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Afghanistan
Taliban threaten UK with a river of blood
2006-05-05
BRITISH forces were placed on notice by the Taleban yesterday that their mission to impose security over southern Afghanistan would end in failure. On the day that Britain took command of the Nato forces that are being deployed in their thousands across the most volatile provinces of the country, the Taleban leadership sent them a chilling message. “Our activity will increase day by day. We now have the confidence to fight face-to-face and we have all the ammunition we need,” said Mohammad Hanif Sherzad, the spokesman for Mullah Omar, the reclusive, one-eyed Taleban leader, who has a $10 million (£5.4 million) bounty on his head.

“We will turn Afghanistan into a river of blood for the British,” he told The Times on a satellite telephone from an undisclosed location. “We have beaten them before and we will beat them again.”

That threat could once have been dismissed as the rantings of a dying movement that was driven from power by the US-led invasion of 2001. But today the warning will be taken seriously.

The Taleban have rearmed, recruited new followers and are planning a hot reception for the 8,000-strong Nato force from Britain, Canada and the Netherlands, which hopes to impose order on an area the size of Britain. The deployment is intended to allow America to scale back its combat troops and help the Afghan Government to extend its writ beyond Kabul, the capital.

Lieutenant-General David Richards, the Briton in command of the Nato forces, said that he was not concerned about the threat and noted that his troops would “respond very robustly” if attacked.

But while Nato launched the “most challenging” ground mission of its history, the task looked increasingly daunting. “Outside of the main city and provincial towns everything is controlled by the Taleban,” Mullah Sayed Mohammed, an MP from Kandahar, said.

In Helmand province, assigned to the British, the Taleban sent a grim message yesterday to those who challenge their authority with the discovery of the beheaded body of a policeman.

Neighbouring Kandahar province is even more dangerous. Four Canadian soldiers were killed in a roadside bomb last month. In the worst recent clash, Canadian troops fought a pitched battle against a force of 200 Taleban in the Panjwai district, only a 20-minute drive from the city of Kandahar.

The Dutch, who are sending a force of only 1,000 men after a heated political debate at home, might have the most challenging task of all. They have been assigned southern Uruzgan province, a mountainous region, much of which is under Taleban control.

Veteran British forces in Afghanistan are convinced that they have a fight ahead of them. Eight Harrier fighter pilots based in Kandahar have never been busier, and the deployment of the fighter jets has been extended by six months. Flight Lieutenant Scott Williams, 29, said: “I was here last year at the same time and the fighting is much fiercer this year.”

An incident on February 13 in the Deh Rawood district of Uruzgan illustrated the scale of the threat. When he flew over the scene, four American Special Forces were dead, killed by a massive roadside bomb. The US survivors were pinned between a ridge and a river and were taking heavy fire from Kalashnikovs and rocket launchers from a force several hundred strong.

“Every time I had radio contact with the guys on the ground I could hear gunfire in the background,” Flight Lieutenant Williams said. To try to suppress the threat he and his comrades flew over the area at an altitude of less than 100ft, hoping that the noise would scare off the Taleban.

It did not. A Harrier then fired a rocket into the group of insurgents. This, too, failed to subdue a stubborn and apparently well-trained enemy. A Harrier then dropped a 540lb (245kg) airburst bomb, which can destroy an area the size of a football pitch. “It’s not going to be pleasant after one of those has been dropped.” the pilot said. “Things went pretty quiet.”
The lesson, Flight Lt, is to use the airburst bomb first next time.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#9  Saving Britain, Scandinavia and NORDLANT, besides North Atlantic oil, for the Motherly Russian/Soviet Red Banner Northern Fleet.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2006-05-05 21:26  

#8  Oooh, river of blood! Did they happen to mention whose blood? And does this mean the brutal Afghan winter meme is no longer in play?

/me predicts the propery values in Pakistan's NWFP are going to take a downturn soon.
Posted by: SteveS   2006-05-05 20:56  

#7  Arclight puhleeze.... let's make those trails impassable
Posted by: Frank G   2006-05-05 19:58  

#6  LOL Tu.
Posted by: 6   2006-05-05 19:22  

#5  Of Afghani civilians, one presumes.
Posted by: gromgoru   2006-05-05 12:06  

#4  The Brits really need to copy this style of airbased ground support. bittorrent for video at this link
(AC-130 in action over Afghanistan)
Posted by: 3dc   2006-05-05 11:33  

#3  Would a "river of blood" put out a "sea of fire"?
Discuss.
Posted by: tu3031   2006-05-05 08:13  

#2  We now have the confidence to fight face-to-face and we have all the ammunition we need,”

Thanks to German kidnapping payoffs and the Russian arms industry.
Posted by: Boesoeker   2006-05-05 08:11  

#1  A flyover, then a rocket, then the airbust bomb? How polite! Why not that bomb first, then a flyover with wing-wagging?
Posted by: Bobby   2006-05-05 08:07  

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