Sunday, May 22, 2011

Taliban Suicide Team Attacks Police Headquarters In Khost, 10 Hour Firefight Ends With 6 Killed


In a brazen early morning attack on a police headquarters in the Afghan city of Khost, four Taliban suicide bombers were able to get inside of the HQ and engage in a ten hour battle with Afghan and U.S. forces - the end result was that two of the attackers set off their bomb vests and the other two were shot and killed but not before they had killed six in the attack.

From the article at The Long War Journal:

A Taliban suicide assault team stormed a police station in the eastern Afghan province of Khost today, killing six people, including soldiers, policemen, and a civilian.

A heavily armed four-man Taliban suicide team dressed in Afghan police uniforms entered the traffic police headquarters in the heart of the city of Khost at about 4:30 AM local time. Afghan and US security forces surrounded the building and clashed with the Taliban fighters for 10 hours, according to TOLO News.

Two of the suicide bombers detonated their vests, and two others were shot and killed. Three Afghan policemen, two Afghan soldiers, and a civilian were killed during the fighting. Afghan security forces also disabled a car bomb near the building.

The Taliban claimed credit for the attack in a statement released on the propaganda website, Voice of Jihad. "A group of martyrdom-seeking Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate attacked the Police Headquarter, a training academy where some 1500 soldiers are being trained and the traffic building," the Taliban said. The terrorists were "armed with heavy and small machine guns, rockets, and explosives."

Now, the article mentions the spring offensive by the Taliban but I don't really see much out of the ordinary from previous attacks in previous months but I guess we will have to see if more and more of these events happen.

One other thing to notice is the use of Afghan uniforms by the attackers. We have seen this tactic used by the Taliban several times now and it has to be a major worry to our forces in this area of Afghanistan. Let's face it, there's enough to worry with the true allegiance of the Afghan troops we fight with side by side let alone introduce uniform wearing Taliban onto the scene.



Suicide assault team attacks police compound in Afghan east


A Taliban suicide assault team stormed a police station in the eastern Afghan province of Khost today, killing six people, including soldiers, policemen, and a civilian.

A heavily armed four-man Taliban suicide team dressed in Afghan police uniforms entered the traffic police headquarters in the heart of the city of Khost at about 4:30 AM local time. Afghan and US security forces surrounded the building and clashed with the Taliban fighters for 10 hours, according to TOLO News.

Two of the suicide bombers detonated their vests, and two others were shot and killed. Three Afghan policemen, two Afghan soldiers, and a civilian were killed during the fighting. Afghan security forces also disabled a car bomb near the building.

The Taliban claimed credit for the attack in a statement released on the propaganda website, Voice of Jihad. "A group of martyrdom-seeking Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate attacked the Police Headquarter, a training academy where some 1500 soldiers are being trained and the traffic building," the Taliban said. The terrorists were "armed with heavy and small machine guns, rockets, and explosives."

Khost province is a haven for the Haqqani Network, a Taliban subgroup led by Sirajuddin Haqqani and his father, Jalaluddin. The Hezb-i-Islami Gulbuddin, led by Guldbuddin Hekmatyar, also maintains a strong presence in the Sabari district in Khost.

Today's attack is the latest in the Taliban's so-called Badar spring offensive. Yesterday, a Taliban suicide bomber killed six people in the cafeteria of a Kabul hospital used by Afghan forces. Other major Taliban attacks this week include an ambush that killed 35 road workers and guards in Paktika; a suicide attack that killed 13 people in Nangarhar; and an IED attack that killed four ISAF troops in the south.

Background on the Taliban's spring offensive

The Taliban are seeking to roll back Afghan and Coalition gains made in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar over the past year, as well as to reinforce the perception that Taliban forces can strike in all areas of Afghanistan. The Taliban are also trying to break the will of the Afghan security forces as well as intimidate local Afghans.

In their announcement of the Badar offensive, the Taliban said the primary targets would be "foreign invading forces, members of their spy networks and (other) spies, high-ranking officials of the Kabul Puppet Administration, both military and civilian, members of the cabinet, members of the parliament, Heads of foreign and local companies working for the enemy and contractors." The Afghan High Peace Council was also singled out.

The Taliban said Badar would focus on "military centers, places of gatherings, airbases, ammunition and logistical military convoys of the foreign invaders in all parts of the country." Their tactics would include "group and martyrdom seeking attacks," or suicide attacks and assaults; "group offensives," or massed assaults; "city attacks," ambushes, and IED attacks.

The Taliban also said that "strict attention must be paid to the protection and safety of civilians during the spring operations by working out a meticulous military plan."

The Taliban maintain they have no shortage of suicide bombers to carry out attacks. In April, a commander in the Pakistani Taliban claimed that more than 1,000 suicide bombers train at camps in the Mir Ali area of North Waziristan.

The Pakistani government refuses to strike the terror groups in North Waziristan despite the known presence of al Qaeda and other foreign terrorist organizations in North Waziristan, and requests by the US that action be taken against these groups. The Pakistani military has indicated that it has no plans to take on Hafiz Gul Bahadar, a senior Taliban commander in North Waziristan, or the Haqqani Network, which is also based there. Bahadar and the Haqqanis are considered "good Taliban" by the Pakistani military establishment as they do not carry out attacks inside Pakistan. Yet Bahadar, the Haqqanis, and other Taliban groups openly shelter groups that carry out attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.



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