Thursday, June 10, 2010

Taliban Send Suicide Bomber On "Strategic" Mission...He Crashes Wedding and Kills 40 Wedding Party Attendees




Oh yeah, the Taliban apparently ran out of little girls to massacre at a school so they picked their next most strategic target today to hit...a wedding party in Kandahar. Yep, you read that right - 40 people saw their life ended by a Taliban suicide bomber while celebrating the marriage of two people, obviously a strategic military target, eh? - the details aren't in yet on whether the bomber used a suicide vest or a vehicle-borne bomb but it seems to me this is a lot of dead and wounded for just a suicide vest.

From the report at The Long War Journal:



A Taliban suicide bomber struck at a wedding in a strategic district in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar.

The suicide bomber detonated as "massive bomb" in the midst of a wedding party. It is unclear if the bomber used a vest or a vehicle to carry out the attack.

"Right now I can say that dozens of people were killed and injured in the blast," a senior police official in Kandahar told The Hindu. "It was a suicide bomber that targeted the wedding party."

The suicide bomber killed 40 people and wounded 77, according to Xinhua. The groom and several children were among those wounded.

The attack may be revenge for the killing of two senior Taliban leaders in Kandahar since late May. On May 30, Afghan and Coalition special operations forces killed Mullah Zergay, who led the Taliban in Kandahar City, as well as in the vital districts of Zhari and Arghandab. On May 29, Afghan and Coalition forces killed Haji Amir, who was described as one of the top two Taliban leaders in all of Kandahar province.

So, let me get this straight. To avenge the killing of two of their leaders, the Taliban don't try to take out an Afghan army squad or a NATO humvee or a police headquarters.....no, they decide to kill 40 civilians at a wedding?

And people wonder why I have called for the complete eradication of the Taliban from the face of the Earth.




Suicide bomber kills 40 at wedding in Kandahar

A Taliban suicide bomber struck at a wedding in a strategic district in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar.

The suicide bomber detonated as "massive bomb" in the midst of a wedding party. It is unclear if the bomber used a vest or a vehicle to carry out the attack.

"Right now I can say that dozens of people were killed and injured in the blast," a senior police official in Kandahar told The Hindu. "It was a suicide bomber that targeted the wedding party."

The suicide bomber killed 40 people and wounded 77, according to Xinhua. The groom and several children were among those wounded.

The target of the attack is not yet known. According to AFP, the families in attendance support neither the Taliban or the government.

Taliban suicide bombers are often recruited and trained in Taliban and al Qaeda camps in Pakistan's lawless tribal agencies of North and South Waziristan.

The Taliban have carried out a campaign of assassination and intimidation against tribal leaders and politicians who back the government and Coalition forces. More than 20 senior officials, including the deputy mayor of Kandahar, have been killed by Taliban assassins over the past several months.

The attack may be revenge for the killing of two senior Taliban leaders in Kandahar since late May. On May 30, Afghan and Coalition special operations forces killed Mullah Zergay, who led the Taliban in Kandahar City, as well as in the vital districts of Zhari and Arghandab. On May 29, Afghan and Coalition forces killed Haji Amir, who was described as one of the top two Taliban leaders in all of Kandahar province.

Kandahar is considered to be the center of the Taliban's power base in Afghanistan. The International Security Assistance Force has placed great emphasis on Kandahar and is deploying the bulk of its forces en route to Afghanistan to the province. President Barack Obama and Defense Secretary Robert Gates have said progress in Kandahar and in other key areas in the south, east, and north, must be made by December in order for Western nations to continue flagging support for the war.

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