Bombs away
U.S., NATO
and Afghan forces stormed into the Taliban-held town of Dahaneh in
Helmand province before dawn today, battling to gain control of the
strategically important village ahead of next Thursday's presidential
election (
AP).
Operation Eastern Resolve II is designed to cut off the Taliban from a
main base and reclaim the area's main market district, breaking the
months-long stalemate between coalition forces and insurgents.
Dahaneh is a main trading route through the northern parts of Helmand, which produces 60 percent of the world's opium (
Al Jazeera). Casualty figures are as yet unavailable (
Voice of America).
The
number of effective IEDs in Afghanistan for the month of July is triple
what it was during the same month last year, suggesting that Taliban
militants are becoming more sophisticated at placing and setting off
the roadside bombs that are the source of the majority of U.S. and NATO
deaths (
AP).
August is on pace to be the deadliest month yet for foreign troops in
Afghanistan, surpassing July, when 75 U.S. and NATO soldiers were
killed.The Pentagon figures are available here (
JIEDDO).
As
an example of the danger from roadside bombs, two Associated Press
journalists embedded with the U.S. military in southern Afghanistan
were wounded early this morning when an IED exploded their vehicle (
AP).
And seven policemen were killed in Kabul and northern Afghanistan this
morning, including a district police chief in the northern province of
Kunduz (
AFP and
Quqnoos).
Incumbent
Afghan president Hamid Karzai's supporters are reportedly at work
trying to rig next week's presidential election, attempting to collect
or buy voter registration cards (
Times of London). Reports of security concerns and corruption are widespread, particularly in largely Pashtun areas of Afghanistan (
AP).
Money makes the world go 'round
U.S.
ambassador to Afghanistan General Karl Eikenberry has told the State
Department that an additional $2.5 billion in nonmilitary aid is
necessary "if we are to show progress in the next 14 months" (
Washington Post).
Since 2001, the U.S. has spent around $38 billion on reconstruction,
more than half of it training and equipping Afghan security forces.
Nukes, lawsuits, and refugees
A
Pakistani military spokesman denied that Taliban militants have
attacked any of the country's nuclear facilities, in reaction to claims
by a U.K. professor that militants have made three attempts in two
years to strike them (
AP).
Shaun Gregory's article, which appeared in the July issue of West
Point's Combating Terrorism Center's journal, is available here (
CTC Sentinel, 24 pp, pdf).
Pakistani
police yesterday filed a criminal case against former president General
Pervez Musharraf for ordering the illegal detention of judges during
Pakistan's 2007 political crisis (
Wall Street Journal and
Dawn).
Currently living in London, Musharraf could be arrested if he returns
to Pakistan and faces up to three years in prison if convicted (
Los Angeles Times).
Of
the more then two million refugees from this spring's conflict in the
Swat Valley and surrounding districts, some 765,000 have returned (
Daily Times), but Taliban militants are still carrying out acts of violence in the region, torching seven primary schools in Buner (
Bloomberg).
Please don't stop the music
Some
Pakistani youths are taking to the studio and the concert hall to vent
against the Taliban militants who are causing such violence in their
country (
Reuters). The Taliban, opposed to music, theater and film, have not asked these musical entrepreneurs for a theme song.
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