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Showing posts with label Kabul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kabul. Show all posts

Monday, May 8, 2017

ISIS Has Bad Weekend

ISIS dealt big blow in Afghanistan 

after commander killed

  • 05/08/2017 01:37 PM 
  • Source: FOXNews.com 
  • by: foxnewsonline@foxnews.com (Fox News Online)
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ISIS dealt big blow in Afghanistan after commander killed
Flickr - TheSpeakerNews
Dozens of Islamic State fighters were killed over the weekend by the Afghan
 air force making a string of gains in the same area where U.S. forces helped
 take out the region's ISIS boss, the government announced on Monday.

At least 34 ISIS fighters were killed in airstrikes in eastern Nangarhar province,
 Afghan officials said. That’s the same area where the terror group’s top local
 commander was killed by Afghan and U.S. military forces in April.

Confirmation of the death of Abdul Hasseeb Logari, the ISIS chief in
 Nangarhar, came on Sunday night from the Pentagon. Logari was among 
several senior leaders of the ISIS affiliate in Afghanistan and was killed in
 an April 27 raid jointly conducted by Afghan Special Security Forces and
 the U.S.

Logari was responsible for ordering a March attack on a military hospital in 
Kabul, according to the office of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, which
 also confirmed the terror leader's death. Around 50 people were killed 
and many others injured in that attack.

Read more at http://americanactionnews.com/articles/isis-dealt-a-blow-in-afghanistan-after-commander-killed#DMgwCVuQ0YEBhQgd.99

Monday, April 24, 2017

Helmand Province About To Get A Visit From The Marines


Report: 300 U.S. Marines ‘En Route’ to Taliban Stronghold in Afghanistan


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An estimated 300 U.S. Marines are heading to a Taliban stronghold in the southern Afghanistan province of Helmand, one of the deadliest regions of the ongoing war for coalition forces located along the Pakistan border, reports Marine Corps Times.

The American troops are expected to reach their destination — where the Taliban has largely reversed previous U.S./NATO coalition gains — by the end of this month. Nearly all of Helmand has once again fallen under the control of the Taliban. Helmand sits next to Kandahar province, widely known as the birthplace of the Taliban.
The 300 additional Marines, with the appropriate support, “can absolutely make a difference in Helmand province,” retired Gen. David Petraeus, who served as the top commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan between 2010 to 2011, told Marine Corps Times.
He added that the Marines’ advise-and-assist mission could provide the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) “the support they need to reverse the momentum of the Taliban in that important province that sits astride the critical ‘Ring Road’ that connects the southern and western parts of the country to Kabul.”
The ANDSF includes police and army units.
Marine Corps Times reports:
The deployment of Marines from the II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, will be the largest Marine deployment to Afghanistan since 2014, when the U.S. military’s combat mission known as Operation Enduring Freedom officially ended.
By the end of April, the Marines will be in Helmand province as Task Force Southwest, replacing the Army’s Task Force Forge. During their nine months in Helmand, the Marines will train the Afghan National Army’s 215th Corps and the 505th Zone National Police in marksmanship, indirect fire and small-unit tactics and other skills, Marine Corps officials said.
According to various assessments, the Taliban controls more territory now than during any time since U.S./NATO troops removed the jihadist group from power in 2001.
Long War Journal recently reported that the terrorist group controls (7) or contests (6) nearly all of the 14 districts in Helmand.
The United States military has long considered Helmand to be a major Taliban stronghold.
“Helmand province is becoming increasingly dangerous for U.S. troops. In March, three American soldiers were shot at an Afghan military base in an apparent insider attack and in February, a Special Forces soldier was severely wounded in Sangin,” notes Marine Corps Times.
Although the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) has established a presence in the Afghanistan region, the Taliban remains the strongest jihadist group there. The two groups have fought one another for turf, influence, and recruits.
However, some Afghan officials and the U.S. military believe they have also worked together.
Former President Barack Obama reportedly approved the deployment of the 300 Marines before leaving office.
In the year after the former commander-in-chief declared an end to the U.S. combat mission and withdrew most American troops from the war-devastated country, the State Department deemed Taliban jihadists the world’s chief perpetrators of terrorism in 2015, with 1,093 individual attacks.
“Make no mistake, though we are no longer in a combat role in Afghanistan, it is still a combat environment,” Col. Matthew Reid, deputy task force commander, told Marine Corps Times in January. “As Marines, we train and deploy with a combat mindset.”
This year, U.S. Forces-Afghanistan (USFOR-A) revealed that the American-backed Afghan government had lost control of nearly half (43 percent) of the country, primarily to the Taliban.
The rest of the country was either contested or under the control/influence of terrorists.
Nevertheless, U.S. National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster sounded optimistic over the weekend that U.S.-backed forces will defeat the Taliban.
He told TOLO News during his first trip to Afghanistan:
The Taliban must be defeated as well. They can be defeated in a number of ways. For those that are reconcilable, who are now willing to join their Afghan brothers to strengthen the Afghan state, to end the violence, to be part of the political process, I think your president and the chief executive officer they will welcome them back in. So it is their choice now.
The Taliban has refused to participate in peace negotiations with the Afghan government, saying they have no reason to engage in talks because they are winning the war.
American Gen. John Nicholson, the top commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said late last year that the Taliban generates nearly 60 percent of its funding from trafficking opium primarily cultivated in Helmand.
In its most recent assessment, the United Nations reported that Helmand remains the top opium-producing province in Afghanistan.
The war-ravaged country is the world’s top supplier of opium and its heroin derivative.

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Terrorists Are Coming And Its Not A Movie!

FBI Chief Warns 'Terrorist Diaspora' Will Come to the West

Image: FBI Chief Warns 'Terrorist Diaspora' Will Come to the West
(Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Wednesday, 27 Jul 2016 07:34 PM
Hundreds of terrorists will fan out to infiltrate western Europe and the U.S. to carry out attacks on a wider scale as Islamic State is defeated in Syria, FBI Director James Comey warned.
“At some point there’s going to be a terrorist diaspora out of Syria like we’ve never seen before,” Comey said Wednesday in New York. “We saw the future of this threat in Brussels and Paris,” said the head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, adding that future attacks will be on “an order of magnitude greater.”
Comey’s blunt warnings echo those of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, who has scoffed at Obama administration efforts to defeat Islamic State extremists in Syria and Iraq. Nonetheless, the FBI chief’s comments reflect a consensus among U.S. intelligence officials that the group inevitably will strike out abroad as it continues to lose ground militarily under attack from a U.S.-led coalition.
For a QuickTake on the widening threat from Islamic State, click here.
CIA Director John Brennan told the Senate Intelligence Committee in June that “our efforts have not reduced the group’s terrorism capability and global reach.” Using an acronym for Islamic State, Brennan said, “as the pressure mounts on ISIL, we judge that it will intensify its global terror campaign to maintain its dominance of the global terrorism agenda.”
‘Greatest Threat’
Comey, who called violence directed or inspired by Islamic State “the greatest threat to the physical safety of Americans today,” said that “a lot of terrorists fled out of Afghanistan in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This is 10 times that or more.”
In his remarks at a conference on cybersecurity, Comey also cited the difficulty of heading off what are often called “lone-wolf” attackers acting on the group’s calls for violence.
It is “increasingly hard” for counterterrorism officials to find and stop individuals inspired or directed by Islamic State who use a knife or a vehicle to kill people, Comey said.
Latest News Update
For a QuickTake on the rise of ‘lone-wolf’ terrorists, click here.
At the same time, U.S. officials have claimed increasing success in reducing Islamic State’s hold on the caliphate the group proclaimed across a swath of Iraq and Syria.
Special:
Kerry, Trump
“We can say that the tide has turned,” Secretary of State John Kerry said last week. Using an Arabic name for Islamic State, he said, “Our coalition and partners on the ground have driven Daesh out of nearly 50 percent of the territory that it once controlled in Iraq and 20 percent of the territory in Syria.” But he also cited the need for “real-time communications between countries” and other measures to counter the group’s efforts “to transform themselves into a global terrorist organization.”
While Trump has said he would be more aggressive in attacking Islamic State if elected in November, he hasn’t provided details. His response to the threat of attacks in the U.S. is a vow to introduce “extreme vetting” of potential immigrants from certain “territories” affected by terrorism.
Attacks in France have left more than 230 dead since the start of last year. A mass shooting that killed 49 people at a nightclub last month in Orlando, Florida, was carried out by a man who claimed allegiance to Islamic State. Less than two weeks before the Olympic Games begin in Rio de Janeiro, Brazilian police have rounded up a dozen people it said were possibly members of an Islamic State cell.
Beyond the West, Islamic State took credit for a July 23 suicide bombing at a rally in Kabul that killed more than 80 people, the deadliest single attack in Afghanistan in 15 years of war.
Encryption Debate
The FBI chief also spoke Thursday of the unresolved fight over law enforcement access to encrypted communications that brought his agency into conflict with Apple Inc. earlier this year.
The debate over encryption “has dipped below public consciousness right now,” Comey said.
The FBI is using that time to collect data on the negative impact that encrypted communications is having on investigations, he said. From October through March, 500 of 4,000 devices the FBI confiscated couldn’t be opened due to encryption, he said.
Debate by policy makers over the issue probably will have to wait until next year, after the U.S. elections, he said.
“At some point encryption is going to figure in a major event in this country,” Comey said. “We’ve got to have the conversation before that happens.”
© Copyright 2016 Bloomberg News. All rights reserved.


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Monday, November 30, 2015

Will Americans In Afghanistan Get Hit Soon?

US Embassy: Kabul Attack 'Imminent' in Next Two Days

Image: US Embassy: Kabul Attack 'Imminent' in Next Two DaysAfghan police keep watch near the site of a suicide blast in Kabul that targeted a senior member of Afghanistan's election commission. (REUTERS/Ahmad Masood)
By Newsmax Wires   |   Monday, 30 Nov 2015 12:32 PM
An "imminent attack" in Kabul is expected by the United States embassy there,  which warned it had received credible reports of a threat within the Afghan city in the next two days.

"U.S. Embassy Kabul has received credible reports of an imminent attack in Kabul city, Kabul province, Afghanistan within the next 48 hours," it said in a post on its website, reported Reuters.

"During this period of heightened threat, the U.S. Embassy strongly urges U.S. citizens to exercise extreme caution if moving around the city. There were no further details regarding the targets, timing, or method of the planned attack," it said.
"The security situation in Afghanistan is extremely unstable, and the threat to all US citizens in Afghanistan remains critical."

The embassy frequently issues such emergency warnings but the latest post comes as the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan are expected to meet on the sidelines of a UN conference in Paris, said news service AFP.

The meeting between Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani could be a possible first step towards resuming Islamabad-brokered Taliban peace talks.

"A meeting between (Sharif) and (Ghani) on the sidelines of the UN climate change conference is likely," a Pakistani official said on condition of anonymity.
Latest News Update
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He said that Pakistan was ready to facilitate an Afghan-owned and Afghan-led peace process, but there was no immediate reaction from Kabul.

"Islamabad firmly believes the meeting... will have a positive impact on regional peace and help Islamabad and Kabul to further strengthen their ties," the official said.

Pakistan, which wields considerable influence over the militants, hosted a historic first round of negotiations in July but the talks stalled soon thereafter when the Taliban confirmed the death of their longtime leader Mullah Omar.

The United States and China have been pushing for the process to restart, but frosty ties between Islamabad and Kabul have been hampering those efforts.

Kabul has turned increasingly bitter over Islamabad's backing for the resurgent Taliban, who have intensified attacks on Afghan government and foreign targets in recent months.

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