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NATO, Afghan Forces
Launch Offensive
24 July 2008
NATO and Afghan forces have launched an offensive against militants to
regain control of a remote district in southern Afghanistan.
207th
Afghan National Army (207th ANA) Corps Combat Support Battalion soldiers
NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) says troops began
an operation Wednesday in Ghazni province, after militants took over the
Ajiristan district on Monday. ISAF says some militants in the area were
killed during a coordinated airstrike.
Meanwhile, a district police chief was killed when a roadside bomb
struck his convoy in Nangarhar province.
In Wardak province, the U.S.-led coalition says troops killed militants
during a search in the Saydabad district Tuesday.
In Washington, a Defense Department spokesman said the decision to send
more U.S. troops to Afghanistan will be left to the next presidential
administration.
U.S. commanders have been asking for three more combat brigades, or
about 10,000 troops, to help confront rising violence in Afghanistan.
On Tuesday, the top U.S. military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, said the
U.S. does not have the man-power to send urgently needed military
reinforcements to Afghanistan. He said U.S. troops are all heavily
committed in Iraq.
In other news, coalition and Afghan forces killed groups of enemy
fighters during operations in Afghanistan this week, military officials
said.
While coalition
forces yesterday searched compounds in the Sayed Abad district of Wardak
province for a Taliban commander, a cadre of militants inside a
barricaded house attacked troops with grenades, machine guns and
small-arms fire.
Coalition
forces fought back using small arms and grenades, and they called in an
air strike, killing an unknown number of the enemy fighters, military
officials said.
Combined forces also came under ambush during a July 21 operation in the
Maruf district of Kandahar province. As troops patrolled the area,
militants attacked from a fortified position, using small-arms fire and
rocket-propelled grenades. The combined force returned small-arms fire
and called for close-air support. The retaliation killed several
militants and destroyed their attack position, military officials said.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan on July 21, Afghan national security forces and
coalition forces observed a group of enemy fighters amassing along a
ridgeline in the Shah Wali Kot district of Kandahar province. As the
armed fighters moved into fortified fighting positions, the combined
forces engaged them with small-arms fire and called for close-air
support, killing the militants.
No Afghan or coalition forces were injured or killed during the
engagement, military officials said. |