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US Marines under fire ahead of Afghan assault
Thursday, February 11, 2010
The Daily News (Pakistan)
* Afghan official says locals warned not to leave houses as
operation ‘well planned’ * NATO forces drop leaflets warning of
fight to come
OUTSKIRTS OF MARJAH:
US Marines came under attack from insurgents armed with sniper guns
and rocket-propelled grenades as they geared up on Wednesday to
overwhelm a Taliban bastion in Afghanistan.
Thousands of Marines
along with foreign and Afghan soldiers are massing around the town of
Marjah in Helmand, which officials say is one of the last areas of the
southern province under Taliban control.
The flow of residents
fleeing the imminent offensive has slowed, provincial officials said,
after loaded-down cars, trucks, tractors and buses clogged roads from
Marjah to provincial capital Lashkah Gar for days.
Don’t leave:
“We have announced and told people in Marjah not to leave their houses
as our operation is well planned and designed to target the enemy,” said
Daud Ahmadi, spokesman for Helmand Governor Mohammad Gulab Mangal.
“Civilians will not be harmed,” he said. Another 75 families had
left Marjah, on top of the 164 families who left earlier, the spokesman
said. Other officials have said more than 400 families have fled.
The operation, expected to begin in days, will be the biggest push
since US President Barack Obama announced a new surge of troops to
Afghanistan and one of the biggest since the 2001 US-led invasion
defeated the Taliban regime.
It is seen as a key test of a
comprehensive counter-insurgency strategy that aims to follow up what
officials predict would be a decisive military victory by establishing
Afghan government control.
But Taliban fighters appear defiant in
the face of the enormous firepower being amassed in the region, where
they have held sway for years in tandem with drug traffickers.
An
AFP photographer said 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines Regiment arrived by
helicopter at Berkha Nawa junction, on the northeastern outskirts of
Marjah, and immediately came under sniper fire from insurgents.
The Marines encampment, reinforced with sandbags, also came under rocket
fire. US Cobra helicopters were called in to attack Taliban positions,
the photographer said.
The Marines searched houses and compounds
for weapons and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) — the prime Taliban
killer of foreign troops — and evacuated residents from all but one of
the homes.
Taliban fighters could be seen planting IEDs on roads
surrounding the junction, he said, adding that Marines were doing
regular sweeps to clear the area.
Leaflets: NATO forces dropped
leaflets on the area warning of the fight to come, to give residents and
insurgents time to flee and avoid a battle, officials said.
Mark
Sedwill, NATO’s senior civilian representative in Afghanistan, said the
US-led alliance hoped the operation would proceed “swiftly and with as
little incident as possible”.
“But this very much depends on the
conduct of people who are in Marjah at the moment and their choices
about whether to resist or to lay down their weapons and, as the
government has offered them, come over under the sovereignty of the
legitimate authorities,” he told reporters. “People need to be under no
illusion — this operation is going to succeed, we are going to bring
Afghan government sovereignty to this area. afp
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