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THE STANS
Taliban bomber kills nine at Afghan NATO base
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Feb 27, 2012

India plans wargames near Pakistan border
New Delhi (AFP) Feb 27, 2012 - The Indian military is to conduct one of its largest mock war drills -- involving 20,000 troops -- close to the country's border with nuclear-armed rival Pakistan, an official said on Monday.

The manoeuvres, named Shoorveer or Brave Warrior, which will also involve 200 Russian-made tanks, are due to begin in the deserts of India's state of Rajasthan next month, army spokesman colonel Jagdeep Dahiya told AFP.

"The exercise will be one of the largest manoeuvres conducted so far," he said, adding that latest warplanes would be factored into the drills, which are scheduled to end in May.

In a separate statement the military said tanks, frontline combat vehicles, artillery, helicopters, fighter jets, drones, air-defence weapons and military radars would be part of the exercise.

Another military source said the event would be held less than 200 kilometres (124 miles) from the highly militarised border with Pakistan, with which India has fought three wars since independence from British rule in 1947.

Dahiya dismissed fears the exercise -- to be conducted by an elite military corps raised only for cross-border assault -- would crank up tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad.

"We do inform Pakistan in advance whenever such large-scale exercises are conducted by us," the army colonel added.

New Delhi froze peace talks started in 2004 with Islamabad following attacks in Mumbai in 2008 by gunmen India says came from Pakistan. The assault left 166 people dead.

The slow-moving peace dialogue resumed early last year with cross visits by officials to India and Pakistan.

The two South Asian adversaries carried out tit-for-tat nuclear detonations in 1998 and declared themselves as nuclear-armed states.


A Taliban suicide car bomber targeting NATO troops at an airport in eastern Afghanistan killed nine people Monday, the seventh day of violence over the burning of the Koran at a US airbase.

The insurgents also said they were behind an attempt to poison foreign troops, as the death toll from unrest and protests that spread to even usually peaceful parts of the war-ravaged country hit about 40.

The UN announced that it was pulling its international staff out of their base in the northern Afghan province of Kunduz after it came under attack Saturday by demonstrators protesting the burning of the Koran.

The move came after NATO's International Security Assistance Force pulled all its staff out of Afghan ministries at the weekend when two US advisors were shot dead in the interior ministry, apparently by an Afghan colleague.

Six civilians, an Afghan soldier and two local guards were killed in the bomb attack on the military base at Jalalabad airport, but NATO troops escaped unhurt.

The Taliban said it was revenge for the Koran burning.

"The foreign forces have insulted our religion and this attack was revenge," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told AFP.

The hardliners also claimed that an "Afghan cook" working on their behalf poisoned the food of NATO troops at another base in the same province of Nangarhar.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) launched an investigation after "traces of bleach" were found in fruit and coffee, a spokesman said.

"There were no injuries, no fatality. The investigation is ongoing," said Master Sergeant Nicholas Conner.

On Sunday, seven US soldiers were wounded in a grenade attack during an anti-US demonstration at their base in northern Kunduz province, police said.

On Saturday, two US advisors were shot dead in the interior ministry in Kabul, just days after two US troops died as an Afghan soldier turned his weapon on them as thousands of demonstrators approached their base in the east.

The UN said the relocation of its international staff from the Kunduz base would be within Afghanistan.

It added it would "put in place additional arrangements and measures to make sure that the office can continue to operate in safety".

The US embassy has been in lockdown since the violence erupted and has warned of a "heightened potential threat to American citizens in Afghanistan".

Afghan President Hamid Karzai appealed on television for calm, while condemning the treatment of Islam's holy book.

In a televised weekend statement, he said he respected the emotions of Afghans upset by the Koran burning in an incinerator pit at Bagram airbase, but urged them not to let "the enemies of Afghanistan misuse their feelings".

Taliban insurgents have called on Afghans to kill foreign troops in revenge for the Koran incident and claimed to also have been behind the killing of the two US advisers in the interior ministry.

The shooting prompted NATO and several European countries to pull their advisors out of Afghan government ministries, while fallout from the Koran burnings widened as Afghan ministers cancelled a visit to Washington.

The Pentagon said Sunday that Afghanistan's defence and interior ministers had cancelled the trip this week to concentrate on addressing security concerns at home.

US President Barack Obama has apologised for the burning of the Korans, which officials said were inadvertently sent to the incinerator.

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NATO probes food after Taliban poison claim
Kabul (AFP) Feb 27, 2012 - The Taliban claimed Monday it was behind the poisoning of coalition troops' food in eastern Afghanistan as NATO launched an investigation after "traces of bleach" were found in fruit and coffee.

The investigation was opened after lab tests discovered the traces in the food at a base run by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Nangarhar province, an ISAF spokesman told AFP.

"There were no injuries, no fatality. The investigation is ongoing," Master Seargent Nicholas Conner said, adding that NATO staff, Afghans and nationals from a third country worked at the dining facilities.

The Taliban, which is waging an insurgency to oust the 130,000-strong US-led ISAF force from Afghanistan, claimed that an "Afghan cook" had poisoned the food.

The incident follows days of anti-US protests over the burning of Korans at a US military base and the killing of two senior US advisors inside the nation's interior ministry compound -- reportedly by an Afghan employee.

Two other US soldiers were killed, also in Nangarhar, by an Afghan trooper who turned his weapon on them as demonstrators approached their base last Thursday.

And on Monday, a Taliban suicide car bomber killed nine people in an attack on the airport in the provincial capital Jalalabad, where another NATO base is located.

No ISAF staff were injured in the blast, which the Taliban said was in retaliation for the Koran burning at the US-run Bagram airbase north of Kabul.



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THE STANS
Fallout from Afghan Koran burning widens
Kabul (AFP) Feb 27, 2012
The fallout from Koran burnings at a US airbase, which triggered a week of violence, has widened as Afghan ministers cancelled a visit to Washington and Western nations expanded withdrawals of civilian staff. The moves came after two US advisers were shot dead at the interior ministry in Kabul Saturday in an attack blamed on a rogue Afghan intelligence official and claimed by the Taliban as ... read more


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