The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Air strikes hurting IS group in Afghanista­n — US

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WASHINGTON: The Islamic State’s nascent presence in Afghanista­n has dwindled after the US military stepped up strikes on the jihadists, a US general said yesterday, but warned they possess the ability to ‘catch fire’ again.

In the first three months of the year, the US military conducted ‘just under’ 100 counterter­rorism strikes in Afghanista­n, 70-80 of which targeted the IS group, Brigadier General Charles Cleveland said.

“The capacity of Daesh, we believe, has been lessened,” the Kabul-based general told reporters, using an Arabic abbreviati­on for the IS group, which overran large areas of Syria and Iraq in a brutal offensive and has attempted to make inroads in war-torn Afghanista­n too.

“Their overall footprint in Nangarhar we do believe has been lessened as well,” he said, referring to a province in eastern Afghanista­n where IS fighters have focused attention on the regional capital Jalalabad.

Just based on their past performanc­e they have got the ability to catch fire very quickly. So we do want to continue to have constant pressure on them.

The US military estimates between 1,000 and 3,000 IS fighters are in Afghanista­n. Cleveland said the number was likely on the ‘lower end’ of that. They comprise disaffecte­d Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, as well as Uzbek Islamists and locals, Cleveland said.

The Obama administra­tion in January approved new rules loosening when the US military could hit IS fighters. Previously, the Pentagon could only do so under limited circumstan­ces, such as for protecting local Afghan troops. Despite recent successes against the IS group in Afghanista­n Cleveland warned the jihadists could quickly rejuvenate.

“Just based on their past performanc­e they have got the ability to catch fire very quickly. So we do want to continue to have constant pressure on them,” he said in a video call.

Long-establishe­d Taliban militants, however, remain a major force and this week announced a Spring offensive.

“We’ve seen them begin to reestablis­h their presence in Helmand (in the south), and we see them on the offense, particular­ly trying to clear some areas on the eastern part of Helmand,” Cleveland said. Also present in Afghanista­n are 100-300 al-Qaeda fighters, who are rivals of the IS group.

Cleveland earlier told AFP the US military is investigat­ing air strikes it conducted this month in Afghanista­n. Kabul said the strikes killed 17 ‘insurgents’ but local officials and witnesses insist they were civilians.

On April 6, ‘US forces conducted two counterter­rorism strikes in Paktika’ province, Cleveland said in a statement.

“Currently, there is no evidence of civilian casualties. However, we are conducting a thorough investigat­ion into the strikes,” he added, without saying why they were carried out or the number of victims.

Haji Hussain Khan, a tribal elder from Gomal district, said three drone strikes killed 17 people. District governor Shaista Khan corroborat­ed the account, saying those killed included youths and elders of the Kakarzai tribe returning from a meeting over a land dispute.

“The 17 victims were all civilians,” he said. But an Afghan official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the dead were “armed insurgents linked to alQaeda. All the victims were armed insurgents,” Paktika governor Aminullah Shariq added. — AFP

Charles Cleveland, Brigadier General

 ??  ?? A man rides on a motorbike as another one walks past damaged buildings in the rebel-controlled area of al-Nashabyia town in Eastern Ghouta, Syria. — Reuters photo
A man rides on a motorbike as another one walks past damaged buildings in the rebel-controlled area of al-Nashabyia town in Eastern Ghouta, Syria. — Reuters photo

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