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Taliban Buildup In Kandahar: Islamist Fighters Prepare To Face NATO In Afghanistan

KATHY GANNON   04/18/10 09:18 PM ET   AP

Afghan Taliban Kandahar
FILE - In this April 15, 2010 file photo, U.S. soldiers arrive at the scene after a car bomb exploded outside a hotel in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar. The Taliban are moving fighters into Kandahar, planting bombs and plotting attacks as NATO and Afghan forces prepare for a summer showdown with insurgents, according to a Taliban commander with close ties to senior insurgent leaders. NATO and Afghan forces are stepping up operations to push Taliban fighters out of the city, which was the I

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The Taliban are moving fighters into Kandahar, planting bombs and plotting attacks as NATO and Afghan forces prepare for a summer showdown with insurgents, according to a Taliban commander with close ties to senior insurgent leaders.

NATO and Afghan forces are stepping up operations to push Taliban fighters out of the city, which was the Islamist movement's headquarters during the years it ruled most of Afghanistan. The goal is to bolster the capability of the local government so that it can keep the Taliban from coming back.

The Taliban commander, who uses the pseudonym Mubeen, told The Associated Press that if military pressure on the insurgents becomes too great "we will just leave and come back after" the foreign forces leave.

Despite nightly raids by NATO and Afghan troops, Mubeen said his movements have not been restricted. He was interviewed last week in the center of Kandahar, seated with his legs crossed on a cushion in a room. His only concession to security was to lock the door.

He made no attempt to hide his face and said he felt comfortable because of widespread support among Kandahar's 500,000 residents, who like the Taliban are mostly Pashtuns, Afghanistan's biggest ethnic community.

"Because of the American attitude to the people, they are sympathetic to us," Mubeen said. "Every day we are getting more support. We are not strangers. We are not foreigners. We are from the people."

It is difficult to measure the depth of support for the Taliban among Kandahar's people, many of whom say they are disgusted by the presence of both the foreign troops and the insurgents. Many of them say they are afraid NATO's summer offensive will accomplish little other than trigger more violence.

Mubeen said Taliban attacks are not random but are carefully planned and ordered by the senior military and political command that assigns jobs and responsibilities to its rank and file. The final arbiter is the Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar, who heads the council, or shura, that decides strategic goals which are passed down the ranks to commanders in the field, he said.

"We are always getting instructions from our commanders, what suicide attacks to carry out, who to behead if he is a spy," Mubeen said, gesturing with a maimed hand suffered during fighting in 1996 when the Taliban were trying to gain control of the capital of Kabul.

Then, like now, his enemies were members of the Northern Alliance, dominated by Afghanistan's minority ethnic groups and returned to power by the U.S.-led coalition following the Taliban's collapse in 2001.

Mubeen, a native of Zabul province, worked with the Taliban's civil aviation minister, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor, during the Taliban's five-year rule. In the final days before the Taliban abandoned Kandahar in 2001, Mubeen played a crucial logistical role, helping move weapons and supplies to hideouts outside the city.

Mullah Mansoor was one of two senior Taliban figures named by Mullah Omar to replace the No. 2 commander, Mullah Abdul Ghani Barader, who was arrested in Pakistan in February.

Mubeen said that in the first years after the Taliban were routed, fighters had to survive in the mountains, rarely making forays into Afghan towns and villages. He attributed the Taliban comeback to deep resentment – especially among ethnic Pashtuns – to the presence of foreign military forces and public disgust with the Afghan government.

"Our brothers are already here and ready," he said. "Our people are skilled now. They know a lot of things, how to make things more difficult and to be more sophisticated in our attacks."

Mubeen said Taliban fighters had received better training, although he would not say where and by whom.

"But we were interested to get the training and we understood that we needed the training," he said.

Mubeen said the Taliban's main goal in the war is the establishment of sharia, or Islamic law, in Afghanistan. When they ruled the religious militia enforced an antiquated and regressive interpretation of Islamic law that appalled the West, including publicly amputating hands and feet for theft and carrying out public executions.

"We want sharia. That is first. Everything else comes after that," he said. "People want sharia and then development."

Mubeen said he was confident that efforts by President Hamid Karzai and his international partners to win over rank-and-file members with promises of amnesty, jobs and money would not succeed in undermining the insurgents.

"The government and the Americans did a lot of work to make disputes in the Taliban and to give money to the Taliban," he said.

He also said peace negotiations with the Taliban leadership would not take place without the blessing of Mullah Omar.

"The world community should leave our country and then we are ready to negotiate," he said.

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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The Taliban are moving fighters into Kandahar, planting bombs and plotting attacks as NATO and Afghan forces prepare for a summer showdown with insurgents, according to a...
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The Taliban are moving fighters into Kandahar, planting bombs and plotting attacks as NATO and Afghan forces prepare for a summer showdown with insurgents, according to a...
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11:05 AM on 04/20/2010
Why we are in Afghanistan.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/21/world/asia/21iht-stan.1.6256916.html
12:05 AM on 04/22/2010
It is not worth it. How much oils from Iraq helped US economy?

The new multinational oil companies care less about America, we pay with our tax money to get Iraqi resources for them, then they stage a jobless recovery here at home.

We have to get out of the area. We should not listen to cooperate media that paint wars as driving force for economy. The wars are the main reason for huge government deficit and if we continue like this for a while we will face huge inflation and dollar will totally collapse.

We have to get out now!
12:25 PM on 04/19/2010
As they say in some places: Strategy FAIL.
Why is NATO giving the Taliban such a long warning that they are coming?
12:11 PM on 04/19/2010
will we ever learn
anything about Afghanistan or Pakistan

http://rawdawgb.blogspot.com/2009/10/will-we-ever-learn.html
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Balzac
11:36 AM on 04/19/2010
It's good to see a leader speak up for the Taliban. Unfortunately, he is not well-informed about American attitudes, nor is he making reasonable statements. I've never heard of him before. I don't know if there's been any recent video proof of Mullah Omar's existence as a living man.

Seems like this Mubeen wants the fight to be ugly enough to spoil subsequent political arrangements made after NATO moves into Kandahar.

NATO forces shouldn't rely on spies alone for information on targets unless each target can be confirmed independently as well. There will be attempts made by opposition spies to give bad information intended to cause civilian tragedies and demoralize the campaign. Inaccurate intel or no intel is better than being deceived.

For the determined resistance, secondary to the goal of causing NATO forces to kill civilians, the goal of killing and capturing NATO forces is next, as it is more difficult to achieve, yet still valuable.

Given that Mubeen wants fighters want to harrass, escape and then return, perhaps there could be cameras to record which men leave the city, in anticipation of their eventual return. Those who leave can be considered the most likely to resume resistance after returning.
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Balzac
11:50 AM on 04/19/2010
I don't think it is accurate to say that the Pashtun are generally resentful of the Afghan government, given that President Karzai himself speaks the same language. It is not bad to have your own specific cultural group represented by the leader of your government.

It's a good thing that Mubeen has been specific about his concerns. Perhaps there can be some Sharia courts set up to serve the people if they really want it. But it will require more modern interpretations of Sharia law and more skillful representatives and judges, or else it'll be medieval and beneath the dignity of the people to bear it.
10:07 AM on 04/19/2010
Oh man, here we go again - "we want sharia", "people want sharia"....religious extremism is never pretty, matter of fact all extremism deals in absolutes disregarding everything else. Quite a few of the Muslim majority countries actually are relatively tolerant from what I gather but there are few that stick to their old ways. The taliban are just one piece of the puzzle, and they are tightly connected to the local tribes. I've been thinking that the piecemeal approach won't work, it has to be a massive effort across the Muslim/Arab world. I have no idea what would it take to be honest but the current situation is like that game "whack a mole". Can't see the end of it as it is and from what I've seen in the media there are plenty of decent people living side-by-side with some unlikeable characters. All I can do is to cheer when the taliban and other like them suffer a defeat, what they've done to the female population alone in Afghanistan and Iraq has turned those countries decades back. Kind of like those cults prepping their followers/captives for the Rupture, Apocalypse or whatever event they've built their strategy around. Religion has been and still is very important way to spread good will and help people, but it could be used for wrong as we all see.
10:03 AM on 04/19/2010
The mighty christian empire from far away with all its fancy technology and money enough to bribe people anywhere and everywhere up against a tribe of muslim fanatics in Afghanistan. I will bet on the local fanatics driving the foreigners out and after all is said and done it will have been a complete waste.
08:55 AM on 04/19/2010
The Taliban are just a bunch of right-wing extremist religious fanatics with assault weapons, every country has them.
11:23 AM on 04/19/2010
How simplistic and ignorant. The military needs to CRUSH them once and for all. Make the announcement to any puke muslim that is not taliban to get the hell out of dodge and then carpet bomb and send cruise missiles to destroy a few hundred square miles around where these subhuman pukes are hiding out. Crush them once and for all.
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08:39 AM on 04/19/2010
What I really don't understand is how the Taliban preaches their group is one with the people where it's obvious they are a detriment to those very people? Whatever kind of logic that is America needs to get out. NOT cut and run, just realize with the attitude of the people we're wasting our blood and gold. GET THE @#$% OUT Duh, what is our fearless leaders don't understand about "it just ain't a' gonna' work".
09:45 AM on 04/19/2010
As much as a detriment you think the Taliban may be to these people I think its preferable to being slaughtered by American missle strikes. Now that the Americans have withdrew do you expect violence to increase in the area or decrease?
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Ergon
Man From Atlan
10:54 AM on 04/19/2010
First the foreign troops will leave. Then the taliban will take over the country. Then there will be peace, though not by a government that you will like. Still, extremism is often a symptom of other issues. First we neeed to reform our own foreign policies.
11:07 AM on 04/19/2010
I am not sure if a totalitarian religious state that beheads its own people is a better alternative. After all, these are the same people who are causing much of the violence, with suicide bombs.

Before the U.S. invasion, Afghanistan was not exactly heaven on Earth. Music was outlawed, the religious police patrolled the cities and villages, women were even more suppressed, and public executions were common place.

I am not sure if the "world community" wants to abandon the country back to that rule.
08:20 AM on 04/19/2010
Korengal Valley,"The Vally of Death", US Troops Defeated by Intense Fighting .US outpost now underTaliban control http://bit.ly/aMmP7C
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ergon
Man From Atlan
10:52 AM on 04/19/2010
42 troops died there to defend that base, now abandoned. What a waste! Anyone remember this same strategy in Vietnam, to abandon the countryside and retreat to urban areas? Just before they withdrew all together?
11:08 AM on 04/19/2010
Ultimately, especially with the new U.S. strategy, there was little point to holding the outpost.
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General Armchair
What, me worry?
07:56 AM on 04/19/2010
The Pentagon has spent $17 billion on a "Manhattan Project" to defeat IEDs. In Iraq and Afghanistan there have been, at most, 170,000 IEDs employed against US and Coalition troops (most, so far, in Iraq). Do the math, thats over $100,000 per IED, just on this one DoD project to find technical fixes for the IED threat, not counting cost of wrecked vehicles, weapons, and lives from successful IED attacks by guerilla forces.

They construct these things in living rooms. At most a garage is needed. For the Russians it was Stingers. For us it's the IED and suicide bombers.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
08:08 AM on 04/19/2010
Average cost of IED is $10... so sad.
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nirek
Proud progressive Vietnam vet. against WAR
07:14 AM on 04/19/2010
It is not worth the cost of this mission. Too much blood (on both sides) and too many$$$$$$$ wasted on a fools errand .
I am proud of our troops (most of them) for doing the best they could without any real help from the politicians !
Much like my experience in Vietnam, politicians got in the way there, too.

Nirek
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
07:11 AM on 04/19/2010
GETTTTTTTTTTTT OUUTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
06:10 AM on 04/19/2010
We have two cowards who posted so far. Who else has worthless ad hominum attacks? Please, degrade the sacrifices of our soldiers further, why don't you?
07:39 AM on 04/19/2010
i'm not going to degrade the sacrifices of our soldiers. just that we shouldn't be there and we need to bring our soldiers home. now are you going to use the vietnam era arguement that that will make the deaths of soldiers already killed meaningless.
02:27 PM on 04/19/2010
Thanks for degrading their sacrifices. Do you piss on their graves, by the way?

'I'm not pissing on their graves, I'm watering them!'
08:00 AM on 04/19/2010
Sweetie, unless you are posting from the middle of a fire fight over there, I suggest you do not question others' courage. I read their posts and they are not what you portray them as.
02:26 PM on 04/19/2010
Sweetie, they suggest nothing new other then 'abandon everything and run for the hills'. Sure, it's glossed up, but it's all the same.

And by the way, sweetie, you'd better not suggest that, 'cause I doubt countries will think highly of a 15 year old running the military. Sure, I'd get a lot of reforms done, but I think the adult mind-frame will be crying from a 'kid' doing more then what fifteen adults in congress couldn't do in fifteen terms.
05:44 AM on 04/19/2010
My money is on Taliban to take this one. But why again are they fighting the taliban, they netiher attacked US or threatened them. Oh yes now I remember, they provided safety to imaginary bogey man Osama.
05:18 AM on 04/19/2010
What? The superpower is still fighting the 4th world country? Fighting with rocks? How impressive.
10:25 AM on 04/19/2010
our defense contractor's (our only major industry that actually produces anything locally) profits are at stake and we must continue to keep fighting endlessly to ensure sustained profitability.

Follow the money and it will be so easy to understand the war on terror.
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dratster
12:14 PM on 04/19/2010
And some would claim that except for Preesident Obama denying American Exceptionalism, this fight would be easily won...