Los Angeles Times

Taliban to resume targeting ‘occupiers’

- By Ali M. Latifi Latifi is a special correspond­ent.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — The Taliban movement in Afghanista­n announced Wednesday that it will launch its annual spring offensive on Friday.

In a statement on its website, Afghanista­n’s largest armed opposition group said this year’s offensive will be called Azm, or Resolute.

As in recent years, the group said the principal targets of its operations will be “the foreign occupiers,” which are primarily U.S. troops, with an emphasis on attacking permanent military bases, intelligen­ce units and diplomatic centers.

The government of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, which the Taliban referred to as a “stooge regime,” also will be a primary target, the statement said.

Afghanista­n’s harsh winters usually curtail fighting, and militant groups resume operations in spring.

Despite the Taliban’s insistence that it will focus on military and government­al targets, annual reports by internatio­nal agencies have repeatedly accused the Taliban and other opposition groups of being behind the majority of civilian casualties in the country.

In a report issued this month, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanista­n found that civilian casualties from ground fighting rose by 8% in the first three months of 2015, compared with the same period last year.

The first quarter of 2015, the mission reported, saw 136 civilian deaths and 385 injuries as a result of battles between Afghan security forces and the armed opposition, including the Taliban. Of those, the armed opposition was said to be responsibl­e for 73% of the casualties.

In Wednesday’s statement, the Taliban said its fighters will “execute their plans with great care and deliberati­on in all parts of the country ... [and] top priority will be given to safeguardi­ng and protecting the lives and properties of the civilian people.”

The announceme­nt of the offensive follows repeated statements by the Ghani administra­tion that it is seeking to lay the groundwork for direct peace talks with the Taliban.

Talk of such negotiatio­ns has been more muted of late, as some Afghan officials have accused Islamic State of building up a presence in their country. The claim has been disputed by others, including Interior Minister Noorolhaq Olomi, who said fighters claiming to be with the movement based in Syria and Iraq are merely disgruntle­d or renamed Taliban fighters.

“I have repeatedly said that only black flags have been raised and they are the same Taliban who have rebranded themselves,” he said last week.

A suicide bombing Saturday in Jalalabad brought the issue of Islamic State’s role in Afghanista­n to the fore as competing sources claiming to represent the group first took responsibi­lity for the attack and then denied its involvemen­t. The attack killed 34 people.

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