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THE STANS
Taliban attacks down for first time: ISAF
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 11, 2011


The number of Taliban attacks in Afghanistan has declined for the first time in a "welcome" trend in the ten-year-old war, an officer with the NATO-led force said Tuesday.

Overall insurgent attacks are down in the past two months compared to last year and the Taliban has failed in recent months to seize back territory lost in US-led offensives in the south, said Major General Michael Krause, an Australian officer who serves as deputy chief of staff for International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).

"Every year there have been more violent activities in Afghanistan since the previous year except this one," said Krause by video link from Afghanistan.

"Over the last two months the violence trends in Afghanistan have reduced compared with last year ...," he said.

ISAF statistics showed insurgent assaults were down in 17 of the last 22 weeks, he said.

"Now, that's a trend. And although we still face tremendous challenges and we always must remain realistic about our objectives and goals, that's a very, very welcome trend and the first year that we've seen that trend," said Krause, on his second tour in Afghanistan.

But despite the upbeat assessment, the course of the war remains the subject of debate amid doubts about Afghan security forces and the corruption-plagued Afghan government.

ISAF's account also differed from a United Nations report last month showing the total number of security incidents up 39 percent in the first eight months of 2011, compared to the previous year.

Krause said the discrepancy between the ISAF and UN tallies could be explained by a difference in how the two organizations calculate violence trends.

The UN counts all security-related incidents, including reported threats and street demonstrations, while the NATO-led coalition only tallies confirmed violent attacks, he said.

Recent high-profile attacks by the insurgency, including a 19-hour-long assault on the US embassy in Kabul and a truck bombing that wounded 77 American troops, had obscured broader progress in the war effort with NATO now seizing the momentum, he said.

But he said insurgent attacks have not declined in the east, where NATO-led forces have encountered a resilient adversary in the rugged mountains neighboring Pakistan.

The Australian general referred to trends but did not outline the total number of insurgent attacks this year or in 2010.

The Taliban had vowed to take back former strongholds in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar but the summer fighting season came and went without the insurgency gaining back ground, Krause said.

"We still hold all of those population centers, and we've done so since we secured them. The Taliban has not been successful, and his offensive has failed," he said.

The Taliban acknowledged the battlefield setbacks in a communication intercepted by foreign forces, Krause added.

"He also knows he's failed. How do I know that?"

"Well, we intercepted a very, very welcome transmission from the inner shura not so long ago that admitted that Al-Badr (offensive) had failed. In fact, the translation used the phrase: utterly failed." he said.

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Two dead as NATO oil tanker torched in SW Pakistan
Quetta, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 11, 2011 - Two people were killed when gunmen torched an oil tanker carrying fuel for NATO troops in Afghanistan in the southwestern Pakistani province of Baluchistan on Tuesday, officials said.

Gunmen on a motorbike fired at the vehicle then set it on fire in the Dasht suburb of the provincial capital Quetta, local administration official Saeed Kurd told AFP.

The driver and his helper were killed as they could not escape the burning vehicle, he said.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack but the Taliban has in the past said it carried out similar attacks to disrupt supplies to the more than 130,000 US-led international troops fighting in Afghanistan.

Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants frequently launch attacks on NATO supply vehicles in the northwest and southwest regions of Pakistan, which border landlocked Afghanistan.

Most supplies and equipment required by foreign forces in Afghanistan are shipped through Pakistan, although US troops increasingly use alternative routes through Central Asia.



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THE STANS
NATO optimistic over Afghan transition: Rasmussen
Bucharest (AFP) Oct 10, 2011
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Monday he was confident the transition from NATO to local control of security in Afghanistan will be completed by 2014 as planned. "I am quite optimistic about fulfilling the timetable to transfer lead responsability to the Afghans, a process that started in July this year and that will be completed by 2014," Rasmussen told members of NATO's ... read more


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