Baltimore Sun

New leader to command coalition in Afghanista­n

U.S. general praises the ‘heroes’ in fight against insurgents

- By Ali M. Latifi

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A new commander took charge of the U.S.-led military coalition in Afghanista­n on Wednesday as a deadly suicide bombing illustrate­d the challenges he faces in a conflict now in its 15th year.

Gen. John W. “Mick” Nicholson took over from Gen. John Campbell during a ceremony at NATO coalition headquarte­rs in Kabul at a moment when insur- gents control more territory in Afghanista­n than at any time since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion.

Nicholson, 58, praised Afghan and internatio­nal forces for continuing the fight against insurgents, who now include not only the Taliban but also militants claiming allegiance to Syria- and Iraq-based Islamic State.

“I believe that all who have fought bravely within the Afghan security forces and the coalition are heroes,” Nicholson said.

“But the real heroes of this conflict are the Afghan people — those Afghan leaders here in the capital who take on the tough job of creating and running a government, and those in the villages and towns of Afghanista­n whose lives have indeed been improved in the years since 2001, but who also have had to face the uncertaint­y and losses involved in this conflict.”

Civilian casualties rose in 2015 to their highest levels in recent years, according to United Nations statistics, as the fighting with insurgents stretched Afghan security forces and brought violence into areas once considered safe.

On Wednesday, a suicide attack in the eastern city of Jalalabad left at least three people dead and 19 injured.

Officials said a suicide bomber detonated his explosives near the gates of the Indian Consulate, which is next to several other foreign diplomatic missions.

Then four gunmen began a half-hour battle with Afghan security forces, who ultimately killed the attackers, officials said.

At least two civilians and a police officer were killed.

No group immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Campbell oversaw the drawdown of coalition forces and the transition to an advisory role in support of Afghan forces in December 2014, only to see U.S. special operations forces and warplanes drawn back into the conflict after Taliban insurgents waged offensives in the north and south in recent months.

Nicholson, who begins his fourth tour in Afghanista­n, leads a force of 13,000 internatio­nal troops from more than 40 countries, including 9,800 Americans.

Addressing his comments to insurgents, Nicholson said: “I know you. You have brought only hardship and suffering to the Afghan people.”

But he also is left to deal with the repercussi­ons of two deadly incidents that i nvolved i nternation­al forces.

Last fall, U.S. forces bombed a hospital run by the medical charity Doctors Without Borders in the northern city of Kunduz, leaving 42 people dead and more than 30 injured.

More recently, internatio­nal forces were implicated in a raid on a hospital run by the Swedish Committee for Afghanista­n, an aid agency, in the eastern province of Wardak. The aid group said that Afghan and internatio­nal troops entered its hospital last month, forced two patients and a 15-year-old relative out of the hospital and shot all three dead.

NATO officials said they were aware of the allegation­s and have begun an investigat­ion.

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