government official said.

Seven civilians were wounded and some may have been killed in a second blast that occurred shortly afterward about 30 metres from the first explosion, said Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the governor of Kandahar.
It was not clear whether the second explosion was caused by a suicide bomber.

The car bomber died in the first the blast, Mr. Ahmadi said.
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The dogs of war
Christie Blatchford  POSTED AT 2:07 AM EDT ON 22/07/06  Globe & Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com//servlet/story/RTGAM.20060722.coblatch22/TPStory/National/columnists

When my baptism of fire came in this tour of Afghanistan, I didn't panic, didn't whimper, didn't freeze. I had only to look after myself, writes

TARIN KOT, AFGHANISTAN — My late father, a navigator with the Royal Canadian Air Force, never talked about his experiences in the Second World War — he sang about them, in verses from The North Atlantic Squadron and other ditties whose titles are too raw to repeat here.

He had what is usually called a good war: He survived, though he lost colleagues; he made some of the most enduring friendships of his life; he believed with every fibre of his being that the Allies were on the side of right (and there were few reporters in those days muddying the waters by balancing off their stories with quotes from Nazi spokesmen, as happens now with “Taliban spokesmen”); he was a part of history, and though he was far too modest to speak directly of this, he rose to meet the challenge of his generation and, on a personal level, conquered the fear he must have felt every time he flew out over the unforgiving waters of the North Atlantic.
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Green Beret from Fort Worth dies in Afghanistan
July 21, 2006, 10:52PM
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/4064442.html

FORT BRAGG, N.C. — A Green Beret based at Fort Bragg died this week when he was shot during a combat reconnaissance patrol in Afghanistan, the Army Special Operations Command said today.

Staff Sgt. Eric Caban, 28, of Fort Worth, died Tuesday after being hit by small arms fire, the military said.
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U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan
July 21, 2006, By The Associated Press
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4064088.html

As of July 21, 2006, at least 257 members of the U.S. military have died in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan as a result of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to the Defense Department.

Of those, the military reports 158 were killed by hostile action.
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Initial reports.....

Two Canadians Killed, Eight Injured in Suicide Car Bomb Attack on Convoy

http://www.canada.com/topics/news/story.html?id=d0ef7802-2189-4823-a4c9-1e8815ad9fc0&k=56678
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060718/afghanistan_template_060722/20060722?hub=TopStories
http://www.deepikaglobal.com/ENG4_sub.asp?ccode=ENG4&newscode=144266
http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_2115.aspx
http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2006/07/22/soldiers.html

Two Canadian soldiers were killed and eight wounded Saturday when their convoy was hit by the first of two suicide bombings near Kandahar City. It was the worst single-day casualty toll yet inflicted on Canadians by the insurgents.  Killed were Cpl. Francisco Gomez, 44, of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, based in Edmonton, and Cpl. Jason Patrick Warren, 29, of the Black Watch, the Royal Highland Regiment of Canada, based in Montreal.  "Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of Cpl. Gomez and Cpl. Warren," said Col. Tom Putt, deputy commander of Task Force Afghanistan. "We will not forget their sacrifice."  Seven Afghan civilians were killed and 30 injured in the second attack.  In the first blast, a Canadian Forces Bison armoured vehicle was rammed by a car packed with explosives.  The Bison was at the tail end of a convoy of Canadians that was heading back to Kandahar Air Field following a gruelling two weeks of fighting.  The attack happened in the early evening, around 5:30 p.m. local time, some six kilometres west of Kandahar.  Then, about an hour later, a suicide bomber walked into a crowd and detonated a body pack filled with explosives, killing and wounding scores of civilians who had gathered in the area.  Both bombers died in the explosions, officials said.  A purported Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the attacks, which came as NATO prepares to take command of the volatile region.  The two Canadians who were killed were transported by road to a coalition outpost, where they were pronounced dead.  The wounded soldiers were airlifted to Kandahar Airfield's multinational hospital.

 
More details of latest CAN deaths, injuries, shared in accordance with the "fair dealing" provisions, Section 29, of the Copyright Act - http://www.cb-cda.gc.ca/info/act-e.html#rid-33409

Reuters
http://ca.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=domesticNews&storyID=2006-07-22T223752Z_01_ISL280595_RTRIDST_0_CANADA-AFGHAN-VIOLENCE-COL.XML
CanWest News (reporter embedded)
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/story.html?id=d0ef7802-2189-4823-a4c9-1e8815ad9fc0&k=56678
Canadian Press (reporter embedded)
http://www.cp.org/premium/ONLINE/member/elxn_en/060722/p072215A.html
Agence France Presse
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060722/1/429g9.html
BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5205754.stm
Bloomberg wire service
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601082&sid=acUIrG0wMlEk&refer=canada

Two Canadian soldiers were killed and eight wounded Saturday when their battle-weary convoy was hit by the first of two suicide bombings near Kandahar City.  It was the worst single-day casualty toll yet inflicted on Canadians by insurgents in southern Afghanistan. Killed were Cpl. Francisco Gomez, 44, of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, based in Edmonton, and Quebec City native Cpl. Jason Patrick Warren, 29, of the Black Watch, the Royal Highland Regiment of Canada, based in Montreal.  Two of the wounded were from Shilo, Man., and the remainder from Edmonton.  Gomez had been driving the vehicle when the attack occurred . . . . Their Bison armoured vehicle was at the back of a convoy of Canadians that was returning to Kandahar Air Field after two gruelling weeks of sometimes intense fighting in the Kandahar region and in neighbouring Helmand province.  Soldiers who had already arrived at the base were celebrating their return, unaware of what had happened to their comrades. However, their joy quickly turned to sorrow when news of the attack spreading across the camp . . . .

(...)

Seven Afghan civilians were killed and 30 injured in the second explosion, about 30 metres away from the first blast, witnesses said.  In the first attack, a car packed with explosives blew up directly beside the Canadian Forces Bison, military officials said.  "They likely only had a split second to react," said one soldier who didn't want to be identified.  "There's no way you can stop something like this."  The attack happened in the early evening, around 5:30 p.m. local time (0900 EDT), some five kilometres west of Kandahar.  Witnesses said in the confusion that followed the attack, the Canadians opened fire on a car and people in the area, perhaps in an effort to avoid being struck again.  "One of the vehicles went too close to the convoy," Abdul Rahman said through an interpreter.  "The Canadians just began firing. They shot (at) everybody.  Men, women and children." 

Military officials, however, disputed the claim.  "There was no return fire," said Putt.  "We have absolutely no evidence of that."  About an hour after the first blast, a suicide bomber walked into a crowd and detonated a body pack filled with explosives, killing and wounding scores of civilians who had gathered in the area.  Both bombers died in the explosions, officials said.  A purported Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the attacks, which came as NATO prepares to take command of the volatile region.  The two Canadians who were killed were transported by road to a coalition outpost, where they were pronounced dead.  The wounded soldiers were airlifted to Kandahar Airfield's multinational hospital.  Five of the injured were treated and released from hospital and were expected to return to active duty while two others were admitted for observation.  An eighth was taken to a military hospital in Germany for further treatment.  None of their injuries was considered life-threatening.
 
Latest on Canadians Killed - CAN Cdr Calls IEDAttack "Cowardly"

Canadian Press
http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/politics/news/shownews.jsp?content=n072302A
Associated Press
http://www.forbes.com/technology/ebusiness/feeds/ap/2006/07/23/ap2897485.html

'A Canadian success story within a tragedy'
Christie Blatchford, Globe & Mail, 23 Jul 06
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060723.w2afghansolde0723/BNStory/Afghanistan/home
Just hours after two Canadian soldiers were killed and eight others wounded military convoys were once again rolling in and out of the giant dust bowl that is the Kandahar Air Field base.  Corporals Francisco Gomez and Jason Patrick Warren died last evening in a double-barrelled suicide bombing attack on the western outskirts of Kandahar City just as an enormous convoy of vehicles was returning home to the base after an astonishing 16 days of almost daily combat with the Taliban and insurgents.  "A Canadian success story within a tragedy," is the sorrowful label Canadian Brigadier-General Dave Fraser, who heads the eight-nation Coalition operation in southern Afghanistan, attached to the cruel end of the largest military operation in this country in four years . . . .


Taliban Warns Afghans to Stay Away from Foreign Troops
Reuters, 23 Jul 06
http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-07-23T145804Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-260693-1.xml

Taliban militants warned Afghans on Sunday to keep away from foreign troops as they planned more attacks, a day after a twin suicide strike against a Canadian patrol killed at least five locals.  The threat of more such attacks, made by a Taliban spokesman in a phone call to Reuters, comes a week before the 26-nation NATO alliance takes on security from a U.S.-led force in southern Afghanistan, its most dangerous assignment in its history.  The U.S.-led coalition said Saturday's back-to-back bombings in Kandahar, which also killed two Canadian soldiers and wounded dozens of bystanders, would anger the local population . . . .
 
'A Canadian success story within a tragedy'
CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD Globe and Mail Update 22 July 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060723.w2afghansolde0723/BNStory/Afghanistan/home


Kandahar, Afghanistan — Just hours after two Canadian soldiers were killed and eight others wounded military convoys were once again rolling in and out of the giant dust bowl that is the Kandahar Air Field base.

Corporals Francisco Gomez and Jason Patrick Warren died last evening in a double-barrelled suicide bombing attack on the western outskirts of Kandahar City just as an enormous convoy of vehicles was returning home to the base after an astonishing 16 days of almost daily combat with the Taliban and insurgents.

"A Canadian success story within a tragedy," is the sorrowful label Canadian Brigadier-General Dave Fraser, who heads the eight-nation Coalition operation in southern Afghanistan, attached to the cruel end of the largest military operation in this country in four years.
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Canadians killed in Afghan blastsFrom correspondents in Kandahar
July 23, 2006 The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19882245-1702,00.html

Eight people were killed, including two Canadian soldiers, and dozens wounded in a double suicide attack in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar.

The attacks came just over a week before a NATO-led mission takes over security in the south and at a time of the bloodiest phase of an insurgency since coalition forces overthrew the Taliban in 2001.

Major Scott Lundy, a spokesman for the US-led force, said a suicide car bomber rammed a coalition convoy in the city, a Taliban stronghold, just before sunset.

Canada said two of its soldiers were killed and eight others wounded as their convoy made its way back to Kandahar Airfield.

The Department of National Defence named the two dead soldiers as Corporal Francisco Gomez of the Edmonton, Alberta-based Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry and Corporal Jason Patrick Warren of the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada, based in Montreal.
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General defends armoured vehicles after deaths in Afghanistan
Last Updated Sun, 23 Jul 2006 11:10:13 EDT  CBC News
http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2006/07/23/troop-carrier060723.html

As relatives in Canada await the arrival of the bodies of two slain soldiers, military commanders in Afghanistan are again defending the vehicles supplied to Canadian troops.
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More troops for Afghanistan likely

July 23, 2006 The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19882773-1702,00.html

AUSTRALIA is likely to send more troops to Afghanistan to protect engineers about to be deployed to that country, Defence Minister Brendan Nelson says.
Dr Nelson said the Special Operations Task Group already in Afghanistan, which includes elite Special Air Service soldiers, will come home as planned at the end of September.

But the minister said worsening security in southern Afghanistan may require extra protection for the reconstruction taskforce Australia was about to send to the country.
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Militants kill 4 policemen in S. Afghanistan
July 23, 2006  People's Daily Online
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/23/eng20060723_285908.html       

Taliban-linked militants have killed four policemen in the southern Ghazni province of Afghanistan, provincial police chief said Sunday.

The enemies raided several police checkpoints in Gilan district on Saturday night, killing four policemen, Tafsil Khan told Xinhua.

He said another three policemen were missing after the attack, but stopped short of giving more details.

Taliban militants carried out two suicide attacks in the southern Kandahar province Saturday, killing seven persons including two Canadian troops and injuring 24 others.

More than 1,100 people, mostly Taliban insurgents, have been killed this year in this central Asian country, which is suffering a rise of violence.

Source: Xinhua



 
http://www.cfc-a.centcom.mil/News%20Release/2006/07-July/Suicide%20bombers%20attack%20Coalition;%20civilians%20in%20Kandahar%20City%20-%20UPDATE.htm

UPDATED NEWS RELEASE

Suicide bombers attack Coalition; civilians in Kandahar City

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan – Updated reports indicate the two suicide bombers who attacked a Coalition vehicle patrol July 22 in Kandahar City, did so in a large crowd of Afghan civilians, killing five innocent Afghans and wounding 32.

Two Coalition soldiers were also killed and eight were wounded when the first suicide attacker detonated a bomb on the Soldiers’ vehicle patrol.

A short time later, a large number of Afghan civilians were wounded when a second suicide bomber, moving on foot, detonated his explosive vest in a crowd that had gathered to look at the initial attack site.

“This horrific incident, executed by brutal Taliban extremists, is a gross act against the people of Afghanistan,” said Maj. Gen. Benjamin C. Freakley, commander of Combined Joint Task Force – 76. “We grieve for our lost Canadian Soldiers who served so willingly. They were superb teammates and we will always remember their selfless sacrifice. We are honored to have served with them.”

The wounded Coalition soldiers were evacuated to Kandahar Airfield’s multinational hospital, and the wounded Afghan civilians were evacuated by Afghan National Police to a local Afghan hospital for treatment.
 
Bad Guys Getting Nailed, Nabbed, Too
AFP - http://sg.news.yahoo.com/060723/1/429q5.html
Times Online (UK) - http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2282732,00.html
Forbes news wire - http://www.forbes.com/technology/feeds/ap/2006/07/23/ap2897690.html

Nato-led British and Afghan troops killed 19 Taleban guerrillas yesterday, a local official said, as militants threatened more suicide attacks.  British soldiers and Afghan forces attacked villages in an operation outside Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of Helmand, where Taleban fighters were hiding. Haji Mullah Amir Muhammad Akhundzada, the deputy governor of Helmand, said: “Government and British forces killed 19 Taleban and arrested 17 others, including two Pakistanis, in the attacks.”  Residents said that civilians had also been killed . . . .


Some Bad Guys Extradited from PAK to AFG
Kuwait News Agency, 23 Jul 06
http://www.kuna.net.kw/Home/Story.aspx?Language=en&DSNO=889562

Pakistan Sunday handed over about 58 Taliban militants to Afghan border security Authorities, being rounded in a crackdown launched two weeks back in Southwestern Baluchistan province.  They were handed over to the Afghan authorities under tight security at Pak-Afghan Chamman border, Bashir Ahmed, District Chamman officer, told newsmen . . . .


AFG Worries About Pace of Rebuilding
Paul Garwood, Associated Press, 23 Jul 06
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060723/ap_on_re_as/afghanistan_s_two_realities

Laborer Mohammed Asif says the open sewer trickling through his Kabul slum sums up his lot.  "Life is so dirty," the father of two says.  Anger over the slow pace of reconstruction is palpable nearly five years since a U.S.-led invasion force toppled the Taliban.  Signs of progress are everywhere — rising wages, girls attending school, spreading cell phone networks, a new cross-country highway. But then there's the reality of a raging insurgency, weak governance and the extreme poverty faced by millions such as Asif . . . .


AFG District Int Boss Nabbed for Drugs
News.com.au, 24 Jul 06
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,19889656-38197,00.html

THE intelligence chief of an Afghan district on a major drug trafficking route to Tajikistan has been caught with 33kg of heroin in a government vehicle, an official said today.  The intelligence director of Rustaq district - in northern Takhar province on the border with Tajikistan - was arrested last week, national secret police chief Abdul Wahab Khetab said in the capital, Kabul. "He was carrying 33 kg of heroin in his government-owned vehicle," he said, adding the suspect was being questioned by authorities . . . .
 
"THE intelligence chief of an Afghan district on a major drug trafficking route to Tajikistan has been caught with 33kg of heroin in a government vehicle, an official said today.  The intelligence director of Rustaq district - in northern Takhar province on the border with Tajikistan - was arrested last week, national secret police chief Abdul Wahab Khetab said in the capital, Kabul. "He was carrying 33 kg of heroin in his government-owned vehicle," he said, adding the suspect was being questioned by authorities . . . ."

... while hanging from jumper cables by his thumbs, feet immersed in a tub of water..."  ;D

Edited to add:  The entire first para is quoted from a different poster.  The last sentence was a limp attempt at humour....carry on.
 
Commanders want to withdraw troops from Afghan outposts
Tom Coghlan, Sean Rayment, Daily Telegraph (UK), 23 Jul 06
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/07/23/wafg23.xml

British troops are set to be "tactically withdrawn" from isolated military outposts in Afghanistan following a series of sustained attacks from Taliban fighters, The Sunday Telegraph has learnt.  The proposed move, described by commanders as a "rebalancing" of British forces, is to allow them to concentrate their force into a smaller area so that vital reconstruction work can begin.  British troops have engaged Taliban fighters on more than 110 occasions since arriving in Helmand two months ago. Most of the attacks, in which six soldiers have died, have taken place close to the military outposts . . . .


Taliban train snipers on British forces
Tom Coghlan, Daily Telegraph (UK), 23 Jul 06
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/07/23/wafg123.xml

Taliban insurgents in southern Afghanistan are training teams of snipers to target British and other coalition troops, a tactic not used previously by the Taliban although employed to great effect by Iraqi insurgents.  The claim comes from a Taliban commander in Kandahar and Helmand provinces, who made the revelation after consultation with a more senior commander . . . .



 
Articles found on 24 July 2006

Afghan blast injures two coalition soldiers
(Note: later identified as US soldiers)
Updated Mon. Jul. 24 2006 CTV.ca News Staff
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060724/afghanistan_soldiers_060724/20060724?hub=TopStories
also on this link from The Scotsman
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=1072732006
Two coalition soldiers were seriously injured in southern Afghanistan in the latest in what has become a string of insurgent attacks.

The two soldiers were injured as they patrolled Kandahar's infamous Highway One with the Afghan National Army, said Major Scott Lundy.

They came across a vehicle that appeared to be broken down, which detonated as the patrol passed by.

Their injuries have been assessed as non-life threatening.

The nationality of the soldiers was not revealed.

The attack comes just days after a suicide bomber killed two Canadian soldiers along the same dangerous stretch of highway.
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'I know the risk'
Barb Pacholik, The Leader-Post  Published: Monday, July 24, 2006
http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/story.html?id=9c1051f6-25e7-4de1-9d9b-8dc8eb882b1e&k=65572

Amid Afghanistan's death and stifling dust, reservist says he's doing his generation's duty

Despite the loss of two more Canadian soldiers on the weekend and his own close brush with a bomb, a Regina area reservist says he has no second thoughts about volunteering to serve in Afghanistan.

"I know the risk," Jim Sinclair said in a telephone interview Sunday from Kandahar, Afghanistan. One day earlier, two Canadian soldiers were killed by a car bomb just west of that city as a convoy of soldiers returned to their base. Sinclair was part of the convoy, but was amongst a group that arrived before the blast.

"If this means the world's going to get better and my life is taken to better my niece's and nephews' lives down the road, then so be it," Sinclair said firmly. "When it's your time, it's your time."

The 36-year-old Regina Beach bachelor said he'd rather die "honourably . . . trying to accomplish something."

"At the end of the day, no soldier wants to go to do this kind of work. But it's got to be done. Every generation has a part to play in global stability. This is my generation," he said.
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'Me fine. Still alive,' Corporal Jason Warren wrote from Afghanistan this spring.
Yesterday, funeral plans were made for him and Cpl. Francisco Gomez. Both died Saturday.
TU THANH HA AND DAVE EBNER
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060724.AFGHANSOLDIERS24/TPStory/National

MONTREAL AND CALGARY -- Though a reservist, Corporal Jason Warren had volunteered for a six-month tour in Kandahar. He died Saturday, just two weeks short of leaving the combat zone for a week of decompressing in Cyprus before heading home to Canada.

"Hey people that still know me. How's it going? Me fine. Still alive," he wrote from Kandahar this spring in a posting on the website of Montreal's Black Watch regiment, his reserve unit. "Well, we'll see after the 2 week dismounted patrol."

A skirl of bagpipes rose briefly yesterday, but it was mostly the hard slap of military boots resounding on the Black Watch armoury floor that could be heard as eight of Cpl. Warren's regimental friends rehearsed being his pallbearers.

"He was so close to coming home . . . He knew the dangers he was getting into and he knew the territory," Master Corporal Mathew Snoddon said during a break.
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Cameron pays surprise visit to Afghanistan
(Filed: 24/07/2006) The Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/07/24/ucameron.xml

David Cameron has arrived in Afghanistan on a surprise trip to visit British troops in the country.

He was flown by Ministry of Defence jet to the former Taliban stronghold of Kandahar this morning. His arrival was kept secret for security reasons.

Mr Cameron said his first visit to troops stationed overseas since becoming Conservative leader would be devoted to "listening, learning and showing our support for what is being done."
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Besieged Gurkhas saved from Taliban by US air strike
By Sean Rayment  (Filed: 16/07/2006) The Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=OFFTZOVXP3SC3QFIQMGSFGGAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2006/07/16/wafg116.xml

British commanders were forced to order a United States air strike against Taliban fighters in Afghanistan to prevent a military base being overrun, writes Sean Rayment.

American aircraft dropped two 500lb bombs in the raid on Wednesday, destroying a school and shops and, according to unverified reports, leaving between 25 and 200 people dead.

Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, yesterday called for an investigation into the strike
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Afghan Development Continues Amid Violent, Indiscriminate Attacks
American Forces Press Service
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060723_5726.html

WASHINGTON, July 23, 2006 – Coalition forces continue to aid and develop Afghanistan, even as they fight back terrorist extremists who are determined to stop progress, U.S. military officials reported today.
Aid and reconstruction efforts include a rebuilt mosque in the Paktya province and medial and humanitarian aid to hundreds of Afghan villagers in the Kandahar province, said Combined Forces Command spokesman Army Col. Thomas Collins.

The refurbished mosque, he noted, was a joint effort by the Afghan government and coalition forces; it took three months and $16,000 to complete. The project had been identified by the people of the Zormat district as "something they needed for their people," Collins said. A ribbon-cutting ceremony marked the mosque's completion on July 20.

Also last week, a cooperative medical assistance team provided preventive health care to more than 230 Afghan villagers and some 450 children in the Kandahar province. All children under the age of 5, Collins said, were given de-worming medication. A second medical assistance team, he added, is en route to villages in the Uruzgan province.
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Violence sweeps across Afghanistan
Monday 24 July 2006, 12:36 Makka Time, 9:36 GMT    Al Jazeera
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/294ED38F-0BBE-42DF-8F94-51C730C731A1.htm

Hundreds of Taliban fighters firing rocket-propelled grenades have attacked a district headquarters in southwestern Afghanistan, killing three policemen and wounding seven.


The attack comes amid of a flurry of suicide attacks, roadside bombings and shootings that have claimed lives across the country.

About 400 Taliban fighters in 35 trucks arrived in Bakwa, a town in southwestern Farah province, late Sunday and launched a heavy assault on the district police and administration headquarters.

The fighters fled back towards neighbouring Helmand province after a five-hour battle, carrying an unknown number of casualties with them.

Also in Farah, four suspected suicide attackers riding on two explosive-laden motorbikes were killed after they were challenged by police as they drove through the provincial capital late Sunday, said Gen. Sayed Aga Saqib, provincial police chief.
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Afghan forces kill 19 Taliban
Monday 24 July 2006, 3:53 Makka Time, 0:53 GMT   Al Jazeera

Afghan forces killed 19 suspected Taliban rebels on Sunday as they traded rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire with insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan.


The fighting in the southern province of Helmand took place 15 km (nine miles) south of Lashkar Gah, as police hunted Taliban militants, said Mullah Amir Mohammed Akhundza, the provincial deputy governor, who led the operation.



Nineteen bodies of militants were recovered, and 17 other suspected Taliban were caught, including two Pakistanis, he said. Hundreds of policemen were involved in the clashes that started early Sunday, said Ghulam Nabi Malakhail, Helmand police chief. Two policemen were wounded.



Afghanistan is experiencing its worst spate of violence since late 2001, when the Taliban regime was overthrown in a US-led invasion. More than 800 people, mostly militants, have died nationwide since mid-May.
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FACTBOX-Timeline for NATO operations in Afghanistan
24 Jul 2006 11:12:51 GMT  Source: Reuters 
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L24685509.htm

July 24 (Reuters) - The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) is due to expand military operations into southern Afghanistan in coming days, launching what could be NATO's toughest ground combat mission in its history.

Here is a chronology of NATO's presence in the country.

2001

Oct. 7 - U.S.-led forces begin bombing Afghanistan to root out Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda group, which carried out the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington, and its Taliban protectors. Washington does not take up NATO's offer of help, concerned the consensus-based alliance would slow it down.
2003     More on link

ANALYSIS-Afghan NATO mission will test European resolve
24 Jul 2006 11:02:16 GMT Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L24258379.htm

By Mark John

BRUSSELS, July 24 (Reuters) - NATO faces an uphill battle to bring security to violent southern Afghanistan and analysts question whether the transatlantic alliance is fully prepared for what will be the first true ground war in its history.

The handover of military operations there from the U.S.-led coalition to NATO scheduled around July 31 will bring European soldiers into the thick of a battle against hardened al Qaeda and Taliban insurgents fighting in their heartlands.

Doubts remain over whether Europe's leaders have committed enough troops or understand what those soldiers will encounter on the ground, and whether they will pull out if rising casualties fracture delicate public support for the mission.

"It's do-able, but it's a matter of addressing the issue head-on," said analyst Michael Williams at London-based thinktank the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI).
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Afghanistan Reconstruction
Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/db/crisisprofiles/AF_REC.htm?v=at_a_glance

Afghanistan is struggling to recover from more than a quarter-century of conflict, with violence still raging in the south and southeast. It is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world and home to a booming narcotics trade.
Six million fled during the conflict
600 children die every day
Around 35,000 foreign troops

Billions of dollars have poured into rebuilding Afghanistan since the fall of the hardline Taliban regime in 2001. But many Afghans are frustrated at the pace of reconstruction efforts, which have been dogged by security problems and allegations of corruption and mismanagement.

The Taliban were toppled by U.S. and mujahideen forces in 2001 after they refused to hand over Osama bin Laden, architect of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Remnants of the Taliban fighting to oust thousands of foreign troops and Afghanistan's new western-backed government have stepped up a campaign of bomb attacks, ambushes and raids during 2006. Security officials also blame land disputes, banditry, the drugs trade and clan feuds for rising violence.
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Two more suicide attacks in Afghanistan
24 Jul 2006 13:12:15 GMT  Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL305339.htm

By Mirwais Afghan

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, July 24 (Reuters) - Two suicide bombers targeted Afghan and U.S.-led coalition troops in Afghanistan on Monday, amid a wave of such attacks before NATO takes over security in the country's violent south.

Two coalition troops and one Afghan army soldier were wounded. The identities of the foreign troops were not given.

One bomber detonated explosives in a vehicle as a coalition convoy passed outside the southern city of Kandahar, where Canadian troops form the bulk of coalition forces.

In the second attack, a motorcycle bomber blew himself up in the western province of Farah, a forces statement said. Police and Afghan soldiers came under small arms fire from militants as they approached the scene and one Afghan soldier was wounded.

The attacks come just two days after twin suicide attacks killed seven people in Kandahar, a stronghold of Taliban militants and one of six provinces which will come under NATO control on July 31.

Violence has risen steeply in Afghanistan in recent months particularly in the south where hundreds of militants and civilians have been killed, as well as more than 20 foreign soldiers. Militants on Monday also attacked a police station in Farah, firing off hundreds of rocket-propelled grenades before retreating, and killed two local employees of international aid agency World Vision, in neighbouring Ghor province
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PHO helps in reconstruction of Afghanistan
21 Jul 2006 11:32:00 GMT  Source: Polish Humanitarian Organisation 
Website: http://www.pah.org.pl
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/fromthefield/polhumorg/115348224963.htm


Providing formal and non-formal education for children, youth and adults are among the biggest challenges facing Afghanistan today. Since opening its mission in Afghanistan in June 2002, Polish Humanitarian Organization has realized a number of humanitarian projects aimed mainly in education sector. Some of the projects are still in progress and more are being planned.

In December 2004 PHO launched second, extended edition of artistic and vocational courses for children. The project involves cultural diversity workshop, courses of traditional Afghan music, arts, calligraphy, learning about multicultural world and human rights as well as vocational trainings, for instance hairdressing. It concerns two orphanages from Kabul: Allahuddin i Tahiye Maskan. 135 children will take part in mentioned activities throughout the year 2006. This project is being realized thanks to grants from Polish Teacher's Union.

In co-operation with Shams Women Need and Help Organisation, PHO has organized and successfully evaluates music classes for Afghan girls. During the lessons school-aged girls, under the supervision of professionally trained teachers, learn to play the traditional Afghan instruments, tabla and harmonium. The aim of that project was to revitalize Afghan tradition and culture.
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Third GSM Network Launches in Afghanistan
http://www.cellular-news.com/story/18423.php
Third GSM Network Launches in Afghanistan

At the weekend, a third GSM operator named Areeba launched its services in Afghanistan. At a press conference, organized by this purpose in Ministry of Communications, His Excellency Eng. Amirzai Sangin Minister of Communications, Mr. Tawfiq Ramadan Director of Areeba Afghanistan and some other officials of Areeba attended the conference. His Excellency Minister of Communications made an inaugural call on the phone to the Director of Communications in Mazar launched Areeba's services in Afghanistan.
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Canadians scorn 'cowardly' Taliban attacks
Last Updated Sun, 23 Jul 2006 23:44:00 EDT CBC News
http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2006/07/23/omez-warren.html

Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan are saddened by the loss of two of their number on Saturday, but pleased with their military success and angry at the Taliban attackers.

The bodies of Cpl. Jason Warren, top, and Cpl. Francisco Gomez are expected to be returned to Canada on Tuesday. (Department of National Defence) Corporals Francisco Gomez and Jason Warren were killed when a suicide bomber blew up a car packed with explosives beside their Bison armoured vehicle as they returned to Kandahar airfield after two weeks hunting Taliban militants.
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‘Afghanistan Found Me’An interview with journalist and activist Sonali Kolhatkar
by Julie Sabatier
http://newstandardnews.net/content/index.cfm/items/3421

TNS Interview: Sonali Kolhatkar is a journalist and also the co-director of the Afghan Women’s Mission, a group that helps raise funds for schools, orphanages and other program led by Afghan women.
Sonali Kolhatkar is co-director of the Afghan Women's Mission, a group that helps raise funds for schools, orphanages and other program led by Afghan women. She also hosts the popular radio show Uprising on Pacifica Radio's KPFK in Los Angeles. Kolhatkar was trained as an astronomer, but made a career shift six years ago to writing, radio and activism. Reporter Julie Sabatier interviewed Kolhatkar for The NewStandard last week.

TNS: You've done work in so many different activist campaigns, from Free Mumia to the anti-WTO movement. How did you decide to focus so much time and energy on the women of Afghanistan?

SK: In a way, Afghanistan found me. I got a chain e-mail in 2000 about the Taliban's mistreatment of Afghan women. I started doing research and found the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA). I was so inspired by these women, and I went down the street to a coffee shop and just cried and wondered if I was wasting my time working for [California Institute of Technology] and NASA. I contacted RAWA and asked them, 'What can I do? How can I help?' They said they needed a legal way for people to make donations from the US.
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Is Al Qaeda setting up shop in Kashmir?
By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 42 July 2006
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0718/p06s02-wosc.html

SRINAGAR, INDIAN KASHMIR – Last Wednesday, barely 18 hours after the railway blasts in Mumbai (Bombay) that claimed some 200 lives, a mysterious caller phoned up local journalist Rashid Rahi to praise the attacks and to proclaim the arrival of a new militant group, Jammu and Kashmir Al Qaeda.
With its call for Indian Muslims to join the struggle for "complete liberation and dominance of the religion of Islam," the caller hinted darkly of a heightened confrontation with America's chief ally in South Asia, India.
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Two slain soldiers begin journey home
Canadian Press Globe & Mail 25 July 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060725.w2soldiers0725/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — Hundreds of Canadian and other coalition soldiers in Afghanistan bid a tearful farewell early Tuesday to two fallen comrades.

A lone bagpiper played as the bodies of Corporal Francisco Gomez of Edmonton and Corporal Jason Warren from Montreal were gently carried from two Canadian Forces Light Armoured Vehicles onto a C-130 Hercules at Kandahar Air Field.

Tears streamed down the face of Bombardier Ryan Shudra, a reservist from the 20th Field Regiment, based in Red Deer, Alta, as he carried Cpl. Warren's Tam O'Shanter behind his flag-draped coffin.

Bombardier Shudra was one of eight soldiers injured Saturday when Cpl. Warren and Cpl. Gomez were killed in a suicide attack.
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Intense clashes with Taliban temper troops' steely spirit
CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD  Globe and Mail 25 July 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060724.wblatchfordmain24/BNStory/Afghanistan/home

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — War, the British singer Edwin Starr barked three decades ago in a song that became a pop hit at the tail end of the peace-loving Sixties, "What is it good for?" Mr. Starr's answer was, "Absolutely nothing."

There is a group of about 600 Canadian soldiers who have just emerged from weeks of battle who might beg to differ -- not that war is good, not that it cannot smash your spirit as surely as it can your body, but that it can also be instructive, formative, important.

Two days ago, war had Lieutenant-Colonel John Conrad, the gentle commander of the National Support Element, which is the military's moniker for the logistical folks who keep the whole machine humming, doing the only kind thing he could do for a dead comrade.

Lt.-Col. Conrad was loading a body bag for the first time in his life.
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Australian troops headed to dangerous Uruzgan province in Afghanistan
The World Today - Tuesday, 25 July , 2006  12:34:00  Reporter: Josie Taylor
http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2006/s1696503.htm


ELEANOR HALL: Already in Afghanistan, Australian troops are heading straight for an area described as one of the most dangerous in the world.

About 240 Australian soldiers and engineers will soon go into the Uruzgan province, in Afghanistan's volatile south, to help rebuild infrastructure.

But one security adviser working in the region has told The World Today that he believes the troops will be too busy ensuring their own safety to help with reconstruction.

The security adviser, who says he can't give his full name for legal reasons, says it's becoming more and more dangerous in the region and that already many aid projects have shut down.

He is speaking here to reporter Josie Taylor.

SECURITY ADVISER: A lot of programs have shut recently, or are ineffective. A lot of the implementing partners of larger agencies have got limited projects at the moment, purely through the security in the region... is not permissible.

JOSIE TAYLOR: And how... what's your description of the security in the region at the moment, or particularly in Afghanistan and southern Afghanistan?

SECURITY ADVISER: The security since Ramadan, which is sort of October last year, has been progressively getting worse, and it started in districts several hundred kilometres out from regional centres, city centres such as Kandahar and Lashkar Gah, and during the last six to eight months, progressively the fighting has been moving closer and closer into the city.
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Army personnel leave for Afghanistan
July 25, 2006 - 5:29PM FairFax Digital
http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Army-personnel-leave-for-Afghanistan/2006/07/25/1153746847571.html

A group of 34 Australian army personnel left for Afghanistan on Tuesday to relieve troops who have been stationed in the war-ravaged country since February.

The group, a mix of air crew and helicopter specialists from the army's 5th Aviation Regiment in Townsville, will replace soldiers operating and maintaining two Australian CH-47D Chinooks, defence said in a statement.

About 110 Australian personnel fly and maintain the Chinooks from a base in southern Afghanistan, providing medical evacuation, air mobility and logistical support to coalition troops in the area.

The relieved troops will return to Australia later this week.

Australia's commitment of the two helicopters is due to end in April 2007.

In recent weeks there has been a surge in violence between resurgent Taliban-led rebels and Afghan and foreign troops as NATO prepares to take over command of security operations in the hardline militia's former southern heartland.
End



Bomb hits Kabul taxi as Afghan violence kills 10, including coalition soldier
HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA | Tuesday July 25, 2006  The Cronicle Herald
http://thechronicleherald.ca/World/9001498.html

KABUL (AP) -- A roadside bomb along a busy Kabul road killed two Afghans on Tuesday as fighting in the eastern provinces left a U.S.-led coalition soldier and seven suspected Taliban dead, officials said.

The Afghan government, meanwhile, launched an urgent appeal for $76.4 million US to tackle an ``imminent food crisis'' caused by prolonged drought, particularly in the north and northwest of the country.

The bomb in Kabul -- the latest in a series of blasts that have rattled nerves in the capital -- killed a man and a woman riding in a taxi, and wounded four others, said Faiz Ahmad Hotaq, a police official.

In the eastern Kunar province, a coalition soldier, whose nationality was not disclosed, was killed Monday in firefight with militants, a coalition statement said.

Seven militants were also killed in Paktika province in clashes with coalition soldiers, it said. One coalition soldier was slightly wounded.

Violence has escalated sharply in Afghanistan this year, as Taliban-led rebels have stepped up attacks, particularly in their former southern heartland, drawing a tough response from Afghan and foreign forces.
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Lady Luck has been shining on us

Canadian soldiers, thankful for good fortune in battle, mourn men lost to suicide attack
By TERRY PEDWELL The Canadian Press The Chronicle Herald
http://thechronicleherald.ca/World/517357.html

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Kirk Gallinger isn’t sure yet how to describe to his wife the hell he’s witnessed in the past few weeks.

She might have some idea already, having read, watched or heard the news of how Canadian soldiers spent 17 days hunting down Taliban fighters in southern Afghanistan.

But his wife, Crystal, doesn’t really "know," says Maj. Gallinger, who commanded the 1st Batallion of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry’s Alpha Company through some of the most intense battles Canadians have seen since the Korean War.

"My wife has no clue," Gallinger says of the things he’s done in Afghanistan. "My wife has been watching a bit of the news, (but) I haven’t been telling her the extent to which we’ve been involved in the operations."

He surmises that perhaps video of some of the battles will help.

"I’ve got some interesting footage."

Soldiers from the Canadian Forces Combat Camera unit, along with a number of reporters, were with the troops during many of the altercations they’ve faced since heading out on Operation Mountain Thrust on July 4. Some startling images have been recorded.
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Mideast force unlikely Canadian military stretched to maximum in Afghanistan
25 July 2006 The Chronicle Herald
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Canada/517228.html

OTTAWA — The Canadian military is already stretched so thin in Afghanistan that it’s unlikely to contribute much — if anything — to any peacekeeping force on the Lebanon-Israel border, say military, diplomatic and academic experts.

But even if Ottawa had the resources, many analysts say there are good reasons to avoid a troop commitment in the Middle East.

"It’s only our fight if all other alternatives have been exhausted," says Norman Spector, a former chief of staff to Brian Mulroney and ambassador to Israel.

Spector contended Monday that it makes more sense to hand the lead in pacifying Lebanon to former colonial powers like Britain and France, who have a greater strategic interest in the region. They could be supplemented by Germany, Italy and other European partners in NATO.
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One man and his search dog
25 Jul 06  Defence News UK
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/DefenceNews/MilitaryOperations/OneManAndHisSearchDog.htm

Anyone who reads a newspaper or watches television is more than aware of the UK's involvement in Southern Afghanistan and the 3,000 plus British troops that are deployed there. But not many are aware of the military working dogs that are doing their bit to restore peace and security in Afghanistan.
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Soldiers beat the heat to run Afghan marathon
24 Jul 06  Defence News UK
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/DefenceNews/PeopleInDefence/SoldiersBeatTheHeatToRunAfghanMarathon.htm

Soldiers based in Afghanistan have been braving searing 50-plus degree temperatures to run a marathon aimed at raising money for needy children in the country.

Teams of troops based at Lashkar Gah, in Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan, including those from Colchester-based 16 Air Assault Brigade, ran 26 miles around the camp on Friday 21 July 2006 to help raise money for Aschiana, a charity which helps street children in Kabul.

Due to the intense heat, the teams of six split the marathon, which equates to 50 laps of the camp, into smaller more manageable chunks of about ten laps each. They also began the run at 5am local time (approximately 8.30am UK time) to avoid the hottest time of day.

Defence Secretary orders new vehicles for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan
25 Jul 06   Defence News UK
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/DefenceNews/MilitaryOperations/DefenceSecretaryOrdersNewVehiclesForTroopsInIraqAndAfghanistan.htm

Defence Secretary, Des Browne, has unveiled a package of new equipment to help protect UK Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan following an armoured vehicles review

This will include: the purchase of around 100 additional Pinzgauer 'Vector' for Afghanistan, on top of the 66 already on contract, with deliveries to begin early in 2007; the provision, for Iraq, of around 70 uparmoured and upgraded FV430 troop carriers, in addition to the 54 already on contract, with deliveries starting late this year and building up to a mechanised infantry battlegroup by Spring 2007; and the acquisition of around 100 of a new medium weight vehicle, 'Cougar', which is manufactured by Force Protection Incorporated of Charleston, South Carolina, and is expected to be delivered to Iraq and Afghanistan in batches over the next six month rotation, with an effective capability in place in Iraq by the end of the year.
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Afghan violence kills 10, including coalition soldier
FISNIK ABRASHI  Associated Press  Globe & Mail 25 July 2006
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060725.wkabul0725/BNStory/International/?cid=al_gam_nletter_newsUp

KABUL — A roadside bomb along a busy Kabul road killed two Afghans on Tuesday as fighting in the eastern provinces left a U.S.-led coalition soldier and seven suspected Taliban dead, officials said.

The Afghan government, meanwhile, launched an urgent appeal for $76.4 million (U.S.) to tackle an “imminent food crisis” caused by prolonged drought, particularly in the north and northwest of the country.

The bomb in Kabul — the latest in a series of blasts that have rattled nerves in the capital — killed a man and a woman riding in a taxi, and wounded four others, said Faiz Ahmad Hotaq, a police official.

Afghanistan, UN Launch New Appeal to Help Fight Looming Food Crisis
By Benjamin Sand   Islamabad   25 July 2006  Voice of America
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-07-25-voa19.cfm

Afghanistan is seeking nearly $80 million to help fight "an imminent food crisis" caused by widespread drought. The aid appeal, issued with the United Nations, says more than two and a half million people could be affected by the drought and crop failures.

The Afghan government and United Nations kicked off the $76 million appeal Tuesday morning in Kabul.

The U.N.'s deputy special representative to Afghanistan, Christopher Alexander, said that millions of farmers throughout Afghanistan are facing a large shortfall in their wheat harvest due to the drought.

"It's not just a question of lack of rain," he said. "It's a question of livelihoods being in jeopardy. So this is a human crisis, these are real, acute, basic needs that need to be addressed."

Droughts are common in Afghanistan but Alexander says this year it is particularly harsh.
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Pro-Taleban Militants in Pakistan Free Four Soldiers, Extend Cease-fire by a Month
By VOA News 23 July 2006
http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-07-23-voa7.cfm 

Pakistani officials say pro-Taleban militants in a semi-autonomous tribal region bordering Afghanistan have freed four soldiers taken hostage in April and extended a cease-fire by another month.

The move came a day after Pakistan released 32 men who had been in jail from five months to two years on suspicion of involvement in attacks on security forces in North Waziristan.

In June, the militants called a month-long cease-fire to give time for tribal elders to broker a settlement to end the bloodshed in the region.

The rebels also had a number of demands, including the withdrawal of army troops from new checkpoints and replacing them with tribal police, and the release of tribesmen detained during military operations.
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Afghanistan worries drought may boost drug trade
25 Jul 2006 12:07:44 GMT  Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/ISL270300.htm


By Zeeshan Haider

KABUL, July 25 (Reuters) - The Afghan government and the United Nations on Tuesday appealed for over $76 million in aid to combat impending drought, warning that farmers could start growing opium poppies to avoid hunger.

Afghanistan produces around 90 percent of the world's opium and the United Nations fears cultivation levels of poppy are back on the rise after production decreased in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001.

Vice President Karim Khalili warned that poor farmers might resort to cultivating less water-intensive poppy if the international community does not help them combat drought.

"The first negative impact of the drought is that farmers might be forced to illegally cultivate poppy if production (of other crops) falls sharply," he said.

"If there is hunger, then it is natural that they will resort to this (cultivation)."

Security analysts say money made from selling opium helps pay for the insurgency by Taliban militants, which is at its worst since 2001.

Much of the insurgency is focused in strife-stricken southern region, which is also home to the country's main poppy-growing provinces.

Afghanistan is the world's largest heroin-producing and trafficking country, and latest figures show illicit opium production accounts for roughly a third of the country's total economy.

The United Nations said Afghanistan is set to face acute food shortages in the coming months due to inadequate rainfall in April and May, especially in the rain-fed areas.

It is estimated the drought will affect up to an additional 2.5 million people living in mostly rain-fed areas. Some 6.5 million people are already seasonally or chronically food insecure.
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Afghan reconstruction
Source: Reuters
http://www.alertnet.org/db/crisisprofiles/AF_REC.htm?v=at_a_glance

Afghanistan is struggling to recover from more than a quarter-century of conflict, with violence still raging in the south and southeast. It is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world and home to a booming narcotics trade.
Six million fled during the conflict
600 children die every day
Around 35,000 foreign troops

Billions of dollars have poured into rebuilding Afghanistan since the fall of the hardline Taliban regime in 2001. But many Afghans are frustrated at the pace of reconstruction efforts, which have been dogged by security problems and allegations of corruption and mismanagement.

The Taliban were toppled by U.S. and mujahideen forces in 2001 after they refused to hand over Osama bin Laden, architect of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Remnants of the Taliban fighting to oust thousands of foreign troops and Afghanistan's new western-backed government have stepped up a campaign of bomb attacks, ambushes and raids during 2006. Security officials also blame land disputes, banditry, the drugs trade and clan feuds for rising violence.

But there is some good news. Millions of former refugees have streamed back, the judiciary and army are being reconstituted and roads and hospitals rebuilt. Women, who were barred from education and jobs during the Taliban years, are now allowed to vote and some have won seats in parliament.

key facts
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Violence rises in Afghanistan
Edmonton Sun 25 July 2006
http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/World/2006/07/25/1701237-sun.html

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- The violence in Afghanistan intensified yesterday as Canada prepared to send two of its fallen home.

In the south, just east of Kandahar, two international coalition soldiers were seriously hurt when a van packed with explosives detonated as their patrol was driving past.

Two days earlier, two Canadian soldiers - Cpl. Francisco Gomez of Edmonton and Cpl. Jason Warren of Montreal - died after a suicide bomber drove his car beside their Bison armoured vehicle, and triggered an explosion.

BODIES RETURN TODAY

The bodies of Warren and Gomez were to be returned to Canada today, following a ceremony at the Kandahar Air Field.
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Afghanistan Suicide Bomber Kills Girl in Kabul, Military Says
25 July 2006 Bloomberg.com
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601082&sid=aWWRDOWzcZlk&refer=canada

July 25 (Bloomberg) -- An Afghan girl was killed and three civilians were wounded today when a suicide bomber detonated explosives in the capital, Kabul, the U.S. military said.

``This is truly a despicable act,'' coalition spokesman Thomas Collins said in an e-mailed statement. ``A family has been ruined and the dreams of an innocent little girl are lost forever.'' Afghan and police and coalition forces are investigating the blast, the military said.

In two other statements, the U.S. military said a coalition soldier and seven insurgents were killed yesterday in separate clashes in eastern Afghanistan.

The U.S.-led coalition has faced increasing violence as it seeks to extend the influence of President Hamid Karzai's central government from Kabul into more remote eastern and southern parts of Afghanistan. Hundreds of insurgents have been killed by the military since operations expanded in April and May.
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Coalition soldier killed in Afghanistan fighting
25/07/2006 - 10:15:07 Ireland Online
http://breakingnews.iol.ie/news/story.asp?j=190122976&p=y9xyz368z

Fighting in eastern Afghanistan left one US-led coalition soldier and seven suspected Taliban dead, the coalition said today.

The soldier, whose nationality was not disclosed, was killed yesterday during an action against militants in Pech district of eastern Kunar province, a coalition statement said.

The seven militants died yesterday in the Barmal district of Paktika province, in a clash with coalition soldiers, the statement said.

The firefight involved some 45 militants who attacked a coalition patrol with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms, the military said. One coalition soldier was slightly wounded in the clash.
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Germany promises more aid to Afghanistan
July 25, 2006 People's Daily Online         
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/25/eng20060725_286379.html

Germany would keep its promise to provide Afghanistan with 80 million euros (about 100 million dollars) this year to help the war-torn country, a German minister said on Monday.

German Economic Cooperation and Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul made the remarks after meeting visiting Afghan Finance Minister Anwar ul-Hag Ahadi in Berlin.

Germany, the fourth largest donor after the U.S., Japan and Britain, would stand by Afghanistan, Wieczorek-Zeul said, adding that a key part of the aid will be used in improving energy supplies of Afghanistan.

Earlier this year, at the London conference on Afghanistan, Germany pledged 80 million euros in aid each year until 2010.

Germany has about 2,700 troops in Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Recently ISAF troops had been attacked by suicide bombers.

Wieczorek-Zeul noted that Germany would not reduce its aid to Afghanistan at "these difficult times."

Source: Xinhua
End


Guns and poppies: The coming anarchy in Afghanistan
by Michael Stickings The Moderate Voice
http://www.themoderatevoice.com/posts/1153757053.shtml


Remember Afghanistan? I won't blame you if you don't. It's hard to see it through the fog of war in Iraq and Lebanon, not to mention through the fall-out of nuclear crisis in Iran and North Korea. Not so long ago, Afghanistan was the focus of much of our attention. After 9/11, the U.S. went in and routed the al Qaeda-friendly Taliban, or at least sent Osama bin Laden, Mullah Omar, and their supporters scurrying into the mountains and across the border into Pakistan, a short war of revenge that was neither lost nor entirely won.

And yet there was optimism. In his 2002 State of the Union address, President Bush said this:
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B.C. man building school killed in Afghanistan
Last Updated: Tuesday, July 25, 2006 CBC News
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2006/07/25/bc-carpenter.html

A Vancouver carpenter has been killed in northern Afghanistan, where he had been completing construction of a school he had been working on for the past four years.

Mike Frastacky, 56, was shot to death on Sunday in a home he was staying at in the town of Nahrin.

His sister, Luba Frastacky of Toronto, told CBC Radio on Tuesday that Canadian Foreign Affairs officials said her brother was shot three times in the head.

She said he knew it was particularly dangerous in northern Afghanistan this summer, and that there was talk of a $10,000 bounty being offered for the death of a Westerner.

She said her brother, who had been there since mid-June, had planned to cut this year's visit short because of the danger.
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Articles found on 26 July 2006

EDITORIAL: Soldier sacrifices
26 July 2006 Edmonton Sun
http://www.edmontonsun.com/Comment/Commentary/2006/07/26/1702474.html

The deaths of Cpl. Francisco Gomez, a 44-year-old member of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry in Edmonton, and Quebec City native Cpl. Jason Patrick Warren, 29, of the Black Watch, the Royal Highland Regiment of Canada, in a suicide bombing last weekend in Afghanistan brings the death toll for the dangerous mission to 20: 19 soldiers and one diplomat.

If those numbers make you uncomfortable, good. We hope they do.

Because if people are uneasy with those statistics it means they still care, one way or another. It means they're either gutted by the fact that our soldiers have to pay such a high price in order to try to bring stability to a wartorn region as part of the war on terror, or they're outraged at how our soldiers' lives are being sacrificed for a futile cause.

As our readers know, we completely support the Armed Forces' mission in Afghanistan. And it grieves us whenever we at the Sun get the notification that another soldier has died, because we know all too well by now that these aren't automatons programmed to go into the Afghanistan mountains to kill. They're flesh and blood human beings with families back here in Canada - spouses, parents, children - who are suffering the worst kind of grief imaginable.
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Wrong thread, but still a Canadian who deserves mention   :salute:

Gov't confirms Canadian soldier killed at UN post
26/07/2006 4:55:51 PM  CTV.ca News Staff

The PMO has identified Maj. Paeta Hess-von Kruedener as the Canadian Forces soldier killed in an Israeli air strike in south Lebanon Tuesday.

Major Paeta Hess-von Kruedener, in South Lebanon in March, with one of the Mouktars of a Druze village called 'Bourhoz' 

Maj. Paeta Hess-von Kruedener, a member of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, died when a bomb directly hit the UN observer base in the town of Khiyam near the eastern end of the border with Israel.

Hess-von Kruedener had completed nine months of his one-year tour of duty with the UN in Lebanon. He was an infantry officer with 20 years service, and had done four earlier operational tours (in Cyprus, twice in Bosnia, and Congo).

He was the lone Canadian Forces observer in southern Lebanon, and was assigned to report on ceasefire violations with the Observer Group Lebanon (OGL). His group, Team Sierra, was based 10 kilometres to the north of the Israel-Lebanon-Syria border.

On July 18, he provided CTV.ca with an update of his mission via e-mail. He said a great deal of fighting was taking place near his post.
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Injured in Afghanistan
By Christine van Reeuwyk  Esquimalt News  Jul 26 2006
http://www.esquimaltnews.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=10&cat=23&id=696063&more=


Wounded reservist recounts his tale

Master Cpl. Kai Hesser sat stunned amid a cloud of smoke and vehicle remains.

It was about 8 a.m. on June 21, a hot, dusty day in Kandahar, Afghanistan when a bomb tore through the light armoured vehicle carrying Hesser and his comrades.

“We were just driving along and the next thing I knew I was covered in smoke and dust,” Hesser said. “I was sitting in the carrier and said, ‘What the hell was that?’”

Hesser recalled his plight after touching down at Victoria International Airport July 19.

Hesser, 29, refused a wheelchair, and opted instead to gently hop his way into the camera-laden press conference with the aid of crutches.

“It’s good to be home,” he said. “It’s not a great environment there; it’s hot, humid, the food is not good. It’s good to be home.”

Hesser, originally from Nanaimo but a native of Victoria for the past two years, spent nearly three weeks in a hospital in Kandahar before returning to Canada July 9. He was in hospital in Edmonton undergoing more tests and X-rays before returning to Victoria.

The 10-year reserve veteran suffered a severe fracture to his left ankle, a blood clot in his left leg and fractures to his hip and right knee.

“There are times I have to use my arms to help move my legs,” Hesser admitted.

Two others were injured in the blast: Hesser said he’s spoken to both and they appear all right.

“It’s good to be home” was a running theme for Hesser during the press conference, though he said he wouldn’t hesitate to go back overseas.

Major Joel Anderson, Hesser’s commanding officer, greeted Hesser at the airport.

“He strikes me as someone who wants to get back to activity as soon as possible,” Anderson said.

He regaled the press with the story of Hesser refusing a wheelchair in Edmonton, followed by his refusal of a wheelchair in Victoria, and the fact that Hesser wanted to gather his own luggage from the baggage carousel.

“That’s the nature of our soldiers,” Anderson said.

Hesser was just one part of the Canadian military presence in Afghanistan. Canadian soldiers are conducting operations in northern Kandahar province as part of Operation Mountain Thrust.

“I do appreciate the support that we get from a lot of the people,” Hesser said. “They may not support the mission ... but they certainly support us and that’s a really good thing, especially for the guys over there ... it’s a rough environment.”

He credits the light armoured vehicle for saving his life.
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Aust soldiers injured in Afghanistan
Wednesday, July 26, 2006. 2:16pm
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200607/s1697528.htm

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) has revealed that six Australian soldiers from the Special Air Services (SAS) were injured earlier this month in a skirmish in Afghanistan.

The soldiers were in the country's south when the group was injured by anti-coalition militia.

They were evacuated to a medical facility, but the ADF says only one has returned to Australia for further treatment.

In a special briefing in Canberra, Brigadier Gus Gilmore said, despite the injuries, the Australian soldiers were involved in a highly successful engagement.

"As a result of the operation six Australian special forces soldiers received minor wounds," he said.

"All soldiers were provided with immediate first aid and five soldiers were subsequently evacuated to a coalition medical facility for further treatment, the sixth wounded soldier was assessed by medical personnel and remained in the field."

Brig Gilmore also announced that Australian soldiers based in the Iraqi province of Al Muthanna have fired shots for the first time.
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NATO approves Afghanistan security expansion
Updated Wed. Jul. 26 2006 10:15 AM ET   Associated Press
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060718/nato_afghanistan_060726/20060726?hub=World

BRUSSELS, Belgium -- NATO countries have approved expansion of their 18,000-member security force to volatile southern Afghanistan, officials said Wednesday.

NATO spokesman James Appathurai said the alliance's top military commander, U.S. Gen. James Jones, would now start to initiate orders to take over the southern region from the current U.S.-led coalition troops around the end of July.

Canada, a NATO member, currently has about 2,200 soldiers on the ground in the south.
End



Plane crashes in Afghanistan, casualties not known
Wed Jul 26, 2006 Reuters
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-07-26T131511Z_01_ISL317256_RTRUKOC_0_US-AFGHAN-CRASH.xml&archived=False

KABUL (Reuters) - An unidentified plane crashed in southeastern Afghanistan on Wednesday, but there were no immediate reports of casualties, Afghan officials told Reuters.

The plane had taken off from southeastern province of Khost, where the U.S.-led coalition forces have a base, before crashing in a nearby province, they said.

A spokesman for the coalition forces in Kabul confirmed the crash, but said he had no details.
End

7 Taliban Killed in Southern Afghanistan
The Associated Press  By FISNIK ABRASHI July 26, 2006
http://www.topix.net/content/ap/3553734836107826531915146322290443872833

U.S.-led coalition troops killed seven suspected Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan, and Australia announced on Wednesday that six of its special forces soldiers were wounded in the same area earlier this month.

Authorities in northern Afghanistan questioned four Afghans in connection with the killing of a Canadian reconstruction worker, whose bullet-ridden body was found earlier this week.

The top European envoy to Afghanistan said the U.S.-led war on terror has been too focused on al-Qaida.

'I think perhaps they were too single-minded on one objective without seeing the broader picture, perhaps not realizing that it was not simply a matter of al-Qaida that had produced the Taliban,' said Francesc Vendrell, special EU representative for Afghanistan. 'But the Taliban had come to power because of bad governance that had happened in Afghanistan between 1992 and 1996.'

Vendrell said that by next month, there would be 18,000 NATO troops in all of Afghanistan, along with a similar number of U.S. forces _ the highest foreign military presence in the post-Taliban period.
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Hundreds of Taliban Assault Police Post
The Associated Press  By AMIR SHAH  July 24, 2006 
http://www.topix.net/content/ap/3677670799319699886540932818491551580347?threadid=TA9TVV4744GO6MN9

Hundreds of Taliban fighters firing rocket-propelled grenades on Monday attacked a district headquarters in southwestern Afghanistan, killing three police and wounding seven, amid of a flurry of suicide attacks, roadside bombings and shootings that claimed lives across the country.

A car bomb seriously wounded two U.S.-led coalition soldiers near Kandahar, and in another incident, four suspected suicide attackers riding two motorcycles died in a confrontation with Afghan police. In the west, gunmen killed two Afghans working for international aid agency World Vision who had been delivering medicine.

It was the latest in a bloody wave of violence between resurgent Taliban-led rebels and Afghan and foreign troops, and comes as NATO-led forces prepare to take over command of security operations in the hard-line militia's former southern heartland.

The heaviest fighting took place in Bakwa, a town in southwestern Farah province, which has been spared from the worst of the recent violence that has claimed more than 800 lives, mostly militants, since mid-May.
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Canadian shot to death in northern Afghanistan
July 26, 2006  People's Daily Online         
http://english.people.com.cn/200607/26/eng20060726_286892.html

A Canadian carpenter who had spent the last four summers in northern Afghanistan building a school was killed Sunday while working there.

Mike Frastacky, 56, was shot to death in a house in the town of Nahrin in the province of Baghlan, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported Tuesday.

Frastacky's sister said her brother began the project after he took a trek to Nahrin five years ago and found the community needs a school.

He paid for the project with his own money and by collecting small donations from friends and family. Putting his carpentry skills to use, he began building a school for 600 students complete with a library, playground and well providing fresh water.

The sister said Frastacky did the project because "he loved the Afghan people and wanted to spend some time other than building homes for Vancouver millionaires."

Source: Xinhua  END


Area firms ponder Afghanistan
Asian nation promotes its business opportunities - Ben Rand - Staff writer - (July 26, 2006)
http://www.democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060726/BUSINESS/607260365/1001

Given the events of the last five years, the notion of investing in Afghanistan may seem strange to some small to medium-sized business owners.

Since 2001, the Asian country has become a principal focus in the war on terror, marked by the U.S.-led invasion to rout out the Taliban and al-Qaeda. Progress toward a democracy, though steady, has been overshadowed by media reports of conflict.

But Afghanistan is very much open for business — and a safe and inviting place to be, a representative of the government of Afghanistan told a Rochester audience on Tuesday.

The country's economy has been growing 20 percent a year and is expected to grow at a 10 percent rate in each of the next three years, said Khaleda Atta, commercial attaché for the embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, D.C.

"There are very viable business opportunities for many businesses," Atta said at a luncheon meeting of the International Resource Group, a Rochester-based nonprofit that focuses on educating businesses about foreign investment.

The opportunities are rapidly expanding beyond the typical needs of reconstruction to include energy, telecommunications, water and waste management, civil aviation and consumer goods, Atta said.

The country has attracted substantial investments in and around Kabul, including a high-rise hotel and a $25 million Coca-Cola bottling plant. About 70 U.S. companies have obtained their investment licenses in Afghanistan, with plans for $75 million in investment.

Sharon L. Badenhop, president of USA East Associates Inc. and a founder of the IRG who invited Atta, said she was struck by the notion that Rochester businesses produce what Afghanistan needs.

That Afghanistan is open for business is surprising but makes sense, said Eduardo Navarro, president of EIC Electronics of Rochester. "It's interesting to see it, and why not?" Navarro said.

[email protected]



Seven Taliban militants killed, 6 soldiers wounded in Afghanistan
Kabul, July 26 (AP): The Hindu News Update Service
http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/003200607261440.htm

The US-led coalition troops killed seven suspected Taliban militants in southern Afghanistan as Australia announced today that six of its special forces soldiers were wounded in the same area earlier this month.

Authorities in northern Afghanistan today questioned four Afghans in connection with the killing of a Canadian reconstruction worker, whose bullet-ridden body was found earlier this week.

Gunmen today also killed an Afghan worker and wounded three others who had been helping build a road to a US led coalition base in the south of the country.

Violence has escalated sharply in Afghanistan this year as Taliban-led rebels have stepped up attacks, particularly in their former southern heartland, drawing a tough response from Afghan and foreign forces.

Militants attacked a coalition patrol with rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns yesterday, prompting soldiers to respond with heavy machine-gun fire and kill seven insurgents in southern Helmand province's Garmser district, a coalition statement said. There were no military causalities.

Separately, six Australian special forces soldiers have been wounded during heavy fighting in mid-July in southern Afghanistan, said Brig. Gus Gilmore, spokesman for the Australian Defense Force. He would not disclose the exact location or time of the incident.

Gilmore said the soldiers were taking part in a military operation. One of the six soldiers has returned to Australia for treatment, while the others suffered minor wounds.

 
NATO approves expanding security force to southern Afghanistan
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/26072006/2/world-nato-approves-expanding-security-force-southern-afghanistan.html

"BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - NATO countries have approved expansion of their 18,000-member security force to volatile southern Afghanistan, officials said Wednesday.

NATO spokesman James Appathurai said the alliance's top military commander, U.S. Gen. James Jones, would now start to initiate orders to take over the southern region from the current U.S.-led coalition troops around the end of July.

Canada, a NATO member, currently has about 2,200 soldiers on the ground in the south."

Mark
Ottawa
 
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