Taliban storm army outposts, kill 18 soldiers

Published April 14, 2015
The pre-dawn raid in the Jurm district of Badakhshan province on Friday marks a grim setback for Afghan forces, set to face their first fighting season in which they battle insurgents without full Nato support. — AFP/file
The pre-dawn raid in the Jurm district of Badakhshan province on Friday marks a grim setback for Afghan forces, set to face their first fighting season in which they battle insurgents without full Nato support. — AFP/file

KUNDUZ: Militants killed 18 Afghan soldiers — including some who were beheaded — after storming army outposts in the remote mountainous northeast, officials said on Monday, in a major attack before the Taliban’s traditional spring offensive.

The pre-dawn raid in the Jurm district of Badakhshan province on Friday marks a grim setback for Afghan forces, set to face their first fighting season in which they battle insurgents without full Nato support.

The militants have stepped up attacks on government and foreign targets since Washington backpedalled on plans to shrink the US force in Afghanistan this year by nearly half.

“Eighteen Afghan soldiers were ma­r­tyred and eight of them were be­headed” on Friday, provincial spo­ke­s­man Naweed Frotan said, adding that some 200 fighters stormed the posts.

The Taliban attackers also took seven soldiers hostage, but three of them were later freed after the intervention of local elders, acting provincial governor Shah Waliullah Adeeb told local media.

“Three of those taken hostage were martyred and one other soldier remains missing,” he said.

The defence ministry confirmed the incident in a statement and said the fighting left a total of 33 Afghan soldiers dead, wounded or missing.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which highlights Afghanistan’s precarious security situation as US-led foreign troops pull back from the frontlines after a 13-year war against the insurgents.Nato’s combat mission formally ended in December but a small follow-up foreign force has stayed on to train and support local security forces. President Barack Obama last month announced a delay in US troop withdrawals from Afghanistan, an overture to the country’s new reform-minded leader, President Ashraf Ghani.

Hosting Ghani at the White House for their first presidential face-to-face meeting, Obama agreed to keep the current level of 9,800 US troops until the end of 2015.

Published in Dawn, April 14th, 2015

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