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Afghanistan Bank Heist: 6 Guards Beheaded

DEB RIECHMANN and AMIR SHAH   08/ 3/10 04:02 PM ET   AP

Afghanistan Bank Heist Beheading
Pararescuemen, or "PJs," of the 58th Rescue Squadron, left, link up with ground medics carrying a casualty during a rescue mission in Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan, Wednesday July 28, 2010. The PJs and helicopter aircrews are part of the U.S. Air Force's 451st Air Expeditionary Wing based at Kandahar Air Field, which provides a variety of air assets in southern Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban have issued a new code of conduct ordering fighters to protect civilians – as long as they don't side with the Afghan government or NATO coalition. If they do, the punishment is death.

The 69-page directive, obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press in southern Afghanistan, follows an acceleration in Taliban attacks on Afghan officials – a campaign that threatens the NATO goal of bolstering local government to help turn back the insurgents.

"The Taliban must treat civilians according to Islamic norms and morality to win over the hearts and minds of the people," says the code, which the insurgents began distributing about a week ago.

On the other hand, the code makes clear that civilians who work with foreign troops or the Afghan government are fair game. "They are supporters of the infidels" and can be killed, the code says.

The code updates a similar directive released a year ago that limited the use of suicide bombers and mandated that prisoners cannot be harmed or ransomed without the approval of a Taliban regional commander. NATO and Afghan officials criticized last year's code as propaganda and insisted it does not reflect how the Taliban really fight.

Analysts familiar with the Taliban said last year's code was more of a political statement than a military textbook, meant to counter the international coalition's own attempts at winning hearts and minds. The U.N. has reported that about 70 percent of the civilian casualties are due to the Taliban, mostly people being killed or wounded in suicide attacks and roadside bombs.

The new code confirms what is becoming increasingly apparent: The ranks of Afghanistan's civil servants are under siege.

Roadside bombs are planted on their routes. Ominous letters threaten their families. Taliban on motorbikes shoot them in the streets.

An average of three government officials have been attacked or killed every month so far this year, according to a tally by The Associated Press based on police reports. Attacks have occurred in about a dozen of the 35 provinces. Many more incidents are believed to go unreported.

In one of the most dramatic attacks, gunmen assassinated the deputy mayor of Kandahar city in April as he knelt for evening prayers in a mosque in the south.

Local officials get regular reminders that their jobs might cost them their lives.

Mohammad Rahim Amin, a local government chief in Baraki Barak district of Logar province, said he received a telephone threat the other day.

"How are you, servant of infidels?" the caller asked him.

Amin, unruffled, turned the tables on the man on the other end of the line.

"I'm OK," he replied. "How are you, killer of the Afghan nation?"

Amin has survived two Taliban ambushes and a roadside bomb that coalition forces safely defused.

"My family is all the time worrying about me," Amin said. "Two months ago, we received a threat letter that said: `Don't work with the government, otherwise your family will be destroyed.'"

These attacks undermine efforts by the government of President Hamid Karzai to earn the trust of the people. They also make it more difficult to recruit Afghans for the civil service and strengthen administration, especially at the provincial and district levels where the threat is greatest.

"When you have targeted killings, especially the tribal leaders, it creates an environment of fear," said Barna Karami, deputy of Afghanistan's Independent Directorate of Local Governance. "It's natural that when security deteriorates, targeted killings, kidnappings and assassinations make people fear to participate in government."

The Taliban are stepping up their attacks on local officials because Afghan and foreign troops are ramping up their pressure on the insurgents.

Over the past 30 days, coalition and Afghan troops have captured or killed 50 insurgent leadership figures and more than 425 suspected militants, NATO says.

With about 7,500 NATO reinforcements streaming into Afghanistan in the coming weeks and months – joining up with 110,000 already here – the Taliban's fear and intimidation campaign will likely become more aggressive.

"The means that they use to fight can only result in a great number of civilian casualties," said Lt. Col. John Dorrian, a NATO spokesman in Kabul. "They are ruthless and they are willing to take shortcuts like using improvised explosive devices and suicide attackers, which almost always result in innocents being killed as well."

Dorrian said targeted attacks on local officials present challenges for Gen. David Petraeus' counterinsurgency strategy, which aims to provide security and earn the trust of the Afghan people.

As Afghan security forces grow and more NATO troops arrive, the insurgents will have less freedom to move and fewer places to hide, he said.

For now, however, the lives of Afghan civil servants – governors, teachers, community leaders and police – are in danger across the country.

There were two attacks on Monday.

In Dand district to the west of Kandahar, a suicide car bomber blew himself up next to a vehicle taking district government chief Ahmadullah Nazak to work. Nazak was injured but six children were killed.

In Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan, Karzai adviser Wahidullah Sabaoun was wounded, but not seriously, when his convoy was hit by a remote-controlled bomb hidden in a rickshaw.

Kazim Allayar, deputy governor of Ghazni, said he's been targeted by the Taliban seven times. A remote-controlled mine in Ghazni city badly damaged his car, but he and his bodyguard escaped injury. Another time, a bomb, placed inside a cooking pot and strapped to a parked motorbike, exploded as he drove by.

Still he stays in his job.

"It is my duty," he said. "Afghanistan is my homeland. As a soldier of this nation, we are struggling and fighting. We are ready for sacrifice."

Mohammad Hussain Fahimi, a member of the provincial council in Wardak province, said he and his fellow council member "do not take one step outside the city."

If he needs to travel, he lies about where he's going because he worries that shopkeepers and taxi drivers, who spy for the Taliban, will alert insurgents of his whereabouts. Government representatives from Jalrez, Nirkh and Sayd Abad districts that are controlled by the Taliban have shifted their families to Kabul.

___

Associated Press Writer Matiullah Achakzai contributed to this report from Spin Boldak, Afghanistan.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban have issued a new code of conduct ordering fighters to protect civilians – as long as they don't side with the Afghan government or NATO coalition. If they...
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban have issued a new code of conduct ordering fighters to protect civilians – as long as they don't side with the Afghan government or NATO coalition. If they...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fauker1923
'Give 'em the Good News'
10:28 AM on 08/04/2010
"head"line is STILL wrong on day two. HuffPo.... fix yo self
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
papasnow
Retired from work...actively living life.
11:06 PM on 08/03/2010
I understand that the Quran makes it clear that all life is precious...except if that life disagrees or displeases the "faithful"...then the "faithful" can simply kill the "infidels".
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
09:09 PM on 08/03/2010
Where is the story the headline promised?
02:06 PM on 08/03/2010
I love HP's editors!!!
Headline: "Afghanistan Bank Heist: 6 Guards Beheaded "
Story: "Earlier reports that the guards had been beheaded are inaccurate."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danusgram
supporter of Mitt robbed me for President
01:11 PM on 08/03/2010
This should be a front page headline at the top of the page over 200000 dollars stolen by the Taliban...come on people
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danusgram
supporter of Mitt robbed me for President
01:10 PM on 08/03/2010
one quarter of a million dollars stolen of my money sent to fight the Afghan war...WTF...what is being done to find that kind of money....sure will finance them .....what is wrong with the military do not realize that kind of money is tempting and why keep it over there in the first place ..while I am unable to get a tiny unemployment check these people are able to get this.
12:50 PM on 08/03/2010
BEHEADED ? wow....thanks god never thought traveling to Pakistan. I need my head on for life .
12:45 PM on 08/03/2010
I can't wait to see this activity reported on the 6 o'clock news with real on-the-scene pictures, and, here I though all Afghans were lazy and layed around smoking opium!

The money from the bank robbery will go direct to the people rather than contractors, bribers or warlords. All U.S. aid should be distributed this way!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsuperconductor
12:30 PM on 08/03/2010
Things are going so well there, glad to see my tax dollars in action in such a positive way! I'm sure our involvement there won't lead to our economic collapse, like happened with Russia! History is never cyclical!
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:58 AM on 08/03/2010
This article should be titled "this week in Kabul, and Kandahar, and maybe some other places also". I think there are three separate stories here. I got very confused reading it though, maybe i missed a fourth or fifth one.
12:47 PM on 08/03/2010
Just remember all those places are great vacation spots ... for Republicans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fogy
RIP, ignorance
11:30 AM on 08/03/2010
BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO HuffPo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It's one thing to sensationalize. It's another thing to LIE!!!!!!!

I'm getting sick of your sloppy work, people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fauker1923
'Give 'em the Good News'
09:56 AM on 08/03/2010
when might we see the beheaded? never? because they still have their heads? HP... brew, seriously brew.... fix the "head" line.
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mariusvinchi
Saint Lucia is looking better and better every day
09:42 AM on 08/03/2010
The body of the story CLEARLY states that the initial report that the guards were beheaded was wrong, so why is the headline still reading that they were beheaded? Get on the J.O.B HP!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
Jaxy
Bah! My micro-bio didn't meet your guidelines
10:47 AM on 08/03/2010
It IS a clearly misleading headline, given the "refudiation" of the beheading claim within the body of the article itself. Sadly, Huffpost is not unaccustomed to rolling out sensationalistic claims, in order to draw readers to a story.

My suggestion: always read the article in its ENTIRETY, regardless of the headline.
09:12 AM on 08/03/2010
Gawd, HP--the headline is a lie. This really needs to stop--way out of control with the Enquirer garbage.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WasteNJ
All Out Of Bubble Gum.
09:06 AM on 08/03/2010
"Earlier reports that the guards had been beheaded are inaccurate, Durani said."

Might want o change the title of the story, no?
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
09:47 AM on 08/03/2010
This new generation of "journalists" are quite disappointing.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WasteNJ
All Out Of Bubble Gum.
11:58 AM on 08/03/2010
Right, I also meant "to", so I guess I'm guilty too!