Dayton Daily News

U.S. airstrikes push back Taliban

Afghans drop food, ammo to soldiers in besieged province.

- By Lynne O’Donnell

Afghan forces backed by U.S. airstrikes pushed back a Taliban onslaught Thursday in a strategica­lly important district in the southern Afghan province of Helmand, officials said.

Sangin district had been besieged by the insurgents for weeks before an uptick in the ferocity of the fight this week sparked concerns it could fall to Taliban control.

But civilian and military officials said Sangin remained in government hands after the United States conducted two airstrikes overnight, and Afghan military helicopter­s dropped food and ammunition to soldiers and police who had been surrounded and trapped inside the district army base for days.

The presence of a small contingent of British troops, who arrived in the Shorab base — formerly Britain’s Camp Bastion during their Afghan combat mission — on Wednesday had helped boost morale of both civilians and security forces, officials said.

Overnight, the Taliban captured parts of the center of Sangin district around the district governor’s compound, but the Afghan forces, bolstered by reinforcem­ents, soon succeeded in driving them further out, said Akhtar Muhammad, a police commander in Sangin.

“An hour later we recaptured that building and now we have it,” he said.

In recent days, the Taliban assault has threatened to overrun Sangin, a major poppy-growing area in Helmand, raising alarm that Afghan forces were too overstretc­hed to fend off the insurgency. The Taliban this week pronounced they had seized control of the district, but the claim was widely refuted by Afghan officials.

As the military rushed more troops to the area, Afghan officials on Wednesday asked for the internatio­nal military coalition’s help, including airstrikes.

Just before midnight, U.S. warplanes conducted two strikes in the vicinity of Sangin, the spokesman for the NATO mission in Afghanista­n, U.S. Army Col. Mike Lawhorn, said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States