What's new

Taliban Making Military Gains in Afghanistan

Bulk of officers are still trained in india,,,sorry:coffee:

India won't allow Pakistani officers into their training programs so we have to take a detour in order to keep a tab on what Indians indoctrinate ANA with. Quite a few of our boys in ANA uniforms have been trained in India.
 
The last time you cut a deal with the Taliban was when your jetliner was hijacked for which you had to pay a handsome booty. ;)
Paying off Taliban to let mining operations continue is not a big deal. Practically done in half of the globe. Certainly acceptable as long as those minerals reach home.
 
Paying off Taliban to let mining operations continue is not a big deal. Practically done in half of the globe. Certainly acceptable as long as those minerals reach home.


+ Taliban of 2014 is not same Taliban of 1999. It is improbable that Taliban would become bitch of Pakistan like the one in pre 2001 era was. Taliban has extended overtures to India and is rumored to be in constant touch with Indian consulate.

Is India flirting with the Taliban?

Taliban praises India for resisting U.S. pressure on Afghanistan - The Hindu

In a rare move, Afghan Taliban praise India – The Express Tribune

What lies behind the Taliban statement on India? | Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
 
+ Taliban of 2014 is not same Taliban of 1999. It is improbable that Taliban would become bitch of Pakistan like the one in pre 2001 era was. Taliban has extended overtures to India and is rumored to be in constant touch with Indian consulate.

Is India flirting with the Taliban?

Taliban praises India for resisting U.S. pressure on Afghanistan - The Hindu

In a rare move, Afghan Taliban praise India – The Express Tribune

What lies behind the Taliban statement on India? | Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses

Qualify your statement.

Those are the Pakistani Taliban you are referring to.
 
After Losing Province in 2010, Afghan Taliban Strike Back
By CARLOTTA GALL and TAIMOOR SHAHJULY 27, 2014



KABUL, Afghanistan — A sudden Taliban offensive in the southern province of Kandahar in recent days has led to some of the heaviest protracted fighting there in years, officials said on Sunday. The militants overran a district center on the border with Pakistan, battled government forces near the provincial capital and staged a suicide-bomber attack on a home of the province’s powerful security chief.


Kandahar, a crucial base of Taliban power since the 1990s, had enjoyed much improved security since the surge of American troops pushed the Taliban out in 2010. American forces still maintain a base at the Kandahar airport, but Afghan forces have aggressively taken the lead in the province under the security chief, Gen. Abdul Raziq, whose brutal tactics in fighting the Taliban have raised criticism but have nonetheless been seen as effective.

In an annual public statement over the weekend for the holiday of Eid al-Fitr, the Taliban’s supreme leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, reiterated his determination to re-establish an Islamic emirate in Afghanistan. The proof was borne out by a multifront offensive in Kandahar involving hundreds of Taliban fighters that was seemingly timed to take advantage of Eid al-Fitr, which closes the holy month of Ramadan. Up to 100 Taliban, Pakistani and other foreign fighters attacked the district compound of Registan, the southernmost desert district of the province, on Saturday, Afghan officials said.

The battle raged for 10 hours as policemen fought for the compound, but their commander and five of his men were killed in the fighting as they ran out of ammunition, said Dawa Khan Minapal, a government spokesman in Kandahar. The area is remote, and army and police reinforcements were hours away across the red desert that gives the district its name.

General Raziq had set off leading security forces to the south to repel the Taliban and secure the border when news came of an attack by six suicide bombers on his home in Spinbaldak, which borders Pakistan in the east. The bombers occupied a school near his home and aimed rockets and gunfire on the guesthouse where his family was living. The border guards in charge of security of his house fought back, leading to an extended firefight in which one guard was killed and three others were wounded.

The bombers were shot dead or blew themselves up. A civilian boy was also killed, but there were no casualties in General Raziq’s family, his spokesman, Zia Durani, said.

Two days earlier, an estimated 250 Taliban fighters made a surprise attack on security outposts in Zhare District, to the west of the provincial capital. Afghan security forces repelled the attacks, but the clashes continued much of Friday. Twenty-four Taliban fighters were killed in the heavy fighting, Mr. Minapal said. One policeman and one army soldier were killed, and five police officers were wounded.

An elder from Zhare said the Taliban showed up in several villages Friday morning as people were attending prayers at their mosques. “People rushed to evacuate their homes,” said the elder, Hajji Abdullah Khan, who comes from the village of Pashmul. Some went to an adjoining district of Panjwai and some to Kandahar city, as he did, he said.

“If the fighting continues, we fear that we will lose the grape harvest, and that will really affect people economically because we have nothing except our vineyards, and we have invested all our efforts and wealth in them,” he said.

Mr. Khan said the area had found a kind of peace after the American troop surge, and a year and a half since a popular uprising repulsed the remnants of the Taliban and led the population to swing around to support the government and security forces. Insurgents continued with small actions, mostly laying mines, but villagers were able to return to their villages, he said.

“People returned from displacement and had resettled in Pashmul, and they had just started living again,” Mr. Khan said. “But suddenly the Taliban reappears, ready for fighting, and again we will be making an exodus. It is really hard for us living in this condition.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/28/world/asia/taliban-afghanistan.html?_r=0
 
To take a detour on the topic, I do wonder how the minorities and Women would fare with the resurgence of Taliban.

Details like that tends to get lost in the picture when discussing military.
 
India may soon have to deploy its forces to protect its multi billion dollar investment. :coffee:
Nope! All we need to do is to buy off the Taliban! It's the color of money that makes the mare go! The Taliban will then be willing to even provide protection to India's billion dollar infrastructure! :-)

Elementary dear Watson!! :big_boss:
 
Never going to happen.Now the Afghan forces are stronger than ever before.

No, it is what we know. But actually talibans are actually stronger and more advanced then afghan army. They were trained by Americans and Russians. They got weapons from both countries and they are expert in making any kind of firearm.
 

Back
Top Bottom