Monday, February 8, 2010

Afghan Villagers In Helmand Say The Taliban Are Digging In For A Fight Against Operation Mastarak


Well, it appears that the Taliban aren't going to cooperate with American and NATO plans to infilitrate the heavily dominated Helmand province area of Marjah as the reports out from Afghan villagers in the area say that the Taliban are not only bracing for the fight but bringing in reinforcements.

From the report at Reuters, we see what the strategy of announcing the offensive has been:


Washington hopes the Marine operation will help decisively turn the momentum this year in a war that commanders accept has not been going their way. They have also not kept the planned offensive a secret, hoping the militants will give up the fight.
"It has to do with letting people know what's coming in the hope that the hardcore Taliban, or a lot of the Taliban, will simply leave, and maybe there will be less of a fight," U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in Turkey on Saturday.

And here's some of the reports on what is actually happening:


"The Taliban are not going to leave Marjah. We have seen them preparing themselves. They are bringing in people and weapons. We know there is going to be a big fight," said Abdul Manan, a man from Marjah who had fled to Helmand's capital, Lashkar Gah.
"The Taliban are very active in Marjah. They are planting mines there and in the surrounding areas," said another villager, Abdul Khaleq, after arriving in Lashkar Gah with his family.

Now, I'm not 100% sure that these villager reports are to be believed - more often than not, the Taliban follow the strategy of what Gates has counted on and that is they flee a big fight like this - we really have never seen them willing to stand up and take the brunt of an assault like this but perhaps they view this soil in Marjah as too precious to leave...I guess we'll see.

We do know that the Taliban have been very busy in lining much of the area with land mines and IEDs so it will be a slow go for U.S. and NATO forces. The British are supposed to spearhead the operation first so we may get some idea of resistance as early as a day or two from now - but I would say that if indeed the Taliban decide to make a stand, it will be the biggest mistake they have made in Afghanistan in a very long time.



Taliban dig in for big assault, say Afghan villagers

LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Taliban militants are massing and preparing for a big fight ahead of a major NATO offensive in an insurgent stronghold in southern Afghanistan, villagers fleeing the area said on Sunday.

U.S. Marines are set to launch a massive operation within days to take Marjah, a dense warren of canals and lush farmland in the center of Helmand, the country's most violent province.
Military commanders are dubbing the area the last big Taliban enclave in the province. The offensive, one of the biggest of the eight-year-old war, will mark the first major show of force since U.S. President Barack Obama ordered in 30,000 extra troops.

Washington hopes the Marine operation will help decisively turn the momentum this year in a war that commanders accept has not been going their way. They have also not kept the planned offensive a secret, hoping the militants will give up the fight.
"It has to do with letting people know what's coming in the hope that the hardcore Taliban, or a lot of the Taliban, will simply leave, and maybe there will be less of a fight," U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in Turkey on Saturday.
According to some of the villagers escaping Marjah in fear of their lives, fighters are digging in rather than fleeing.
"The Taliban are not going to leave Marjah. We have seen them preparing themselves. They are bringing in people and weapons. We know there is going to be a big fight," said Abdul Manan, a man from Marjah who had fled to Helmand's capital, Lashkar Gah.
"The Taliban are very active in Marjah. They are planting mines there and in the surrounding areas," said another villager, Abdul Khaleq, after arriving in Lashkar Gah with his family.
The Taliban have stepped up their fight against Afghan and foreign troops in recent years. They have largely shied away from face-to-face combat, relying instead on deadly homemade bombs.
Abdullah Nasrat, a Taliban commander in Nad Ali district where Marjah is located, told Reuters by telephone there were some 2,000 insurgents there ready to fight to the death.
"We are well prepared and will fight until the end. We don't have sophisticated weapons like the Americans with tanks and air planes, but we have Islamic zeal. That is the power we have to fight against the infidels," he said.

"WRATH OF AMERICANS"

Around one hundred families have fled Marjah and surrounding areas, seeking refuge in Lashkar Gah over the last week, the provincial governor's spokesman Dawood Ahmadi said. Afghan families average around six members.
Some of those had fled from areas around Marjah where British "shaping" operations have been taking place ahead of the Marine offensive.
"On the government side, we are ready to help these people. We are ready to help up to 50,000 displaced people," he said, adding there was a possibility of more people fleeing. Those who fled said they feared for their lives.
"We know that the wrath of the Americans is coming upon us. We left Marjah to save our lives and our families' lives," Khaleq said.
"We have no shelter, no property. We left our farms. We appeal to the government to help us," he said, adding that other families had fled to nearby Sangin and Nawa districts.
Many of those arriving in Lashkar Gah told Reuters they had set up in open-air compounds normally used for storage in the city. Helmand has a harsh desert climate where temperatures can soar in summer and drop below freezing in winter.
"We don't know what will happen to Marjah and to our property. This could go on for months," said Manan..

3 comments:

HFDean said...

Awesome - Great Article Tusker, thanks for the post - keep up the good fight!

Holger Awakens said...

Zinner!

Always great to have you stop by, sir.

:Holger Danske

Anonymous said...

Digging in is always a mistake for a guerilla army. They just became static targets.