Top US officer warns:
Afghan war will get worse
AFGHANISTAN: More NATO troops will die in Afghanistan as violence
mounts over the summer, but Washington’s goal of turning the tide
against the insurgency by year’s end is within reach, the top US
military officer said on Sunday.
The remarks by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike
Mullen, on a visit to the country, came as the Taliban said they were
holding captive one of two U.S. servicemen who strayed into insurgent
territory, and that the other had been killed.
It also comes less than a week since a major international conference
in Kabul agreed that the Afghan government should aim to take
responsibility for security in all parts of the country by 2014.
Mullen, who called the troops’ disappearance an “unusual
circumstance,” said there would be more violent incidents to come, but
the US military was doing everything possible to find the missing men,
who were both from the Navy.
A spokesman for the NATO-led force declined to comment on the
Taliban’s announcement it was holding one of the men.
The Navy described both men as still missing.
“Forces on the ground in Afghanistan are doing everything they can to
locate and safely return our missing shipmates,” Admiral Gary Roughead,
Chief of Naval Operations, said in a statement.
The Afghan Government said on Sunday it was checking reports from
villagers that civilians had been killed in a raid by foreign forces in
Sangin, in southern Helmand province, on Friday.
The NATO-led force said it was aware of reports of the incident and
was investigating, but would not comment further until further details
were available. Such incidents have triggered outrage in the past among
the population against the international troops whose mission is to
protect them.
Elsewhere, Taliban guerrillas captured a remote district from the
Afghan government after days of clashes in eastern Nuristan province,
officials said on Sunday.
A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said police were working to
recapture Barg-i-Matal, a district that has changed hands several times
in recent months. US troops pulled out of the remote and mountanous
region in line with Washington’s strategy of giving priority to
protecting population centres.
Violence in Afghanistan is at its highest of the 9-year war as
thousands of extra US troops, dispatched by President Barack Obama in
December, step up their campaign to drive insurgents out of their
traditional heartland in the south.
Last month was the deadliest for foreign troops since 2001, with more
than 100 killed, and civilian deaths have also risen as ordinary Afghans
are increasingly caught in the crossfire.
“As we continue our force levels and our operations over the summer
... we will likely see further tough casualties and levels of violence,”
Mullen told a news conference in Kabul.
Kabul, Monday, Reuters
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