Kuwait Times

Seven Afghan troops killed in Taleban attack

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MAZAR-I-SHARIF: Seven Afghan soldiers were killed in a Taliban attack on a base in northern Afghanista­n yesterday, officials said, as local and internatio­nal forces brace for another deadly winter.

According to the Afghan defense ministry, “terrorists” attacked a joint military base in the Dawlat Abad district of Balkh province near the Uzbekistan border.

The base was shared between the army and the National Directorat­e of Security, Afghanista­n’s secretive intelligen­ce agency. “As a result of this attack, seven Afghan army soldiers died and three others were wounded. Meanwhile, in this attack, three NDS staff were also injured,” the defense ministry said in a statement.

Taleban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said 20 soldiers had been killed in the attack, including a commander. “Six soldiers were wounded and four arrested. The base was captured,” Mujahid wrote on Twitter.

The attack comes one day after the Taliban claimed responsibi­lity for the death of an American special forces soldier, who was killed in Kunduz province, also in the north. The Taleban said they had attacked the vehicle he was in, whereas the US military said he died when a weapons cache he had been investigat­ing exploded. Winter once marked a slowdown in the socalled “fighting season”, with Taleban fighters returning to their villages while snow and ice made attacks more difficult to pull off. But in recent years, the distinctio­n between seasons has all but vanished.

According to German intelligen­ce officials at Camp Marmal, a German-run base outside Mazar-i-sharif in Balkh, January 2019 saw one of the highest-ever numbers of attacks in the north.

“If there is no game changer on the strategic level, it will be a ‘hot’ winter,” one official told AFP.

“We are talking about two dozens of security incidents average per day” across NATO’s northern command, he added. In October, local officials said a column of hundreds of Taliban fighters on motorbikes attacked Shortepa district police headquarte­rs in Balkh, briefly capturing the facility.

The German intelligen­ce official said the number was exaggerate­d, with likely only “dozens” of fighters. Still, it highlights how quickly Taliban fighters can mass and then disperse back into the local population. “There’s fierce fighting going on all through the year, meaning that the Taliban managed to expand into some territorie­s that haven’t been their traditiona­l ones,” the official said. —AFP

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