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Monday, January 2, 2012

2011 Afghan war & Nato


Nato fighting in Afghanistan continue to pay a high toll, with more than 560 killed in 2011, the second highest number in the 10-year war against the Taliban-led insurgency. Commanders from the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) say violence is declining following the US military surge which saw an extra 33,000 troops on the ground. But the UN says violence is up, while recent mass casualty strikes by the Taliban on civilians and coalition troops have fuelled analyst predictions that more bloodshed is likely as Nato hands control for security to Afghan forces. The death toll of coalition service personnel in 2011 was 565 and includes 417 from the US and 45 from Britain, according to an AFP tally based on figures from independent website icasualties.orgThe number is down from a wartime high of 711 in 2010 after the start of the surge but up from 521 in 2009. The fatality count has been worsened by several devastating attacks, including the car bombing of an ISAF convoy in Kabul in October which killed 17, and the shooting down of a helicopter in Wardak, south of the capital, in August in which 30 US troops perished. But it is Afghan civilians who have paid the highest price. The deadliest attack saw at least 80 people killed in a shrine bombing in Kabul on the Shiite holy day of Ashura in early December. The surge troops — ordered in by US President Barack Obama two years ago to turn the tide in the war — have now begun to pull out, with 10,000 already gone and the rest leaving by next autumn. Other foreign forces are also scaling down their missions ahead of a 2014 deadline for the withdrawal of all Nato combat forces. And one Western military official said some units have already been told not to carry out offensive operations. Since the US-led invasion toppled the Taliban from power in 2001, a total of 2,846 foreign troops have died in the conflict. “We’ve seen a considerable reduction in enemy attacks (this year). That’s a result of successes on the battle field and a reduction of their capability to attack us,” said ISAF spokesman Brigadier General Carsten Jacobson. While fewer ISAF troops on the ground in the coming years may mean fewer coalition deaths, the civilian toll will not necessarily fall. The UN said the number of civilians killed in violence in Afghanistan rose by 15 per cent in the first six months of this year to 1,462. A full-year report is due out in mid-January. Insurgents are blamed for 80 per cent of the deaths, which are mostly caused by homemade bombs or IEDs. Nato, which says enemy attacks are down eight per cent, only includes “executed attacks” and not IED finds or instances where the Taliban intimidate local people. Haroun Mir, an analyst at Afghanistan’s Centre for Research and Policy Studies, said that while the Taliban were no longer engaging ISAF troops head-on, factions within the insurgency were intent on targeting civilians. “The Taliban are deliberately targeting civilians to spread fear among the people. They want to show that despite the surge they are still active, that they have the capacity to disrupt life, especially in the cities,” he said. The international community is looking for a political solution to the war and moves have been made to establish a Taliban office, possibly in Qatar, to enable peace talks. But Mir said although some members of the Taliban would be willing to negotiate, others, such as those based over the border in Pakistan, are likely to become increasingly isolated and unleash more violence. “We expect more terrorist attacks and more political assassinations during the phase of transition. These radical groups will do everything possible, especially after 2014, to weaken the government,” he said. As security is handed over the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), which now number more than 300,000, can also expect to take on more casualties. Since March 21, the beginning of the Afghan year, 1,400 police, 520 soldiers and 4,275 insurgents have been killed in the conflict, according to Afghan government figures. However, there is some optimism that the reduction in the foreign presence may in itself lead to a fall in violence. “The hope is that as foreign troops hand security to Afghan forces fewer local people will become radicalised,” said Fabrizio Foschini of the Afghanistan Analysts Network. “And the insurgents won’t kill as many civilians collaterally by using highly destructive tactics to target foreigners,” he said.

Iran successfully produces N-fuel rods


The revelation was made by state television on Sunday in a snub to international demands that it halt sensitive nuclear work. The rods, which contain natural uranium, were made in Iran and have been inserted into the core of Tehran s research nuclear reactor, the television reported. Nuclear fuel rods contain small pellets of fuel, usually low-enriched uranium, patterned to give out heat produced by nuclear reaction without melting down. "This great achievement will perplex the West, because the Western countries had counted on a possible failure of Iran to produce nuclear fuel plates," the Tehran Times newspaper said. The development was announced at a time of growing tension between Western powers and Iran after the U.N. nuclear agency reported in November that Tehran appeared to have worked on designing a nuclear weapon. Secret research to that end may be continuing, it said. The United States and its European allies have increased the sanctions pressure on Iran, one of the world s largest oil producers, to push Tehran to halt the enrichment. U.S. President Barack Obama signed more sanctions against Iran into law on Saturday, shortly after Iran signalled it was ready for new talks with the West on its nuclear programme and said it had delayed long-range missile tests in the Gulf.