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Kunduz has not fallen!

A-Team

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- Kunduz city has not fallen, stop believing in BS thrown around by twitter journalists :P

- There were some sporadic attempts with pot shots nothing more.

- Talis and folks on twitter have been sharing old pictures and videos.

Note : Before going hooo haaa and jumping into conclusion, check your sources. Most of the publications depend on twitter made journalists.

Burkka offensive is getting uglier for the Talis :P
 
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They've launched an offensive. Not clear who controls what. They probably control a portion of it. But not all
 
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- Kunduz city has not fallen, stop believing in BS thrown around by twitter journalists :P

- There were some sporadic attempts with pot shots nothing more.

- Talis and folks on twitter have been sharing old pictures and videos.

Note : Before going hooo haaa and jumping into conclusion, check your sources. Most of the publications depend on twitter made journalists.

Burkka offensive is getting uglier for the Talis :P

This is because of generals like that Pakistan hater who glorify Taliban
 
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- Kunduz city has not fallen, stop believing in BS thrown around by twitter journalists :P

- There were some sporadic attempts with pot shots nothing more.

- Talis and folks on twitter have been sharing old pictures and videos.

Note : Before going hooo haaa and jumping into conclusion, check your sources. Most of the publications depend on twitter made journalists.

Burkka offensive is getting uglier for the Talis :P

Btw why is kunduz getting attacked again and again why camt they secure it?
 
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Btw why is kunduz getting attacked again and again why camt they secure it?

Lots of factors in play, but mostly its psy ops, twitter feeds nothing more.

The Talis are like thieves, you can take a pot shot here and there and then run like jackals.

Remember it did take some time for Pak army to clear Swat, Kunduz is a heavily populated province, so care is needed to clear it all out.
 
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Lots of factors in play, but mostly its psy ops, twitter feeds nothing more.

The Talis are like thieves, you can take a pot shot here and there and then run like jackals.

Remember it did take some time for Pak army to clear Swat, Kunduz is a heavily populated province, so care is needed to clear it all out.
Swat is more populated than kunduz. even though it is a district and not province like kunduz.
 
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- Kunduz city has not fallen, stop believing in BS thrown around by twitter journalists :P

- There were some sporadic attempts with pot shots nothing more.

- Talis and folks on twitter have been sharing old pictures and videos.

Note : Before going hooo haaa and jumping into conclusion, check your sources. Most of the publications depend on twitter made journalists.

Burkka offensive is getting uglier for the Talis :P

You mean to say tolo news and every afghan news channel reporting of Taliban capturing the main square was fake ? :D .
Reuters , Al Jazeera and many other international media is reporting it .

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/...ttack-afghanistan-kunduz-161003034257759.html


We are putting all our efforts together to push them back," he said.

Military helicopters were flying overhead and gunfire could be heard within the city.

Fighting rages as Taliban attacks Afghanistan's Kunduz

Taliban fighters took control of the central intersection in Kunduz where they raised their flag a year ago in their biggest success of the 15-year-old conflict.


Do listen to the video in Al jazeera .
 
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Taliban will capture part of a city,reinforcement will come and kick them out.Just another day in Afghanistan.
 
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/taliban-fighters-launch-assault-on-afghan-city-1475492161

Taliban forces battled their way into the heart of Kunduz on Monday, rebuffing efforts by U.S.-backed government forces to defend the northern Afghan city against a coordinated assault, residents said.

The lightning offensive, which came almost a year to the day after the Islamist movement briefly seized control of the city in a similarly orchestrated attack, deals a sharp blow to efforts by the government of President Ashraf Ghani to quell the 15-year insurgency and arrest the growing insecurity that has swept the country in recent months.

In less than a day, many government offices, including the headquarters of the provincial council, fell to the insurgents, and heavy fighting was raging in many parts of the city, said Sayed Assadullah Sadat, a council member.

“The Taliban have reached to the city’s main square and taken control of it,” Akbar Farhang, a resident, said by telephone from Kunduz.

The governor’s office, along with the city’s airport and its main Afghan army base, remained in government control, Mr. Sadat and other residents said, as U.S. warplanes provided air support to Afghan troops on the ground.

Some residents were fleeing as Taliban forces advanced, Mr. Sadat said, while others had locked themselves indoors in districts of Kunduz still under government control.

“The Taliban have taken the neighborhood I live in. They are in control of half of the city,” said Mohammad Essa. “The children are frightened and everybody is so scared.”

As night fell on Afghanistan’s fourth-largest city, the situation appeared fluid and chaotic.

“The situation is bad in Kunduz,” said the provincial council chief, Mohammad Yonus Ayubi, and security officials were unable to which forces were in control on the ground.

“I don’t know what parts are controlled by the Taliban. I don’t have clue,” said Mahfouzullah Akbari, a regional police spokesman.

Earlier Monday, Mr. Akbari said Taliban fighters were hiding in civilian houses on the outskirts of Kunduz and using the inhabitants as human shields. Meanwhile, all activity in the center of the city ground to a halt.

A crucial objective of the Taliban appeared to be Bala Hesar, an ancient hilltop fortress overlooking the city and the location of a large army base.

Government officials didn’t confirm any fighting on the strategic hill but acknowledged there were heavy clashes on the city’s outskirts.

“People are worried,” said one official, who asked that his name be withheld for security reasons. “But no outpost has fallen into the Taliban hands so far, and Afghan forces are fighting very well compared with last year.”

In a similar coordinated attack that stunned the Kabul government, Taliban forces overran Kunduz on Sept. 28, 2015, the first time since the U.S.-led invasion that forced them from power in 2001 that they had taken control of a major city in the country.

They were driven out entirely almost two weeks later by government forces backed by U.S. aircraft and troops of the U.S.-led international military coalition in Afghanistan.

During the fighting, an errant U.S. airstrike on the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz killed more than 40 people. The U.S. military later punished 16 officers for a chain of errors blamed for the strike.

Since it was retaken by the government, the city has remained under threat from the Taliban, with the insurgents largely in control of rural areas beyond the capital.

It wasn’t immediately known whether Mr. Ghani would continue with plans to meet with world leaders on Tuesday and Wednesday in Brussels in a bid to raise more international aid for his beleaguered country. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Ban Ki-moon, secretary-general of the United Nations, were among those scheduled to attend the gathering.

Kunduz, and the northern province of the same name, weren’t the only areas of Afghanistan under Taliban attack on Monday.

The insurgents overran the district of Nawa in Helmand province, killing its chief of police, said former provincial council chief Obaidullah Barakzai. With the fall of Nawa, the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, is now exposed to attacks from the south.

Helmand has seen much of Afghanistan’s worst fighting this summer and was close to collapse in August, when the Taliban repeatedly blocked main highways to Lashkar Gah, tightening a noose around the city.

@A-Team does this look like last year to you?
 
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/taliban-fighters-launch-assault-on-afghan-city-1475492161

Taliban forces battled their way into the heart of Kunduz on Monday, rebuffing efforts by U.S.-backed government forces to defend the northern Afghan city against a coordinated assault, residents said.

The lightning offensive, which came almost a year to the day after the Islamist movement briefly seized control of the city in a similarly orchestrated attack, deals a sharp blow to efforts by the government of President Ashraf Ghani to quell the 15-year insurgency and arrest the growing insecurity that has swept the country in recent months.

In less than a day, many government offices, including the headquarters of the provincial council, fell to the insurgents, and heavy fighting was raging in many parts of the city, said Sayed Assadullah Sadat, a council member.

“The Taliban have reached to the city’s main square and taken control of it,” Akbar Farhang, a resident, said by telephone from Kunduz.

The governor’s office, along with the city’s airport and its main Afghan army base, remained in government control, Mr. Sadat and other residents said, as U.S. warplanes provided air support to Afghan troops on the ground.

Some residents were fleeing as Taliban forces advanced, Mr. Sadat said, while others had locked themselves indoors in districts of Kunduz still under government control.

“The Taliban have taken the neighborhood I live in. They are in control of half of the city,” said Mohammad Essa. “The children are frightened and everybody is so scared.”

As night fell on Afghanistan’s fourth-largest city, the situation appeared fluid and chaotic.

“The situation is bad in Kunduz,” said the provincial council chief, Mohammad Yonus Ayubi, and security officials were unable to which forces were in control on the ground.

“I don’t know what parts are controlled by the Taliban. I don’t have clue,” said Mahfouzullah Akbari, a regional police spokesman.

Earlier Monday, Mr. Akbari said Taliban fighters were hiding in civilian houses on the outskirts of Kunduz and using the inhabitants as human shields. Meanwhile, all activity in the center of the city ground to a halt.

A crucial objective of the Taliban appeared to be Bala Hesar, an ancient hilltop fortress overlooking the city and the location of a large army base.

Government officials didn’t confirm any fighting on the strategic hill but acknowledged there were heavy clashes on the city’s outskirts.

“People are worried,” said one official, who asked that his name be withheld for security reasons. “But no outpost has fallen into the Taliban hands so far, and Afghan forces are fighting very well compared with last year.”

In a similar coordinated attack that stunned the Kabul government, Taliban forces overran Kunduz on Sept. 28, 2015, the first time since the U.S.-led invasion that forced them from power in 2001 that they had taken control of a major city in the country.

They were driven out entirely almost two weeks later by government forces backed by U.S. aircraft and troops of the U.S.-led international military coalition in Afghanistan.

During the fighting, an errant U.S. airstrike on the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz killed more than 40 people. The U.S. military later punished 16 officers for a chain of errors blamed for the strike.

Since it was retaken by the government, the city has remained under threat from the Taliban, with the insurgents largely in control of rural areas beyond the capital.

It wasn’t immediately known whether Mr. Ghani would continue with plans to meet with world leaders on Tuesday and Wednesday in Brussels in a bid to raise more international aid for his beleaguered country. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Ban Ki-moon, secretary-general of the United Nations, were among those scheduled to attend the gathering.

Kunduz, and the northern province of the same name, weren’t the only areas of Afghanistan under Taliban attack on Monday.

The insurgents overran the district of Nawa in Helmand province, killing its chief of police, said former provincial council chief Obaidullah Barakzai. With the fall of Nawa, the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, is now exposed to attacks from the south.

Helmand has seen much of Afghanistan’s worst fighting this summer and was close to collapse in August, when the Taliban repeatedly blocked main highways to Lashkar Gah, tightening a noose around the city.

@A-Team does this look like last year to you?

Do you know how many WSJ sources are on the ground? None!
 
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@A-Team does Kunduz have any forces to protect it? Why it needs to be recapture again and again? I've heard of ghost soldiers in ANA, how true it is? For exemple they get money for 15 soldiers but only 10 are hired and rest is eaten by corrupt Afghan officials.
 
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None, the fat lady is reporting from Kabul and resorting to hear says.

Pictures to be shared soon.

Nothing can be gained by denying when the world is reporting one thing and you are saying the opposite. Your own media has confirmed this. Denial will cause more damage to the situation. But i dont think ANA is in denial so I think they are sending their soldiers to retake the city.

Screenshot_2016-10-03-23-06-48.png
 
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